Suppose Bernard Pollard had missed Tom Brady's left knee on that sunny September day five years ago. Suppose those Hall of Fame-bound ligaments hadn't been snapped, leaving the league's flagship franchise in the hands of a 26-year-old kid who never had even started a game in college, let alone the NFL.
"I guess we'll never know," said Matt Cassel, that former kid and current Vikings backup quarterback. "But all I know is I was in my fourth year and he was Tom Brady, quarterback of the New England Patriots. No one else was going to step on that field unless it was a mop-up deal. But it turned out …"
Cassel paused. He has reached that moment in the conversation. The moment that's honest and innocent, yet still uncomfortable to say out loud for a backup at the one position in which starters play until they are seriously injured, woefully inept or insurmountably ahead.
"Unfortunately for Tom and fortunately for me," Cassel said, "things turned out well for me."
Had Pollard missed that knee? Well, let us count three possibilities:
• Brady probably would have finished that opening-day victory over the Kansas City Chiefs and completed the season. Why? Because that's what he has done every other year since 2001.
• Josh McDaniels might have remained a young Patriots assistant coach hidden in Brady's considerable shadow instead of becoming head coach of the Denver Broncos.
• And Jay Cutler might still be the quarterback in Denver. Why? Because McDaniels wouldn't have been forced to trade Cutler to Chicago after a failed effort to acquire Cassel, a nobody who never would have become a high-priced somebody had he not gone 10-5 in Brady's absence.