With the Vikings at 2-12, coach Leslie Frazier at least will have one good memory when he takes the field in Washington on Saturday: He won there last season in his first game as head coach after taking over for the fired Brad Childress.
It's interesting that the opposing quarterback in that Nov. 28 game was Donovan McNabb, whom the Vikings signed this year in hopes of providing some veteran offensive leadership. In that game, he threw 35 passes, completing 21 for 211 yards and one touchdown with one interception.
In that 17-13 victory last year, a healthy Brett Favre was the Vikings quarterback, and he completed 15 out of 23 passes for 172 yards and no touchdowns.
The Vikings were 3-3 under Frazier last year -- besides the Redskins, they beat the Bills and the Eagles in the Tuesday night game after the Metrodome roof collapsed.
In that game at Washington a year ago, an ailing Adrian Peterson carried the ball only six times for 36 yards while Toby Gerhart had 22 carries for 76 yards and a touchdown.
The Vikings need another victory at Washington or one at home in the season finale with the Bears if they want to avoid a 2-14 record, which would be the worst in franchise history. And Frazier certainly didn't expect to go only 5-15 since winning his first two games last season.
The Redskins are 5-9 this season, but they have won two of their past four games, have topped the 100-yard rushing mark in each those games and last week beat the then-NFC East Division-leading New York Giants, 23-10.
The Vikings, who have not won a game since defeating the Panthers on Oct. 30, might have a better chance to beat the Redskins than the Bears, if they want to avoid making dubious history.