McKinnie puts focus on his
play, not future
Aug/06/08 10:24 PM Filed in:
Bryant
McKinnie
MANKATO -- Vikings left
tackle Bryant McKinnie faces plenty of unknowns as
he prepares for his seventh NFL season.
He faces four charges, including one felony, stemming
from a brawl outside a Miami nightclub in February, and
he is scheduled for a Sept. 24 court date. (He does not
need to appear.) That incident also made McKinnie a
repeat offender of the league's conduct policy, meaning
he could face a multi-game suspension from the NFL.
McKinnie, who met with Commissioner Roger Goodell in
June, said Wednesday he has not heard from the league
and isn't worrying about things at this point. "I
actually have been focused on football," he said. "I
feel like some of the stuff that happened in the
offseason has been my motivation to play well this
season. I've been pretty focused."
There is good reason for this. In March, Vikings coach
Brad Childress admitted to reporters that he faced a
potentially "difficult" decision on McKinnie's future.
Childress' message almost certainly was conveyed in a
face-to-face discussion with McKinnie, who received a
seven-year contract extension worth $48.5 million in
2006. McKinnie said Childress and the Vikings have been
supportive throughout this process.
McKinnie isn't in a situation to talk about his case --
his Florida-based attorney has asked the state to allow
McKinnie to enter a pre-trial diversion program that
could lead to the charges being dismissed -- but said
he's confident things will work out.
"People may not know the whole story," McKinnie said.
"Sometimes it might get portrayed as one way when that
might not be the case. ... I guess when everything is
done and over with then you could possibly talk about
it. It depends on how everything goes."
Meanwhile, McKinnie is spending much of camp locked in
one-on-one battles with Pro Bowl defensive end Jared
Allen, who led the NFL with 15.5 sacks last season.
That experience should be very valuable considering
McKinnie's goal is to improve his pass blocking.
(startribune.com)