KeenumRudy

ST. PAUL -- Minnesota Vikings quarterback Case Keenum didn't see much hockey growing up in Abilene, Texas. The sport is something he's taken a liking to since signing with the Vikings last March.
On Thursday, Keenum, along with teammate Kyle Rudolph, took in the Wild's game from a suite at Xcel Energy Center. Keenum was the Hy-Vee First Wild Game fan on the center-ice scoreboard.

Save for a minor-league game a few years back in Texas, Keenum said the Wild's
6-2 win
against the Buffalo Sabres was the first time he's watched a hockey game live.
"Little to none, if I'm being honest," Keenum said of his exposure to hockey as a kid. "My dad was a football coach, grew up a football family and we put on a different kind of pads. But this is impressive to watch; it's been a lot of fun."
If the smile on his face was any indication, Keenum may become a regular at Xcel Energy Center.
"It's great. It's fast, those guys are fast on the ice," Keenum said. "It's faster than I can even watch. I look away one second and the first goal is already going on."
Keenum, in the midst of an MVP-caliber season as the Vikings signal caller, said he got the same sense watching the Wild on Thursday as he did growing up ensconced in the football culture in Texas.
While the sports are very different, hockey in Minnesota and football in Texas are each time-honored traditions to the people who live there.
"They know football and hockey," Keenum said. "They've surpassed my expectations with all of it. But they definitely love their hockey, that's for sure."
Keenum and Rudolph had to be impressed with the loud "Skol!" chant that broke out midway through the third period, a chant Vikings fans began at U.S. Bank Stadium when it opened and have taken with them to numerous stadiums around the NFL this season.

The second-seeded Vikings will open the NFL playoffs next Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium against a to be determined opponent that will be decided this weekend.
If things go their way, and Minnesota is able to take care of business during the NFC playoffs, it's possible the Vikings could become the first team in NFL history to host a Super Bowl in their home stadium.
Super Bowl LII is scheduled for U.S. Bank Stadium on Feb. 4. The Vikings unveiled their playoff motto this week, "Bring it Home."
That's exactly what Keenum plans to do.
"It's been a lot of fun, this year has been incredible and we're looking for it to continue," Keenum said. "It's really exciting, it's more exciting than I can put into words. We're just trying to take it one week at a time and hopefully we'll be in that game."
Related:
- Wild announces time change for Jan. 14 game against Canucks - Becoming Wild: Rudolph on ice