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3 Vikings Defensive Linemen Facing Suspensions

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3 Vikings Defensive Linemen Facing Suspensions

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) ―

When three Minnesota defensive linemen travel to New York this week to meet with the NFL, they could be bringing the Vikings' playoff fate with them.

Jared Allen, Pat Williams and Kevin Williams all will meet with league officials in hopes of avoiding suspensions that would gut the team's biggest strength.

The Williams Wall will appeal four-game suspensions for testing positive for a weight-loss diuretic that is on the list of substances banned by the league.

Allen will be there to talk about a hit on Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers two weeks ago that could leave him vulnerable to a suspension because it came two days after he was fined $50,000 for hits on Houston's Matt Schaub.

Losing three of their biggest -- literally and figuratively -- stars would be a devastating blow for a team that is currently tied with Chicago and Green Bay atop the muddled NFC North. Allen leads the team with eight sacks and Kevin Williams is second with seven. All three play a pivotal role in the team's second-ranked run defense as well.

All three players were unavailable for comment on Monday following a 19-13 loss at Tampa Bay on Sunday.

Kevin and Pat Williams declined comment after the game against the Bucs. When Allen was asked by reporters about what he will discuss with the league officials, he replied, "I have no clue. I'll find out when I get there."

Coach Brad Childress was asked about the situation on Monday.

"I understand the question and I wish I could give you some insight, but those things are going to be between the league and who the league deals with," he said. "So it's difficult for me to comment on that."

On top of it all, starting end Ray Edwards could face a fine for a late hit on Tampa quarterback Jeff Garcia in the second quarter.

Allen has said all season that he never intentionally tries to hurt another player.

"We play a violent sport. We know that and we willingly sign up for it," Allen said earlier this season when talking about the fines being issued by the league. "We don't ever purposely go out to hurt anybody, ever.

"I know for myself, I have the utmost respect for everybody who plays this sport. But at the same time, it's like you can't make rules to tame it down. This is what we do. We're grown men. We make the decision to do what we do."

Childress has defended Allen's hits, saying it can sometimes be impossible for a player running full speed to let up and avoid an opposing player who gets the ball away a split-second sooner.

That was the case against the Packers, when Allen went unblocked and had a free run at Rodgers. Moments after Rodgers released the ball, Allen hit him high and knocked him down, drawing a roughing-the-passer penalty.

When he looked at the tape last week, Childress said it didn't appear to be a helmet-to-helmet hit.

"It's like going from a green light to a red light without a yellow light in between," Childress said. "He's full-speed, on the gas, and the ball comes out. ... Without being a physics major, I don't think there's any way that you can stop on a dime."

Physics aside, that's exactly what could happen to the Vikings' quest for their first playoff appearance since 2004 if the NFL holds true to its historically hard-line nature when it comes to suspensions.

The league has gained a reputation for sticking to its rulings, and that does not bode well for the Vikings.

The issue has been hovering over the team for the last month, ever since Foxsports.com first reported that Kevin and Pat Williams tested positive. But quarterback Gus Frerotte, the only starter available in the locker room on Monday, said he doesn't think it's had a negative affect on the team.

"I don't even worry about it. I don't even think about it. It doesn't bother me at all," Frerotte said. "It has nothing to do with me, so I don't even worry about it."

 

(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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