Showing posts with label Detroit Lions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Lions. Show all posts

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Week 1: Detroit Lions at Minnesota Vikings

Today is D-day for Wilson

MINNEAPOLIS (Star Tribune; 9.13.1987) - Today is the first day of the rest of Wade Wilson's life. Today, the defensive line gets taller, the cornerbacks quicker and the ball a whole lot heavier. Today - at least for today - Wade Wilson is the Vikings' No. 1 quarterback.

"Everything changes Sunday," said Wilson.

Everything. There is no more popular man in town than the No. 2 quarterback - with the possible exception of the No. 3 quarterback. For seven long years as a Viking, Wilson always has been one or the other. When you're No. 2 - or No. 3 - you're everybody's darling, especially when No. 1 screws up. When you're No. 2, you are the best quarterback in the world because you have done no wrong. Of course, the reason you have done no wrong is because you haven't been on the field much, if at all. No matter.

That is what makes you so attractive. You're unsullied, unspoiled, perfect. No matter what number you wear, you're a 10. And you never get booed. Until you become No. 1 and overthrow a receiver in the end zone by 20 yards.

That is the nature of this game and Wilson knows it. Today, there will be no place to hide.

"Sunday, everything changes because it all goes from expectations to producing," he said. "People have been wanting me to play off and on the last couple years, but they really can't say I do good because I haven't really played that much when it counts. Now it's time to show that I can play."

Wilson knows he played very well during the preseason. He completed 63 percent of his passes, threw for five touchdowns and had a quarterback rating (128.1) that jumps right off the board. In the last game of last season, he passed for 339 yards and three touchdowns. He also knows that the real test starts today in the regular-season opener against the Detroit Lions. The preseason and the last game of the 1986 season, when the Vikings already were eliminated from the playoffs, don't mean a thing. "I look at this as an opportunity," he said.

An opportunity to start a quarterback controversy?

Wilson, a small-town boy from Commerce, Texas (pop. 11,000), son of a high school football coach turned elementary school principal, is too nice a guy to start one with words. In print, he says all the right things, that he knows the injured Tommy Kramer, coming off a Pro Bowl year, is supposed to be No. 1. But make no mistake: On the field, Wilson would like nothing better than to make it excruciatingly hard for coach Jerry Burns to pull the trigger and put Kramer back in the lineup. And if Wilson plays as splendidly as he did in the preseason, I'm not so sure Burns shouldn't leave well enough alone.

"If we were going like gangbusters and the club had a certain chemistry and success, I certainly wouldn't do anything to change it," said Burns. "There is nothing in my contract or Tommy's contract that says when Tommy is ready to go that he automatically steps into the breach."

There is a certain irony to the fact that the man Wilson backs up is named Tommy Kramer. Ten years ago a high school senior named Wade Wilson, looking for a place to go to college, visited Rice University, where a senior quarterback named Tommy Kramer was setting all sorts of passing records. Wilson probably would have loved to succeed Kramer. One problem. Rice never called back.

So Wilson attended tiny East Texas State, an NAIA school in his home town. As a senior, Wilson led the team to a third-place finish in the national playoffs. That was seven years ago. That also was the last time he started in a season opener.

The Vikings selected him in the eighth round of the 1981 draft and by rights, Wilson said, they should have cut him after his first training camp. "The way I was playing, I had no business making the team," he said. "That's the honest truth."

Wilson was smart and had great work habits, but he had the touch of a sumo wrestler. "When a back would come out of the backfield for a pass, he'd damn near knock 'em over," said Burns, who then was the offensive coordinator. Burns thought of Wilson in baseball terms: The kid had a big league arm but needed to learn how to control it.

The thing that may have saved him from the cutting block that first year was that he could punt in emergency situations. So the Vikings, who needed a No. 3 quarterback behind Kramer and Steve Dils, kept him, though for the first three years the coaches considered him very raw.

In time, Wilson developed his touch and impressed the coaches because he never stopped trying to improve, even though he played in only four games in his first three seasons. But once Wilson was ready to show what he could do, he had few opportunities because Kramer was ahead of him.

In six years, Wilson has started only 10 games, always because somebody else was hurt. He is a very young 28. But there have been moments. In 1985, he started against the Philadelphia Eagles. "I was pretty excited because this was my chance to do something," he said. "But I had a terrible first half and we did absolutely nothing. Nothing goes right and I get pulled out of the game. So I'm frustrated and now I'm mad because even though I played bad, this was my first game and I didn't think I deserved to get pulled after just one half.

