San Diego Union-Tribune

VIKES DENY STEELERS’ FINAL-PLAY PASS TO END ZONE

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

MINNEAPOLI­S

Dalvin Cook rushed for 205 yards and two touchdowns in his faster-than-expected return from a shoulder injury, and the Minnesota Vikings held on to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers 3628 by forcing an incomplete pass in the end zone on the final play Thursday night.

Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s throw to Pat Freiermuth was on target, but Anthony Barr and Harrison Smith sandwiched the rookie tight end at just the right moment to dislodge the ball and give the Vikings (6-7) a critical victory after they nearly squandered a 29-0 latethird-quarter lead.

All but one of Minnesota’s games this year have been decided by eight points or less.

Roethlisbe­rger had touchdown passes to Najee Harris, James Washington and Freiermuth in the second half, and Harris ran for a score, too, as the Steelers (66-1) recovered from their abysmal start. The Vikings had a 300-66 advantage in total yards in the first half, but Ahkello Witherspoo­n intercepte­d Kirk Cousins twice after halftime to fuel the rally.

Just as vital as all the turf he tore up on the ground was the 17-yard catch Cook made on a seam route on thirdand-9 from the Minnesota 26 with 2:38 left. That forced the Steelers to use all their timeouts, leaving Roethlisbe­rger 96 yards and 2:16 to go after Jordan Berry pinned a punt deep against his former

team.

Roethlisbe­rger hit Chase Claypool for 48 yards while Bashaud Breeland was committing

pass interferen­ce to reach midfield. Claypool pulled in a fourth-and-2 slant to reach the Minnesota 34. Diontae Johnson set up the last play from the 12 by taking a crossing route 12 yards out of bounds, but Roethlisbe­rger and the Steelers, who failed on a 2point conversion try earlier in the fourth quarter, wound up just short.

Just 11 days after Cook dislocated his shoulder, keeping him out of last week’s loss at previously winless Detroit, he lined up in the backfield and enjoyed the most running room he’s seen all season. Cook set a franchise record with 153 rushing yards in the first half, and he needed only 14 carries to do it.

The Vikings trampled the Steelers with their zone blocking scheme, creating gaping holes for Cook to burst through and minimizing the contact with his stillheali­ng shoulder. The Vikings

averaged more than 10 yards per play in the first quarter.

The only speed bump for the Vikings came when Greg Joseph pulled a 53-yard field goal left and sent his first extra point try wide right. Chris Boswell also hooked a 49-yard attempt left, just his second missed field goal of the season for the Steelers to end a streak of 20 straight makes. This was the first NFL game since at least 1991, as far back as Sportradar data goes for this research, with two missed field goals and a missed extra point in the first quarter.

Steelers OLB Alex Highsmith (knee) was hurt in the third quarter and did not return.

 ?? BRUCE KLUCKHOHN AP ?? Vikings running back Dalvin Cook (33) scores on a 7-yard touchdown run during the first half.
BRUCE KLUCKHOHN AP Vikings running back Dalvin Cook (33) scores on a 7-yard touchdown run during the first half.

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