EAGAN, Minn. – Vikings coach Mike Zimmer announced defensive end Danielle Hunter had successful surgery on Tuesday to repair a herniated disk in his neck and is done for the season.
While the Vikings coach did not relay a specific timeline for his pass rusher’s recovery, he said Hunter “should be back and playing football again.”
Hunter notched back-to-back seasons with 14.5 sacks while earning Pro Bowl honors in 2018 and 2019.
Zimmer admitted Wednesday he knew Hunter’s injury was more serious than he initially led on.
Hunter participated in the Vikings’ first training camp practice on Aug. 14 where he sustained the injury. Three days later when asked why the defensive end missed a day of practice, Zimmer said Hunter had “a little tweak, he’ll be alright.”
That was not the case.
Zimmer continued to refer to Hunter’s injury as a tweak throughout the month of August. Hunter was then placed on injured reserve on Sept. 9.
“When you guys give me crap about this thing being a ‘tweak’, when it all started, he woke up and thought he slept on his neck wrong,” Zimmer said. “So that’s why it was a tweak.”
Hunter had an MRI on his neck “sometime during training camp,” according to Zimmer, at which point the coach said he was aware that the injury was more than a tweak.
Sources told ESPN that the Vikings initially anticipated a six- to eight-week timetable for Hunter’s stay on IR, and that his injury was classified with a “major” designation. The 25-year-old was seen working with athletic trainers during practice throughout September on a rehab field and went to New York to receive a second opinion on his injury at the beginning of October.
Hunter weighed in after his surgery, calling it a “success” and thanked fans for their support.
Last season, Hunter became the fastest player ever to record 50.0 career sacks and remains the 18th highest paid defensive end ($14.4 million/year) after signing a five-year extension back in June 2018.