Babatunde Aiyegbusi towered over a tall table at Champps Americana in Eden Prairie on Friday, trying to wrap his head around the concept of waffle fries.
"This is potato?" the Poland native asked. "And at breakfast it is like cake, like a pancake?"
Six days earlier, the 6-9 offensive tackle arrived in the United States for the first time with a pair of goals. The first, eating some tacos, was the easy one. The second, convincing an NFL team to give this virtual unknown a shot, seemed to be far from it.
But there he was Friday, decked out in a supersized black Vikings hoodie, sipping pink lemonade and scanning the lunch menu of this sports bar in the foreign but not totally unheard-of land of Minnesota, a place he will call home for at least the next few months.
Aiyegbusi chose chicken wings and agreed to try a side of the waffle fries, too, before beginning to tell the improbable tale of how a 27-year-old former basketball player with no college football experience abruptly flew here from Poland — a country that prefers fútbol to football — and was able to score an NFL contract with the Vikings.
"I've got a lack of technique, the footwork and maybe hand placement are wrong, but I'm here to be coached and I know the coaches are going to do whatever it takes to make me better," he said. "And I'm about to make this team. Believe me on that."
Aiyegbusi was raised in Olesnica, Poland. His father, who is Nigerian, is a doctor. His Polish mother is a head nurse. The two met in medical school and had three children. Babatunde, who was sandwiched in age between his two sisters, was always the biggest boy in his classes.
"I was always this fatty with a big belly," he said, demonstratively puffing out his cheeks.