Chicago Sun-Times

Defensive debacle angers Zimmer

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

MINNEAPOLI­S — The Vikings have been built around a stifling defense since Mike Zimmer was hired as coach.

That foundation has developed a frightenin­g amount of cracks one-fourth of the way through Zimmer’s fifth season. The Vikings allowed 456 passing yards in their 38-31 loss in Los Angeles to the Rams on Thursday night, the highest total against them since 1980.

Zimmer said afterward that he has never been part of a pass defense so poor in his career, which includes successful stretches as an innovative defensive coordinato­r with the Bengals and Cowboys. The following afternoon, Zimmer wasn’t in a better mood when he was asked to assess the coverage breakdowns that led to five touchdown passes by Jared Goff.

“It was guys getting out of position,’’ Zimmer said on a conference call with reporters Friday. ‘‘There were some misdirecti­on plays. It was similar to what we’ve gotten before. Some of it was corners, some of it was safeties, some of it was linebacker­s, some of it was nickels and some of it was me.” You?

“I might be overcoachi­ng them some,” Zimmer said.

The good news is the Vikings have three extra days to recover from the Rams game and prepare for their trip to Philadelph­ia. The bad news is that the next game is against the Super Bowl champion Eagles, who were last seen by the Vikings in that 38-7 blowout in the NFC Championsh­ip Game. As dominant as Zimmer’s defenses have been, certain teams with versatile and creative passing attacks have been able to exploit them. The Eagles last season and the Rams this year are two glaring examples.

Zimmer stopped short of blaming his system for the problems against the Rams, noting the 24-7 victory by the Vikings in Minnesota last season, but the most devastatin­g plays against them Thursday night were the result of mismatches that Rams coach Sean McVay helped create with pre-snap confusion or clever playcallin­g.

Vikings outside linebacker Anthony Barr wound up in coverage on three of the five touchdown passes — to running back Todd Gurley and wide receivers Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods.

“They had a good game plan against us,” defensive end Danielle Hunter said. “We made more mistakes than they did, and they ended up on top.”

The Vikings only allowed 300plus passing yards in six games in Zimmer’s first four seasons, let alone 400-plus, with a previous high of 383 passing yards at Miami in 2014. Even the 2013 team that finished next-to-last in the league in passing defense didn’t yield a 400-yard game.

With the arrival of a new quarterbac­k and offensive coordinato­r, Zimmer figured the Vikings (1-21) could start slowly this season. They were 2-2 at the first-quarter mark last year but finished 13-3. So all is not lost, but their oncedaunti­ng defense has a lot of work to do.

“This team has a chance to be really, really good,’’ Zimmer said. ‘‘One week, it’s the offense. One week, it’s the defense. One week, it’s the special teams. If we put it all together, we can beat any team there is.”

 ?? BRUCE KLUCKHOHN/AP ?? Vikings coach Mike Zimmer isn’t used to seeing his pass defense get shredded so badly.
BRUCE KLUCKHOHN/AP Vikings coach Mike Zimmer isn’t used to seeing his pass defense get shredded so badly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States