Moving out day in the NFL always brings reflection and introspection as players pack up their lockers and head for their offseason homes, often unsure which direction their career compass will point next.
Change is the one constant in the NFL. Players always come and go. Teams look different from one season to the next. As Vikings players surveyed the damage one final time Monday, they realized a season like this usually brings consequences and the prospect of wholesale change.
"We're coming off a 3-13 season," veteran cornerback Antoine Winfield said, "so of course change is going to be made."
This time, it can't just be tweaks either, or "retooling" as the team's brain trust described it last offseason. The Vikings have legitimate questions and concerns at nearly every position. They lack quality depth at many spots. An overhaul is in order.
Players know it, too. As much as they want to avoid being an armchair general manager -- not that the team has an actual general manager, of course -- they're also realistic about what lies ahead.
"There's no doubt the landscape is going to shift," linebacker Chad Greenway said. "I don't have the answers to those questions. But you can only imagine that something is going to change."
The roster remake begins with a veteran core that invested much to the organization and helped take the Vikings to the doorstep of the Super Bowl in 2009. The group includes Steve Hutchinson, Kevin Williams, Visanthe Shiancoe, E.J. Henderson, Anthony Herrera and Cedric Griffin. Tight end Jim Kleinsasser played his final game Sunday after announcing his retirement.
All of those players except Griffin are in their 30s and well-compensated. Whether because of age, injury or general ineffectiveness, none of them played to their previous standard this season. The Vikings now must decide how -- or if -- those players fit into their rebuilding blueprint.