The notion that Adrian Peterson can't or shouldn't run the ball against eight- or nine-man defensive fronts has been proven faulty at times during the running back's five seasons with the Vikings.
One of them came early in the first quarter of Sunday's 26-23 overtime loss to the Detroit Lions.
The Lions had nine defenders in the box. Yet Peterson still ran for 43 yards, sidestepping tackle Ndamukong Suh in the backfield and bursting through a gap vacated by blitzing middle linebacker Stephen Tulloch.
A day later, Peterson said "a lot" of his longer runs have come against similar stacked fronts.
"Because once I get a crease and I'm out, there's not too many guys left to beat," Peterson said. "I've been facing eight-, nine-men fronts since I've been here. Even when [Brett] Favre was here, I was facing eight- and nine-men fronts. I feel like I've got a lot of confidence in the guys up front that we can, no matter the situation or point of the game, we'll be able to run the ball."
Vikings coach Leslie Frazier agrees. And he's now making darn sure that he and his coaching staff don't forget it in light of the fact that Peterson had only five carries for 5 yards in the second half on Sunday.
"What we have to make sure we're always conscious of -- and I have to remind myself of this -- is even if Adrian gets stopped for negative [yardage] or 2 yards because they've got so many people at the line of scrimmage, he's such a great player that even against eight-man fronts, he can still make something happen," Frazier said. "You can't ever forget that. Second half, [the Lions] came with more eight-man fronts because of Adrian, for sure, and we've just got to stay with it and it will continue to open up other things."
It sounds simple considering Peterson's multiple All-Pro honors, $100 million contract and face-of-the-franchise status. But the Vikings have strayed weekly from a core philosophy built around Peterson and a ball-control attack.