The futility of the Vikings' passing attack in the second half was best demonstrated when they reached a final gasp with 6 1/2 minutes remaining. This was the possession that came after Philadelphia's Brian Westbrook sped 71 yards through a broken field to put his team in front 23-14.
The Vikings had done nothing with four previous possessions in the half, and now they had to move the ball or concede that this season's return to the playoffs was a one-and-done proposition.
Tarvaris Jackson threw a pair of incompletions against Eagles pressure and it was third-and-10 from the Minnesota 25. The Vikings had to hit something here beyond the sticks, and this is where the quarterback went with the ball:
Deep left, with Bobby Wade -- a possession receiver -- running deep against double coverage. And with Bernard Berrian stumbling and giving up on his route, it became Wade against three defenders, pursuing a Jackson pass that was actually a heave in the general direction.
This had been an extremely rabid hometown crowd, but now there were boos for this decisive moment of ineptitude, and then thousands chugged through the aisles and headed into our winter wonderland.
There was a single conclusion to be drawn from Sunday's drama for the Purple zealots who chose to be rational rather than rage-filled over this sound 26-14 defeat:
The Vikings have regained contending status after a bleak decade, and that means the priority for this offseason is more clearly than ever to find a starting quarterback.
He can't be too old, since the Vikings already have one of those in Gus Frerotte, and he must bring talent and confidence, both qualities that Jackson appears to be lacking.