The Record (Troy, NY)

Cousins, Vikings seek redemption vs. Packers

- By DAVECAMPBE­LL AP Pro Football Writer

MINNEAPOLI­S » The Minnesota Vikings had moved into position for the go-ahead touchdown at Green Bay in the fourth quarter of their Week 2 meeting, with firstand-goal inside the 10-yard line.

Then one regrettabl­e off-balance throw by Kirk Cousins thwarted their rally and seemingly threatened to cement his status as a so- so quarterbac­k who couldn’t be counted on in the most crucial moments.

Cousins and the rest of the offense have made a resolute recovery from the cringe-inducing decision and resulting end-zone intercepti­on that essentiall­y sealed a 21-16 victory for the Packers. Finally, the Vikings have the opportunit­y to avenge that damaging defeat when they host the rematch on Monday night. Having clinched at least a wild- card spot in the playoffs, the Vikings can also prevent their chief rivals from clinching the NFC North on their home turf.

In a testament to patience in this snap-judgment league, Cousins and his runners, blockers and receivers have performed well enough after an iffy September that scoring points and protecting the ball have become the least of Minnesota’s problems. They’ve definitely come a long way since that day in Green Bay.

“It’s hard going back and watching that tape. We’re so much better as a football team, so much better of an offense than we were,” tight end Kyle Rudolph said.

Cousins was picked off twice in that game while going 14 for 32 for the secondwors­t completion percentage of his career, as the Vikings fell behind 21- 0 in the second quarter. Two weeks later, they lost 16- 6 at Chicago with a season-low 222 total yards as Cousins was sacked a season-most six times.

Coupled with his regression during the second half of 2018 that contribute­d to Minnesota missing the playoffs in his debut season, the fully guaranteed $84 million contract the Vikings gave Cousins was beginning to look like a liability. As it turned out, Cousins just needed more time to settle in with the new system directed by offensive coordinato­r Kevin Stefanski and designed by offensive adviser Gary Kubiak.

The Vikings have averaged 29.4 points over the last 10 games, even with starwide receiver Adam Thielen absent for about two-thirds of that stretch. With a productive rushing attack as the foundation, Stefanski has put Cousins in consistent­ly favorable situations by frequently using play-action, screen and rollout passes from under center. That has set up several well-timed deep balls to Stefon Diggs that Cousins has put in the right places for game-changing gains.

“It’s always a work in progress, and I don’t really like putting my stake in the ground and saying something or other about my performanc­e,” Cousins said, “but I do think the longer you play, the more comfortabl­e you get in a system, the more comfortabl­e you get with teammates, the better you can make decisions in split seconds as to whether to check the ball down or take the deep shot, throw it away, avoid a sack.”

In his fifth full season as a starter, Cousins still lacks a postseason win and has only a handful of victories on the road over winning teams. He has, however, begun this year to slay a few of those sportstalk-show-filler dragons with fourth-quarter comebacks, night-game victories and a significan­t reduction of turnovers.

Currently ranking in the top five in the league in completion percentage, yards per attempt, passer rating andinterce­ption percentage, Cousins has unquestion­ably produced the best season of his career. Beating the Packers would be another notable accomplish­ment.

“Hopefully he has a great game and hopefully we win, but it’s not all on him,” coach Mike Zimmer said. “We have 21 other players, and they have to go out and execute just as much as he does.”

Packers coach Matt LaFleur has long admired Cousins. He was the quarterbac­ks coach for Washington in Cousins’ first two years in the league.

“If the play’s there, he’s making the play, period, every time,” LaFleur said. “He’s so accurate, and he’s extremely intelligen­t. He knows what he’s looking for, andwhen he sees it there’s no hesitation.”

LaFleur’s current pupil, Aaron Rodgers, has long displayed such decisivene­ss, among many other elite attributes. With the Packers relying more on the run these days and a collection of mostly inexperien­ced receivers, Rodgers ranks behind Cousins in almost every statistica­l measure this year. Still, he hasn’t thrown an intercepti­on in eight straight games, and he has helped the Packers reach the 11-win mark for the first time in five years.

“This is why we play the games, for times like these, to go on the road in a hostile environmen­t and have a chance to lock up the North with a win,” Rodgers said. “Everybody will be ready to roll. ‘Monday Night Football’ adds a little extra to it, I’m sure. It’s going to be one of those old-fashioned NFC North contests.”

 ?? MIKE ROEMER - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this Sept. 15, 2019, file photo, Minnesota Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins throws a pass during the second half of the team’s NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers in Green Bay, Wis. Cousins and the Minnesota Vikings finally have the opportunit­y to avenge a damaging defeat in Green Bay in the second game of the season. They host the rematch with the Packers, on track for the playoffs with the chance to prevent their chief rival from clinching the division title on their home turf. The Packers won the first meeting 21-16, after Cousins threw a dangerous pass in the fourth quarter that was intercepte­d in the end zone.
MIKE ROEMER - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this Sept. 15, 2019, file photo, Minnesota Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins throws a pass during the second half of the team’s NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers in Green Bay, Wis. Cousins and the Minnesota Vikings finally have the opportunit­y to avenge a damaging defeat in Green Bay in the second game of the season. They host the rematch with the Packers, on track for the playoffs with the chance to prevent their chief rival from clinching the division title on their home turf. The Packers won the first meeting 21-16, after Cousins threw a dangerous pass in the fourth quarter that was intercepte­d in the end zone.

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