Every Vikings player bears the scar of last year's season-ending 3-8 skid, even though Mike Zimmer is quick to defend his prideful defense that started the year better than any team in the NFL.
"We had two bad games," Zimmer said of the defense. "I don't know about tapered off. We finished third in the league in points scored and every other statistical category."
In Zimmer's third season at the helm, the Vikings defense recorded top-10 finishes in five major categories: yards allowed (third), passing yards allowed (third), sacks forced (fifth), points allowed (sixth) and takeaways (seventh).
The NFL took notice when they were the league's last unbeaten team at 5-0.
"Our team was clicking," defensive end Brian Robison said. "Offense was putting up points. Defensively we were making plays."
But by October, comparisons to all-time vaunted defenses stopped.
Carrying the weight of an offense that failed to reach 21 points in seven of nine games, the Vikings defense, the team's backbone, started to break.
Perfectly mediocre made a sour replacement for all-time great. That's 8-8 for you.