Now that we're 34 games into Brad Childress' tenure and 16 starts into Tarvaris Jackson's career, now that Childress and the Vikings front office have built an impressive roster and raised expectations through the Teflon roof, we have to ask an impertinent question.
What's changed?
The Vikings' stunning loss to the Colts on Sunday leaves Childress 14-20 as a head coach. In the 34 games before Childress arrived, Mike Tice went 18-16 and won a road playoff game with fewer good players.
In Childress' first season, when he had Brad Johnson throwing to Travis Taylor and Marcus Robinson, the Vikings' passing game was among the worst in the NFL.
In his second season, with his handpicked quarterback project in place, the Vikings' passing game was among the worst in the NFL.
Now, two games into a promising season, with Jackson supposedly ready to make the step from erratic to efficient, the Vikings' passing game is among the worst in the NFL.
It is the inability to play catch that has cost the Vikings two winnable games, that has squandered a powerful running game, that has wasted two not-great-but-good-enough performances by the defense.
Jackson was awful Sunday, and it was his misfortune to play the same position in the same building as a great quarterback who enjoyed none of Jackson's advantages.