On Sunday, two teams separated by a few percentage points in the NFC standings will face each other at frosty TCF Bank Stadium.
One is all but mathematically eliminated from playoff contention at 4-7 and answering questions about building something for next season.
The other is a half-game out of the lead in its division at 3-7-1 and talking about how it still has everything left to play for this season.
The Vikings are the team with the better record despite losing two consecutive games after their bye week to fall to last place in the NFC North, four games behind the first-place Green Bay Packers. The Carolina Panthers, meanwhile, control their future in the laughable NFC South, which is led by the New Orleans Saints and Atlanta Falcons at 4-7, the same underwhelming record as the Vikings.
"It's crazy how that works," fullback Zach Line said. "Last year, it was kind of flip-flopped. The NFC North was struggling to win games. Now it's the NFC South."
Last season, the Packers won the NFC North with an 8-7-1 record. This season, it is technically possible that a 5-11 team could win the NFC South and host a first-round playoff game, too.
The ineptitude of the NFC South has rekindled conversations about the NFL's playoff format and has set ablaze the notion that expanding the playoffs to 16 teams would be a good thing for anything other than the pockets of NFL owners and the league's television partners.
The 2010 Seattle Seahawks were the first and only NFL team to make the playoffs with a losing record over a full season. Barring a strong finish in the NFC South, they will soon have company.