If the Vikings care only about winning games, they can do more than merely welcome back Adrian Peterson.
Why not sign Ray Rice? The former Ravens running back could win an appeal of his suspension, and there is no evidence that he has punched a woman in months.
Why not sign Darren Sharper? The former Vikings safety has been accused of sexual assault in three states, but not in Minnesota. He may be able to intercept a few passes between trials.
By announcing that Peterson would play this week, days after he was arrested because he allegedly beat a 4-year-old with a branch, and shortly after the Vikings lost 30-7 to New England, the Vikings established that winning trumps those hollow words they've spit at us over the years about character.
So they might as well bring in every felonious free agent they can find.
There is a pure if unattractive logic in professional sports teams selling their alleged souls to win games. If the Vikings and the NFL had told us all along that they cared only about results, then the Peterson decision would at least be consistent.
There is no consistency, or courage, here.
When Roger Goodell became NFL commissioner, he promised to punish wayward players. When the Wilfs were embarrassed by the Love Boat scandal in 2005, they commissioned a lengthy code of conduct to cleanse an organization that leads the NFL in arrests since 2000.