For the sixth time in Mike Zimmer's eight years as coach, the Vikings will finish the regular season at home against the Bears. It will be the fourth time the Vikings have had nothing at stake.
The first matchup — a 13-9 victory at TCF Bank Stadium in 2014 — got the Vikings to 7-9 after a little-known receiver named Adam Thielen caught his first NFL touchdown pass. The Vikings won 38-10 in a 2016 finale that was notable for only two reasons: the people that scaled the U.S. Bank Stadium rafters to protest the Dakota Access Pipeline, and the fact the Bears scored their only TD on a play that would spark the "Philly Special" on the same field in Super Bowl LII a year later.
The Vikings clinched a first-round bye against the Bears in 2017, lost a playoff spot with a defeat in 2018 and rested starters in 2019 after a Monday night loss to the Packers locked them into the NFC's final wild-card spot.
The Vikings are again 7-9 and back to a no-stakes finale against the Bears on Sunday, a year after playing the Lions in the same situation. In both seasons, the Vikings began December in control of their playoff destiny; both times, they were eliminated a week before the final game.
They are here because of a series of bets they made that didn't pan out. They banked on veteran additions improving their secondary, while counting on offensive continuity with first-year coordinator Klint Kubiak succeeding his father, Gary. They planned for an improved offensive line, adding size with two of their first four draft picks, and expected their pass rush would return to form after defensive end Danielle Hunter and linebacker Anthony Barr returned from injuries.
Finally, they crossed their fingers they would escape major effects of COVID-19, despite beginning the season with the NFL's lowest percentage of players vaccinated against the virus.
Each of those bets, to varying degrees, came up short of what the Vikings expected in return. This week brings the four-year anniversary of the "Minneapolis Miracle," the defining moment of Zimmer and General Manager Rick Spielman's eight years together. The Vikings are 33-33-1 since, from their 38-7 loss to the Eagles in the NFC Championship Game to the 37-10 defeat last Sunday night at Lambeau Field that eliminated them from the playoffs for the third time in the four seasons since Stefon Diggs' improbable touchdown.
The Wilf family will debate changes at the top of the organization, which could come as soon as Monday. But before that, the Vikings will play another finale against the Bears, closing out a wild year when 14 of their first 16 games were decided by one score or less.