In the moments immediately after Sunday's unraveling in Indianapolis, Vikings coach Leslie Frazier acknowledged the obvious, admitting his team had set its own booby traps in a 23-20 loss to the Colts.
Little by little, the Vikings came undone with penalty after questionable penalty after "My goodness, what in the world was he thinking?" penalty.
When asked to explain how so many mistakes piled up, Frazier shrugged with a blank stare.
"I don't know," he said from a podium inside Lucas Oil Stadium. "We have to go back and look at what we're doing and try and figure out what we have to do better."
So Monday provided Phase 2 of "The Great Penalty Inquisition." And this time Frazier was asked what can be done to rectify such problems going forward.
"You keep harping on the importance of not doing things that can be self-inflicted," he said.
The easiest reaction to Sunday's flag fest is to blame the coaching staff. It's a logical path to go down after nine players drew 11 penalties, many bone-headed.
The Vikings were versatile with their blunders. They committed five offensive penalties for 50 yards, four on defense for 30 yards and two more on special teams for 25 yards.