There is nothing that thrills a sporting public more than surprising success. Examples of the madness this has created in Minnesota include the 1981 and 1991 North Stars, the 1987 and 1991 Twins, the 2003 Wild and the 2004 Gophers women's basketball team.
The Vikings are best known for the heartbreak delivered to their constituency, yet they have won much more than they've lost through 52 years. And they have delivered several seasons when success was extra- surprising, including these:
The 1969 Vikings went 12-2, won two playoff games at Met Stadium and advanced to their first Super Bowl. It was a pleasant surprise, not a shock, after an 8-6 record had given Bud Grant's club a berth in the Western Conference title game a year earlier.
The 1987 Vikings were 8-4 with real players, 0-3 with strike-breakers, and backed into the playoffs. The surprise came when Jerry Burns' club upset New Orleans and San Francisco in road playoff games, before narrowly losing at Washington in the NFC Championship Game.
The 1998 Vikings were coming off a season in which Dennis Green won his first playoff game in unlikely fashion against the Giants. The optimism increased when Randy Moss was drafted in April. Still, a 15-1 regular season with a record-breaking offense ... that was more excitement than most of us anticipated.
And now there is the ongoing season, and it says here, this is already a journey that carries the most surprising success in the Vikings' existence.
The Vikings were 3-13 in 2011 and earned every embarrassing moment. They also had an 11-game losing streak in the NFC North.
The only previous time the Vikings were 3-13, in 1984, CEO Mike Lynn was forced to bribe Grant to return as coach. Bud went 7-9 in his one-year comeback and was lauded for returning stability to the operation.