Minnesota’s microscopic playoff hopes were officially extinguished Sunday afternoon when the Bears beat Cleveland, ensuring the Vikings’ season will end in Week 18.
As much was effectively determined after the Vikings were waxed in Seattle two weeks prior. It’s why a portion of the fan base couldn’t get overly excited about a shutout win over Washington last week and were equally conflicted for Sunday’s primetime showdown with Dallas.
To tank or to not tank?
In the NFL, is that even a question?
“Tanking” is a refrain more aptly saved for the NBA. Frankly, it’s hard to do in the NFL.
It’s not as applicable in a season that provides with only 17 opportunities in which players can prove themselves each fall. In a league where contracts feature minimal guarantees, meaning guys are always playing for their financial future. Most players aren’t going to be happy if they’re held out with a minor injury. And the rosters simply aren’t deep enough to hold out healthy bodies, anyway.
Football is also a sport where if you go at anything less than full speed with laser focus, you open yourself up to a higher potential for injury. Pride comes into play, as well. You think Justin Jefferson isn’t going to do everything in his power to reach the 1,000-yard plateau this season?
If the best players are out there, you’re going to get their best.
About the only cord teams can pull to attempt to lessen their chances of winning a game is to change quarterbacks. We’ve seen organizations do that at the end of seasons to give a younger player an opportunity or to prevent a veteran from complicating a contract situation with an injury. And, in turn, the move frequently helps produce losses.
That opportunity doesn’t exist for the Vikings, who are already playing their second-year signal caller. J.J. McCarthy, if healthy, is going to be under center for Minnesota for the season’s duration, for better or worse. The snaps give the 22-year-old more experience and gives the Vikings more data to evaluate as they head into the offseason.
Minnesota is going to push full throttle through the finish line, or at least until Week 18. And is there much harm in that? Realistically, the Vikings are going to draft somewhere between 10-16 in Round 1.
Would you rather draft 10th? Sure. Is there a massive difference between the two slots? Not really. Evaluating and selecting prospects and moving around the board via trades are such inexact sciences that once you move outside of the top five – where the prospective franchise quarterbacks and left tackles reside – it’s all somewhat of a crapshoot.
The more concrete advantage of a poor finish is the schedule it locks in for your following season. Finishing last in your division means you’ll face last-place teams in three other divisions in 2026. Three extra wins can make all the difference in a 17-game season.
The NFC North is such a juggernaut, the Vikings have a fourth-place finish all but assured. Which means any damages done for Minnesota via wins picked up between now and the end of the season are nominal, at best. And there’s something to be said for gaining positive traction over the final quarter of the campaign. Not only for McCarthy, but for the team at large as it hopes to bounce back for a brighter 2026.
Tanking isn’t possible, anyway. The Vikings may as well charge forward, full speed ahead.
Related Articles
Aaron Jones gets pseudo homecoming as Vikings play Cowboys
Vikings at Cowboys: What to know ahead of Week 15 matchup
Vikings picks: Can Minnesota slow down Dak Prescott?
The Loop Fantasy Football Update Week 15: Last-minute moves
Paul Wiggin, longtime member of the Vikings, dies at 91