"So then Steve comes in and he was just as bad and it was in the fourth quarter and kind of cold and raining and I'm sitting on the sidelines, pouting, and Bud (Grant) says, `You're going back in.' And I just looked at him like, I can't believe this. I was mad enough that he pulled me and I was real mad he was going to put me back in and embarrass me more."

Wilson went back in with the Vikings losing 23-0. Final score: Minnesota 28, Philadelphia 23. "That was a lot of fun," Wilson said.

He would like to have more fun today.

Burns has one worry about his No. 1 quarterback for the day. "He has a little bit more of a nervous nature than Tommy," Burns said. "I worry a little bit about that. When Tommy throws an interception, he walks off and says, what the hell? I'll get it next time. He knows the best of them make mistakes. But Wade's not yet buoyed by that kind of confidence. Wade's never had the total fame of a Tommy Kramer. He's never hit the home run."

Then again, he's never had the chance.

At the moment, Wilson can't even enjoy the traditional benefits of being the No. 2 quarterback. In Minnesota, understand, the current No. 3 quarterback may be even more popular than the No. 2 guy. The fact that Rich Gannon has not played one down in an NFL regular-season game doesn't seem to matter. He is shiny and new and the way he runs, he reminds people of Francis Tarkenton. Wilson shrugs. "Sometimes," he said, "you feel caught in a crunch. You've got a Pro Bowler in front of you and a wonder kid behind you."

But for today, and maybe longer, Wade Wilson is the man.# By Dan Barreiro

September 13, 19871234Final
Detroit Lions6103019
Minnesota Vikings01021334

MINNEAPOLIS (AP; 9.13.1987) - Anthony Carter is the Minnesota Vikings' best receiver, even if he tried to prove otherwise during the first 36 1/2 minutes of Minnesota's 1987 season.

"You don't expect an Anthony Carter to drop two passes like that, that's for sure," Vikings quarterback Wade Wilson said Sunday after his 73-yard touchdown pass to Carter sparked a 21-point third quarter that lifted the Vikings to a 34-19 season-opening NFL victory over the Detroit Lions. "But he was the key in us turning the game around. He's a great athlete and he made a great comeback."

Wilson, starting in place of the injured Tommy Kramer, threw three first-half interceptions. But the first two went through Carter's hands before settling in the arms of Detroit defenders.
"It's something that's going to happen in a game," Carter said. "But it happened to me and that's something that doesn't usually happen.

"I just dropped them and Wade got two interceptions real quick. It was my fault."

The miscues helped Detroit build a 16-3 second-quarter lead. Minnesota still trailed 19-10 and had a third-and-18 on its own 27-yard line when Carter beat Duane Galloway _ who had two of Detroit's interceptions _ and Wilson hit Carter in stride.

"It was a blitz and they had man-to-man coverage on Anthony Carter," Wilson said. "You couldn't ask for anything more."

"I didn't play it well," Galloway said. "I should have used my head. I should have gotten a little farther off the ball. That touchdown turned the game around."

Added Lions Coach Darryl Rogers: "We took a chance on blitzing, but we couldn't get to Wilson and Carter beat us."

He said that the Lions played well in the first half, "but ... were unable to sustain it for the full game."

"The fourth-quarter momentum was totally with the Vikings," Rogers said. "It's amazing how well they controlled the ball, expecially after not doing it for 2 1/2 quarters."

Wilson finished with 12 completions in 22 attempts for 248 yards and three touchdowns to overshadow Chuck Long, the Lions' No. 1 draft choice in 1986.

Long was 24-for-38 for 195 yards and a touchdown but was intercepted by Neal Guggemos three plays after Wilson's bomb to Carter. Guggemos' 26-yard return set up D.J. Dozier's 1-yard touchdown run, which put the Vikings ahead for good with 6:30 left in the third.

Detroit failed to advance the football on its next possession and Wilson took advantage with a 24-yard touchdown pass to Leo Lewis, putting the Vikings up 31-19.

Eddie Murray kicked four field goals for Detroit, two of which were set up by interceptions that went through Carter's hands. Detroit's only touchdown, Long's 5-yard pass to Pete Mandley that put Detroit up 16-3 midway through the second quarter, came after Galloway went 30 yards with an interception of a Wilson overthrow.

