Tarvaris Jackson required Gus Frerotte's back injury to regain his standing as the Vikings starting quarterback. On Sunday, Jackson required good fortune on a pair of plays in order to avoid public controversy over which quarterback the Purple should go with in its first home playoff game since Jan. 6, 2001.
The afternoon had been rocky for Jackson, and then turned far worse near the end of the third quarter. The Vikings trailed 16-10 and reached first-and-goal at the New York Giants 4-yard line.
Adrian Peterson tried to go left and was met by a couple of Giants. The crowd waited several seconds and then exhaled when it became clear this was one of those occasional carries when Peterson did not fumble.
On second down from the 6, Jackson tried to look off a safety, then hit Bernard Berrian cutting through the end zone. The safety -- James Butler -- read it and picked off Jackson's pass on the run.
Asked about the ill-timed interception, Jackson said: "I tried to drill it in there. The guy made a play."
Jackson was upset enough over this that he hit Butler out of bounds, giving the Giants an added 15 yards. That gave the Super Bowl champs first-and-10 at the Vikings 40, and they moved behind backup quarterback David Carr toward what could have been a clinching touchdown.
Mysteriously, the Giants chose to throw rather than use their power-running game at the Vikings 2, and wound up settling for a field goal. That made it 19-10, and Jackson's day started its transformation from abysmal to triumphant.
The Vikings were second-and-10 at their 46. The Giants were giving rookie Terrell Thomas some time at right corner in place of veteran Corey Webster. Berrian went on a sprint, Thomas fell and the Vikings were back in the game with a 54-yard touchdown.