The Vikings settled one of their lingering contract situations Thursday by agreeing to an extension with tight end T.J. Hockenson through 2027.
Hockenson was scheduled to be a free agent after the season, and the Vikings had talked with his agent about an extension for much of training camp. His deal added four years to his contract with the Vikings, and is worth up to $68.5 million. The maximum value of the contract averages $17.125 million a year, making Hockenson the league's highest-paid tight end over the Giants' Darren Waller, who is playing on a deal worth $17 million per year.
"I do think there's a sense with all these negotiations where you say, 'Hey, I think we're kind of in the ninth inning of this thing,'" General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah said. "I can't tell you exactly when that moment happens. But I know I told [coach] Kevin [O'Connell] and [Executive Vice President of Football Operations] Rob [Brzezinski], 'I think we can get something done.' And you get that big smile from the head coach."
Hockenson played 10 games with the Vikings in 2022 after the team acquired him from the Lions on Nov. 1, and caught 60 passes in that time, emerging as quarterback Kirk Cousins' No. 2 target through the second half of the season.
The Chariton, Iowa native, who played for the University of Iowa, now figures to spend the rest of his prime just four and a half hours from where he grew up.
"You don't necessarily know how it's going to finish," Hockenson said of the negotiations. "It's obviously a stressful process. I mean, it wasn't really my focus the whole time. I knew I wanted to be here, and we just had to figure out how to make that happen. It's very, very special for me, being from Iowa, to be here: by your own family, to be able to really buy into the city and understand I'm here for a long time."
As the contract neared completion, Hockenson got more work in practice this week than he had in nearly a month. He sat out all seven-on-seven, 11-on-11 and contact drills after Aug. 3, first citing an ear infection and then back stiffness while contract negotiations continued. But he maintained he would be ready for Week 1.
"These three weeks of practice, I've just been trying to watch tape, get mentally prepared and get ready for that game [against the Buccaneers]," he said. "Now, to be back in a huddle, see everybody and just hear the calls come in, just makes me more excited about the season."