Dalvin Cook has the tools and talents to be one of the NFL’s most explosive running backs, but his history of injuries have kept him from breaking out. After rehabbing from a litany of injuries in 2018, Cook enters the Minnesota Vikings training camp completely healthy, and ready to be as effective as he used to be.

“I was brought here to do a job, and my job is to carry the football as many times as they want to hand it to me,” Cook said Saturday (via Pro Football Talk). “I was just unfortunate enough [to have] some injuries and some bumps in the road. But now that I’m having fun, back to being me, however many times [quarterback] Kirk [Cousins] drops back and hands me that football, I’m going to show enough, run it as hard as I can.”

While Cook is ready to run as much as the Vikings want or need him to, head coach Mike Zimmer isn’t thinking about anything like that just yet.

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“Let’s do what we need to do to win and not worry about who gets the carries or how many yards they get,” Zimmer said.

The Vikings may be looking to run the ball more, but Cook might not be asked with carrying the ball 20 times per game. Durability is one of the biggest things that NFL teams focus on, and with the Vikings running back already having a history of injuries, the team could play it safe with him and allow him to ease back into a role that allows him to show off his skills.