An arbitrator on Friday upheld the NFL's suspension of Adrian Peterson, likely ending any chance Peterson had to return to the playing field this year.
The only path left for the Vikings star is a legal appeal, and the team's season will end in just over two weeks.
Harold Henderson, former NFL executive vice president for labor relations and the hearing officer appointed by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, ruled that Peterson must remain away from the league and all team activities until at least April 15. Peterson will be eligible to return then if he fulfills requirements set by Goodell last month, when he suspended Peterson for the rest of the regular season.
The league's 2012 Most Valuable Player will also forfeit six game checks from the 2014 season, costing him $4.1 million from his $11.75 million salary.
In an interview with ESPN, Peterson compared his case to that of Ray Rice, the former Baltimore running back, whose indefinite suspension for a domestic assault case was overturned by an independent arbitrator Dec. 1.
"I've been made an example out of," Peterson told ESPN. "It kind of baffles me how — I have nothing but love for Ray Rice, I'm happy he has the chance to play. But it's like, how did Ray Rice get reinstated before me, a team has a chance to pick him up, but I don't have the opportunity to come back until April? When has that happened in any other case in the NFL, ever?"
The NFL Players Association, which asked that Henderson step aside as arbitrator before the hearing because of his ties to the league, said it was considering "immediate legal remedies."
The Vikings declined to comment on the news.