Casey Johnson
Just when I think that the Vikings can’t get any worse, they go and lose a 16-10 lead to the Buffalo Bills in the final seconds on Sunday and totally set a new standard for being pathetic.
Don’t get me wrong, the Bills aren’t a totally incompetent team. It’s not like they are Rick Moranis’ Little Giants or the pre-Gordon Bombay giving a crap Mighty Ducks. The Bills came into the game with a 3-3 record and a very tough defense (8th in the NFL in points per game allowed and 1st in rush yards per game allowed). But honestly, what more did Minnesota need to go in their favor on Sunday to come away with a victory?
The Vikings won the turnover battle (4 forced, 2 committed), the time of possession battle (Minnesota T.O.P. = 32:23; Buffalo T.O.P.=27:37), the sack battle (Minnesota 6 sacks; Buffalo 5 sacks), and the battle of attrition (kind of), as Buffalo’s top two running backs (C.J. Spiller and Fred Jackson) went down with injuries in the first half (Buffalo’s injuries/losses at tailback were, in my opinion, greater than Minnesota’s losses to John Sullivan and Vlad Ducasse on the offensive line). The Vikings, despite all that went in their favor, somehow still managed to remember their true identity as a terrible football team and their responsibility to give the game away in the final seconds. I mean, seriously, giving up a 24-yard completion on 4th & 20 with 1:18 left in the game, are you kidding me? Chad Greenway, you’re killing me man. How do you get caught off guard in that situation? And how are you not ready for the snap of the ball? It was like Greenway was the security guard that George Costanza gave a chair to. He fell asleep just long enough to blow his assignment. Greenway knew exactly where Buffalo needed to get for the first down and that he couldn’t let Buffalo tight end Scott Chandler get down the seam on him, and yet, Greenway was still unable to stop Chandler from hauling in the 24-yard game-saving grab, eventually leading to the Kyle Orton to Sammy Watkins game-winning 2-yard TD pass with :01 second remaining.
That 4th and 20 play was a representation of Minnesota’s season. There was so much hope, positivity, and expectation at the outset, but then, things unraveled in a terribly disappointing, gut-wrenching, heartbreaking, nausea-inducing way. It’s like seeing that there’s an episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit on and then realizing that Fin (a.k.a. Ice-T) is the focal point of the episode. You were excited, but now you just know that you’re going to end up shaking your head in disbelief at the utter ineptitude that you witness.
Just 7 games through this 16 game season, Minnesota fans might as well pack it in. The ship of success and playoff hopes is sailing away faster than a lifeboat from Cuba. Let’s wave the white flag, give the microphone to the fat lady, and pull back the sheets on the bed. At not even the midway point of the 2014 season, we Vikings fans might as well suck down a little drowsy Benadryl and lose ourselves in a 10-month slumber until next season arrives.
It’s an absolute shame that all hope is lost at such an early point in the season, but I can’t remember a game where I’ve been less emotionally involved than I was on Sunday. I knew deep down, through the entire game, that Minnesota would find a way to lose, and that is a terrible and unfulfilling way to watch a football game. It’s like watching Friday Night Lights more than once. You already know that they’re going to lose, and it’s still miserably disappointing every time. Minnesota’s defense gave them every opportunity to win the game (aside from allow a Bills TD drive in the final minutes of the game), and yet, this gutted, injury-ravaged, anemic, lifeless, bottom of the barrel, turnover-prone, playmaker-lacking offense again failed to show up to the game.
The Vikings did virtually nothing offensively to rouse any enthusiasm or excitement going forward. Sure they ran the ball better than most teams have been able to against the Bills (29 carries for 158 yards), but the Vikings again shot themselves in the foot time and time again by allowing sacks, committing penalties, and turning the ball over. Like the high beams of an oncoming semi shining right in your eyes, it was again blindingly obvious that Minnesota’s offensive line cannot protect Teddy Bridgewater, and the Vikings netted just 118 passing yards (157 passing yards minus 39 yards lost to sacks). That pathetic passing output is also an indictment on Minnesota’s lack of receiving playmakers (Cordarrelle Patterson sure isn’t one as it turns out). And the last thing that the Minnesota faithful want to see is our young quarterback’s development stunted and perhaps even totally derailed by a line that won’t protect and receivers that can’t get open. It is definitely nerve-racking to see Minnesota’s prospective future leader take-on bad habits while he repeatedly gets punished in the pocket.
At this point, the best thing that the Vikings can hope for is week-by-week positive development of the future key/star players that this team will need to step up in order to have any success. Obviously, Teddy Bridgewater needs to start limiting his mistakes and getting more comfortable in the NFL game, but young guys like Jerick McKinnon, Anthony Barr, Matt Kalil, Sharrif Floyd, Xavier Rhodes, Josh Robinson, Harrison Smith, and Cordarrelle Patterson, among others, need to continue to develop and improve so that this team can build a strong foundation of talented young players for (fingers crossed) future success.
It certainly bites that this season has essentially devolved into practice for next season, but unfortunately, it’s all that we’re left with. What a sad and familiar feeling.

