Before Thursday, the Vikings looked like the NFL's most endearing story, one of Adrian Peterson's perseverance and Percy Harvin's will.
Before Thursday, they looked like a throwback to the old black-and-blue division.
Before Thursday, one had to wonder why so many fans seemed hesitant to invest their emotions in a team featuring national stars in Peterson and Harvin and a good-guy coach in Leslie Frazier.
By 9:30 on Thursday night, you no longer had to wonder. By getting overwhelmed by a Tampa Bay team that entered the game with a 2-4 record, the Vikings succeeded in only one endeavor: Shifting Minnesota's focus from their surprising record to their vivid flaws and daunting schedule.
By the time the drunks were finished with their fights in the stands, black-and-blue described the Vikings' bruised psyches, not their style of play.
"They did a good job of just coming out and beating our brains in," defensive end Brian Robison said. "It's Football 101."
If the Vikings can't handle Tampa Bay's talented offense and previously spotty defense, how will they handle the Packers, Bears, Seahawks and Texans?
If the Vikings couldn't seize the advantage at home on a Thursday against a 2-4 team with a rookie coach who was forced to spend Wednesday traveling, how will they handle trips to Green Bay, Chicago, Seattle and Houston?