Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Packers, Vikings are now the ones looking up in division

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

MINNEAPOLI­S — The final weekend of November has arrived, with this Green Bay-Minnesota game predictabl­y carrying plenty of weight toward the race for the NFC playoffs.

The twist, though, is the Packers and Vikings are stuck in the thick of the wild-card mix. The Bears, having beaten the Vikings last week, are the team with a healthy lead in the NFC North, which has been won only by Green Bay (five) or Minnesota (two) since the Bears’ last division title in 2010.

“I definitely didn’t expect to be sitting where we’re sitting, but our record is what it is,” Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers said. “Obviously, Minnesota has a strong team. They’re probably surprised where they’re sitting as well. So I don’t think either of us is out of the division race.”

Both the Packers (4-5-1) and Vikings (5-4-1) have one more game remaining against the Bears (8-3), but they’re each lugging that 29-all tie in Green Bay on Sept. 16 down the stretch like a back tire that’s low on air.

“Maybe it will help us, and maybe it’ll hurt us, too,” Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said. “I don’t really know.”

The Packers will play three of their final five games at home, which is helpful because they have yet to win on the road this year. They’ll have a more-mobile Rodgers than in their last matchup with the Vikings, when he was grinding through a knee injury.

“He looks like his old self, unfortunat­ely,” Zimmer said.

If the Vikings beat the Packers at home for the third straight time, they’ll at least own a tiebreaker over their biggest rival. They would still be 1½ games behind the Bears, though, with a difficult stretch of the schedule ahead.

“We’ll definitely have to play four quarters,” Packers coach Mike McCarthy said, “and maybe more than that.”

Not-so prime time

The Vikings are playing in the NFL’s premier Sunday night slot for the second straight week, triggering a magnificat­ion of their struggles with the bright lights on this season. They’ve lost all three of their night games — in Los Angeles to the Rams on Sept. 27, at home against the Saints on Oct. 28 and at Soldier Field last week. The Rams, Saints and Bears boast the top three records in the NFC, a combined 28-5.

“I guess we’re just playing good teams,” Zimmer said. “That might be the real factor.”

Cousins has a 4-12 career record as a starter when kickoff is in the evening, though he has a 68 percent completion rate with 31 touchdowns and 16 intercepti­ons and an average of 305 passing yards in those 16 games.

Third downers

The Packers are 19th in the NFL with a 38 percent conversion rate on third down. They’re up against a Vikings defense that leads the league on third downs.

One problem for the Packers has been the absence of receiver Randall Cobb, one of Rodgers’ most reliable options. He has missed half of the team’s games with a hamstring injury, including the last two, but he could return Sunday.

Sackmaster Fackrell

Outside linebacker Nick Perry missed the Packers last game at Seattle, but third-year backup Kyler Fackrell made his absence moot with three sacks, his second such performanc­e this season. Fackrell has eight sacks this year, more than starters Perry and Clay Matthews combined.

“The more you play, the more you get comfortabl­e with it, the less encumbered you are with the thinking part,” defensive coordinato­r Mike Pettine said.

Jonesing for the ball

Packers running back Aaron Jones didn’t play against the Vikings earlier this season because of a suspension for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy. Jones has 342 rushing yards and four touchdowns in the last four games, plus 12 receptions for 100 yards and a score. He’s the league leader in yards per rush with an average of 6.4.

 ?? DAVID BANKS/AP ?? Kirk Cousins (8) is 4-12 in his career in night games. Last Sunday night, he lost to Khalil Mack and the Bears.
DAVID BANKS/AP Kirk Cousins (8) is 4-12 in his career in night games. Last Sunday night, he lost to Khalil Mack and the Bears.

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