Sorry about that...we completely skipped last week's tie against Green Bay, and the consequences that came from it. Well, we have a new kicker, and Kirk Cousins appears to be the real deal. I am still salty that the coaching staff took the ball out of Kirk's hands in the final few plays of overtime when he was dealing and probably would have thrown another touchdown to win the game. Instead, the coaching staff decided that they could maybe trust a kicker who hadn't made a kick all day.
Spoiler alert: they couldn't...and that's why Dan Bailey is now our kicker.
Fast forward a week; this is a game you absolutely have to win with a short week to follow, and your next two games being against the Rams and Eagles. Buffalo may very well threaten to join the 0-fer club, population Detroit (2008) and Cleveland (2017). Theoretically, this should be the easiest game the Vikings play all year...but of course, the Vikings never make anything easy on themselves, so I'm not holding my breath on a blowout win.
The Vikes will probably make this game closer than it has to be. Then again, it could turn out exactly like the Bengals game from late last year. That's all I have to say about this game on short notice.
Showing posts with label Zim Reapers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zim Reapers. Show all posts
Sunday, September 23, 2018
Friday, January 19, 2018
NFC Title Game: To go boldly where no (host) team has ever gone before!
So, it’s time to put the miracle in the
rear-view. Now there’s a phrase used in
everyday life.
The 2017 Minnesota Vikings have already made history
after one playoff game. If you believe
that there is a curse specifically targeting the Vikings, they may have
destroyed it with the Minneapolis Miracle only to encounter another one:
something called the home field curse.
As we all know, no team has ever had home field
advantage in the Super Bowl, and no matter how hard the NFL tries to play it
(AFC being designated the “home team” as per usual rotation), if the Vikings
make it, they will be the home team. There’s no way around it.
The other part of the “home field curse” is that no
one had ever made it past the divisional round of the playoffs in the year
their city hosted the big game; something the Vikings have already done thanks
to Case Keenum and Stefon Diggs putting the Saints’ season through a table
Dudley Boyz style. The Vikings already
conquered one part of the curse by being one of the few host teams to make the
playoffs in the first place. This is uncharted territory.
Minnesota’s opponent on Sunday, the Philadelphia
Eagles, are not a victim of this curse, because Philly has never hosted a Super
Bowl. But they, like the Vikings, have
also never won one. That is the best
thing about the championship games this year; three of the four teams have
never won a Super Bowl, and one of them automatically gets that shot regardless
of results.
The Eagles are definitely powered down without
Carson Wentz, but I would not sleep on Nick Foles. The Vikings defense will have to be up to the
task of stopping Philly’s ground game and making them a one-dimensional
team. The Eagles only scored 15 points
against Atlanta, but they seemed to make all of the right plays at the right
times. Meanwhile, we needed a rookie to
falter at the worst possible time to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. Mike Zimmer said “there is no damn curse.” If that’s true, I expect a win on Sunday.
There isn’t much more to say except I really hope
this isn’t the last Vikings Cavalcade this season to review one game and talk
about the next one.
I hope to begin the next post with “THE VIKINGS ARE
GOING TO THE SUPER BOWL!!!!”
I also hope to be able to start a Skol chant in
public whenever I feel like it. It’s all
up to you now, Vikes.
Wednesday, January 17, 2018
Minneapolis Miracle, or "Vikings fans finally allowed to have a nice thing" Edition!
“Vikings
gonna Viking.”
And here's the miracle itself, one more time, because I will never get tired of this.
https://youtu.be/OKgUiBOpsZ4
Those three
little words were my simple response to how things had played out with 25
seconds left in the second NFC Divisional playoff game; the last football game
of the weekend. Yes, it was only a one
point game at 24-23, but come on…this is the Vikings. A missed pass interference penalty in 1975 in
this very round ended what many people say was that team’s best chance to win a
Super Bowl. Even if we get into field
goal range, there’s no guarantee Kai Forbath makes the kick (with apologies to
Kai…he’s still a better kicker than Blair Walsh).
