He had searched for daylight all day, plowing into the line, bouncing off, spinning, swiveling his head, looking for home runs when the defense would allow only singles.
Now, with the Vikings on their last-chance drive, Adrian Peterson finally listened to the voices in his ear. "The whole game the guys were telling me, 'Be patient,' " he said. "They told me to keep it front side and it will open."
They wanted Peterson to stop looking for cutbacks, to use his speed and power to burst through the first available hole. So, with the clock ticking under three minutes in the fourth quarter, at the end of a drive on which he would touch the ball on six of seven plays, Peterson took a handoff to the right, from the Packers 29, and finally found an opening resembling the Great Plains.
He burst through the line and found himself sprinting down the sideline with Packers safety Atari Bigby. Peterson jabbed Bigby with a stiff-arm and dragged him toward the end zone, finally stretching the ball to the goal line.
That touchdown gave the Vikings their first victory over the Packers in four years and a tie for first place in the NFC North. That touchdown also offered the latest confirmation that the Vikings employ the best running back in football.
Peterson rushed 30 times for 192 yards on Sunday, and his touchdown and the point after made the final score 28-27. On a day when the Vikings couldn't pass, when they gave up two return touchdowns and seemed destined for another one of those deflating losses that stain their history and Brad Childress' tenure, Peterson proved this is his team.
Sometimes Childress has been guilty of overthinking his offensive options. On Sunday, he proved to be a realist. The Vikings ran 13 offensive plays in the fourth quarter. Peterson handled the ball on 10 of them.
For better, or worse. With the Vikings trailing by three early in the fourth quarter, Peterson ran for 2, then 25, and a play later he ran for 5, setting up a third-and-1 at the Minnesota 41. With Peterson in the backfield, Chester Taylor plunged into the line and came up short.