When Vikings players arrived at Winter Park on Wednesday to begin their preparations for Sunday's rematch with the Detroit Lions, coach Mike Zimmer was armed with a stat sheet.
Rapid fire, he unloaded the numbers from the first Lions game on his players.
Eight sacks. Three turnovers. Three third-down conversions. Three points.
"If we do it again, it'll be painful," Zimmer later said.
The 17-3 loss to the Lions in Week 6 was the low point of the season for the Vikings offense, especially their offensive line and their rookie quarterback. The stat that stung most was the eight sacks allowed, though the entire offense had a hand in the season-high sack total, including Teddy Bridgewater, who was on the receiving end of several hard hits in his second NFL start.
The Vikings — now protecting Bridgewater better even though they are now starting the sixth, seventh and eighth linemen on their depth chart — know they must protect their quarterback better this time around as they cling to the slimmest of playoff hopes heading into Week 15.
"We just need to make sure we handle adversity better," center John Sullivan said, begrudgingly looking back at everything that went wrong in Week 6.
After Bridgewater threw his first career interception in the end zone on the team's first drive, he became gun-shy and held the ball far too long on several plays. It didn't help that his receivers, sometimes running the wrong routes, weren't open. And once the Lions' talented front four got to Bridgewater a couple of times, it quickly became a feasting frenzy.