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		 Vikings' 
		Peterson to be reinstated on Friday 
		
		 
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		[April 17, 2015] 
		(Reuters) - Adrian Peterson is free 
		to resume his playing career, the National Football League said on 
		Thursday, but whether the former Most Valuable Player who was suspended 
		for beating his son returns to his former team is unknown. 
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			 The Minnesota Vikings running back was advised by the NFL that he 
			would be reinstated as an active player on Friday and that he may 
			participate in all scheduled team activities, the league said in a 
			statement. 
			 
			In a letter from NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, Peterson was 
			informed that he is expected to fulfill obligations to authorities 
			in Minnesota and Texas, as well as commitments he made during an 
			April 7 meeting with the commissioner. 
			 
			During his meeting with Goodell, Peterson said he would maintain an 
			ongoing program of counseling and treatment as recommended by 
			medical advisors. 
			 
			The league also said any further violation of the personal conduct 
			policy by the running back would result in additional discipline, 
			which could include suspension without pay or banishment from the 
			NFL. 
			
			  
			"We look forward to Adrian re-joining the Vikings," the NFL team 
			said in a statement. 
			 
			But Peterson's agent, Ben Dogra, said during the NFL's spring 
			meetings last month that his client would like to leave the Vikings 
			for a new team. 
			 
			Peterson, the 2012 NFL Most Valuable Player, was suspended on Nov. 
			18 after he pleaded no contest in Texas to a misdemeanor assault 
			charge and was ordered to pay a $4,000 fine and perform community 
			service. 
			 
			Following his September indictment, Peterson, 30, sat out one game 
			before being reinstated by the Vikings. When team sponsors expressed 
			their anger, Peterson was placed on the commissioner's exempt list, 
			which took him off the field but allowed him to keep his $11.75 
			million salary. 
			 
			After Peterson's no contest plea, the NFL took Peterson off the 
			exempt list and suspended him, saying he would not be considered for 
			reinstatement before April 15. 
			 
			Peterson was arrested last September on a felony child abuse charge 
			for disciplining his 4-year-old son by repeatedly striking him with 
			a thin tree branch called a switch. 
			
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			Several sponsors abandoned the Vikings after Peterson was indicted 
			and endorsement deals the six-time Pro Bowl running back had with 
			apparel maker Nike and others was abruptly dropped after his plea 
			deal was announced. 
			 
			Blessed with a rare combination of speed and power, Peterson has 
			rushed for 10,190 yards over his eight-year NFL and has scored 91 
			touchdowns. 
			 
			He admitted striking his son with the switch but insisted that he 
			loves his son and was only administering the form of punishment he 
			himself received as a child growing up in Texas. 
			 
			(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles and Steve Ginsburg 
			in Washington; Editing by Frank Pingue) 
			
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