Monday at Winter Park was, in many ways, just another typical getaway day at the end of a long NFL season.
The utter exhaustion from a season that began back on April 23 with more than 90 percent of the team showing up for voluntary workouts was palpable. And the sting from Saturday night's 24-10 first-round NFC playoff loss at Green Bay still hurt as players gathered personal belongings, scurried to flights bound for warmer climes and discussed the need to take time to get right physically, mentally and, in some cases, surgically.
"I'm not doing a thing for a few months," said defensive end Jared Allen, who will have shoulder surgery after the Pro Bowl.
That was the prevailing mood in every corner of the room, except one. In the back, right corner stood not only the face of this franchise but its 217-pound generator, still pumping at maximum nuclear capacity with no intentions of letting anyone relax too long or ever lose sight of the work needed to give the Vikings a chance at winning their first Super Bowl.
Yes, Adrian Peterson isn't satisfied. No, Peterson is not willing to rest beyond a few days, if that. Heck, the guy even spent part of Monday morning promising to do the unthinkable -- play hard in the Pro Bowl -- and the illogical -- use the Pro Bowl's $50,000 winner's check as motivation for a guy with a $96 million contract.
"It's a bonus," he said. "Guys look at that and say, 'We get this win, we get 50 more racks so we can give it to our mom, our dad, our family or go buy a car.' There's a lot you can do with 50."
People have called him "All Day" since he was a child. Heading into what sounds like an immediate sweat-stained offseason, perhaps it's time to call him, "All Day, Every Day."
Peterson fulfilled his goal of returning better than he was before tearing the anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments in his left knee on Christmas Eve 2011. He became the seventh NFL player to rush for 2,000 yards, falling eight yards short of Eric Dickerson's NFL single-season record of 2,105. And yet the indefatigable running back views those accomplishments as the merely the beginning steps en route to a 2,500-yard season and a Super Bowl victory.