It required a keen eye to instantly notice on television the third effort Percy Harvin made on his final run Sunday. Stopped at the 1 and sandwiched between Falcons linebacker Curtis Lofton and safety Thomas DeCoud, Harvin never stopped fighting.
Like a hooked trout on the deck of a boat, the Vikings receiver slithered and thrashed, ultimately stretching the football across the goal line before hitting the ground.
Officials blew the whistle with 4:59 to go, ruling Harvin down inside the 1.
Thirty-seven seconds elapsed before the Vikings next snapped the ball. What happened in that brief window of time -- or more exactly, what didn't happen -- became the latest lowlight of a trying season in which the Vikings continue to show poor reaction time and ill communication.
Had only a Vikings coach in the press box seen a replay of Harvin's desperate lunge, they could have insisted coach Leslie Frazier dig out his red challenge flag and call for a review.
Had that happened, it's logical to believe Harvin would have been awarded a touchdown, pulling the Vikings within 24-21.
Instead, Frazier stepped to a podium Monday and was left to dissect the penultimate miscue of a 24-14 loss.
This was like chasing a shot of Wild Turkey with a warm glass of Pine-Sol.