Weeks before Christian Ponder's shoulders slumped and his confidence was questioned, the Vikings went to Detroit and amassed an anemic 100 net yards passing.
Don't remember griping about that one, eh?
Well, that's because the Vikings won 20-13. A 227-yard offensive output was swept aside because Percy Harvin returned the opening kickoff a franchise-record 105 yards for a touchdown and Marcus Sherels added a 77-yard punt return for a touchdown in the third quarter.
Six weeks later, things have changed. Harvin is unlikely to play because of a badly sprained left ankle, and the Lions' special teams coverage units have gone from historically awful to among the league's best over the past five weeks.
"They're not even the same special teams," Vikings coach Leslie Frazier said. "They're playing so, so much better as a group across the board."
As Vikings special teams coordinator Mike Priefer notes, this group isn't the same as the one the Lions had in September, when they became the first NFL team since at least 1940 to give up kickoff and punt returns for touchdowns in consecutive games.
"The thing about the NFL is if some guys can't get it done, they bring in new guys," Priefer said. "But for the most part, they're doing the same things [schematically]. They're just doing them better. I think any time you get burned or a little bit embarrassed, you're going to come back and play a little bit harder. You're going to come out swinging."
Since that loss to the Vikings, Lions special teams coach Danny Crossman has changed four players on his kickoff team and three on his punt team. Starters were asked to chip in. Seventh-round pick Travis Lewis was moved from regular gameday inactive to replacing veteran Doug Hogue, who was released. Returner Stefan Logan is now on the kickoff team as well, young special teamer Ricardo Silva was added to the roster and Kassim Osgood has improved like a 10-year veteran should since missing a key tackle in that Vikings game.