Minnesota's other points came on field goals of 27 and 22 yards by Chuck Nelson.
In the second half, Wilson completed six of 10 passes for 143 yards. Kramer, who missed the first three weeks of training camp while in treatment for alcohol problems, suffered a pinched nerve in his neck in his first preseason game and is out on a game-to-game basis.

Detroit missed several opportunities to take command of the game in the opening half.

The Lions got inside the Vikings' 10-yard line three times but came up with only Murray field goals of 26, 27 and 24 yards.

After James Griffin's interception, tight end Rob Rubick dropped a pass that would have given the Lions a first down at the 1-yard line. And after Galloway's first interception, Minnesota cornerback Carl Lee wasn't called for interference even though he appeared to have hit Jeff Chadwick in the end zone before the football arrived.

Murray also missed a 54-yard field goal at the end of the first half. In addition, he punted twice, for 46 and 45 yards, after punter Russell Erxleben sustained a groin injury in the second quarter.

Mandley caught seven passes for 79 yards. Detroit fullback James Jones, who terrorized the Vikings for 174 yards in the Lions' season-opening victory last year, led all runners with 58 yards.

Dozier finished with 57 rushing yards and Alfred Anderson 53 for the Vikings.# By Mike Nadel

MINNEAPOLIS (AP; 9.13.1987) - Joey Browner said Monday that he has an agreement with Minnesota Vikings Coach Jerry Burns that he will not play on special teams unless his contract is improved.

Browner, who made the Pro Bowl as a special teams player two years ago and then made the NFL's all-star game again last year as a safety, missed 11 days of training camp in a contract dispute.

Saying he wanted to renegotiate his four-year, $1.375 million contract because it was signed before he became a Pro Bowler at two different spots, Browner threatened to sit out the regular-season opener.

However, Browner did play Sunday in Minnesota's 34-19 victory over the Detroit Lions and earned high marks from defensive coordinator Floyd Peters.

But he didn't play on any of the kicking teams.

"I just played strong safety," Browner said after Monday's practice. "It wasn't a request (not to play on special teams). It was just an understanding I have with Coach Burns. I'm doing what I'm paid to do. And that's play defensive back."

He said he would play on special teams in a crucial situation if Burns asked him to.

"If a game came down to one play and it was a special teams play, I would do it," said Browner, who made a name for himself in the NFL for the aggressive way he covered punts.

He said that contract talks haven't gone well. Vikings General Manager Mike Lynn steadfastly refuses to renegotiate contracts.

Burns didn't want to talk about the situation.

"There's no problem between me and Joey Browner relative to special teams," said the second-year coach, who is popular with most players including Browner. "That's all I'm going to say. Period."

He did add, however, that there are other Vikings who don't play on special teams. He also said that the coaching staff had talked in the offseason about lightening Browner's playing load _ even before the contract dispute began.

"Joey Browner is extremely critical to our defense and I would like to keep him as fresh as I can possibly keep him," Burns said. "If I can keep him fresh and ... keep his involvement in other areas minimal, it would make him a better player. I recognize that he's an excellent special teams player. But you can't take him out there and wear him out."

Neither Burns nor Browner worried about dissension on the team should a punt be returned for a touchdown while Browner was not in the game.

"They're paying other guys just like they're paying me," said Browner, whose spot on the punt coverage team has been taken by rookie Reggie Rutland.

"He's a team player in my book," Burns said. "Maybe we should have (quarterbacks Tommy Kramer and Wade Wilson) cover punts to alleviate any controversy."

Speaking of quarterbacks, Kramer threw lightly during the workout but said he is still far from ready to play unless the Vikings absolutely need him. Kramer, who has a pinched nerve in his neck, watched from the sideline Sunday as Wilson passed for 248 yards and three touchdowns against Detroit.

Kramer said he didn't know if he would feel any better by next Sunday, when the Vikings meet the Los Angeles Rams.

Running back Darrin Nelson, who missed the opener with a knee injury, said he felt better and might be back by Sunday. Cornerback Ike Holt is still doubtful.

Nelson's replacement, top draft choice D.J. Dozier, got a game ball for his performance against the Lions - 12 carries for 57 yards and a touchdown and another touchdown receiving. No. 3 draft choice Henry Thomas, the nose tackle, also received a game ball. Trainer Fred Zamberletti, who has been with the team since its inception in 1961, said he doubted whether two rookies have ever been so honored for one game.# By Mike Nadel

Notes:
Dan Barreiro, and Staff Writer. 1987. Today is D-day for Wilson :[METRO Edition]. Star Tribune, September 13, http://www.proquest.com/ (accessed July 1, 2010).

