The Minnesota Vikings will move to a bigger "Bank" in 2016.
The team on Monday announced what is likely to be a lucrative 20-year deal with U.S. Bank for stadium naming rights, but a bank spokesman said an online site's published $220 million price tag was "on the high side." Neither he nor the Vikings would say more about the amount.
The bank and the Vikings had planned to reveal their agreement next Monday at a news conference on the construction site of the new $1.1 billion, 65,400-seat stadium rising in downtown Minneapolis. But Sports Business Daily crashed that plan with a story on its website. In late-afternoon statements, the Minneapolis bank and the team confirmed their partnership.
The Vikings are temporarily playing at the University of Minnesota's TCF Bank Stadium, nicknamed "The Bank."
U.S. Bank has long been considered the leading contender to put its name on the Metrodome's successor, which will open in fall 2016. CEO Richard Davis and the Vikings have engaged in a public courtship for more than a year.
Last spring, Davis donned a purple tie and, along with Carlson Cos. scion Marilyn Carlson Nelson, successfully wooed NFL owners into choosing Minneapolis for the 2018 Super Bowl. On Monday, the bank provided a written statement from Davis in which he called the Vikings a "treasure" for Minnesota and surrounding states.
"We look forward to U.S. Bank Stadium being a place that will drive economic vitality in Minneapolis-St. Paul, as well as a place where friends and families will create lasting memories celebrating civic pride and the competitive accomplishments of the Minnesota Vikings," Davis said.
In the same statement, Vikings owner Mark Wilf said the Vikings are "proud to partner" with U.S. Bank both on the stadium and on a new "places to play" grant program. Grants totaling $250,000 will be handed out in each of the "next several years" to children's sports facilities across the state, the news release said. Applications will be accepted beginning this fall.