GREEN BAY, WIS. - The volume on the two TVs had been muted, but the pictures, strangely, had not yet been shut off. So as Leslie Frazier came to deliver his postgame news conference in a small Lambeau Field interview room late Saturday, he literally had Green Bay's 24-10 playoff victory hanging over his head.
A local Green Bay news broadcast had an all-caps banner across the bottom of its screen -- "PACKERS WIN!" -- plus images of coach Mike McCarthy laughing with reporters and reveling in his team's dominance.
It presented a surreal backdrop for Frazier as he spent eight minutes attempting to recap his previous five hours -- from the Vikings' surprise pregame deactivation of quarterback Christian Ponder to the woes of backup Joe Webb to a flurry of costly mental mistakes that resulted in uncharacteristic penalties and turnovers.
Frazier seemed somber, maybe a bit dejected. These are the inevitable emotions attached to most season-ending losses, especially one as lopsided as Saturday's.
But even with the disappointment, the Vikings coach made sure not to lose sight of the contagious ambition that had given his underdog team its playoff opportunity.
"These guys never let anyone put limitations on what they could achieve," Frazier said. "They played as hard as they could and tried to do the very best they could to give us a chance to win."
Just a few minutes earlier, in a hushed locker room, Frazier filled his final postgame address with pride. He thanked his players for their class, sacrifice and intelligence, a few of the top qualities he wants all his teams to embody.
He reminded them they had all been privileged to work with one another. And he hoped their 2012 resurgence had left them fulfilled.