The good news at Winter Park this week is that Percy Harvin, who has been slowed down because of a serious rib injury, is practicing full-time, and if the best all-around athlete on the Vikings squad is healthy, that greatly increases their chances for a big upset in Green Bay.
The Vikings might have won the first Packers game had Harvin not missed the second half because of his ribs. Instead, Green Bay held on to win 33-27 on Oct. 23 at the Metrodome.
"It gives you a chance to win just about every game that you're in, if you can keep [Harvin] on the field and healthy, which is what we're trying to do each and every week in 2011, as much as we can," Vikings coach Leslie Frazier said.
Harvin can return kicks and play wide receiver and running back. Frazier describes him as a big playmaker who creates tremendous problems for defenses.
"He plays a lot of different positions, and everywhere he goes, the defense has to account for him," Frazier said. "If he's returning kickoffs, it changes how people cover kicks. He's a difference-maker."
But Frazier also said Harvin is susceptible to injuries. "He's not a real big guy, so some of those hits, they effect him," Frazier said.
Harvin's No. 1 role is as a wide receiver, and Frazier described the 2009 first-round pick out of Florida as the best slot receiver in the NFL.
"He is a hard matchup for anybody trying to cover him man-to-man," the Vikings coach said. "We can put him in the backfield and he can still make plays in the backfield. And when you put him in the slot and try to cover him, it's a hard matchup for defensive backs. We're hoping that this bye week got him healthy."