The Fox cameras caught a close-up of Vikings coach Leslie Frazier right before the Packers' 25th offensive snap of Sunday's regular-season finale at Mall of America Field.
Despite a 20-7 lead with 1 minute, 7 seconds left in the first half, Frazier wore the look of a father watching his 16-year-old back the family car out of the driveway for the first time.
No one outside of the Vikings bench knew it at the time, but cornerback Antoine Winfield's day had ended on the Packers' 24th snap three minutes earlier. The fractured right hand that Winfield thought he could play through with nothing more than a glove over a small pad was causing unbearable pain and looking like the belly of a snake that had swallowed a cantaloupe.
What Frazier knew then that the rest of us didn't was, like it or not, punt returner Marcus Sherels would finish the game as Winfield's replacement in a nickel package the team would use almost exclusively against Aaron Rodgers and his arsenal of receivers.
Sherels is the ultimate NFL scrapper, an overachiever who had to survive a weekend tryout before being signed as an undrafted rookie out of Minnesota in 2010. He's praised for his poise, intelligence and his skills to play in the slot, an obvious rarity among the team's current crop of big corners.
But Sherels also is the team's fifth-best corner. And, well, when it comes to experience, let's just say he was 12 when Winfield broke into the NFL as Buffalo's final first-round pick of the last millennium.
"Antoine makes a difference," Frazier said. "There's no question about that."
Amen to that. In the 18 snaps that Winfield played on Sunday, Rodgers completed seven of 13 passes for 47 yards and a touchdown. Rodgers also was 0-for-1 in a first-half red-zone play in which the Vikings went with six linemen, three linebackers and two safeties.