An NFL season rarely, if ever, sticks to a script written in July before players report to training camp.
Narratives too often become fixated on best-case scenarios when, in reality, chances are greater that plans will get blown to smithereens by November.
Or sooner.
Hello, Vikings.
"You have adversity through the season all the time," cornerback Captain Munnerlyn said. "People get hurt, things don't go your way. You just have to learn how to deal with it."
Through two games, the Vikings are proof that success is often determined not by how teams fare when they're at their best, but by how they respond when a crisis hits.
The organization spent the entire offseason anticipating a more comfortable and productive working relationship between Teddy Bridgewater and Adrian Peterson. It all sounded encouraging.
Those plans were tucked away after Bridgewater suffered a devastating knee injury on a routine drop-back in practice.