Voice of Vikings Back On-Air

There’s been a lot of drama going on during the early portion of the 2026 Minnesota Vikings offseason.
We’ve seen a couple coaches move on, and be moved on from, before the dam broke Friday when the general manager was fired in untimely fashion. Since, previously unrevealed schisms have been reported and faulty leadership throughout the organization has been exposed.
But in the middle of it all, one story caught more immediate attention from MN Vikings fans across the world than all the other drama surrounding our favorite football team.
It all started when radio voice of the Vikings, Paul Allen, made an unassuming joke Friday morning — over whether paid protestors receive hazard pay — while on-air at KFAN for his popular weekday radio show — “Nine to Noon”.
Paul Allen back on-air at KFAN
In the midst of the chaos in Minneapolis, it took one big social media account aggregating the clip on Twitter for the entire world to lose its mind. When his show came back on the air last Monday morning, it began with a recorded PA apology, followed by an announcement that he was taking some time off.
That led to a flurry of rumors that Allen — who’s been on-air at KFAN since 1998 — could be fired or driven out of his seat by one side of the angry political mob. But after a week off-air, Paul Allen returned on Monday, February 2, meaning cooler heads prevailed at iHeartMedia.
PAUL ALLEN IS BACK BABY
— Minnesota Sports Fan (@realmnsportsfan) February 2, 2026
HUGE W @KFAN1003
Thankfully, the big suits at iHeart did NOT force the bosses at KFAN to make the singular biggest mistake of the sports radio station’s 15 years on the FM 100.3 dial full-time.
But that felt like far from a certainty last week, when the heat was cranked up so high on PA that, that even I felt obligated to put something on the internet in his support.
Hey Vikings, KFAN — you are welcome
Nobody really cares what Eric Strack thinks about most things. I’ve never met PA in any form or fashion, either. But MinnesotaSportsFan.com gets millions and millions of visitors every year.
Trust me (or don’t), but in nearly ten years of running a website that regularly spreads rumors/reports that teams, players and even media don’t want spread — I can promise you there are powerful people in all of your favorite organizations watching and reading whatever gains steam on the internet.
If the Wilfs, or higher ups at iHeart were doing that last week, someone had to be there to tell the them what the average Vikings fan really thought about the situation. We all know — when it comes to hot-button issues like this — nobody else in the old Google search will.
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