Week 8 -BYE-
Week 9 Steelers at Broncos
Week 8 -BYE-
Week 9 Steelers at Broncos
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Posted by Zach Koenig | 1 comment
At the half, then, with the Vikings trailing 16-14, I really thought that our Purple crew could pull it out. The Eagles were doing absolutely nothing on offense, while
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
Go Pu
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
Tarvaris Jackson was 16/26 with 239 yards, 1 TD, and 1 INT. Adrian Peterson rushed for 103 yards on 21 carries. Both Bobby Wade (98 yds) and Bernard Berrian (81 yards) turned in impressive performances. Jackson's INT was also the only Vikings turnover lost in the contest.
Continue reading "Vikings 20, Giants 19: Getting the Job Done"
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
The running game was working well until Adrian Peterson kept fumbling away possessions (he finished with 76 yards), but Tarvaris Jackson also added 76 yards on the ground by himself and looked as exciting as the prime years of Daunte Culpepper. What impressed me the most about Jackson's scrambling, though, is that he wasn't just running around like a chicken with his head cut off...instead, he ran when he saw big yardage and scrambled to avoid pressure and deliver an on-target pass when needed.
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
However, I think the key matchup in the contest will be the Vikings' ability to put pressure on young Atlanta QB Matt Ryan (pictured above). If the D-Line can hurry Ryan, their offense will get out of sync and become one-dimensional. If he is allowed to stand in the pocket and deliver clean passes, though, there is a good chance that White or Michael Jenkins will haul them in against a Purple secondary that needs help up front to succeed.
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
Continue reading "Vikings 35, Cardinals 14: An Impressive ..."
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
Coming into Sunday night's nationally televised contest against the Bears, the Vikes were a team (and a fan base) that expected a victory. Remarkably (if you know anything about the Vikes in pressure situations!), that is exactly what transpired, with an exclamation mark! Why did the Vikings have no excuse not to win this game? A quick recent-history lesson:
Continue reading "Vikings 34, Bears 14: Doing What Needed To Be Done"
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
-First, let's give credit where credit is due...this was one of those games where Adrian Peterson took the team completely on his shoulders. Much like LaDainian Tomlinson did for the Chargers in recent years, Peterson absolutely dominated this game when it really counted...in the second half. However, I would caution Vikings fans not to get too over-hyped about their 5-4 and tie-for-first-place team. Peterson will NOT be able to shoulder that much of a workload every game (whether he wants to or not, the holes will not always be there, especially when defenders start keying on him again), and thus other teammates will have to step up and make big plays (something that is usually severely lacking in MN). I am confident in saying this because the exact same scenario happened last year. After A.D. single-handedly beat the Chargers (when he set the single-game rushing record) and Bears (220 some yards and 3 scores), he was by and large shut down for the rest of the season (I remember the game in San Francisco where he was held to something like 9 total yards on 15 or so carries...ouch). So, as good as it is to be tied for first in the NFC North, the Vikes have an awful lot of proving themselves to do in the remaining regular-season weeks.
Posted by Zach Koenig | 2 comments
Continue reading "THE ULTIMATE MID-SEASON NFL BREAKDOWN ..."
Posted by Nolan Bennett | No comments yet
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Posted by Nolan Bennett | No comments yet
The game actually started out on a very positive note for the Vikings, as Adrian Peterson capped off their first drive of the game with a touchdown lunge at the goal line. Of course, the Bears (helped by the inability of the Vikings' kickoff team to execute a successful squib kick to keep the ball away from Devin Hester, thus gaining them tremendous field position) also scored on their first possession to knot the score at 7-7.
Posted by Zach Koenig | 2 comments
From what I have seen, the Vikings (like most teams in the NFL) rely heavily on runs (from Adrian Peterson and sometimes Chester Taylor) and short passes to set up the occasional deep strike. Essentially, it is a West Coast offense. When run to perfection, this type of offenses does two things: 1. It softens up the defense line by pounding the ball at them time and time again; and 2. Because of that pounding, the line is not strong enough to put pressure on the QB, who is then free to complete short passes (under ten yards) and look for the occasional man coverage on the outside to take a deep shot. However, the Vikings lack one key component of that system: the ability to complete short passes. Leaving Bernard Berrian out of the equation for the moment, the Vikings' other receivers (Bobby Wade, Aundrae Allison, and Robert Ferguson) are just not good enough to consistently get open and make the play required of them. Allison is too inexperienced and penalty-prone, while Fergie and Wade are too old). So, what ends up happening is that opposing defenses even leave the short-yardage receivers in loose coverage, instead choosing to stop-up Peterson, a strategy that has been quite successful in rendering the Purple impotent with the ball. The end result is Peterson getting stuffed, and the receivers dropping enough passes (or just plain not getting open) to set up third and long situations, which a West Coast offense is not equipped to convert, as the defense can finally play a little looser knowing that a pass is almost surely coming.
Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet
Continue reading "Despite Safety, Win Over Lions Is Anything But"
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Posted by Jeff Chlebus | 1 comment