GREEN BAY, WIS. – The Vikings' first trip to Lambeau Field with Mike Zimmer as head coach came eight years ago, when they arrived without their starting quarterback available, fell far behind by halftime and watched the Packers relax for much of the second half.
Fifteen meetings later, at the end of a stretch where Zimmer's defenses have often proved a worthy foil for Aaron Rodgers, the Vikings lost 37-10 in a Sunday night defeat that looked like a bookend for Zimmer's first loss at Lambeau.
Time will tell whether the defeat in Green Bay was his last.
The Vikings' playoff hopes were euthanized Sunday night, in a defeat that felt like an anthology of their worst moments against their hated rival. With Kirk Cousins on the COVID-19 list, the Sean Mannion-led Vikings offense didn't surpass 100 yards until the end of the third quarter. Rodgers hit Davante Adams eight times for 118 yards and a touchdown in the first half alone, before Zimmer made the decision for Patrick Peterson to shadow Adams in the second half.
The 27-point loss matched the eighth-worst loss to the Packers in Vikings history, tying two losses Minnesota took in 1962 (its second season) to Vince Lombardi's second championship team. It was the fifth-most lopsided defeat in Zimmer's eight seasons, and his worst since the Vikings' 38-7 loss in the NFC Championship Game four years ago.
"I didn't feel like we gave ourselves a chance to win," Zimmer said in a postgame news conference that lasted just over three minutes. "The first half kind of got away from us, time of possession. We didn't move the ball really at all. We got away from the running game way too soon, and then in the second half, we didn't play well enough defensively, so give them credit. They're a good team, and they got after us."
The loss eliminated the Vikings from the NFC playoff race and set up a meaningless season finale for the second year in a row. It is the fifth time in eight seasons the Vikings have missed the playoffs in General Manager Rick Spielman and Zimmer's time working together.
After building a 20-3 led in the first half, the Packers leaned on their running game to pull away in the fourth quarter, when A.J. Dillon plowed through the Vikings defense for a pair of touchdowns.