For the Vikings in 2017, the road to the Super Bowl begins at U.S. Bank Stadium.
Whether it ends there on Feb. 4, when Minneapolis plays host to Super Bowl LII to cap off the postseason, will be largely determined by whether coach Mike Zimmer's team can keep several of the NFL's top passers under wraps, show up for a trio of prime-time games and weather three consecutive road games near the end of the regular season.
The NFL unveiled its regular-season schedule on Thursday night for the 2017 season. For the first time since 2012 and only the second time in the past decade, the Vikings will open the season at home. On Sept. 11, they play host to perennial Pro Bowl quarterback Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints on a Monday night, in the first half of the NFL's opening-week "Monday Night Football" doubleheader.
It will be the second time in three years that the Vikings kick off the regular season on "Monday Night Football." It did not go so well for them in 2015 when they got bullied by the San Francisco 49ers on the road, though they did rebound to win the division.
The Vikings also play prime-time games in Chicago and Green Bay, in addition to traveling to Detroit to play on Thanksgiving for the second consecutive season. The Vikings will also have to make sure their passports are up to date, as they head back overseas to England in Week 8 to play Cleveland at London's Twickenham Stadium.
Their bye week conveniently comes at the season's midway point, after they return from playing their second-ever game in London. The first was four years ago.
Despite those challenging road trips, the road to the 2017 postseason is reasonable for the Vikings, who have the league's fifth-easiest schedule based on 2016 records. Their opponents had a .453 winning percentage last season, per CBS Sports.
The Vikings will, however, have to defeat some of the NFL's most productive quarterbacks. After Brees, they face Pittsburgh's Ben Roethlisberger, Washington's Kirk Cousins, Atlanta's Matt Ryan and Carolina's Cam Newton in addition to twice seeing Green Bay's Aaron Rodgers and Detroit's Matthew Stafford in NFC North showdowns.