When Percy Harvin went down against the Seattle Seahawks because of an ankle sprain, sidelining him for four weeks so far and forcing him to miss the Vikings' past three games, it did more than take away the team's primary option at wide receiver. It also showcased how his productivity was the main reason other Vikings wide receivers were able to accumulate any stats at all, and their failure might account for the team's 23-14 loss to the Packers on Sunday and their loss in Chicago last week.
Harvin was responsible for more than 50 percent of receptions by Vikings wide receivers when he went down, with 62 receptions for 677 yards and three touchdowns.
And if you take a look at the numbers for the rest of the team's wide receivers in their past three games without Harvin, it becomes painfully apparent how important he was to getting the rest of the receivers going -- especially in the cases of Michael Jenkins and Devin Aromashodu, the Vikings' two leading wide receivers behind Harvin when he went down.
Jenkins had 26 receptions for 295 yards and a touchdown when Harvin was injured; since then he has four receptions for 29 yards with no touchdowns in three games.
Aromashodu had 10 receptions for 151 yards when Harvin went down; since then, one reception for 31 yards.
The one wide receiver whose production hasn't risen and fallen depending on Harvin's participation has been Jerome Simpson, who has been disappointing. He had eight receptions for 84 yards in five games before Harvin went down and has six receptions for 54 yards in the past three without him.
The Vikings' leading wide receiver since Harvin went out is Jarius Wright, a rookie who only got a shot to play because Harvin was injured. Perhaps because the other receivers have been so locked down by opponents' top cornerbacks, Wright has 11 receptions for 127 yards and one touchdown in the past three games -- the first three games of his career.
But the team's wide receiver corps might have finally bottomed out against Green Bay on Sunday. It was so bad that late in the game the Fox announcers pointed out that the Vikings were on the verge of doing something that hadn't been accomplished in 10 years in the NFL -- going an entire game without having a wide receiver catch a pass. The last time it happened was Dec. 8, 2002, when the expansion Houston Texans defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers 24-6 with three defensive touchdowns. With under three minutes to go in the fourth quarter, Simpson finally caught a pass for the wide receivers, but that doesn't take away from how ugly the receiving game has gotten without Harvin.