The Vikings are back from their bye week, leading the NFC North by themselves in late October for the first time in five years and set for an 11-game stretch that will determine if this team is more like its predecessors from 2017 or 2016.
In 2017, the Vikings hit their bye week at 6-2 after a win over the Browns in London, won seven of their final eight and won the NFC North by four games over the Lions, who finished ahead of the Packers for second place after Aaron Rodgers broke his collarbone at U.S. Bank Stadium in October.
The 2016 team went 5-0 before the bye, returned to Mike Zimmer's warning that "fat cats get slaughtered" before a game in Philadelphia and lost eight of its final 11, finishing 8-8 and becoming the sixth team to miss the playoffs after a 5-0 start since the NFL expanded to 12 playoff teams in 1990.
Adam Thielen, whose breakout season as a wide receiver was in 2016, still thinks of that team as a cautionary tale.
"There's a few guys that were on that team, so I think [it's] trying to use that experience and talk about it," he said. "But at the same time, we're such a different team: a different locker room, a different mind-set. I think this team is trending up.
"We still have so much room for improvement, so that's the good thing. We're early in learning this system. I know we have not played our best football. I think that ability to find ways to win without playing your best football is important."
Even as the Vikings work to smooth out the rough edges that have made many of their games closer than necessary, they have continued to win. Their 2½-game division lead is the biggest in the NFL, and they have beaten each of their three NFC North rivals at U.S. Bank Stadium.
They have done it by "winning on the margins," as coach Kevin O'Connell talked about before his first season with the team: even without major changes to their roster, the Vikings have improved by finding efficiencies in some areas and connectedness in others.