On Dec. 28, 1975, Drew Pearson mysteriously separated himself from Vikings cornerback Nate Wright, scored the touchdown at Met Stadium that eliminated what might have been Bud Grant's best team, and prompted a cretin to toss a bottle at Armen Terzian's skull.
On Dec. 28, 1996, the Vikings traveled to Dallas to take on the proud but fading Cowboys in a wild-card playoff game, and lost 40-15.
On Dec. 28, 2003, Mike Tice required only a victory over the lowly Cardinals in Phoenix to qualify for the playoffs, and he thought he had one until the Cardinals scored two touchdowns in the last two minutes, with Nate Poole making the winning catch as time expired.
On Dec. 28, 2008, the Vikings needed a victory over the Giants at the Metrodome to make the playoffs. "Thanks for bringing up all those great memories," Vikings center Matt Birk said Friday afternoon. "It's a good thing I'm not superstitious."
Historical blinders are recommended for the Vikings and their fans today. Dec. 28 is a date that lives in franchise infamy, and while the Pearson catch might represent the most dramatic moment in Vikings history, the memory of Poole's catch remains an open wound.
"I think of that day and that play a bunch," Tice said in an e-mail from Jacksonville, where he is the Jaguars assistant head coach. "It's the old 'What if?' I wouldn't say we were jinxed. I would just call a timeout next time and make sure we were as good as can be with our call and our execution."
With time running out and the ball on the Vikings' 28-yard line, Cardinals quarterback Josh McCown rushed the offense to the line and took the snap just before the clock hit zero. He scrambled -- "went serpentine," as Birk put it -- and finally launched a pass toward the end zone.
"It was just disbelief," Birk said. "It was fourth down, they had no timeouts, they ran up and snapped it real quick and the guy was running around and I remember when he threw the ball ..."