MANKATO – The Vikings will pack up and leave Mankato on Wednesday and, for the first time in 52 summers, they shall not return.
"This is my 41st season coming down as a player or scout," said Scott Studwell. "Lots of memories. All the friendships formed. Some shenanigans I'd rather not discuss. I guess it still hasn't hit me that we're not coming back."
Training camp moves to the team's new Eagan headquarters in 2018. Meanwhile, 80 miles southwest of Minneapolis, the city that sharpened 13 Hall of Famers and created countless memories — many good, some bad and one very tragic one that cost Korey Stringer his life — will sit eerily quiet for the first time since 1965.
In Vikings lore, Mankato even predates Bud Grant. When the team left Bemidji State for what's now Minnesota State University, Mankato, Norm Van Brocklin was in his final season as head coach.
The franchise was 29-51-4 with no playoff appearances when young Bud and his steely blue eyes swaggered south from Canada. His first order of business was to establish defensive end Jim Marshall and center Mick Tingelhoff as captains. Mick was the introvert. Jim was very much the extrovert from the team's inception in 1961 until he played his 282nd consecutive game in 1979.
Mankato is where Marshall met his wife. Where his mother-in-law, Fran, is 101 going on 102. Where he grabbed an entire NFL roster in his great, big hands and helped Grant shape it on and off the field every summer.
"I love Mankato," Marshall said. "I still get Jake's Pizza delivered to my brother-in-law's place down there. But most of all, Mankato was our chance to develop that family unity that our teams had."
Grant was detail-oriented. He even orchestrated the precise moment players were allowed to leave Mankato for a home preseason game at old Met Stadium in Bloomington.