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Vikings announce that Adrian Peterson will enter their ring of honor during 2026 season

EAGAN, Minn. (AP) — Adrian Peterson is getting inducted into the Minnesota Vikings’ ring of honor.

The Vikings announced Monday that Peterson would be inducted during halftime of a home game at some point during the upcoming season. A date wasn’t announced, as the NFL isn’t releasing its full 2026 schedule until Thursday.

Peterson received the news while visiting the Vikings’ facility Thursday to speak to rookies and provide content for the team’s entertainment network. The Vikings posted a video on X that showed Peterson’s reaction.

Peterson will become the 29th person to join the Vikings’ ring of honor.

Peterson played for the Vikings from 2007-16. He owns franchise records for career yards rushing (11,747) and touchdown runs (97).

He ranks fifth in NFL history with 14,918 yards rushing in a career that also included stops in New Orleans (2017), Arizona (2017), Washington (2018-19), Detroit (2020), Tennessee (2021) and Seattle (2021).

He rushed for 2,097 yards for the Vikings while earning MVP honors in 2012.

“From the moment we selected Adrian in the 2007 NFL draft, he proved to be a transformational player for the Minnesota Vikings,” Vikings owner/president Mark Wilf said in a statement. “His historic 2012 MVP season will be rightfully remembered by fans, but Adrian’s consistent production over 10 seasons in Minnesota is what firmly established him as an all-time Viking and one of the greatest to ever play this game.

“It will be a privilege to welcome Adrian into the Vikings ring of honor this year, and we know it’s a matter of time before we are also celebrating his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.”

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AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Florida attorney general issues investigative subpoena to the NFL over the Rooney Rule

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has issued a subpoena to the NFL as his office investigates whether the league has committed potential civils rights violations related to the Rooney Rule and the league's other employment practices, policies and programs. Uthmeier, who threatened possible enforcement actions against the league in March if it didn’t suspend the 23-year-old rule, sent the subpoena along with a letter to NFL executive vice president and attorney Ted Ullyot on Wednesday. The subpoena commands the league to appear at the attorney general’s office in Tallahassee, Florida, on June 12. It asks the league to produce extensive documents, including “all diversity reports, coaching census data, or demographic surveys that reflect the race and sex of coaching staffs of the teams from 2017 to the present.” "All in all, the Rooney Rule and the NFL’s related ‘inclusive hiring’ policies — and the NFL’s representations about these policies — continue to raise significant concerns under Florida law,” Uthmeier wrote in the letter.
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