Kevin O’Connell Has Vikings Headache He Wasn't Expecting

Former NFL writer Dianna Russini finds herself at the center of controversy as her personal connections with the Vikings' head coach are scrutinized after a traffic ticket incident.

The Minnesota Vikings somehow found their way into one of the offseason’s messiest NFL stories, and the path runs straight through Dianna Russini and Kevin O’Connell.

What started as a report about Russini - the former NFL writer for The Athletic - allegedly using her connections to help her get out of a traffic ticket has now turned into a Vikings problem. According to Pro Football Talk, the coach involved was O’Connell, and the exchange wasn’t a FaceTime call at all. Russini reportedly showed the officer a text conversation between herself and the Vikings head coach.

The incident, as described in the report, happened in January while Russini was working on the story that the Buffalo Bills were firing coach Sean McDermott. She was said to be on her phone a lot while driving, and when questioned, she told the officer she was talking to former New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll, who she said was interested in the job.

Then came the key detail: Russini asked whether the officer was a Giants or Jets fan. He said he was neither and, “unfortunately”, a Vikings fan. That’s when she pulled up the texts with O’Connell.

And then, as if the moment needed one more jab, she added, “their quarterback sucks.”

The officer returned to his vehicle, came back, and ultimately let her off with a warning.

That alone would be enough to keep the story humming, but it also raises a bigger question about Russini’s previous reporting on the Vikings. Adam Patrick of the Viking Age and Thor Nystrom have both pointed out that she was heavily tied to the Aaron Rodgers buzz around Minnesota last season, a move that was reportedly blocked by then-GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah. Russini was also the first to report in January that Adofo-Mensah had taken paternity leave, then softened that report after criticism by noting that the Vikings had been supportive of the leave.

Now the obvious question hangs there: what exactly was O’Connell telling her?

There’s also the matter of what this might mean for the Vikings’ quarterback situation. O’Connell has said the competition is open and free, but the appearance of a coach with apparent ties to Russini’s reporting makes the whole thing look a little different. If O’Connell was previously pushing for a veteran option, what does it mean that the team has one in camp now?

However it shakes out, the Vikings have been dragged into a story they probably wanted no part of. With training camp less than a month away, they can only hope it stays there and doesn’t spill into anything on the field.

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