It felt out of the blue when a reporter asked Kevin O’Connell about Jordan Addison’s arrest at O’Connell’s end-of-the-year press conference. Still, Seminole Indian Police had arrested the Minnesota Vikings’ star receiver at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Tampa, Fla., a day before the press conference.
“I just learned about that very, very recently,” O’Connell said in response. “I don’t want to speculate on that in any way, shape, or form. We have to get as many facts and find out exactly what happened.”
Police in Florida arrested Addison at 3:46 a.m. on January 12 and charged him with trespassing.
According to a Hillsborough County criminal affidavit, the casino staff asked Addison several times to leave the restaurant. Addison refused and had to be redirected toward the exit several times during his escort out of the building. He has a February 3 hearing on his misdemeanor trespassing charge.
Jordan Addison was released in the afternoon after posting $500 bail. His agent, Tim Younger, said he believed Addison would be exonerated.
On Jordan’s behalf, his legal team has already initiated the investigation, identified witnesses, and we are reviewing the viability of a claim for false arrest. He looks forward to the legal process and upon full investigation, we are confident Mr. Addison will be exonerated.
— Younger & Associates/QB Limited/Tim Younger (@YoungerAssoc) January 13, 2026
It is Addison’s fourth incident since the Vikings drafted Addison 23rd overall in 2023.
In 2023, a Minnesota State Patrol Officer cited Addison for speeding and reckless driving after he caught Addison going 140 mph down I-94 just after 3 a.m. on a Thursday.
In July 2024, Los Angeles police charged Addison with driving under the influence after they found him asleep in a Rolls-Royce near LAX. He had at least a blood alcohol concentration of .08% at the time of arrest, but pleaded it down to a “wet reckless” a year later.
In Week 5 this season, the Vikings also benched Addison during the first quarter of their game in London. Addison missed a walkthrough in Ware, a town north of London, where the team stayed and practiced.
The Vikings insist these are outlier incidences. Many players consider him a good teammate, and J.J. McCarthy and Carson Wentz developed instant chemistry with him. Kevin O’Connell and Kwesi Adofo-Mensah have also vouched for his character.
Adofo-Mensah and the front office must decide if they want to retain Addison, who has averaged 885 receiving yards in three seasons with the Vikings. They must determine whether they will retain Addison or re-sign free agent Jalen Nailor, but they likely can’t keep both, given their cap situation.
Addison may demand WR1 money, given he’d be many teams’ top receiver. His presence alone frees up space for Justin Jefferson, because teams cannot avoid using resources to defend Addison. The Vikings have a team option for Addison next season before he becomes an unrestricted free agent in two years.
“Any decision you make with Nailor or anybody else is about the short-term and the long-term of that room. Jordan is unique because 99% of the days that Jordan Addison is a Viking, he is a joy to be around.
“He is incredibly intelligent, confident, [and] responsible, and then [like with] all of us, it’s what are you like on those 1% of those days? Is it the type of thing that draws attention or not? Obviously, that’s something we have to consider when you’re talking about long-term ramifications of a contract extension.”
Addison plays a vital role in Minnesota’s offense by helping draw attention away from Jefferson. Still, the Vikings don’t need a WR1, and they may not have cap space to accommodate both, given their spending spree last offseason.
The question with Addison is less about whether they need him, specifically, and more about whether there’s another way to draw attention away from Jefferson.
It would be easier to replace Addison if T.J. Hockenson could be a pseudo-WR2, as he was when the Vikings originally traded for him. However, he hasn’t been the deep threat he once was since Kerby Joseph hit him low in Week 16 of the 2023 season.
If Higbee’s MRI confirms what is expected, this will be the 2nd torn ACL to a TE (Hockenson) this season as a result of a hit from Lions S Kerby Joseph. Dirty? https://t.co/AOv9ijNj0P pic.twitter.com/tu6XnD7iLd
— ACL Recovery Club (@ACLrecoveryCLUB) January 15, 2024
Hockenson had 914 yards in Detroit and with the Vikings in 2022, the year Minnesota traded for him. He had 960 yards before Joseph’s hit altered his career. In the two years since he tore his ACL and MCL on Joseph’s hit, Hockenson has 893 yards in 25 games played.
Last season, he had 438 yards in 15 games. Hockenson’s drop in production was partly because he stayed in as an extra blocker when Christian Darrisaw was out. It also may have been because J.J. McCarthy’s growing pains resulted in a drop in production for all of Minnesota’s pass-catchers. Still, Hockenson seems to have lost a step since the Joseph hit.
Meanwhile, McCarthy had instant chemistry with Nailor, who broke out this season. After only accumulating 208 receiving yards in his first two seasons, Nailor had 414 yards last year and 444 this year.
Neither player is Addison, and maybe the Vikings are better off extending their mercurial receiver. Still, he served a three-game suspension for his “wet reckless” this season, and he doesn’t provide much value when he’s off the field. He can’t create more distractions on the field than the attention he demands when he’s on [italics] it.
Jordan Addison is a star receiver worthy of being a WR1 on many teams. Still, if he’s not worth the off-the-field distractions he creates, the Vikings have options. Justin Jefferson is their WR1. They just need enough around him to prevent defenses from taking him away.