St. Cloud Times

Vikings play Mahomes for 1st time

- Dave Campbell

MINNEAPOLI­S – There’s only one team in the NFL that Patrick Mahomes has yet to beat.

The Minnesota Vikings, it figures, are the only one he’s never faced.

Matching up with the two-time NFL MVP and his defending champion Kansas City Chiefs is hardly a recipe for maintainin­g the momentum generated last week by their vulnerable defense, but the Vikings of course don’t get to choose their schedule.

What players with any pride would want it any other way? It’s time for the team that won 13 games and the NFC North last season to show it can still be a factor in 2023 and keep those long-frustrated fans from obsessing over next year’s draft position.

Playing the Chiefs (3-1) ought to be as accurate of a measuring stick as the Vikings (1-3) could find for the first weekend in October.

“You want to play against the best,” Vikings safety Harrison Smith said, “and these guys certainly have been that in recent history.”

With two Super Bowl titles in his first five seasons as the starter, all those statistica­l accomplish­ments and his unique blend of fearlessne­ss and improvisat­ion that has gone a long way toward redefining quarterbac­k play for a new generation, Mahomes doesn’t have much left to accomplish on the field.

Defeating the Vikings to complete the checklist of 31 other teams would be an impressive feat, considerin­g half of the league only appears on the schedule every four years in the NFL’s formula for interconfe­rence competitio­n.

“I just want to win every week,” said Mahomes, who is 67-17 in the regular season and 11-3 in the playoffs as a starter. “It’s not necessaril­y beating this team because I haven’t played them. It’s going in with the mentality to do what I need to win the game.”

When the Chiefs beat the Vikings in

2019, Matt Moore was behind center while Mahomes recovered from a dislocated kneecap. Though Mahomes has lost to Indianapol­is in his only two regular-season matchups, he and the Chiefs beat the Colts in his first career start in the playoffs.

“Right now, we’re just all focused on trying to get things right,” coach Andy Reid said, “but it is an amazing stat for him for sure.”

The Chiefs are favored by 5½ points, according to FanDuel Sportsbook odds, but even with a defense that ranks just 21st in the league in passing yards allowed the Vikings might well be catching their opponent at the right time in what’s sure to be a raucous U.S. Bank Stadium.

With a wide receiver group still trying to find its way, Mahomes has thrown four intercepti­ons over four games and is only 15th in the NFL in passer rating (92.0).

Picking his spots

Mahomes isn’t feared for his speed, but his ability to use his feet has still been a useful tool in Kansas City’s offense. He showed that in last season’s playoffs, when his scramble set up the winning field goal against Cincinnati in the AFC championsh­ip game and again last week when a 25-yard run on thirdand-22 kept alive the Chiefs’ final drive to seal a 23-20 victory over the Jets.

“He’s got a good feel for the coverage, who is dropping out of there and the time element that is involved with that,” Reid said.

Help on defense

The Chiefs hope to have linebacker Nick Bolton (ankle), who is responsibl­e for setting the defense, and cornerback Jaylen Watson (shoulder) back from injuries this week. Bolton’s absence from the past two games has been noticeable, and missing Watson has minimized the depth in the secondary. The Chiefs could use their full complement of defensive backs to deal with Vikings superstar Justin Jefferson.

“It’s hard to stop him play after play,” safety Mike Edwards said. “If he gets a 5-yard catch, he can turn 5 yards into 60. We have to stop the explosive gains, and we’ll be good.”

Line shuffle

Vikings center Garrett Bradbury, one of only seven players remaining who played against the Chiefs in 2019, is on track to return from a back injury.

 ?? RUSTY JONES/AP ?? Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins passes against the Carolina Panthers during the first half of lst Sunday’s game in Charlotte, N.C. Cousins faces two-time NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs for the first time Sunday.
RUSTY JONES/AP Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins passes against the Carolina Panthers during the first half of lst Sunday’s game in Charlotte, N.C. Cousins faces two-time NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs for the first time Sunday.

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