He's not following the TB12 method to the letter, per se, but Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins has become a devotee of some of the health concepts Patriots quarterback Tom Brady has credited with helping him play into his 40s.
Cousins, like Brady, Saints quarterback Drew Brees and Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, is on a strict health regimen that cuts out products like wheat, dairy and eggs. The fitness plan he's developed with trainer Joe Tofferi is focused on helping Cousins keep his muscles long and limber, rather than trying to put on weight.
The quarterback's plan might not be quite as strict as Brady's — Cousins has talked about his cheat days at places like Shake Shack, Portillo's and the State Fair — but he's among the quarterbacks who believe one of the keys to a longer career is a more detailed diet.
"A lot of what he's doing, or what I've learned about what he's doing, I had actually — with different people that I run into — saw the same messaging, in terms of what to eat, what not to eat, the importance of sleep, the importance of [soft] tissue work," Cousins said. "Everybody I was seeing was really reiterating the same things, so when you see it coming from one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time, you see it coming from the people you work with, you say, 'Maybe there's something to this.' I think it affirmed some of those approaches.
"They certainly were different than maybe what I was doing early in my college career, so there were some changes that needed to be made. But now, having gotten into my routine and being in Year 7 [of my career], I think I've gotten a good handle on what I want to do to take care of myself and prolong my career. I think there are a lot of similarities to what Tom's doing. It's no accident that he's played as well as long as he has. It matters to him, and he's been intentional about the process to be able to do that."
Here are some other Vikings notes before the team faces the Patriots on Sunday afternoon:
2. With both Xavier Rhodes and Mackensie Alexander questionable for Sunday's game, the Vikings could turn to Holton Hill in a bigger role on Sunday. Indications at the end of the week were that Hill would likely start in the Vikings' base defense if Rhodes isn't able to play with a right hamstring injury; Rhodes practiced for the first time all week on Friday, and said he got a "couple plays," and did enough to help him be more confident about the possibility of playing on Sunday.
If Rhodes is cleared after a pre-game workout, I'll be curious to see how much he's able to open things up, and if the injury has any effect on the rest of his kinetic chain. From what I've heard this week, while the Vikings avoided the worst- case scenarios with Rhodes' injury, his hamstring injury is still significant enough that it's not as though he'd be playing completely free. If he does play — and given the significance of the game, the Vikings could certainly pursue the possibility — it will be interesting to see how effective Rhodes can be.