Published July 02, 2009 11:01 pm - If Brett Favre does indeed join the Minnesota Vikings for training camp, says the owner of one campus-area eatery, "there’s not enough restaurants, bars and hotel rooms."
Businesses eager to see Favre
QB would be extra draw for Vikings camp
By Dan Linehan
Free Press Staff Writer
MANKATO
—
What if Brett Favre comes to Vikings training camp in Mankato?
“It’s just kind of my general opinion that if Brett Favre comes to town that there’s not enough restaurants, bars and hotel rooms just to take care of the media that’s coming to town,” said Jon Mueller, owner of Johnny B’s restaurant, which is just across the street from camp.
And while the 16-year Packers quarterback hasn’t signed with the Vikings, Mueller is confident he’ll show up in Mankato when training camp starts July 31.
“We’re moving ahead as if he were already signed,” he said.
On June 15, Favre told an HBO talk show host that he’s considering playing with the Vikings. At the time, he said he’d had surgery on his throwing arm about 21⁄2 weeks prior, and that it takes four or five weeks to determine if the surgery is successful.
He has not spoken publicly since then, but that
hasn’t stopped the speculation, especially in Mankato.
The Vikings and the constellation of groups that work with them to help run training camp at Minnesota State University aren’t comfortable talking about “what-if” scenarios involving Brett Favre.
“People are kind of afraid to talk about the whole Brett Favre thing until an official announcement has been made,” said Anna Thill, president of the Greater Mankato Convention and Visitors Bureau as she walked out of a meeting with a Vikings marketing official.
Shane Bowyer, a professor of entrepreneurship at MSU, co-owns the Sports Institute, which operates training camp on a contract with the Vikings.
He declined to speculate about why there might be extra interest in training camp this year.
“It’s Vikings camp, and there’s always going to be excitement around that,” he said.
Camp will be shorter this year, though.
NFL rules say training camps can’t start more than two weeks before the team’s