Former Vikings coach Bud Grant, who has an office at Winter Park but doesn't get involved in the current football operation, said one missed play in each of the four Vikings' losses could have been the difference in the team being 4-0 rather than 0-4.
Grant points out that the Vikings have been in every game and no one team has run them over.
Grant recalled that during his long coaching career, one play often made the difference in winning and losing. You could easily point to the 1975 Hail Mary pass against Dallas in the NFC playoffs that kept perhaps the best Vikings team ever from going to the Super Bowl.
Then there was the 1972 season when Fran Tarkenton was reacquired from the New York Giants. The Vikings were favored to go all the way but finished 7-7.
That year the Vikings started the season 2-4, with their first four losses by a combined 10 points. The Vikings lost several leads that season in the second half, similar to this year's squad. In the first game of the season against the Redskins, the Vikings gave up a blocked punt for a touchdown in the first quarter but rallied to take a 14-10 lead in the third quarter before giving up back-to-back rushing touchdowns in the fourth quarter to lose 24-21.
Against the Dolphins in Week 3 that year, the Vikings held a 14-6 lead after Bill Brown scored a touchdown to start the fourth quarter, but the Dolphins scored 10 unanswered points to win 16-14, including a 3-yard pass from Bob Griese to Jim Mandich late in the fourth quarter that came after a roughing penalty kept the drive alive.
In Week 4, the Vikings led the St. Louis Cardinals 17-12 late in the fourth quarter when Gary Cuozzo hit Ahmad Rashad with a 24-yard pass to give the Cardinals a 19-17 victory.
That Vikings squad would go 5-3 the rest of the way to finish 7-7.