The Vikings had them right where they wanted them.
A stop would get their defense off the field, and after the Vikings got them backpedaling on earlier downs, their opponents had a long ways to go to convert for a first down.
Wait, which game are we talking about here?
The one in New Orleans? The victory over Atlanta? Or Sunday's last-second loss in Buffalo?
Well, it could have referred to any of those games. And the loss to New England, too. But in this instance, the one in question is the most recent one — the 17-16 loss to the Bills, the one that still had the Vikings shaking their heads 24 hours later.
Buffalo's two long-distance conversions, including their game-saving completion on Fourth-and-Forever, on the game's final drive are the most glaring instances of the Vikings not finding a way to finish a defensive stand and get off the field in a pivotal spot. And in the aftermath of the spectacular come-from-ahead loss, those struggles have put the spotlight on a trend that has carried on throughout the 2014 season.
Thirty-three times the Vikings have put their opponents in the unfavorable position of needing to pick up 10 or more yards on third or fourth down to move the chains. And on exactly one third of those plays, their opponents converted and kept a drive alive, many of those drives ended with scores.
"That's kind of been the Achilles' heel," Zimmer said.