Sharrif Floyd had an urge to see the stars and catch another "Old Wife."
He and his Vikings teammate Linval Joseph had limited their offseason travels after January's first-round playoff loss. The defensive tackles took a few breaks from the team's training facility to pepper in stops at such favorite Minneapolis kitchens as Smack Shack and Brasa.
"No fun vacations at all," Joseph said.
Well ... Joseph spoke for himself. Floyd called Joseph's father in July and set up a return to St. Croix — this time on his own. The U.S. Virgin Islands-born Joseph had introduced Floyd to his family and ocean fishing during a 2014 vacation, months into a fledgling friendship that included the Old Wife, an oddly nicknamed Caribbean catch.
"Best fish I've had in my life," Floyd said.
Two years, 33 games and a pile of emptied plates later, Joseph and Floyd gravitate even closer toward each other. At a combined 630 pounds, they form one of the team's strongest bonds, pillars on a defensive line key to Vikings' championship aspirations.
Breaking barriers
Joseph's career began with the Giants in 2010, and he would start the following year in their run to a Super Bowl title. He still bristles at how he was treated as a rookie in New York. Joseph was forced into the background, relying on veterans to ask questions during meetings. His rookie dinner was the typical gluttonous splurge that ate into a lot of the draftee's signing bonus. With the Vikings, he wants to end those "traditions."
"Nobody is trying to run up a bill like in the old days," Joseph said. "When I was a rookie, they really was trying to — 'Oh, let me get three double shots of Louis XIII or Hennessy X.O.' I mean just like buy another shot for no reason. And don't even drink it, just order it."