The Bears and the Eagles came to town as contenders for playoff spots, and the Vikings, despite the fact that they were out of playoff contention, dominated the Eagles and beat the Bears in overtime. In between those games they lost a thrilling contest on the road against Baltimore.
Matt Cassel had played three good games in a row, posting a 94.46 passer rating over those contests — 80.7 against the Bears, 86.0 against the Ravens and 116.6 against the Eagles.
The local media were convinced that Cassel was the solution to the Vikings' quarterback situation, but for some reason things were a lot different in Sunday's 42-14 thrashing by the Bengals. Cassel wound up with a 32.6 quarterback rating, the third-lowest total in his nine-year career, after completing just 13 of 27 passes for 114 yards with a fumble and three interceptions, including a pick-six score for Cincinnati.
Nobody can blame Cassel for this loss, though. When a defense gives up 429 yards and five touchdowns, it's hard to put the fault on the quarterback. There was plenty of blame to go around.
To be fair, the Bengals are a pretty good team and are unbeaten at home.
However, after this performance it wouldn't surprise me if coach Leslie Frazier turns to Christian Ponder for the final game in the Metrodome this Sunday against a Lions team that was eliminated from playoff contention Sunday.
This team isn't going to win many games when Adrian Peterson winds up with 45 yards on 11 tries. There is little doubt Peterson is playing hurt; otherwise he would be doing a lot better the past few games.
It's been very difficult for anybody to figure out this team, which has lost four games by a total of 12 points, allowing opponents to win with a score in the final two minutes.