This team
has had a recently awful track record with clutch kicks in the playoffs. Gary Anderson hadn’t missed a single kick in
1998, and missed one that would have likely put the NFC title game away against
the Falcons. Blair Walsh missed the
easiest kick of his life in the last playoff game the Vikings had.
With all of
that on our minds, why was this game any different? We were about to lose to the freaking New
Orleans Saints, the team that put a bounty on Brett Favre and were allowed to
get away with it. Of all the teams to
lose to, only the Saints or the Packers (if they had run the table) could have
hurt this much.
But then,
Stefon Diggs caught that pass and somehow stayed on his feet as two Saints ran
into each other, giving him a free path to the end zone. Before the game, if you had told me one of
these teams would win like that, I would have assumed the Saints. Because a receiver breaking free for a last-second
winning touchdown after two defensive players collided seems like a vintage
Vikings choke moment that may or may not have happened at some point.
Somehow, some
way, the Vikings now have their miracle playoff moment, like Pittsburgh and the
Immaculate Reception, which turned that franchise’s entire history around. The Steelers won four Super Bowls in seven
years following Franco Harris’s immortal play, so perhaps there are greater
things in store for the Vikings even if they are unable to “Bring It Home” this
Sunday with a win over the Eagles.
Then again,
how do we know that the Minnesota/Minneapolis Miracle wasn’t the start of such
a thing? There’s only one way to find
out; by tuning in to the NFC Title game at 5:40 p.m. on Sunday. Here’s hoping if we win, we don’t need
another miracle to do so.
And here's the miracle itself, one more time, because I will never get tired of this.
https://youtu.be/OKgUiBOpsZ4
Sunday, January 14, 2018
Divisional: The Exorcist Edition!
The Vikings have been running a "bring it home" campaign detailing everyone for whom they want to win the Super Bowl. With this weekend's opponent, I think a certain quarterback should be added to that list. Yeah, you know the guy. The guy Bountygate hurt the most; Brett Favre.
But enough about the past. Today is about exorcising some demons. Neither Atlanta or Philadelphia should have struck fear into the heart of either team playing this afternoon at USBank Stadium. Therefore, it's my prediction that the winner of today's game will go on to beat the Eagles next week and represent the NFC in the Super Bowl.
It's a pretty simple task, beat the Saints and go on to play a severely weakened Eagles team. It has been eight years since the Vikings beat the Cowboys in the divisional round, and they haven't won a playoff game since (thanks, Blair Walsh).
But, it's also the Vikings, a team that is 17-28 all-time in playoff games. I'd say it's time to turn things around.
But enough about the past. Today is about exorcising some demons. Neither Atlanta or Philadelphia should have struck fear into the heart of either team playing this afternoon at USBank Stadium. Therefore, it's my prediction that the winner of today's game will go on to beat the Eagles next week and represent the NFC in the Super Bowl.
It's a pretty simple task, beat the Saints and go on to play a severely weakened Eagles team. It has been eight years since the Vikings beat the Cowboys in the divisional round, and they haven't won a playoff game since (thanks, Blair Walsh).
But, it's also the Vikings, a team that is 17-28 all-time in playoff games. I'd say it's time to turn things around.
Saturday, December 23, 2017
Week 16: Have a holly, jolly Christmas, and kick the Packers in the rear!
The Vikings had been Kings of the North since
beating the Packers and continuing to win week after week until Carolina, but
Sunday the 17th made it official.
The Vikings showed no mercy, pounding a team that clearly had no
answers. We even got to see Teddy step
onto the field to a massive ovation. It
was a goosebumps moment.
Everything seems to be lining up for the Vikings to
take one of the top two NFC playoff seeds by force. With the Super Bowl being hosted by Minneapolis
this year, it goes without saying that home field advantage is as important as
it possibly could be. However, you also
have to have faith that this team could go on the road to defeat someone. The next two weeks will be very
intriguing. I feel like the Vikings
finish with no worse than 12 wins, and that’s if they slip up against a Packers
team with no Aaron Rodgers. The only two
things tipping the scales in Green Bay’s favor for that game are the game being
at Lambeau Field, and the fact that it will be very cold there tonight.
