MANKATO - That's it. It's over. Vikings training camp is complete.
The doors to the dorms at Gage Hall have been closed. The mountain bikes players and coaches rode around for three weeks have been locked up for good.
Now it's time for the Vikings to turn their attention to their second preseason test, a Friday game against Buffalo. But before we look ahead, here's a rundown of the five most important things we learned during camp:
1 Not even a scary run-in with Cajun food could slow Adrian Peterson's recovery.
On July 30, Peterson had a serving of jambalaya in the dorm cafeteria, suffered a severe allergic reaction to the seafood and felt his face swelling and his breathing passages closing.
An injection of Epinephrine and a trip to the hospital got him right again. And then, the next day in the blazing heat, Peterson effortlessly attacked a strength and conditioning workout that would have weakened even the healthiest civilian.
Yep, that was the strangest episode of what was an eventful three weeks for Peterson. He began camp on the physically unable to perform list but left as an active participant in practice -- less than 33 weeks after having surgery to repair torn ligaments in his left knee.
Is Peterson back to full strength and ready to resume a normal workload? Nope. There's still a ways to go.