MANKATO - Ifeadi Odenigbo turned to a group of unknowing reporters, asking where Vikings rookies were convening for dinner.
Odenigbo, the seventh-round pick, was one of 35 or so Vikings players to report early Sunday afternoon for training camp at the Julia Sears dormitory at Minnesota State University in Mankato. The NFL allows teams to set early report dates for rookies, quarterbacks and injured players for up to a week before veterans are required to show up.
These Vikings will get three extra days before veterans report Wednesday, giving rookies such as Odenigbo a chance to settle into their new homes for the next couple of weeks. However, Mike Zimmer's decision for younger players to bid an early adieu to their summer vacations has a fine point — doing anything possible to make sure these rookies are ready to contribute more than last year's rookies.
"I just felt like it was important," Zimmer said. "I just felt like we wanted to try to get them up to speed as quickly as we can. Last year, a lot of the rookies didn't play as much as they had in the past, so I just figured let's give these guys every opportunity to get them up to speed a little bit quicker."
This is Zimmer's fourth training camp as Vikings head coach and the first time he decided to open camp early.
As some NFL teams fearing injuries tone down rookie work in the offseason, the Vikings ramped it up, Zimmer said.
This comes on the heels of the Vikings' 2016 draft class playing the fewest snaps of any NFL rookie class last season. Zimmer made clear the expectations for this class, highlighted by second-round running back Dalvin Cook, are to make a difference.
"The other thing we did in the spring, we'd have three OTAs, but we'd practice [rookies] on the other two days," Zimmer said. "They probably got another — before it's all said and done — another 10 practices, basically. With the way the NFL is going now with younger and younger players, I just thought it was important. And hopefully a lot of these guys will be playing."