Zimmer should have the Vikings prepared to take this
one. A Vikings team that wasn’t quite as
good as this one beat the Packers at Lambeau Field to take the division two
years ago, and that was with a fully healthy #12. Brett Hundley is going to have to play like
Brett Favre for the Packers to have a chance in this game. However, we should not count our chickens
before they hatch. The 1988 Vikings were
in the midst of a season much like this one and lost to a much worse (4-12) Packers
team 18-6…on a cold night at Lambeau Field in week 16. They finished second in the division to
Chicago and eventually lost to San Francisco on the road in the second round of
the playoffs.
Which just goes to show you there’s always a bad
Vikings loss somewhere to remind fans to keep their hubris in check. Yes, the Vikes might win by 30, but Hundley
might surprise everyone. Here’s hoping
for the former.
And have a Merry Christmas, Skol Nation.
Sunday, December 3, 2017
Week 13: 9-2 and, uh-oh, here comes that old familiar pain...
The Vikings are having a really good season. With a win against the Lions on Thanksgiving
ten days ago, the division lead is three games.
A victory against Atlanta today would basically clinch a playoff
spot. Everything is going well…and it’s
quiet on the drama front concerning this team.
Too quiet.
That old familiar feeling is beginning to creep up on us
again. It’s a feeling that is all too
familiar to Vikings fans and a question we have all asked from time to time;
how will the Vikes let us down this year?
We lost Sam Bradford after one game (Bears game doesn’t really count)
because his knee decided to break down.
We lost Dalvin Cook in week four to an ACL injury. And yet the team is 9-2, in second place in
the entire NFC with only those red-hot Eagles who never lose ahead of them.
I feel like this is the position all of us wanted to be in,
but we all secretly dreaded it at the same time because the other shoe always
drops on this team. You need look no
further than the heyday of the Vikings.
This team made it to four Super Bowls in the 70s and I don’t need to
remind you what happened in those games.
This year, Minneapolis hosts it.
I have not personally even entertained the thought of the Vikings
actually playing in their own Super Bowl for good reason.
The best option is to continue taking things one game at a
time. At this point, Vikings fans should
just be happy the Packers aren’t leading the division. Let the media make the comparisons to 2009
and, much to our chagrin, bring up Gary Anderson, Blair Walsh, and Brett Favre
throwing across his body in the Bountygate game. Unfortunately, until we win a Super Bowl,
those three things are the legacy of the Vikings.
Thankfully, we have five games left of regular season
football to just sit back and enjoy a 9-2 season that could turn into something
more. Let’s go get those dirty birds
today.
Thursday, November 23, 2017
Week 12: Many Thanksgivings for a big Vikings win?
Case
Keenum made a statement on Sunday.
Thankfully, whenever he makes a statement, the Vikings as a whole seem
to follow, and they did in a 24-7 win over the Los Angeles Rams, whom everybody
was hyping up as the next big thing prior to the game.
The game
itself was a grinder; the Vikes only had a couple of great scoring
opportunities prior to the fourth quarter.
One was a touchdown for Latavius Murray. The other two featured Kai
Forbath doing his best Blair Walsh impression, which is hopefully just a phase.
Regardless
of how part of the game looked, the box score read 24-7 when it was all said
and done, propelling the Vikings into the upper level of the NFL with an 8-2
record. The Vikings already play again
today (happy Thanksgiving, everyone) with a chance to go to 9-2. If they win and indeed build a massive lead
in the NFC North, the discussion will begin.
I don’t know about you guys, but I’m dreading this particular discussion:
could the Vikings represent the NFC in their own Super Bowl?
I haven’t
entertained the thought this entire year, and it’s a first for the team, as
they went 8-8 and missed the playoffs the year that the Metrodome hosted Denver
and Buffalo. I’ve preferred to enjoy the
season one week at a time, and it’s been a really good one in spite of knee
injuries. As far as the game today
against Detroit, it’s a thrill to have the team play two years in a row on
Thanksgiving after having not played since the game against Dallas years ago (no,
not the famous Randy Moss game, there was another).
