As the Vikings began studying an opponent for the 63rd time in a regular-season or playoff game under coach Mike Zimmer, there was bound to be something different about this week's preparation than any other game Zimmer had coached.
The Cincinnati Bengals, the Vikings's Sunday opponent, still run virtually the same scheme they used when Zimmer was the defensive coordinator from 2008-13. Current Bengals defensive coordinator Paul Guenther was Zimmer's defensive line coach and helped him adapt the vaunted double-A gap blitz package first introduced by late Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Jim Johnson.
As many as eight of the Bengals' defensive starters Sunday could be players Zimmer coached, and Marvin Lewis — the man who brought Zimmer to Cincinnati — is in his 15th season as Bengals head coach.
The challenge for Zimmer this week, is to parse what he knows about the Bengals from how he feels about the people they have.
"I love Marvin Lewis. He's an unbelievable person, great guy. Heck of a football coach. He's done tremendous things there in Cincinnati," Zimmer said. "It happens. You get a chance to play your friends and people who you used to work with. This is a game of I see numbers, not faces."
As the Vikings prepare for the Bengals, quarterback Case Keenum said "you can't just assume things" about how the defense will operate, based on its similarities to the one they see in practice every day. And Zimmer said the Bengals' familiarity with him from having retained so many of the same players and coaches from his time there is "probably a disadvantage" to the Vikings.
"They've heard everything I've ever said in a defensive meeting to the coaches and the players," he said. "They probably know me a lot better than I know them."
The Bengals are coming off a 33-7 loss at home to the Bears, prompting renewed debate about whether Lewis should keep his job at the end of the season. Zimmer made it clear he doesn't think the coach's job security should be in any jeopardy.