Mike Nadel. 1987. Sunday, AM cycle, Sports News. Associated Press, September 13.

Mike Nadel. 1987. Monday, AM cycle, Sports News. Associated Press, September 14.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Final Regular Season Ranks

1. New York Giants: They lost, and I moved them up. what gives? Seeing them up close made me realize how dominant their offensive line is, and Steve Spagnuolo has some pretty nice blitz packages. I'm guessing it will come down to a game at the Meadowlands against Carolina.
2. Tennessee Titans: Baltimore could make things tough on the Titans come round two. But I think the Colts would beat them.
3. Pittsburgh Steelers: Byron Leftwich probably could win a couple playoff games with this team. Steelers fans should probably hope he stays on the bench though.
4. Indianapolis Colts: Nine wins in a row is nothing to scoff at. I think they will challenge either Pittsburgh or Tennessee in the second round, and if they get through there, might be Super.
5. Baltimore Ravens: Here's hoping we get to see Baltimore play Miami, Tennessee, and Pittsburgh in the playoffs. Talk about some old-school football.
6. Carolina Panthers: Will anybody be able to stop DeAngelo Williams and Steve Smith in the playoffs?
7. Miami Dolphins: They just keep on winning. Their defense deserves a lot of credit. How valuable is Ricky Williams? Because of him the Dolphins go into the playoffs with two relatively fresh running backs.
8. New England Patriots: By far the best team to miss the playoffs, probably playing as well as anybody right now. Matt Cassel appears to be the real deal, and if reports that Tom Brady's recovery is going slowly are correct, New England might have to throw Cassel a fat one-year deal.
9. Atlanta Falcons: Not the way you would like to handle the Rams at home going into the playoffs, but they should beat the Cardinals in round one.
10. Minnesota Vikings: Granted, it was against some of the Giants back-ups. But the Vikings made a pretty nice 4th-quarter comeback Sunday, and clinched the NFC North.
11. Philadelphia Eagles: They have played a lot better in December, but this big win over Dallas isn't enough to wash that performance against Washington out of my memory.
12. San Diego Chargers: I guess you have to give them credit for fighting and getting back into the mix. They still aren't that good.
13. Dallas Cowboys: Tony Romo and Brett Favre looked a lot alike in the last few weeks. And they both cost their teams a shot at the playoffs.
14. Arizona Cardinals: Maybe the most one-dimensional team in the NFL. Probably won't win a playoff game.
15. Houston Texans: I like Matt Schuab and Andre Johnson is the best receiver in the league. Steve Slaton looks to be their running back for a few years also. If they can improve on defense, they will be a contender next year. (Yes, everybody said the exact same thing last year. It's true.)
16. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Bucs were one of the more balanced teams for a lot of this season, but the run defense wore down, and Jeff Garcia couldn't stay healthy. I think they will challenge the NFC South again next season.
17. Chicago Bears: The Bears defense was simply terrible. They are the biggest reason this team missed the playoffs. And, really, the only really they even hung around was because of some weird special teams plays.
18. Denver Broncos: Their defense was awful all year, and it didn't come through Sunday night.
19. New York Jets: At 8-3 they were on the fast track to an AFC East title and maybe even a first-round bye. Then all of their weaknesses got exposed, over and over. Brett Favre needs to retire. The Jets should look at what Aaron Rodgers did, and hope that Clemens can be the man by 2010.
20. New Orleans: Aside from some individual performances, the Saints were a big disappointment.
21. San Francisco 49ers: Mike Singletary got this team to play with some guts in the second half of the season. I think they are a better team than most people know.
22. Washington: They need more from the quarterback position.
23. Buffalo Bills: Overachieved for a little while, but came down to Earth hard. Will have to start finishing drives before they can be taken seriously. 
24. Oakland Raiders: A pretty solid defense, a quarterback who is almost ready to step up and be the man, and a couple good running backs. 8-8 next year?
25. Green Bay Packers: They had some of the same problems last year, but Brett Favre helped hide them. I don't think he would have made much difference this year.
26. Jacksonville Jaguars: Somewhere along the line this team completely lost focus, and despite a couple nice efforts at the end of the year, I would be worried about them were I a fan.
27. Cincinnati Bengals: If they had played as hard as a unit with Carson Palmer, they might have stayed relevant for a little while. 
28. Seattle Seahawks: I might buy the injury argument with this team, but with everybody healthy could they have accounted for even half of their 12 losses? Doubtful.
29. Kansas City Chiefs: This team is so young. They took a lot of lumps this year. Hopefully Tony Gonzalez gets a chance somewhere else next year, because he can still play.
30. Cleveland Browns: I am really shocked by how bad the Browns are. Last year was a fluke, apparently.
31. St. Louis Rams: I feel like St. Louis has a couple nice pieces. Marc Bulger probably needs to be on a good team to be an elite quarterback. This team has a long way to go.
32. Detroit Lions: I don't know that there is anything to say about the Lions.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Upsetting Stat, Part II