I’m
simply hoping for a better result this time around. I mean, half the team isn’t on IR like last
year at this time, and the offensive line is simply better than the last two
years. I’m all for what Case is doing,
but if this team ever becomes Teddy’s again, I think he’d do just fine behind
an offensive line that won’t have him running for his life.
Here’s
hoping we can be thankful for a big Vikings win in a few hours.
Saturday, October 28, 2017
Week 8: Insert clever London pun here!
Vikings vs Browns. Perhaps the first early morning game in the history of the Minnesota Vikings, this one kicks off at 8:30 central time, and many people probably won't even read this post before kickoff.
The Vikes can't blow a game against a winless team...right? Right?
Let's hope so. This feels like a major trap game being overseas playing three and a half hours before the rest of the league. The good news is, the Vikings shouldn't have nearly as much trouble finishing drives against the Browns as they did against the Ravens. If the Vikes finish even one more drive in that game, it's a blowout.
Much like the last game, I expect the Vikings to win this one handily. However, this team likes to make everything much harder than it ever has to be, so I would expect more of a grind like the Ravens game.
Whatever way the Vikings get to 6-2, I welcome. I only pray for no more major injuries going into a bye week that shouldn't ruin the season like last year. This team needs every win they can get right now, because the schedule gets tough with five road games in the final eight weeks to close out the season.
As always, Skol Vikings.
The Vikes can't blow a game against a winless team...right? Right?
Let's hope so. This feels like a major trap game being overseas playing three and a half hours before the rest of the league. The good news is, the Vikings shouldn't have nearly as much trouble finishing drives against the Browns as they did against the Ravens. If the Vikes finish even one more drive in that game, it's a blowout.
Much like the last game, I expect the Vikings to win this one handily. However, this team likes to make everything much harder than it ever has to be, so I would expect more of a grind like the Ravens game.
Whatever way the Vikings get to 6-2, I welcome. I only pray for no more major injuries going into a bye week that shouldn't ruin the season like last year. This team needs every win they can get right now, because the schedule gets tough with five road games in the final eight weeks to close out the season.
As always, Skol Vikings.
Sunday, October 15, 2017
Week 7: It's Packer Week! ...Yay?
Well, let’s dive right in.
The Vikings enter the home portion of the 2017
Border Battle having endured about as much drama as a middle school theater
club. Despite feeling like half of the
team is already on the Injured Reserve list, the Vikes are, in fact, over .500
at 3-2.
Were this any other week, I’d be thrilled at the
prospect of a win, and 4-2 would look mighty fine after the way this season has
begun for the purple and gold. But,
because of who we play, I am tempering my expectations as usual.
The Packers are, again, winning games by the skin of
their teeth this year. This means that
the Vikings, if they hope to win, need to control the clock and score the
game-winning touchdown with virtually no time left in the fourth quarter.
We’ve got the defense to hold this team and this
quarterback in check. See last year,
when the Vikings allowed just 14 points to Green Bay in the first-ever relevant
game at USBank Stadium. They’ve even
done it at Lambeau Field, as evidenced in Week 17 of 2015, when they beat the
Packers 20-13 after building a 17-point lead in the fourth quarter.
So really, this game could go either way. Seeing as how the team is still relatively
healthy, there’s a chance. A couple of
turnovers could turn the tide in our favor. After I spent a week shouting up at the sky, asking
God why he hates Vikings fans after Dalvin Cook got hurt, McKinnon and Murray
looked pretty good on Monday night, especially after Case Keenum came into the
game and the passing game opened up a little.
Keenum and the Vikings’ offense should feast on this
defense, but the Packers might just be able to rely on Rodgers to get a
win. It’s what they’ve done for the past
nine years, and I’m surprised his back hasn’t broken from all of the times he’s
had to carry an otherwise mediocre team.
Anyway, here’s hoping the Vikings can put up a wall in this Border Battle and take a step toward keeping the Packers from invading Minneapolis in February.
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Week 13: The "I'm done with predicting seasons forever" edition
Amazing how a run of bad luck can completely change one’s
outlook on a season.
