It's surprising that the Waffling Wilfs have looked so conflicted and confused on their twisted journey to finally suspending Adrian Peterson.
Even if Peterson had maintained the façade of an honorable athlete, the Wilfs were going to have to consider dumping him in a few months. In the NFL's brutal calculus, Peterson's admission to police that he beat a child bloody might change only the timing and terms of his departure.
The Vikings are paying Peterson while he's on the exempt/commissioner's permission list, so he will stay away from the team without fighting the suspension through the union or the courts. They suspended him only after sponsors threatened their profit margins. They now know that bringing Peterson back this season will create the same problems with sponsors, and will again attract satellite trucks to Winter Park.
Peterson is 29. The list of modern running backs who have thrived past the age of 30 is shorter than a Zygi Wilf speech. Peterson is making about $14 million a year on a contract that runs through the 2017 season.
Peterson plays a position devalued by the NFL. As soon as he showed signs of aging, or being slowed by injuries, the Vikings were going to release him, or trade him, or ask him to renegotiate his contract.
Peterson knows that. That may be why he called Cowboys owner Jerry Jones this summer, to lobby for future consideration. Jones is the rare NFL owner blinded by flashy names.
After an impressive opening-season victory at St. Louis, the Vikings were outclassed Sunday by New England. They may have lost the next four games even with Peterson in the backfield. Without him, the team's braintrust may soon be forced to view this as another rebuilding season.
When that happens, the Vikings will break in rookie quarterback Teddy Bridgewater, and try to develop other young players. They will prepare themselves to contend in 2015 and beyond.