Oakland 3-10
Seattle 2-11
St. Louis 2-11
Kansas City 2-11
Cincinnati 1-11-1
Detroit 0-13

Last week I brought up these records because it has been a long time since so many teams have had such bad records. My question was: Will 2008 see the most 3 or less-win teams in the history of the NFL (since 1978 really, when the season was expanded to 16 games; also exclude 1982, when only nine games were played). Well, they all lost this week.

Detroit was close to Minnesota the whole way through. Cincinnati and Oakland got destroyed. St. Louis and Seattle played tough against better teams. Kansas City stuck with Denver for a little bit. Aside from Detroit, the other teams can still get out of this gutter. We'll see.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

More rankings.

Yet again the  top five are intact. New England drops a few spots, and is replaced at 5 by Washington.

1. Tennessee Titans: This deep into the season, you can't drop the only undefeated team below first.
2. New York Giants: If you were going to drop the Titans, it would be for New York. They dominated the floundering Cowboys, and are head and shoulders above the rest of the best division in the league.
3. Pittsburgh Steelers: They have the best back up quarterback in the league, and he came through in a big Monday night win.
4. Carolina Panthers: Playing mostly consistent, looking to come off their bye week and keep the momemtum.
5. Washington: Tough loss to Pittsburgh. Still one of the few six-win teams in the league.

10. Chicago Bears: Found a way to win despite Detroit playing one of its better games. They need to make a few weeks with Rex Grossman at quarterback.
18. Green Bay Packers: Still not convinced by this team, as they seem to play to their opponents level every week. Need Aaron Rodgers to stay healthy.
21. Minnesota Vikings: An even less convincing team, but they played their best game of the season so far.

28. Cincinnati Bengals: They finally finished a game, and get their first win of the year.
29. San Francisco 49ers: Haven't seen enough of this team, but they don't seem to have a lot going for them.
30. Seattle Seahawks: Really bad.
31. Oakland Raiders: Worst team performance of the season on Sunday. By any team in the league, that is.
32. Detroit Lions: Like the Titans, you can't move a team from this spot until they win a game.

The experts stayed about the same this week with their NFC North rankings. Most had Chicago highest, and all had Detroit at 32. Michael Silver has consistently ranked NFC North teams higher than ESPN, CBS, and Jeff Sagarin's computer have. He currently has two division teams in the top 10, and by his average ranking for the Vikings is five spots higher than ESPN's and seven spots higher than CBS's. Interesting?

ESPN.com: CHI-9, G.B.-16, MIN-20, DET-32
Michael Silver(Yahoo!): G.B.-7, CHI-9, MIN-13, DET-32
CBS Sportline: CHI-15, G.B.-16, MIN-19, DET-32
Jeff Sagarin(USA Today): CHI-8, G.B.-14, MIN-14, DET-32
FOX Sports: CHI-7, G.B.-12, MIN-19, DET-32

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Steelers, Ravens Face Tough Road to Playoffs

How opportune for the NFC North, to draw the NFC East and AFC South in the same season. Each team in those two division has at least three wins already, and at least three of those teams are among the top five in the league in most power rankings (NY Giants, Tennessee, Washington).

While the Cincinnati Bengals(0-8) are a complete mess, and the Cleveland Browns(3-4) are struggling to stay afloat after a terrible start, both Pittsburgh(5-2) and Baltimore(4-3) have fought their way to winning records through eight weeks. Conventional wisdom at the point would probably tell us that Pittsburgh is the clear favorite; I'm not really going to argue with that, or even try to challenge it at all. The interesting thing about this division is that both the Steelers and Ravens are in the middle of one of the most hellish schedules I can imagine.