When this season started, I was so excited that the Vikings
got to play on basically every major holiday; they were going to cause
Halloween havoc against the Bears, they were going to have roast Lions
alongside turkey for Thanksgiving, and best of all, they were going to give
their fans a very merry Christmas Eve by potentially taking the Lambeau game
for a second straight year.
Did any of that happen, and will any of it happen? No and probably not.
I’m really starting to think Winter Park was built over some
kind of sacred burial ground. An injury
list that would read like a V.I.P. guest list if the Vikings were nationally
relevant and a starting quarterback who destroys his knee without even trying
in one of the most fluke-ish ways imaginable.
Every other team in the NFL makes finding a franchise quarterback look
easy, except maybe Cleveland. The
Vikings finally get one, and wouldn’t you know it, he may never play again. Darn the luck.
Chalk up tonight’s Dallas game as one that looked very
exciting and even winnable when the season started. Not anymore.
The Cowboys are a juggernaut this year.
They have found the next Adrian Peterson and Dak Prescott ain’t too
shabby, either. This wouldn’t be that
big of a problem if the Vikings were still good. But they aren’t. How many more “save our season” games can the
Vikings blow before there’s no more season left to save?
The only real hope is that this Vikings team has one more
sucker punch left in them. Indeed, with
the way the NFL is, one punch could be all it takes, and we could be looking at
an 11-5 team when the end of the season rolls around.
But then I remember this team is cursed. Maybe it’ll lift when the Vikings move their
operations to Eagan.
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Week 12: Happy Thanksgiving! Enjoy some hot, fresh...Lion? Okay.
Winning…I had almost forgotten what that felt like.
The Vikings finally took care of a team for the first time
in over a month on Sunday. However, in
true Vikings fashion, they almost choked the game away. In fact, the late game had an eerily similar
feel to the 2003 game (the Paul Allen “NOOOOOOOO” game, in case you need a
reminder).
Only this time, the Vikings closed the deal with defense; something
which the 2003 team was awful at doing starting with the seventh game of that
season. Losing a game or two is a
natural occurrence during the typical NFL season. Losing four in a row is a sign of a team that
perhaps wasn’t as great as everyone made it out to be.
So indeed, as soon as the Vikings got hyped to Mars and
back, they started losing.
However, the losing streak is now in the past. Hopefully, the Vikings can replace it with a
winning streak and take back the division lead.
The opponent: the Detroit Lions. Loss #3 on the year and the correct answer to
a trivia question; indeed they were the first team to hand the Vikings a loss
at shiny new USBank Stadium. The Lions
got into this position simply by winning football games. The Bears stumbled out of the gate and fell
on their faces, and the Packers are surprisingly fading at the moment after a 4-2
start.
Which leaves the Vikings and Lions to fight over the
division today. The first game was ugly,
and I’m not sure what to expect out of the second game. I think Vikings fans are simply relieved that
this game means something, as a loss last week may have been the death knell of
a strange season.
This is the first time the Vikings have played on
Thanksgiving since the less famous Thanksgiving showdown with the Dallas Cowboys
in 2000. The Vikes have played Detroit thrice on Thanksgiving and stand at 2-1; a 27-0 win in 1969, a 23-0 win in 1988 and a 44-38 loss in
1995.
So, how will this one go?
Happy Thanksgiving.
Lion is on the menu this year, and I’m starving for the division lead.
Skol!
Sunday, November 13, 2016
Week 10: Make the Vikings Great Again!
Well, the Vikings beat the Redskins in 2014, so today should be a breeze, right?
Uh...
There really isn't a lot to say about the last three weeks. Oh, there is, but this blog would get a little PG-13 if I really did that.
Let's just move on from the last three weeks. The Vikings have a chance to get right against the Redskins. There is still time this season to make the Vikings great again. Here's a chance to get things back on track.
This is a must-win for the division chances of the purple. Detroit has caught up, and there's no telling what they might be able to do over the final 7 weeks. The Packers are the Packers and will probably get right before the Christmas Eve game, so there's always that to worry about. Chicago is in the rear view mirror for now, but that can always change.
