Even if the Vikings beat Tennessee on Sunday and improve to 4-1, we won't be certain that they have built a sustainable winner, but they will have taken another stop toward justifying their approach.
Just a year ago, they looked not just inept but philosophically flawed and anachronistic, like a shipping company that relies on horses.
Win or lose Sunday, succeed or fail this season, the Vikings look like they have a plan that doesn't feature rotary phones.
In April 2011, they selected quarterback Christian Ponder with the 12th pick in the draft. Most NFL analysts accused them of reaching. Even those who liked Ponder thought he was unworthy of the 12th pick.
Today, Ponder is the quarterback of a 3-1 team. He has yet to throw an interception. He has completed 70.1 percent of his passes. The two times his team needed him to make plays to win a game, against Jacksonville and San Francisco, he did.
As of today, he's proof that if you can find the quarterback you like, where you get him is irrelevant.
In September 2011, the Vikings signed Adrian Peterson to a new, lucrative contract. Many NFL analysts, and me, questioned paying premium money to a player who has taken a beating at a position that has become devalued around the league.
Today, Peterson's return from major knee surgery is one of the most inspirational stories in the NFL, and defenses having to game-plan to stop him has eased Ponder's burden.