Vikings linebacker Anthony Barr was for the most part stuck in Los Angeles over the past month. There aren't many areas better to reside, but the Southern California native was ready to leave home, and couldn't.
"I was real bored," Barr said on Wednesday. "The longest four weeks, really. It was a good time for me to kind of decompress a little bit and get my mind right for this."
And it didn't take long for the Vikings to place the ninth overall pick in the NFL draft all around the front seven when he arrived for mandatory minicamp this week. The rookie has been used quite a bit in his return since an NFL rule restricted him from coming to the Twin Cities.
Barr was thrown into the shuffle at linebacker and used Wednesday at outside linebacker in both the base 4-3 and nickel defensive packages. The Vikings also incorporated Barr, listed at 6-5 and 255 pounds, with his hand in the dirt as a defensive end during pass rushing situations.
That is something Barr said he never was asked to do while playing linebacker for two seasons at UCLA after switching from running back. Barr was available for the team's rookie minicamp in May but had to wait until he finished his finals to return with the team because of an NFL policy for rookies who haven't graduated and haven't finished their semester or quarter.
UCLA's spring quarter concluded June 13, the final day of the Vikings' organized team activities session.
"There's a little bit of a learning curve missing OTAs, but it kind of is what it is," Barr said. "I've just got to catch up and continue to watch film and continue to get better."
Barr didn't enjoy being away from the team during OTAs, but that doesn't mean he wasn't working. Linebackers coach Adam Zimmer flew to California multiple times to meet with Barr and gave him individual drills to practice during the layoff. The rookie also spent time watching film with the coaching staff via video chat.