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The last Eagles-Vikings game was special for Mychal Kendricks; this time, he is barred from attending

Former Eagles linebacker played against his brother at the Linc last January. Eric Kendricks will be there again Sunday, but Mychal Kendricks will be in limbo.

Eagles' Mychal Kendricks takes the field before the Philadelphia Eagles play the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship game in Philadelphia, PA on January 21, 2018. DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer
Eagles' Mychal Kendricks takes the field before the Philadelphia Eagles play the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship game in Philadelphia, PA on January 21, 2018. DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff PhotographerRead mored

When the Eagles faced the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC championship game on Jan. 21, members of the Kendricks family wore special T-shirts, with half of a horned Viking head spliced onto half of a fearsome-looking Eagle head.

Eagles linebacker Mychal Kendricks was facing his younger brother, Vikings linebacker Eric Kendricks, for the right to go to the Super Bowl. It was a story that gained national attention, with ESPN interviewing their mother, Yvonne Thagon, at the concession stand where she worked when the boys played for Herbert Hoover High in Fresno, Calif.

On Sunday, the Vikings will visit Lincoln Financial Field again. Eric Kendricks again will take the field, as a defensive leader for Minnesota. Mychal Kendricks said Thursday he would like to be there as well, "if I can get in."

In fact, he can't, after being indefinitely suspended from the NFL; suspended players can't even buy a ticket and go to a game.

So, there won't be a gathering of extended family, or any whimsical T-shirts.

Mychal Kendricks' weekend plans are uncertain, much like the rest of his life, right now.

"It's been very emotional," said Kendricks, whose three-game stint with the Seattle Seahawks ended Tuesday, when the suspension was announced. "I just pray, and try to stay positive."

Kendricks, 28, pleaded guilty to insider trading on Sept. 6 in a federal court in Philadelphia. He awaits sentencing in January, for a prison term that could be as long as 25 years but likely will be much shorter, given that he cooperated with authorities investigating the scheme to leverage inside stock information provided by a friend, Damilare Sonoiki, a Harvard-educated, Goldman Sachs analyst turned sitcom writer.

The Eagles released Kendricks in May, apparently to get out from under his $7.6-million salary-cap figure, thinking that with Jordan Hicks healing from the Achilles' tear that ended his 2017 season early, Kendricks projected as a part-time linebacker.

Could the federal investigation have played a role in that decision? A source close to the situation said the team was aware Kendricks was being investigated. The Cleveland Browns, who signed Kendricks for one year and $3.5 million after the Eagles made him a free agent, released him on Aug. 30, when news broke of the charges and his planned guilty plea. They said they had been led to believe that Kendricks was cooperating as a victim in the case, not that he would be charged.

"Four years ago, I participated in insider trading, and I deeply regret it," Kendricks said in a statement released when the charges became public. "While I didn't fully understand all of the details of the illegal trades, I knew it was wrong, and I wholeheartedly regret my actions."

Kendricks, an explosive linebacker capable of playing bigger than his listed 6-feet and 240 pounds, quickly found yet another home with the Seahawks, signing a one-year deal for a prorated share of the $790,000 veteran minimum, which worked out to $46,470 a week. He signed on a Thursday and played the next Monday night, starting at left inside linebacker against the Bears. Kendricks sacked Chicago quarterback Mitchell Trubisky. The next week he sacked Dallas quarterback Dak Prescott, equaling his sack total for the 2017 season with the Eagles. Last weekend, Kendricks forced a fumble in Seattle's victory over the Cardinals, though Arizona recovered. He rose to third on the team in tackles, with 15 in three games.

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Two days later, the league stepped in. The announcement reportedly came as the result of Kendricks losing an appeal, which might account for why he was allowed to play three weeks for Seattle.

Observers were surprised when Seattle signed a player who likely wasn't going to be available for very long this season, but Seahawks coach Pete Carroll gave some insight into that on Wednesday – basically, the Seahawks weren't expecting "indefinitely," a word that seems to mean the NFL will wait for the January sentencing to decide what else it needs to do. The league has guidelines for, say, domestic violence arrests, but nobody ever got charged with insider trading before.

"How do you define 'indefinitely'?" Carroll said. "I don't know. We pressed that. What does that mean? It means indefinitely. We don't have a sense for what's going to happen right now, and they couldn't give us any, so we know nothing moving forward.

