The Minnesota Vikings and running back Dalvin Cook have been through the wringer this offseason and the twists just keep on coming.
The saga began when Cook was unwilling to negotiate a contract restructure that would have resulted in a pay decrease. Not long after, both the running back and his agent were publicly critical of the Vikings organization. Several weeks of trade rumors followed, which included serious talks with the Miami Dolphins that never materialized into a deal. Suggestions that Minnesota would cut Cook as a salary cap play followed the team’s decision to re-sign Alexander Mattison to a two-year contract. Now, after months of back and forth, the Vikings and Cook are back to where they started.
Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated reported on Monday, May 15, that the team remains open to retaining the running back if he will consider a pay cut.
“Cook won’t play for Minnesota at his current number ($11 million) this year,” Breer wrote. “The Vikings have come close to trading him, going deep into talks with Miami a couple of months back. But all along, the communication has been good, and the team has been open to bringing him back on a reduced number.”
Vikings Open to Retaining Dalvin Cook on Reworked Contract
Breer’s report butts up in some ways against one ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler offered via a SportsCenter appearance on Sunday when he said Minnesota may be willing to hold on to Cook’s salary cap hit for the foreseeable future. The running back’s cap hit in 2023 is approximately $3 million more than his actual salary.
“I was told from a source that the Vikings want to do right by Dalvin Cook. Right now, they’re willing to hold on to his cap hit of around $14 million until they figure this all out,” Fowler said, per Bleacher Report.
“They want him to go to a place where he can play and be happy, whether that’s via trade, or eventual release, or even staying in Minnesota,” Fowler continued. “But that’s the sort of the thing they’ve been sorting through.”
Trading Dalvin Cook After June 1 Most Lucrative Option For Vikings
Despite the Vikings’ reportedly good intentions and renewed interest in retaining the four-time Pro Bowler, cap realities still render cutting Cook among the likeliest of outcomes.
David Kenyon of Bleacher Report on Monday listed Cook as Minnesota’s “best player who could still be cut” as the NFL calendar creeps toward the start of summer activities.
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