The popularity of modern professional sports is built on change. Change drives the news cycle and the accompanying speculation that in turn drives fan interest.
As recently as the 1990s, the NFL shut down for months at a time. Eventually, the league shrewdly discerned that it could be just as popular in May as it is in October, and that realization has created a modern sports landscape in which free agency can be as important as a championship game or series.
The promise of transformative change drives fan interest in free agency, trades, coaching decisions, coaching changes and player development.
Minnesotans might want to acknowledge that the illusion of change rarely alters reality. When a Minnesota team fails, franchise DNA is usually found at the scene.
The Vikings have existed for 61 years. They have never won a league championship or Super Bowl. They have produced great teams, coaches and players. In January 2023, with a new general manager, coach, offensive and defensive schemes and a couple of key personnel additions, they are again on the verge of another playoff appearance that will leave them short of a title.
The Twins won the World Series in 1987 and 1991. If the Vikings have been cursed by being just good enough to disappoint in the postseason, the Twins have been cursed by injury.
Before and after their championship seasons, the Twins have seen almost all of their great players' careers damaged or shortened by injuries, and they have rarely, since 1991, made it to a postseason in which all of their most important players were available to them.
The injury list includes Tony Oliva, Kirby Puckett, Joe Mauer, Justin Morneau, Miguel Sano, Byron Buxton, Ervin Santana (in a playoff game at Yankee Stadium), Johan Santana (in a playoff game at Yankee Stadium), Cristian Guzman, Kent Hrbek, Rick Aguilera (after agreeing to become a starter in 1996), Francisco Liriano, Josh Donaldson (missed his only playoff series with the Twins) and virtually the entire, once-promising, 2022 squad.