The Minnesota Vikings and the NFL tried to weather a growing tempest Tuesday over Adrian Peterson's return to the backfield despite his ongoing prosecution on child abuse charges.
By Wednesday morning, the Vikings had announced they have placed Peterson on the exempt/commissioner's permission list, which will keep him away from the team while the legal process involving his child abuse case plays out.
On Tuesday, Gov. Mark Dayton called it "an awful situation," and Nike, which pays Peterson handsomely to endorse its products, distanced itself from the star running back.
Even Peterson's Texas-based philanthropic foundation shut down its website, saying it was on "hiatus" and would "re-engage after Adrian, his family and staff have reflected on how the current situation impacts the direction for Adrian's philanthropy."
Nike's store at the Mall of America stopped selling No. 28 jerseys, and Wheaties confirmed it had severed ties with Peterson.
In a sharp message to the NFL, corporate sponsor Anheuser-Busch said it was "increasingly concerned by the recent incidents that have overshadowed this NFL season. We are not yet satisfied with the league's handling of behaviors that so clearly go against our own company culture and moral code."
The NFL assured Anheuser-Busch, "We are taking action and there will be much more to come."
Five days after the Vikings' most popular player was indicted in Texas for whipping his child with a wood switch, with photos showing the child with visible wounds, the Vikings had little to say after surprisingly announcing the day before that its star player would take the field Sunday against New Orleans while his court case headed to an early October hearing.