On Jan. 10, when the Wilf family made its largest set of changes in its 17 years owning the Vikings, it was linebacker Eric Kendricks who signaled how big of a shift was coming next.
Kendricks' remarks about the Vikings' culture — when the linebacker said, "I don't think a fear-based organization is the way to go" — grabbed headlines and became something of a public bellwether for how the Vikings would replace General Manager Rick Spielman and coach Mike Zimmer.
Behind the scenes, the linebacker was part of the leadership group that met with the Wilfs to share what players wanted from the organization. His relationship with the owners had grown through his work on the team's social justice committee and his nomination for the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award in 2020. In the early days of the Vikings' search for a new GM and head coach, Kendricks had accumulated enough capital to speak his mind.
"We had a great conversation at the end of the season and throughout the offseason a little bit," Kendricks said Wednesday. "Just having that bridge of communication with them and the management as well, I feel like it's not really common. I've talked to players around the league and they don't really have that communication with their ownership.
"Like I said, it's on us now as well, it can't just be on them, it can't just be on whoever we appoint the head guy. It's gotta be on the players as well, like myself, who have put their years and time into this league. If I want change, I gotta be that change myself."
Kendricks is 30 now, heading into his eighth NFL season and his first without fellow linebacker Anthony Barr, his teammate since their time together at UCLA. Only Harrison Smith has been part of the Vikings' defense for a longer period of time than Kendricks, and few voices carry more weight in the team's locker room than that of the All-Pro.
Speaking to reporters on Wednesday for the first time since his Jan. 10 comments, Kendricks had little interest in revisiting the 2021 season or what he'd said at the end of it. "I'm not going to talk about last season, really. It's a new year, it's a new day," he said.
It was clear, though, he's not interested in the Vikings' organizational changes being the end of their transformation.