Not much needed to be said as Mike Zimmer addressed the Vikings in the Winter Park film room Friday, the morning after a 42-10 prime-time loss to the Green Bay Packers that skidded off the rails before halftime.
As the Vikings coach grimaced through the game tape, he let the team's play do most of the talking.
"Very somber, very disgruntled, about every bad word you can use to describe it," defensive end Brian Robison said of the mood. "That's what was going on in there."
While Zimmer acknowledged that the Vikings were outplayed in all three phases in the loss, it's clear that the longtime NFL defensive coordinator turned first-time head coach has taken the inconsistent performance of his defense personally.
His baby, which has shown flashes of a smothering potential but has been unable to play a complete game since Week 1, was at its worst at Lambeau Field.
Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers threw three first-half touchdown passes before turning into a second-half handoff machine for running back Eddie Lacy, who ran through big holes before bulldozing Vikings defenders for additional yards after contact. The Packers finally eased up on Zimmer's defense, sitting down Rodgers and Lacy with a 42-0 lead.
"There's nothing more disheartening as a coach than for you to get manhandled up front, to be in the wrong gaps, to have people running the ball at you," Zimmer said. "It's just disheartening."
Friday morning, the players, still sleepy-eyed in meetings after a late-night flight back to the Twin Cities, had to silently sit through what most of America could no longer bear to watch after the Packers picked off a pair of consecutive Christian Ponder passes and pulled away from the Vikings.