The Vikings departed London Stansted airport on Sunday evening after their 28-25 win over the Saints; their arrival in the Twin Cities early Monday morning, helped by a six-hour time change, was no different than if they'd played a night game in the U.S.
They had a light workout on Monday to help players shake off any jet lag. They didn't mandate players get massages from the extra therapists they brought in this week, coach Kevin O'Connell said, but "you don't normally have to do to that with massages, at least in my experience. [Players] normally jump at those."
Weightlifting sessions included extra recovery time, and the Vikings were ready for a full week of practice by Wednesday.
"I think our staff did a great job of planning to be able to feel good on Sunday in London, but then also be able to transition and come back and not have to take three, four days to get back on our time," wide receiver Adam Thielen said. "I think it was a really good mix."
The approach needed to be carefully thought out, as the Vikings try to pull off a feat few have attempted and none have managed successfully.
On Sunday, the Vikings and Saints will become just the sixth and seventh teams to play the weekend after traveling to London; the Packers and Giants will do the same next week. The first five teams to play the weekend after traveling to London are 2-3 in those games, and both of the teams that won a week after a London game (the 2016 Colts and 2017 Dolphins) had lost in London.
It means a Vikings victory over the Bears this weekend would be the first by an NFL team that had also won in London the week before.
Teams have ordinarily taken their bye week after playing in London — the Vikings did in 2013 and 2017 — but after the NFL introduced a 17-game schedule in 2021, teams that play early-season games in the United Kingdom are instead asking for home games the following week, preferring to take their byes later. The Vikings and Saints are home this Sunday; the Giants and Packers will both be home next weekend.