Minneapolis leaders offered Monday to have the city pay 22 percent of the cost of a new football stadium for the Vikings at the current site of the Metrodome. The move puts the longtime home of the team in competition with an offer from neighboring Ramsey County. The Minneapolis plan throws in a sweetener by setting aside money to renovate the aging Target Center, relieving what's a decades-long burden on property taxpayers in the state's largest city. Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak called the proposal "two stadiums for the price of one." "In the long struggle to find a new home for the Vikings, and in the long battle to end stadium debates, today we have a game changer," Rybak said at a Capitol press conference.