NEW ORLEANS - For months, the Vikings' opener at New Orleans, in a rematch of an epic NFC title game, in the home of a city believing the Saints offered proof of its rebirth, felt as consequential and symbolic as Christmas.
Turns out it was more like Halloween -- a holiday signifying little, featuring loud costumes and leaving half the participants with queasy stomachs.
Ugly and overhyped as it was, the Vikings' 14-9 loss to the Saints doesn't mean much. Losing on the road to a championship team early in the season is hardly fatal. It was just another Fleur de Loss in "The City That Doesn't Sleep In Its Own Bed."
What the loss means is that the Vikings suddenly have little margin for error. They haven't dealt with this predicament previously with Favre at their helm.
Last year, they started with easy victories over Cleveland and Detroit, stole one from the 49ers and started the season 6-0. The early winning streak gave them immense confidence and a cushion in the NFC North that allowed them to survive unsightly late-season losses at Arizona, Carolina and Chicago.
In fact, that early winning streak obscured the Vikings' struggles on the road under Favre. Including the end of last season, the playoff loss at New Orleans and Thursday's loss, the Vikings have lost six of their past seven road games with Favre under center, a strange occurrence given his experience.
Having lost at New Orleans, the Vikings face immediate urgency. They will play Miami at home in their next game. A victory should be expected, and would put the Vikings in position to beat Detroit and enter the bye at 2-1.
They need those two wins to buttress themselves against a brutal stretch that could determine their fate: at the Jets on a Monday night, followed by the Cowboys at home and the Packers and Patriots on the road.