Here's where the two stand so far:

Pittsburgh has already played won three divisional games, including one against Baltimore. They also beat a tough Jacksonville team. Their sole losses came against stalwart NFC East opponents: the Ny Giants and Philadelphia. Baltimore, meanwhile, is 4-0 against teams with losing records, and 0-3 against teams with winning records. They lost to Pittsburgh, Tennessee, and Indianapolis in consecutive weeks. They do have two divisional wins under their belt.

Here is what they have coming:

Pittsburgh will go on the road to face Washington, New England, and Tennessee, and will host the inconsistent but talented Indianapolis Colts and San Diego Chargers. Their remaining divisional games are at Baltimore and home for Cincinnati and Cleveland. Baltimore will travel to face Cleveland, Houston and the Giants in consecutive weeks. That ridiculous road stretch is followed by one home game, against Philadelphia, and then another road trip, this time for a division rival Cincinnati. Their final four games: Washington, Pittsburgh, at Dallas, home for Jacksonville.

So while Pittsburgh is surely a better team than Baltimore so far, and holds a game lead in the division, it will really come down to how they play against other opponents. And neither team gets a break the rest of the way. Cincinnati isn't a scary foe, but a divisional game in the NFL is different, even against an 0-8 team.

On another schedule topic, the 0-7 Lions have a really good chance to go defeated the rest of the way. Their final nine games feature nine teams with at least three wins. Their four road games all figure to be bad losses: at Chicago, Carolina, Indianapolis, and Green Bay. Their only hopes may be against either the 3-4 Jaguars or the 3-4 Vikings, both games at Ford Field.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Again, let us not forget the final score

For the second straight week, the Minnesota Vikings won an incredibly ugly game. After turning the ball over three times and have a field goal blocked in the 4th quarter, Minnesota snuck past Detroit on a Ryan Longwell field goal, 12-10.

Typically, the media is writing this win off. The Vikings are not a popular team this year. They were predicted to be one of the better teams in the league, and have shown that, more or less, they are just another middle-of-pack group. ESPN.com's headline for the game said the game was won on a questionable call, while the same site's Last Call claimed the Vikings were outplayed for a second straight week.

If you read my post last week concerning the Saints-Vikings Monday Night Football match up, you understand that I don't really buy that the Saints "outplayed" the Vikings. And this week, I feel even stronger that the Vikings were not outplayed. Although the Lions definitely showed up on Sunday, the Vikings basically dominated most of the game, stopping now and then to hand over the ball or fail on a scoring chance. Please refer to the game's box score for the bulk of the substantiation for my argument. Note that the Lions had eight first downs and only 212 total yards. And, yes, most of it came on one play, but Frerotte did throw for 296 yards.

On a positive note, Minnesota's defense continues to look like one of the best in the league. Kevin Williams had one of the most incredible individual performances by a defender in recent memory. Four sacks from the tackle position? Unreal. David Herron filled in admirably for E.J. Henderson (when he wasn't limping off the field), but there does seem to be a difference in the rush defense since the middle backer went out. With Henderson on the field, outside runs were getting strung out, and E.J. was tackling runners behind the line of scrimmage. With Herron, the same plays are being strung out, and the runner is gaining two or three yards. Most teams would love to have that "problem." Nonetheless, it is a credit to Henderson to note that he was a huge part of why teams struggle so much to run against Minnesota.

Watch any NFL game and notice that some of the most frustrating plays for a defense are 3rd down conversations. And notice, also, that a lot of conversions come on dump offs to running backs. Five or six years ago the Vikings defense gave up an infuriating number of first downs this way. Today, I have no qualms saying the Vikings are the best team in the league at containing running backs catching the ball out of the backfield. It may seem an unsubstantial angle on the game, but these plays keep drives alive and sometimes pick up huge chunks of yardage. But the Vikings linebackers are so quick, and the defensive backs such able tacklers, that even in short yardage situations, teams have no guarantees against this defense.

The Vikings probably should not feel great after this win, but they should feel great about being 3-3. The reality of the situation is that no matter how ugly it was, the outcome was a victory, and they can only look forward to next week. I expect both Minnesota and Chicago to show up next Sunday, and for the first time in almost a month, the Vikings to eliminate the sloppy plays that are weighing them down.