Personally, I would have liked to see a blowout over the Packers, but 16-0 works just fine as a Christmas present. It got us a win, and unless Philadelphia gets its mojo back in the playoffs, the Vikes possibly won't play outdoors again this season.
But that of course means the Vikings need to win today. I'm putting down today as a must-win, even though there's a chance Atlanta beats Carolina to accomplish the same thing. Today's Cavalcade is going to be a short one, because there are not 86 different scenarios to visit. Instead, we have just one: win and claim a bye.
There might be some scoreboard-watching today, but if the Vikings win, none of it will matter because they would get an extra week of rest and be prepared for the divisional round of the playoffs.
I will share my thoughts on why this team has me believing again next week, whether they end up slipping to Wild Card Weekend, or they come through and get the bye. Either way, as division champs, they'll play at home. You just need to beat the Bears, and this defense has given up 7 points since losing to Carolina. I've got to think we'll be fine.
It's a nice feeling to be going to the playoffs no matter what happens this week. Beats the crap out of the alternative (2016, anyone?). Skol!
Sunday, December 31, 2017
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.
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Week 15: Win and In, quite literally.
I think we had a collective freakout on Sunday. It’s amazing how stressful a Vikings game can
be, even when the team has 10 wins more than a week before Christmas Day.
(Speaking of which, Vikings-Packers, however much it ends up
meaning, is on the 23rd, not the 25th.)
There are several ways to look at Sunday’s loss…the first
since early October. The first way is
sheer panic. We didn’t think much of it
when the Vikings lost that ugly game to…Carolina in 2009, did we? We already had the division sewn up; it
didn’t matter. Or so we thought. The next week brought an unfortunate overtime
loss to the eventual 7-9 Bears. And the
rest is history.
Another way to look at it is that this year’s game went
better than that. The Vikings got
handled for much of it, but they overcame a bad performance to come back and
tie the game late in the fourth. If not
for a long Cam Newton run on which Matt Kalil got away with holding, we might
be talking about a nine game winning streak.
Overall, it was not a great game, as so many little things that hadn’t
gone wrong for a while went wrong, and we can only hope the Vikings got a bad
game out of their system. Better now
than in January, especially if the Vikings get a first round bye.
The Vikings got a taste of losing, and it should hopefully
keep them humble and hungry. Adam
Thielen even said that the team had forgotten what losing felt like, so the
loss might be a good thing in the long run.
All I know is win this week and all is forgiven. You’ll automatically clinch the division if
you beat Cincy, meaning you wouldn’t have to play at Lambeau Field more than
once this year. If they end up
making it, the Packers—who are the team it would hurt the most to lose against
this postseason in particular (hypothetically)—would have to come to The Slatra House (Norse word for slaughter, meaning “to butcher”). The same would be true for Detroit; a return
trip to Minneapolis if they played the Vikings a third time at all.
The media is probably looking at last Sunday’s game as the
“Vikings aren’t for real” game, which is fine given that the team performs
better when the media isn’t drooling all over them anyway. Makes me wonder how the Packers or Cowboys
handle it.
Next week’s Cavalcade will be going up on Friday, as I am busy with Christmas stuff on the day of the Vikings-Packers game. Hopefully I’ll be typing up a description of a division championship.
Saturday, December 9, 2017
Week 14: Eight straight feels great, but how great?
I am oddly comfortable right now. Christmas 2017 is shaping up to be a great
affair with a first place operation within the division and (as of this
writing; Saturday night) a team ranking first place in the entire NFC. Now, things could easily change, but that
Vikings-Packers tilt on Christmas Night (not Christmas Eve) should be very
enjoyable if the Vikes have locked up a quality playoff spot.
The big question is, when do we have that moment
where dissention within the ranks starts to show cracks in the armor? The Vikings struggled a bit on offense
against the Falcons, but were able to grind out an eighth consecutive victory;
something that only the greatest of Vikings teams have done historically. There wasn’t much dissent to be had. We all remember the Sunday night game (oddly
enough, against Carolina) where Brad Childress and Brett Favre got into it; a
game which ended up being an ugly 26-7 loss.
How about the Monday night game against Chicago that
same year where the Vikings fell down 23-6, rallied to tie the game, but lost
in overtime? In seemingly every big time
Vikings season, there exists a moment where the “football gods,” if you believe
such a thing exists, seem to slap the fandom in its collective face and taunt
us just like a Packer fan about having no rings. This has happened consistently ever since the
team first started winning playoff games back in the late 60s.
Am I foolish for bracing in anticipation of such a
moment on a week-to-week basis? Or,
should I just give myself up entirely to this team and enjoy the ride with a squad
that very well could be good enough to finally get that elusive first Super
Bowl trophy? It is a question I will
continue to ponder as the season rolls on.
Are you guarding your heart, Vikings fans? Or have you given in to the hype train?
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.
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