Hartford Courant (Sunday)

For Vikings QB Kirk Cousins, stability comes with responsibi­lity

- By Ben Goessling Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

MINNEAPOLI­S — In one sense, Kirk Cousins’ ninth NFL season finds the quarterbac­k with the stability he’s long sought and often lacked in his career.

He’s set to take home more cash ($40 million) than any quarterbac­k in the NFL in 2020, thanks to a new deal that rewarded him with a $30 million signing bonus in exchange for a lower cap number.

He’ll spend another season working with Gary Kubiak, the architect of the offense that Cousins directed during a career year in 2019. And he’ll direct an attack that’s spent two first-round and two second-round draft picks on accoutreme­nts for the quarterbac­k since he walked in the door.

But like one of those photos of a famous landmark taken from an unusual angle, Cousins’ moment of prominence isn’t as simple as it would seem.

As the quarterbac­k pointed out in training camp, Kubiak — who shifted from offensive adviser to coordinato­r when the Browns hired Kevin Stefanski — will be his fifth play-caller in as many years. Receiver Justin Jefferson arrived with the first-round pick the Vikings got in exchange for Stefon Diggs, whose eagerness to play elsewhere was “not a mystery,” Cousins said this spring.

Heading into Year 9, Cousins has realized he needs to be as much a source of stability as he is a beneficiar­y of it.

“Turnover is kind of the normal part of this league,” he said in a videoconfe­rence during training camp. “It’s rare to have continuity, but you appreciate it when you get it. With a little bit less work this offseason, going into my ninth year, I probably am not as concerned about that, but my concern is more on young offensive linemen, our draft picks at positions we know we’re going to need to be counting on. I’ve got to help get them along, get them caught up to speed, and that’s as much my job, potentiall­y, as it is for the coach or the player themself.”

Cousins sneaked in a few days of work with Jefferson and some of his other teammates in Minnesota this offseason, wrapping up just before a summer spike in COVID-19 cases led the NFL Players Associatio­n to curtail private workouts.

He otherwise spent his offseason playing catch with anyone who was around (from a high school friend in west Michigan to his father and brother), connecting virtually with his personal trainer Joe Tofferi and squeezing in some tennis.

He’s yet to miss a game because of injury — or even find himself on the Vikings’ injury report — in two seasons with the team, and said he’s feeling good, as he turns 32.

The fact the Vikings’ offense still has Cousins, Dalvin Cook, Adam Thielen, Kyle Rudolph and four returning starters along the line might make that the

more establishe­d side of the ball. The unusualnes­s of that is not lost on safety Harrison Smith as the Vikings prepare to find four new starters on defense.

“We’re talking about the defense changing and stuff; that’s normally not what we’re talking about,” Smith said. “(Usually) we’re talking about the offense. Now we’ve got continuity with Kirk and a bunch of guys over there, building on success. Especially without preseason games, it’ll be good to go against a group like that in practice who’s going to be clicking at a high level.”

O4 IND O8 TB

O18 @CAR O26 @LAR

N1 NO N8 @TEN N16 MIN N29 @GB

D6 DET D13 HOU D20 @MIN D27 @JAC

 ?? HANNAH FOSLIEN / GETTY ?? Kirk Cousins runs a drill during Vikings training camp on Aug. 21.
HANNAH FOSLIEN / GETTY Kirk Cousins runs a drill during Vikings training camp on Aug. 21.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States