It's a road game, which was how this whole mess started, on the road against the Eagles.
Anyway, I'm sick of talking about losing. Let's talk about how 6-3 would help.
-It would hold off everyone for another week
-It would put everyone's minds at ease after blowing a 5-0 start
-It would possibly help the Vikings extend the division lead if Green Bay loses again. Titans are not a cakewalk.
Minnesota really has no other choice; they MUST become great again, or face the consequences.
It's time to get back on track. #Skol
Uh...
There really isn't a lot to say about the last three weeks. Oh, there is, but this blog would get a little PG-13 if I really did that.
Let's just move on from the last three weeks. The Vikings have a chance to get right against the Redskins. There is still time this season to make the Vikings great again. Here's a chance to get things back on track.
This is a must-win for the division chances of the purple. Detroit has caught up, and there's no telling what they might be able to do over the final 7 weeks. The Packers are the Packers and will probably get right before the Christmas Eve game, so there's always that to worry about. Chicago is in the rear view mirror for now, but that can always change.
It's a road game, which was how this whole mess started, on the road against the Eagles.
Anyway, I'm sick of talking about losing. Let's talk about how 6-3 would help.
-It would hold off everyone for another week
-It would put everyone's minds at ease after blowing a 5-0 start
-It would possibly help the Vikings extend the division lead if Green Bay loses again. Titans are not a cakewalk.
Minnesota really has no other choice; they MUST become great again, or face the consequences.
It's time to get back on track. #Skol
Monday, October 31, 2016
Week 7-8 reaction: The spookiest Halloween in some time. Are the Vikings on the decline?
As a Vikings fan, I have been conditioned to brace for certain
things. I'm always waiting around for Cinderella's coach (no pun intended) to turn back into a pumpkin. How fitting, considering I'm writing this on October 31.
Teddy Bridgewater was supposed
to have his breakout season to establish himself as at least a solid quarterback
in the NFL. His passes in the preseason
were precise, and even his deep ball showed improvement, which was sure to get
the loud minority of fans unsatisfied with his play off of his case.
Then, Teddy got hurt in perhaps the most Vikings way
possible (yes, an even flukier way than Taylor Heinicke), and suddenly the 2016
season, as well as the entire future of the team was in doubt.
Vikings fans know better than anybody (except
maybe Browns fans) that it is not easy to find a franchise quarterback, no
matter how simple everyone else makes it look.
The Packers can go out and get Favre and Rodgers, the Falcons can get
Matt Ryan, the Colts can get Peyton Manning and Andrew Luck, and so on and so
forth.
Teams like the Vikings have to wade through 20 guys before
finally finding someone who might fit the bill.
It was supposed to be Teddy.
The hope is that he can play again, at some point.
In came Sam Bradford, and through a combination of him and
Shaun Hill, the Vikings went 2-0 including a very satisfying win over the
Packers after months of their fans boasting about a ruined homecoming in shiny,
new UsBank Stadium.
Then, the Vikings beat a Carolina Panthers team fresh off of
losing to the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl 50.
Awesome, this might work out after all.
Wins against the Giants in prime time; this time with Odell Beckham in
tow (shut down by Xavier “Road’s Closed” Rhodes) and Texans followed.
5-0 into the bye week.
Nothing’s gonna stop us now, copyright 1987 by Jefferson Starship,
right?
Something’s gone wrong in the happy-go-lucky world of the
Minnesota Vikings.
As Carson Wentz broke out, I looked to the matchup against
the Eagles as a potential first loss.
Oh, it happened. Injuries finally
caught up to the Vikings, and Mike Zimmer’s “next man up” philosophy could only
go so far before Sam Bradford’s offensive line made Philadelphia look like the
1985 Chicago Bears.
Oh well, we said. We
shrugged it off. One loss to a team on
the rise isn’t the end of the world, right?
After all, the Vikings were in the same position as the Eagles with
Teddy two seasons ago, just trying to put some good games together and sell
some hope for the future. Though, Philly
might actually make some noise this year.
