Vikings’ Tapeh
Found ‘Better Future’ Here
It makes a nice story to report that
Thomas Tapeh is back in Minnesota where he played for St. Paul
Johnson High School and the Gophers. With a reported five-year, six
million dollar contract, the Minnesota Vikings brought the 28-year-old fullback
here this winter where his mother and other family still reside. He’s
happy to be back in town and likes his new team, but told Sports
Headliners earlier this month that as a free agent this winter he
was determined to join whatever NFL team provided the best opportunity.
“It’s a business,” said Tapeh, who will make New Jersey his off-season
home.
He played for four seasons in Philadelphia
after being drafted on the fifth round by the Eagles. Playing for a
“better future,” Tapeh intrigued the Vikings enough to offer him the
best contract of his career and a role he’s accustomed to, sacrificing
his body while blocking for others. In the NFL he has rushed 22 times
for 69 yards and no touchdowns. As a featured runner for the Gophers,
he might have achieved those totals in less than four quarters.
In Philly, Tapeh blocked for Brian
Westbrook who has rushed for over 1,200 yards in each of the last
two seasons. Here he will lead the way for Adrian Peterson who
ran for 1,341 yards last season as a rookie and led the NFC in rushing. Tapeh recognizes both Westbrook and Peterson as great backs. “I am
grateful, man. I really am,” he said.
The Vikings will depend on their running
game led by Peterson and veteran Chester Taylor. Defenses will
crowd the line of scrimmage and the combat will be demanding and nasty
including for Tapeh who at 6-1, 240 will block defenders of varying
sizes and temperaments.
What have the Vikings’ coaches told him
about his opportunity here? “This game, the nature of the beast is
competition,” he said. “You survive by competing. …The opportunity is
what I make of it. That’s how I see it.”
Tapeh has been working at Winter Park,
preparing his body for the season. “The older you get in this game, you
realize you can’t pound the body like you used to when you first came
out,” he said. “It’s more endurance. It’s a marathon. It’s not a
sprint. When I first came in you try to lift heavy, heavy, heavy. You
can’t do that no more. You gotta start light and increase as the time
comes closer to the season.
“But right now you take it slow until
about a month away from the season. Then you pick up. That way you hit
the season full stride. You can’t go crazy no more, man. You get tired
quick.”
What aches and pain linger? “This is
football, man,” Tapeh answered. “What don’t linger? Back, neck, knee,
hip. You name it. That’s why you go slow. You rehab the body.
Basically what we’re doing right now. Just rehabbing. …”
Tapeh wouldn’t complain about any
particular pain. “It’s just pain,” he said laughing. “That’s all it is.
Deal with it. It’s just football. Anything in particular? Nah. Just
got to keep going.”
Coach Brad Childress was the
Eagles’ offensive coordinator for two seasons when Tapeh was a
young player in Philadelphia. He spoke about how Childress was a
patient teacher, explaining in detail how plays worked. Now he’s
reunited with Childress and wants to help the Vikings “win a
championship.”