Kyle Rudolph, the last player off the practice field, walked through the gate, then paused.
First impression: The hot afternoon sun doesn't seem so bad when a 6-6, 260-pound guy is blocking it out. And then he shakes your hand. Engulfs it, really, your hand disappearing into a tape-covered paw.
You think, "Aha. Now it makes sense."
Rudolph is the Vikings starting tight end, feeling better than he has in two years, able to once again put a linebacker or two in his rearview mirror, reliable enough to be an XXX-L-sized security blanket for quarterback Christian Ponder. The two are practically joined at the hip pads. Friends off the field, football's equivalent of a battery on it.
"He gets open," Ponder said, simply. "And if he's barely open, I'm going to give him the ball. He has such great mismatches and he has such a catching radius it's unbelievable."
Catching radius is another way of saying Rudolph is one of those guys who catches anything that comes near him, increasing a quarterback's margin of error exponentially. The reasons are simple: He is very big, he has very long arms and hands that are both super-sized and soft.
The man does not drop the ball.
According to ESPN Stats & information, Rudolph dropped just one of the 37 passes thrown to him during his rookie season in 2011. He finished with 26 catches for 249 yards and three touchdowns.