Well, the future is now.
The Vikings next lined up to play the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field,
which is always a struggle. But hey, the
Bears were 1-6, right? Easy money. 6-1, then on to Detroit for 7-1. Winnable games. Winnable games everywhere.
*whack*
I wake up from my unplanned nap and notice that the other
shoe has fallen. As usual, I say to myself. After covering up several flaws for five weeks,
the Vikings have gone 0-2 due to a laundry list of problems. Unfortunately, there is no “quick fix” for
what just happened. For Halloween, the
Vikings broke out the 1984 version of themselves and made the 1-6 Bears look like, you guessed it, the ’85 Bears. In front of the entire nation. Happy bleeping Halloween.
Again, through my years of watching Vikings football, I have
been conditioned to expect such turns of events. Mike Zimmer’s reputation as a great coach may
have taken a hit tonight. We can only
hope that the play of the team improves from here, but I wouldn’t be surprised
if this team lays another rotten egg at home against the Lions. Detroit has just become a scary team.
If the Ed Thorpe curse is real, it must be ending soon,
because the Vikings are really getting punched in the mouth right now.
Then again, if you had told me that this team would be 5-2 without Teddy, Adrian, or an offensive line worth a dollar, I still think I would have taken that; though I would have swapped out this awful loss to Chicago with a loss to a better team, because that was dishearteningly ugly.
Saturday, October 8, 2016
Week 5: We Could Have Something Big Here. Also, winning tickets in random BWW drawings rules!
We are through a quarter of a season and the Vikings
have a perfect record of 4-0.
If you have been paying close attention to Vikings
football over the past few seasons (and I’m sure you have if you’ve seeked out
this blog to kill time before the noon kickoff against the Texans), by now I’m
sure you have noticed some key differences from teams of the recent past;
namely that this defense is really, really
good.
I can say, with a sour taste in my mouth coming back
from watching the 2013 Vikings defense, that the defense of that season
(pre-Zimmer) would have allowed Sterling Shepard, Victor Cruz and Odell Beckham
Jr. to all get loose for a huge combined game in either a close or blowout
loss, because that’s what that Vikings team did in prime time.
The Vikings of 2016: nada. Those three got about a hundred yards total and caught zero touchdowns. Rhodes closed indeed. This Vikings teams is 2-0 under the lights
with two more games scheduled barring any sudden flexes as the season rolls
on. Moreover, they finally snapped an
ugly Monday Night Football losing streak that dated back to 2009.
Aside from the defense, the offense did something
that was rare for a Vikings team pre-Zimmer; they responded to the Giants
scoring with a nice long drive and put one on the scoreboard to make the lead
14 points again. How many times have we
seen that old, familiar story of “Vikings play well, but can’t dagger the other
team, and snatch defeat from the jaws of victory as a result?” Not this team. Not Monday night.
Next up: another home game against Houston. The Vikings have faced Houston three times
and have never lost to them. The last
game took place in 2012 (you know, the year Adrian Peterson went super saiyan),
and the Vikes won 23-6. In 2004 and
2008, the Vikings won by a touchdown. 2004
might be the most famous game of the bunch, as it saw the Vikings get up 21-0
only to need overtime to win.
This feels like another win for the Vikings. They proved last week that they didn’t have
to sack Eli Manning 10 times to get a victory.
All of the moving parts just need to work together, as they have in the
first four games. I’m feeling a couple
of turnovers lead to points, but I’m wondering how long the Vikes can sustain
the current no-offensive-turnovers run of 16 quarters.
All I know is I’m looking forward to doing the new “Skol”
chant at the game. And as always…
Fear the Zim Reapers.
Sunday, October 2, 2016
Week Four: Cutting the Giants Down to Size, or: What? It's Week Four already???
Yes, yes, I know.
The season is already three weeks old. This will return as a weekly blog starting
right now.
Without further ado, here we go.
The 2016 NFL season has so far proven the old adage
that you can’t script September.
Oh, that’s not a thing? Well it should be.
