The Vikings' three-day mandatory minicamp, which runs from Tuesday to Thursday, caps the team's offseason program with its final on-field work before training camp next month.
Many of the questions that exist about this year's team aren't likely to be resolved this week, though.
The Vikings are still sorting through major changes in their secondary after a dismal 2020 season, and their configuration along both lines of scrimmage must be sorted out. Several key players might not be on the field this week, further clouding whatever picture of the 2021 Vikings the minicamp might provide.
Before practices begin on Tuesday, here is a look at several of the major story lines surrounding the Vikings as they head into minicamp.
1. When will the Vikings see Danielle Hunter?
In a bit of a turnabout from where the defensive end has been this spring, Hunter is in Minnesota this week.
Vikings defensive end Danielle Hunter completed a medical check at the team's facility Monday and will be with the team for the start of minicamp Tuesday after he agreed to a reworked contract. Hunter had skipped all of the team's voluntary offseason workouts. Hunter had a $100,000 workout bonus in his deal, and could have been fined more than $93,000 had he skipped this week's camp.
The five-year, $72 million deal he signed in 2018 made Hunter — who reached 50 sacks sooner than any player in NFL history — the 17th highest-paid edge rusher in the league, but the fact he has three years remaining on his current deal and he is returning from surgery on a herniated disc in his neck complicated his negotiating position. The Vikings have always thought highly of Hunter, though, and a source said last fall they had little interest in getting into a contract standoff with a player they regarded as a model citizen on and off the field.