The Vikings and the Panthers were 1-3 when Graham Gano launched the opening kickoff at noon Oct. 13 at Mall of America Field. Leslie Frazier and Ron Rivera — rival head coaches, longtime friends and former Super Bowl teammates — stood on opposite sidelines as popular picks for those trendy early-season NFL hot seats. ¶ By 3:05 p.m., they had shaken hands at midfield and gone their separate ways. Ten weeks later, Rivera is 10-4, a Coach of the Year candidate and one awfully thankful boss of Cam Newton, a 24-year-old undisputed franchise quarterback who has entrenched himself in Carolina in his third season. ¶ Frazier, meanwhile, is 4-9-1, still in danger of being fired and the unfortunate caretaker of an unstable quarterback situation whose resolution could go in any number of different directions after the season concludes a week from Sunday.
The Panthers left Mall of America Field with a 35-10 victory and the highest passer rating (143.4) of Newton's career. Their approach to Newton's third straight 1-3 start had been simple: Just stay patient. Newton, after all, was a former No. 1 overall draft pick with individual success and off-the-charts athleticism. He is often what you get the spring after a 2-14 fall.
The Vikings, meanwhile, retreated to Winter Park, baffled by a blowout they never saw coming and a quarterback letdown that felt all too familiar since Christian Ponder was selected 12th overall in 2011. Having already turned from Ponder to Matt Cassel in what was becoming a lost season, Frazier and offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave began devising a Plan C that would surprise not only the Giants and the rest of the league but their own locker room as well. They would up the ante on General Manger Rick Spielman's already-aggressive move to sign former Buccaneers quarterback Josh Freeman the week before. In what certainly qualified as desperate times, they would start Freeman on the road against the Giants on a Monday night. And they would do it with Freeman having practiced only four times with the first-team offense.
"The way he prepared, not only that week but the week prior to his start, we really felt he had a grasp of where we were with our offense," said Frazier, who confirmed again that he has final say on all decisions involving starts and playing time. "His arm strength. Very impressive. He has a big arm, can make every throw. What we saw on tape in Tampa Bay prior to him signing with us. All that was a part of it."
Far fewer critics questioned Frazier's decision before kickoff. Cassel, after all, had just played poorly in the 25-point loss to Carolina, and Ponder started the year 0-3.
Things changed quickly, however, as Freeman and the Vikings began embarrassing themselves in front of the nation.
With shocking inaccuracy (37.7 percent) and an illogical game plan that resulted in what's still a team season-high 53 passes and just 14 runs, the Vikings offense failed to score in a 23-7 loss.
"Hindsight," said Frazier, "is 20-20."