A locker room that had been so joyous for so much of the season fell into a solemn hush on Sunday night, now that there was no escape from the cold finality so many Vikings players hoped they would not have to face.
Players talked barely above a whisper, about the plays they could have made in the Vikings' 31-24 loss to the Giants and the uncertainty the wild-card defeat injected into their futures. Kevin O'Connell, the first-year coach who wove themes of togetherness through 13 victory speeches this season, made an emotional valedictory speech to players who were almost certainly sharing the home locker room at U.S. Bank Stadium for the final time.
"It's one of the closest connected groups in the entire NFL," O'Connell said. "There's real tears in there. There's real guys that expected to really have a chance to win a world championship."
The Vikings believed they might get that chance, that an esprit de corps might be enough to transcend yearlong flaws on defense, that an 11-0 record in one-score games had equipped them with the resourcefulness they'd need in the playoffs. But in their first, and final, one-score loss of the season, the Vikings fell for reasons that were crushingly simple.
They had no answer for Giants quarterback Daniel Jones, who became the first quarterback in NFL history with 300 passing yards, two passing touchdowns and 70 rushing yards in a playoff game. After Kirk Cousins completed four passes to Justin Jefferson on a game-opening touchdown drive that sent U.S. Bank Stadium into a frenzy, the NFL's leading receiver caught just three passes the rest of the way and wasn't targeted once in the fourth quarter, as the Giants quieted him with the double teams and press coverage techniques that became commonplace late in the season.
A defense that gave up big plays for much of the year allowed five of 20 yards or more. A pass rush that too often went quiet managed only four hits on Jones, while the Giants hit Cousins 11 times. New York went 7-for-13 on third downs; Minnesota was four of 10, including a puzzling first-quarter Jefferson-to-Cousins throwback pass that lost 2 yards on a third-and-1. The Vikings had a chance to tie the score with a touchdown drive in the final two minutes; their season ended when Cousins, feeling he was about to be sacked, threw short to T.J. Hockenson on fourth-and-8.
"This is probably the toughest loss I've had in my career," said Cousins, who completed 31 of his 39 passes for 273 yards and two touchdowns. "It hurts. It hurts."
A pent-up crowd, which had waited five years for a home playoff game, stewed for an extra 10 minutes as the NFL delayed kickoff so the Bills-Dolphins game could finish. When given the OK to start their pregame production, the Vikings accentuated their typical bombast with some new touches.