GREEN BAY, WIS. - Christian Ponder yanked off his jersey and slumped in front of his locker, alone as a man can be in a room packed with 100 people.
Ponder had just thrown away what should have been the signature victory of the Vikings season and his career, failing to complete a pass for a stretch consuming 38:51 of the game clock and lobbing the two interceptions that enabled the Packers' 23-14 victory at Lambeau Field.
He ruined Adrian Peterson's latest infomercial on the life-affirming benefits of major knee surgery, as Peterson rushed for 210 yards only to wind up on the wrong end of the postgame handshakes.
As Ponder tried to stare holes through the carpet, Peterson approached, still wearing his uniform and cleats. He tapped Ponder on the shoulder, then pumped his fist. Not in anger, but in solidarity.
"I told him, if you keep playing with that passion that you showed today, despite those interceptions, we can win," Peterson said.
Moments later, Leslie Frazier, on his way to the podium, leaned against Ponder's locker and offered his own pep talk. "I told him we need to learn from this," Frazier said.
Peterson should be commended for his support of Ponder. Frazier should not. Not on this day.
The Vikings' brain trust committed to Ponder as their current and future starter. Sunday, they failed to react to their team's new reality: That benching Ponder, even for a half, would have improved the Vikings' chances of winning the game and perhaps making the playoffs.