"When we signed him up, we thought that … there would be somewhat of a length of the suspension that wasn't indefinite . … We thought it was going to be two, three weeks, or something like that. I don't know what's happening now with that."

Kendricks also does not know. He was still in Seattle Thursday,  he said, getting ready to return to the Philadelphia area, where he played six seasons for the Eagles after arriving as a second-round draft pick from Cal. His plan for now is to "continue to work out," he said, before ending a brief phone interview.

Former teammates said they were stunned by the charges and that Kendricks is a good man who ended up in a bad situation.

Ex-Eagles linebacker Najee Goode, now with the Indianapolis Colts, said he has talked to Kendricks a few times since the guilty plea, "but not necessarily about what happened."

"I know he's gone through a lot, being signed and released, to keep his head in the right spot," Goode said. "I talked to him the day they played the Monday night game against the Bears, about him playing hard and keeping focused. Mike's a good dude. He got caught up in some crazy, unfortunate situations."

Goode spoke before the suspension was announced.

"In the article I saw, the league didn't know how to look at it. We didn't, either," he said about Kendricks' friends. "I didn't think he was going to be in that circumstance or situation. Regardless, he's still a hell of a player. You see he can come out there on Monday night after not playing and go out there and actually do something.

"He's handling it the best way he can. Anytime you get into stuff with the law, man, you've got to make sure you're cooperating and doing the right things, and I think that's what he's doing."

Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham said that he would "never suspect Mike to be in whatever he was in," and that he knew nothing of Kendricks being in any legal trouble before the announcement of charges and a plea.

"All I know is, Mike's a good guy. He just got caught up in the wrong thing, that's all. People make mistakes, but at the end of the day, he owned it," Graham said. "It ain't like he ran from it. I respect him more – it's hard sometimes to own something. People try to make excuses."

Eric Kendricks has not discussed his brother's situation with reporters who cover the Vikings. His Twitter page header is a photo of the Kendricks brothers embracing after an Eagles-Vikings game in 2016.

"It's crazy we're both in this position," Eric Kendricks said before the January meeting.

Sunday's game will take place 259 days after that one. In the interim. Eric has signed a five-year, $50 million contract extension. Mychal has won a Super Bowl, then seen his career and his life go in a very different direction.

Before that NFC championship game, the Kendricks brothers talked about their relationship.

"He's more conservative, I'm more of a risk-taker," Mychal said. "He thinks things through; sometimes, I just go with the flow. There's pros and cons to both."

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2018 has been a turbulent, eventful year for Mychal Kendricks. Here’s a timeline:

Jan. 21: Kendricks starts at linebacker and makes seven solo tackles in 37 snaps against the Minnesota Vikings and his brother, Eric, as the Eagles win the NFC championship game, 38-7, and advance to the Super Bowl.

Feb. 4: Kendricks starts and makes five solo tackles in 33 snaps as the Eagles defeat the New England Patriots, 41-33, the first Super Bowl victory in franchise history.

March: The Eagles try to trade Kendricks as NFL free agency begins and the league gathers for the NFL Scouting Combine, and, later, the annual meeting. Many rumors, no result.

May 22: The Eagles release Kendricks during organized team activities. With Jordan Hicks healthy, Kendricks projected as a likely part-time player with a $7.6-million salary-cap figure.

May 29: Kendricks visits the Vikings, hoping to join his brother in Minnesota, but no contract gets signed.

June 3: Kendricks signs a one-year, $3.5-million contract with the Cleveland Browns, after a day of loudly and profanely denying he had agreed to anything. Kendricks tweets to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport, who reported the signing: "You will never have my respect."

Aug. 30: The Browns release Kendricks after he is charged with insider trading and pleads guilty. Browns general manager John Dorsey says the team knew of an investigation when it signed Kendricks but was told he was cooperating as a victim in the case, not a defendant.

Sept. 6: In federal court in Philadelphia, Kendricks formally pleads guilty to leveraging inside stock information provided by a friend, Damilare Sonoiki, a Harvard-educated, Goldman Sachs analyst turned sitcom writer. Sentencing guidelines indicate a maximum term of 25 years in prison.

Sept. 13: Since Kendricks has not been suspended while the NFL investigates, he signs with the Seattle Seahawks and plays in three games. He registers a sack in each of his first two games.

Oct. 2: Kendricks is suspended indefinitely by the NFL. Before setting a term for his suspension, the league apparently will await the result of sentencing, set for January.