All eight Vikings players who missed Sunday's practice because of presumptive positive COVID-19 tests were back on Monday, as the NFL said it had gotten to the root of the problem that produced 77 false positive tests among players, coaches and team staffers over the weekend.
BioReference Laboratories, the company handling the NFL's coronavirus testing program, said in a Monday statement that an investigation indicated the positive results were "most likely" erroneous and blamed them on contamination in a New Jersey laboratory.
"I do believe the problem has been corrected," Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL's chief medical officer, said in a conference call Monday.
The mixup took eight Vikings players and one coach off the field for Sunday's practice. Linebacker Eric Kendricks, defensive ends Jalyn Holmes and Kenny Willekes, fullback C.J. Ham, wide receivers Dillon Mitchell and Alexander Hollins, tight end Nakia Griffin-Stewart and tackle Ezra Cleveland were absent, as was assistant special teams coach Ryan Ficken.
"The guys didn't blink an eye, Coach Zim didn't blink an eye, [infection control officer Eric Sugarman] did a great job of coming in and expressing to us what was going on," co-defensive coordinator Andre Patterson said in a videoconference Monday. "We followed the protocol. There was no anxiety. There was nobody worried or walking around, trying to see who was here, who wasn't here. The guys did an outstanding job, and I think the coaching staff handled it good, too. That was probably a good experience for all of us."
If the same thing happens on a game day, Patterson said, "hopefully we deal with it like we did yesterday.
"They're not going to cancel the game. Whoever you play is not going to feel sorry for you. You've just got to go deal with it, and you go play. You have confidence in the guys that have got to go out there and play. I look at it no different as somebody getting hurt the day before the game, or somebody woke up Sunday morning sick — which we've had happen before. You go play."
Coach Mike Zimmer did not speak to reporters on Monday.