Benny Sapp has been the Vikings' nickel back since Nov. 9, when Charles Gordon suffered a grotesque ankle injury in the victory over the Packers.
Sapp was able to function for a couple of games, without creating much attention other than an interception at Jacksonville. Then, the Chicago Bears came to the Metrodome on Nov. 30 in a contest for first place.
The Bears dominated early and were leading 7-3 in the middle of the second quarter. They were third-and-4 at the Vikings 40 and running back Matt Forte was tossed for a 2-yard loss.
As the front line celebrated this stop, a flag appeared, the officiating huddle was held and then the announcement was made: Personal foul, No. 22, Vikings.
What would've been a punt became a first down at the Vikings 27. This was because Sapp, No. 22, had been caught taking an after-the-whistle shot at an opponent. He came to the sideline and received a mini-lecture from coach Brad Childress and others.
Sapp's defensive teammates got him off the hook by staging a goal-line stand that stopped the Bears inside the 1. On the next play, Gus Frerotte laid out a pass for Bernard Berrian running behind the Chicago defense that went for a 99-yard touchdown.
A day later, Childress was asked about Sapp's performance as the nickel back -- with the preamble that Benny had committed the "dumbest penalty in history."
The coach said: "In history? I thought the dumbest in history was that guy from Alabama against Rice."