Football people love to say the word "football." Listen to a former player or coach on TV, and their patter sounds something like: "These football players need to win this football game for this football team on this football field. Also: Football."
Their second-favorite utterance is "Next man up." Spoken with resolve and attitude, "Next man up" connotes toughness and resilience. It's a supposedly macho way of stating the obvious — when your team endures a meaningful injury, the next player on the depth chart will have to perform.
The saying comes with a catch, though. If you're going to survive injuries, the next man up had better be good at playing professional football. Too many of the Vikings' reserves have failed, which means the franchise has done a lousy job of building depth over the last few years.
I've been covering the Vikings since 1990. I've never seen a Vikings team in playoff contention elicit such disgust and apathy from the fan base. On Sunday in Detroit, this depleted and seemingly depressed team will try to beat the Lions and hope the right teams lose around the league so they can drag themselves and their FSA accounts into the playoffs, where certain doom awaits.
Since beating the Raiders 3-0, the Vikings are 0-3, having played two different backup quarterbacks and allowed 90 points. Their collapse culminated, they hope, in the worst game of Kevin O'Connell's head coaching career, a 33-10 loss at home to the mediocre Packers.
This combination of events has led to the usual calls from angry fans to replace O'Connell and perhaps even defensive coordinator Brian Flores.
O'Connell won 13 games as a rookie head coach. Flores is a quality coach. A loss like the one they suffered to the Packers puts everyone on notice, but it's not only too reactionary to give up on either — such a mentality would reveal a misunderstanding of this team's problems.
The 2023 Vikings wound up in the same place as the 2022 Twins and 2022-23 Timberwolves: built to win, and devastated by injuries.