MIAMI – Mike Zimmer adorned the walls of his team meeting room at Winter Park with an armful of purple-and-white signs that boldly state the mantras he wants his new team to embody eventually.
Asked Wednesday what message he was sending to his Vikings players as they prepared for their final road trip of the season, the first-year head coach turned and pointed at the sign hanging over his left shoulder, the one that declared, "Tough teams win in the fourth quarter."
"I don't think that we've done that enough yet," Zimmer said then.
The Vikings made obvious strides under Zimmer in 2014. His reconstructed defense now has a pulse, and the offense is showing signs of life, too, under blossoming rookie quarterback Teddy Bridgewater. If not for a trio of fourth-quarter collapses, the latest and perhaps most frustrating coming in Sunday's 37-35 loss to the Miami Dolphins, the Vikings could be in playoff contention.
But Zimmer's team is just not tough enough yet. They can be formidable physically, sure. But they so far have lacked the mental and emotional toughness needed to close out victories consistently.
"That pretty much sums up the season right there," safety Harrison Smith said. "We've had opportunities to close, and we haven't closed enough times. It's something we've got to fix."
Sunday was the second time the Vikings blew a 14-0 lead on the road in consecutive weeks and the second time that they squandered opportunities to reclaim the lead for good. And like the previous week's loss to the Detroit Lions, this one was ultimately decided on a botched play on special teams.
In a seesaw fourth quarter that featured seven scores and three lead changes, a blocked punt in the final minute resulting in a safety ended up being the difference.