Since they kicked off their 2017 training camp with three contract extensions in an 11-day span — giving two deals to players with two years remaining on their contracts — the Vikings have gone to more audacious lengths to keep their core players together than just about any team in the NFL.
They have issued 12 contracts of more than $50 million each in that time, writing deals with a total value of over $814 million. They at least partly guaranteed nearly half a billion dollars of those deals — $499,030,361, to be exact.
The Vikings paid everyone from a free-agent quarterback who got the first fully guaranteed deal in NFL history to a tight end who'd mused publicly about the possibility of being traded before he signed. They paid two linebackers — getting a deal done with the second after he'd verbally committed to sign with the Jets — and two receivers, making a former rookie camp tryout player one of the league's highest-paid wideouts despite the fact he was still two years from the open market.
This spring, they worked out a second contract with Kirk Cousins, giving him a $30 million signing bonus to help clear cap space. All told, Vikings ownership has written $154.4 million worth of bonus checks as part of the 12 contracts, as well as signing bonus conversions like the ones they've undertaken for Danielle Hunter and Eric Kendricks (twice). And they've managed to add extra trinkets, like a one-year, $8 million deal for Sheldon Richardson and an $11.441 million franchise tag for Anthony Harris, in the process.
The 12th deal, which the Vikings completed last Saturday, might show them at their boldest, most committed to their vision and most willing to see it through.
A day before opening their 60th season at home in front of no fans, they gave a $15.5 million signing bonus — larger than any they've awarded to a player not named Cousins — to Dalvin Cook, paying the running back six months before he would hit an open market fractured by the coronavirus pandemic.
It might take years to determine whether the deal was prudent, but the immediate aftermath revealed the logistical feat it took to bring it to fruition.
The Vikings and Cook's camp were caught between countervailing forces. The team stared at a 2021 cap that could drop because of revenue losses from the pandemic, and Cook faced a running back market that gives players one real chance to maximize their value.