Jared Allen*
Steve Hutchinson*
Bryant McKinnie*
Adrian Peterson*
Kevin Williams*
Sidney Rice
Heath Farwell
* = Starters
Minnesota has the most players voted to the Pro Bowl this year with eight.
Pro Bowl players on the two Super Bowl teams will not participate in the Pro Bowl.
no
No. The Pro Bowl is an exhibition game with little true meaning other than its value as a showcase for fans and a free trip to Hawaii for players.
no you have to not make the superbowl
1) Super Bowl IV: Kansas City Chiefs 23, Vikings 7 2) Super Bowl VIII: Miami Dolphins 24, Vikings 7 3) Super Bowl IX: Pittsburgh Steelers 16, Vikings 6 4) Super Bowl XI: Oakland Raiders 32, Vikings 14
Pro Bowl players on the two Super Bowl teams will not participate in the Pro Bowl.
Now that the Pro Bowl is played the week between the Conference Championship games and the Super Bowl, players on Super Bowl teams who make the Pro Bowl are considered Pro Bowlers and they do get paid.
All first team Pro Bowl players get paid. All Alternates who accept the invitation to play get paid. If an Alternate is named to the tem and declines, they are not considered to be Pro Bowl players and they do not get paid.
none actually there are three teams that do not have players in the pro bowl this year. St. Louis, Buffalo, and Tennessee.
All first team Pro Bowl players get paid. All Alternates who accept the invitation to play get paid. If an Alternate is named to the tem and declines, they are not considered to be Pro Bowl players and they do not get paid.
money
Vikings WR Randy Moss
Nope
JW Marriott.
the answer is NO because the players have to train hard the cant just take a vacation.
No, I am pretty sure that they will not.
No. Players from both teams did not participate in the 2011 Pro Bowl, due to the fact that they were playing each other the next week in Super Bowl XLV. This has always been the case, ever since the Pro Bowl was moved to the week prior to the Super Bowl.