The Green Bay Packers parked their sports car in the garage on Sunday and took the old reliable Buick for a drive.
Both means of transportation can lead to the same destination. One just has more style and sizzle.
Unable to run-and-gun against Mike Zimmer's defensive scheme, the Packers shifted to a methodical, workmanlike approach. They gave the ball to bulldozer tailback Eddie Lacy and ground out an old-school 24-21 victory at TCF Bank Stadium.
The Vikings did an admirable job in limiting a red-hot Aaron Rodgers, but the Packers proved they're not a one-trick pony. They don't need to score 50 points or pass for 400 yards to win. They can also demoralize a team with a slow burn.
Stop Rodgers and Lacy runs wild. Focus on Lacy and, well, you know how that ends.
"It's great to score 50 points and blow teams out," Rodgers said, "but these are character wins right here."
The Packers entered the game on such a historic roll offensively that a reporter asked receiver Randall Cobb afterward what it felt like being involved in a close game "for once."
The Packers had scored 108 points in their previous two games and became only the second team in league history to put 53 on the scoreboard in back-to-back games. Rodgers has reduced games to his own seven-on-seven drill, making defenses look silly.