Santa Fe New Mexican

Vikings bid farewell to Mankato training facility after 52 years

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MANKATO, Minn. — Minnesota Vikings equipment manager Dennis Ryan loaded the team’s pads and bags into a truck headed for the Twin Cities, just as he has so many times on the team’s last day of training camp. He will never have to do it again. The Vikings bid farewell to Mankato on Tuesday after 52 years of training camps in the college town located about 90 miles south of Minneapoli­s. So ended one of the longestrun­ning relationsh­ips between an NFL team and a satellite camp location.

“I really enjoyed my time down here,” said Vikings tight end Kyle Rudolph, who made his seventh and final trek to Mankato. “The fans are great, the energy is great. The facilities are incredible. We have everything we need. We’ll definitely miss it.”

The Vikings will move training camp to their new practice facility when it opens in the St. Paul suburb of Eagan next year. The state-of-the-art complex will have all the comforts and equipment the team needs without the hassle and cost of transporti­ng so much of it to another town for two to three weeks every summer.

But what the new place will not be able to provide is the sense of camaraderi­e and bonding that is forged with so many from the organizati­on staying in a college dorm for such a long stretch of time.

“To be honest, I was probably not in the greatest mood about having to stay in a dorm again, but my experience down here has been awesome,” said quarterbac­k Sam Bradford, who made his lone trip to Mankato this season. “It’s been better than I probably could have imagined it would be and I think a lot of it has to do with just the fans.”

Thousands turned out for the final practice on Tuesday, first sitting in the Minnesota State, Mankato stadium to watch a morning walkthroug­h and then packing bleachers and standing alongside a fence next to the practice fields in the afternoon as the Vikings worked out one more time.

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