You Can Call Me P2, Pat or Patrick
Once the team Peterson wanted to play for most was no longer an option, he began contemplating the possibilities. The Cowboys and 49ers made pushes, he says. There were conversations with the Eagles.
When he interviewed with Zimmer before the draft in 2011, Peterson was drawn to him. At the time, Zimmer was the Bengals’ defensive coordinator. With the fourth pick in the draft, the Bengals chose wide receiver A.J. Green, and the Cardinals took Peterson with the following selection.
Zimmer didn’t think the Vikings had a chance to sign Peterson. Then Peterson asked his agent to call Zimmer. Once Zimmer and Peterson talked, they knew they were a match.
The Vikings offered a one-year, $8 million contract, and Peterson agreed to it on March 17. It was not the deal Peterson hoped for, but he says he is good with it. “I’m willing to bet on myself for this season knowing the salary cap is going to go back up, and I can have opportunities to come back to the table and get more than what I got this year,” he says.
After he agreed to join the Vikings, he finally heard from Keim, Peterson says. “He had the nerve to text me, talking about how I love you, wish you nothing but the best. Now your phone work all of a sudden. I found that as the ultimate disrespect right there.”
Peterson did not return Keim’s text message.
Peterson and Hood, meanwhile, went back to cornerback 101, practicing the fundamentals Hood taught him in 2015. They watched tape of Peterson’s struggles last season and tried to come up with a solution for every problem.
They worked on speed too, with Peterson running 10s, 15s, 20s and 40s, often wearing a weight vest of either 15 or 20 pounds. And then Peterson, who typically spends as much as $300,000 annually on body maintenance, recovered with hyperbaric chamber treatments, saunas, cryotherapy, light therapy, Pilates, yoga and more.
Peterson has always been the type of athlete who does everything possible to prepare himself for peak performance. But he has taken his dedication, focus and intensity to another level since joining the Vikings, Hood says.
Peterson says there is “no doubt” he has worked harder than ever. It showed on the scale.
“I have a chip on my shoulder,” Peterson says. “A big one. A very big one. It’s probably the biggest chip I’ve ever had on my shoulder. You gonna get the real P2 this year.”
Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson sees the spring in Peterson’s step as well as the wisdom in his eyes. Jefferson has known Peterson since Jefferson was 10 and Peterson was an up-and-coming cornerback for LSU. Peterson was teammates with Jefferson’s brother Jordan, and Justin often tagged along with his older sibling. Now Justin says Peterson probably is the most gifted cornerback he ever has competed against. “To see how patient he is, how smart he is and how fast he is, he’s a crazy player to go up against,” Jefferson says.
Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen says he could not be happier to call Peterson a teammate. Their lockers are next to one another. They golf together and compete at practice like MMA fighters.
“I was thinking at the end of practice today I have to go and talk to him and tell him he’s making me better,” Thielen says. “He’s got that dog in him. I talk a lot about what that ‘it’ factor is. I call it the dog factor, but you have to have it in this league to be that superstar, to be that guy who makes a team go from good to great. He’s that guy.”
For the first time in a while, Peterson says he is appreciated instead of tolerated.
This, he believes, is the beginning of the final third of his career.
“I feel rejuvenated,” he says.
That’s what being a new guy can do.
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