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Vikings bring back veteran CB Sapp to plug hole in secondary

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. -- Benny Sapp was sitting at home in Florida, waiting for the phone to ring for 10 weeks after he was cut by the Miami Dolphins in Week 1.

The veteran cornerback was starting to wonder if he was ever going to play again, until the Minnesota Vikings finally called this week. Perhaps as desperate for a defensive back as Sapp was for work, the Vikings signed him to a one-year deal on Wednesday to try to help plug the holes in a depleted secondary.

"There was a point in time I thought I wasn't going to play football again," Sapp said. "That was probably the lowest of my career."

Now he finds himself back in Minnesota, surrounded by familiar faces and eager to get back in the middle of the action.

The eighth-year pro played for the Vikings in 2008 and 2009 and became a popular player in the locker room for his chatty and good-natured disposition. He was traded to the Miami Dolphins, who cut him after an opening-game loss to the New England Patriots this season, in which he surrendered a 99-yard touchdown pass to Wes Welker.

"I gave him a big hug when he got here this morning," linebacker Erin Henderson said. "We've been lobbying for him for a while now."

The Vikings just need bodies in the secondary right now and chose Sapp because of his familiarity with their system. Antoine Winfield was placed on injured reserve on Wednesday with a broken clavicle and Chris Cook is not with the team while he deals with domestic battery charges.

"Now in my career, I think I'm capable of playing anywhere they need me to play," Sapp said. "I just hope I can bring that hard work and effort."

Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

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