Just days before the NFL season was set to begin,
Teddy Bridgewater collapsed at practice in extreme pain. We didn’t know if Teddy had suffered some
kind of freak bodily injury that could have either killed him or ended his
career, but we did know it wasn’t good.
Enter Sam Bradford; former 1st overall
pick of the St. Louis Rams in 2010. Some
people panicked and declared the Vikings’ season to be over before it started,
as they had when Teddy got hurt.
Cooler heads reminded everyone else that Sam
Bradford, injury-prone underachiever he might be, was entering the greatest
situation of his life; plenty of weapons at his disposal and a defense that
makes grown men cry for mommy.
So far, cooler heads have prevailed and Bradford has
done everything asked of him as part of a 3-0 start that hasn’t quite come the
way Vikings fans may have expected, but we will certainly take it. A little bit of national credit (and I do mean little...the excuse computer has been working overdrive) after being
the Doomsday to Cam Newton’s Superman?
That was fun to watch.
Of course,
shutting up all of the Packer fans who told us for months that they would ruin
our homecoming was pretty sweet, too.
Oh, and also getting a respectable game out of Shaun Hill in week one.
There are flaws in the Vikings’ offensive game, but
if this team can still get better, this
season could be a lot of fun.
Next up is the Giants on Monday Night Football. Normally, I would dread such a game, but the
Vikings have started a new streak: 3-0 in prime time games. It is entirely possible that “the moment” under
the lights is not a weakness to this team anymore. One difference this season is that unless he
does something stupid in the next few days, Odell Beckham Jr. will actually get
to play this time. The Giants also have a rejuvenated Victor Cruz and a rookie in Sterling Shepard who is contributing right away. Trying to contain three talented wideouts could be a challenge. Then again, don't most good NFL teams have at least two? Hopefully, the Zim Reapers will be up to the task.
One of the stranger themes in the NFL over the past
several years is that the Vikings defense loves to play Eli Manning…and most of that success was when the defense was not that great.
Last year was another example of why Eli must hate us by now. After bludgeoning Aaron Rodgers and Cam
Newton in back-to-back weeks, what does Zim have planned for Eli? I guess we’ll have to find out.
In Zim we trust. Enjoy the season, Vikings fans. It should be a fun one with games on Halloween, Christmas Eve and Thanksgiving, among others.
Labels:
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Week 4,
Zim Reapers
Tuesday, September 27, 2016
Fear the Zim Reapers!
Hello,
Vikings fans. This is a bonus post for
this week. Expect the main post later
this week.
After
dismantling Cam Newton and making him look like a rookie, people began to
praise the Vikings defense calling them the “Purple People Eaters.”
You may
remember this as the nickname the Vikings defense acquired in the 1970s when
they were really, really good. Drawing
comparisons to the past is never a bad thing, but I also feel like that name
belongs to Alan Page, Jim Marshall, Paul Krause, and the rest of that team that
served as the heyday of the Vikings when we were good enough to at least appear
in Super Bowls.
It’s a
new era in Vikings football with a new stadium and expectations for the near
future are as high as they have been in some time. Mike Zimmer is doing his best to put the
Vikings in a position to succeed for years.
Not to
mention, the defense is really, really good again. I will always respect Bud Grant and his legacy
of putting this team in the national consciousness, but taking the nickname he
and his players earned just wouldn’t be right. We need a new nickname to pay tribute to the
monster Zimmer has created.
This
blog cannot take credit for creating this name, but we really like it and think
it best sums up what the Vikings defense does and will hopefully continue to do.
“The Zim
Reapers.”
Right
away, it leaps out at you. “The Zim
Reapers are knocking at your door!” “Fear
the Zim Reapers” could very well be the slogan of the 2016 Minnesota Vikings. I can foresee some kind of chant involving
the Zim Reapers being invented in the future.
Cam and Aaron will be seeing Harrison Smith, Everson Griffen and others
in their nightmares for the next month.
I love this
name and I heartily endorse it for the nickname of the Zimmer defense that is
finally starting to catch the attention of the nation.
Fear the Zim Reapers.
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