MANKATO – Percy Harvin showed up at Seahawks training camp with a hip injury. Shocking, right?
It's always something in Percy's world.
As the Vikings kicked off training camp Friday with their first practice, news from the Pacific Northwest brought another reminder that the organization made the right decision in parting ways with Harvin, regardless of his immense talent and impact on the offense.
According to reports, Harvin has a hip injury that might require surgery and, if so, could end his first season in Seattle before it begins.
Harvin reportedly will seek a second opinion Tuesday in New York. Hopefully, Harvin receives a favorable diagnosis and can recover without surgery. Hopefully, he can continue to play with the same reckless and fearless style without any physical impediment.
I say hopefully because Harvin's injury should not cause any gloating among Vikings employees and fans, not even privately. Anyone who takes delight in an athlete's injury needs to reassess their priorities.
But Harvin's injury does provide more evidence that life with Percy is rarely smooth sailing and that his off-field drama and injury concerns made his departure an unavoidable outcome, even if unloading a game-changing player in the prime of his career seems illogical and foolish.
Initially, I supported the notion that the Vikings had to do everything in their power to make the relationship work, or at least make it function to the degree that Harvin would not become a distraction or disruptive presence in the locker room.