Dalvin Cook said the six-month contract negotiations that ended in a five-year extension worth up to $63 million last weekend taught him to "not get too impatient." That remains relevant after he had just 13 touches for 48 yards (and two touchdowns) in Sunday's season-opening loss to the Packers.
Cook was upbeat Monday, two days after signing with the Vikings through 2025 for $28 million guaranteed, saying he always intended to remain with the team that traded up in 2017's second round to draft him.
"Being in Minnesota was always important to me with the guys I've built the relationships with and just being around the guys in the locker room and everybody in Minnesota. I love being here," Cook said via videoconference. "That was important, getting that done before the season so I could just turn it loose."
He was not able to turn it loose Sunday. Coach Mike Zimmer pointed to the offense's lackluster second quarter including the safety, interception and a three-and-out as part of the problem. Players felt the absence of the crowd and home-field advantage that typically comes with U.S. Bank Stadium, according to Cook.
"There's something that we've got to find to give us an edge to get up and go play," he said. "Sunday, we didn't find that. We've got to come together as a team, and we've got to find that extra 'it' to get it going."
Despite prolonged contract talks that ran until the eve of the 2020 season opener the mutual interest in a new deal prevented much doubt.
"I know how much Minnesota values me and how the front office thinks about me. I knew I did enough as a player," Cook said. "It was always, 'Dalvin, just go out there and play and give it all I've got.' That's the mind-set that I keep every day I wake up. I knew the Vikings had realized that."
'Should've known'
Rookie cornerback Cameron Dantzler got a lesson in NFL situational awareness Sunday when Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers targeted him over the top on a 45-yard touchdown pass, giving Green Bay a 22-7 lead just before halftime. Dantzler wore a Mississippi St. shirt Monday when explaining a pass he probably never saw in college.