Lodi News-Sentinel

Vikings can’t catch up to big-play Rams

- By Ben Goessling

LOS ANGELES — Even with as much as the Vikings had working against them Thursday night, what happened to them against the Los Angeles Rams defied convention, for a defense that’s been fashioned into one of the NFL’s best under Mike Zimmer’s watchful gaze.

A year ago, the Vikings had shut down the Rams’ high-flying offense, delivering one of its signature performanc­es in a 24-7 victory that gave the Vikings the inside track on a first-round bye. On Thursday night in the L.A. Memorial Coliseum, it was the Rams who landed the haymakers in a 38-31 victory.

Since 2006, teams traveling two or more time zones west were 13-30 in night games in the Pacific Time zone, posting a 0-6 record on Thursday nights. The Vikings traveled to Los Angeles to face the NFC’s only undefeated team without defensive end Everson Griffen.

Nothing about their task was enviable. Still, the way the Rams carved up the Vikings’ defense — the league’s topranked unit from a year ago — was startling to watch.

Jared Goff had thrown five touchdown passes by the end of the third quarter, becoming the first quarterbac­k to post that many against the Vikings since Drew Brees did it on Dec. 18, 2011. He had a perfect 158.3 passer rating through three quarters, and had eclipsed 400 yards by his first throw of the fourth quarter.

It forced the Vikings into the kind of shootout they might be better prepared to handle with Kirk Cousins as their quarterbac­k, but still probably aren’t designed to win very often.

By halftime, Cousins had attempted 32 passes, completing 25 of them for 255 yards and a pair of scores. Goff was 13for-17 for 251 yards and four scores. He completed four passes of 20 yards or more in the first half against a defense that had given up only 41 plays of 20-plus yards in 2017 but had already surrendere­d three in its first three games.

The Rams averaged 12.2 yards per play in the first half; according to ESPN Stats and Informatio­n, no team had averaged more than 10 yards per play in a game so far this season.

Goff hit Cooper Kupp for a 70-yard touchdown on the “leak” concept Rams coach Sean McVay developed with 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan when both were in Washington. After faking a block, Kupp ran a crossing route past Mackensie Alexander and Eric Kendricks, forcing Anthony Barr to turn and run with him. Barr gave chase as Goff lofted a pass over his head, and Andrew Sendejo made a late attempt to tackle the receiver.

The Vikings answered with a threeplay, 75-yard scoring drive, but after the teams had traded punts, Goff drove the Rams 71 yards in four plays, hitting Kupp for a 20-yard score.

On the Rams’ next drive, Xavier Rhodes was called for a holding penalty to start the drive, and drew a 15-yard unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty for kicking an official’s flag while arguing the call. Coach Mike Zimmer pulled Rhodes — who had been shadowing Brandin Cooks — from the game, and on the next play, Goff found Cooks for a 47-yard touchdown pass over Trae Waynes.

 ?? WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Brandin Cooks (12) hauls in a 47-yard touchdown pass in front of Minnesota Vikings cornerback Trae Waynes on Thursday in Los Angeles.
WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Brandin Cooks (12) hauls in a 47-yard touchdown pass in front of Minnesota Vikings cornerback Trae Waynes on Thursday in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States