As Vikings coach Mike Zimmer explained his decision to fire offensive coordinator John DeFilippo the morning after the team's 21-7 loss at Seattle, he fixated on a stretch that's seen the team go from the top of the NFC North to a fight for the final playoff spot.
"We had to shake things up and try to get better as a football team together," Zimmer said Tuesday. "I didn't feel like we were going in that direction based on the past four or five weeks. It wasn't about one game. It's about the direction we were going throughout the latter part of the season."
DeFilippo took the fall for a clunky offense that's also sputtered because of a beleaguered offensive line and quarterback Kirk Cousins' ill-timed turnovers. But his departure also comes at the end of a two-month span that revealed the philosophical gap between the 40-year-old coordinator and his boss.
Zimmer first publicly called for more offensive balance the day after the Nov. 18 loss to the Bears; sources have said his push to run more started internally around midseason. He reiterated concerns about the commitment to the run after a Dec. 2 loss to the Patriots.
The Vikings were eighth in the league in yards and 10th in points through seven games, after they put up a season-high 37 points on Oct. 21, improving to 4-2-1 with a victory over the Jets on a windy day at MetLife Stadium. In their six games since, they have averaged 324 yards and 17.5 points per game, ranking near the bottom of the league in both categories.
In three of those six games, the Vikings ran on a majority of first and second downs in the first half, though their commitment to the run has sometimes flagged, most notably at New England, when they ran only six times in the second half after averaging 9.6 yards per carry in the first.
The Vikings ran 21 times in their first 48 plays Monday, though they threw on four of five third-and-short situations while the game was still within reach, converting only one on a Cousins QB sneak. They came within minutes of their first shutout since a 34-0 loss to the Packers in 2007. By Tuesday morning, Zimmer decided he needed to make a change.
"I just didn't think we were making enough advancement in this part of the season to continue to go forward the way we want to go forward," he said Tuesday. "I'm not going to get into specifics about some of the things. I just felt it was in the best interest of the team to make this move now."