Preview: Vikings look to maintain momentum against Detroit

MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Vikings have rarely shied from a ground-oriented approach on offense in seven seasons under coach Mike Zimmer, never more apparent than in their last game.

Dalvin Cook has made this strong-arm strategy viable, rather than some tired relic. With 30 rushes for 163 yards and three touchdowns — plus two catches for 63 yards and another score — Cook carried the Vikings to a potentially pivotal victory at Green Bay. As Kirk Cousins only attempted 14 passes, Cook became the first player with 30 carries for Minnesota since 2013.

“We’re going to have to ride this guy,” Zimmer said.

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The Vikings have had a player reach 30-plus rushing attempts 17 times in their 60-year history, including six by single-game franchise record holder Adrian Peterson (35). The Vikings are 16-0-1 in those games.

When asked this week to assess Cook’s unique traits, Zimmer paused briefly before invoking the name of the NFL’s all-time leading rusher, Emmitt Smith.

“Really good feet. Quick accelerator. Powerful runner. Good vision,” Zimmer said.

The Vikings have run the ball on 49.6% of their plays, the third-most in the league. Baltimore, the NFL leader, employs a run-heavy quarterback in 2019 NFL MVP Lamar Jackson.

“We just run yards like Swiss chard,” Cook said, using the leafy green vegetable for a clever rhyme.

The nutritional value is unmistakable, as long as they’re controlling the ball and scoring points. That’s the way they tried to win with Cook’s predecessor, too. Peterson, coincidentally, will be in Minnesota on Sunday with his latest team, the Detroit Lions.

The Vikings (2-5) have a lot of catchup to do.

They blew double-digit second-half leads and lost be one point to Tennessee and Seattle. They were also no-shows in one-sided defeats to Green Bay, Indianapolis and Atlanta. Their performance against Detroit (3-4) will reveal a lot about whether they’re truly a darkhorse contender for the expanded playoffs or better off refocusing on the future.

That summary might sound familiar to the Lions, who were unsure if quarterback Matthew Stafford would be available after placing him this week on the COVID-19 reserve list.

“We’re doing some things really well,” coach Matt Patricia said. “We just have to learn how to finish better. I think that’s true all the way across the board.”

BACKUP PLAN

If Stafford is not cleared in time to play, the Lions would have to choose between Chase Daniel or David Blough. The 34-year-old Daniel has started just five games in his career with seven touchdowns and five interceptions, though he helped lead Chicago to a 16-6 victory over the Vikings last season by going 22 of 30 with a touchdown in relief of an injured Mitch Trubisky.

Blough went 0-5 as a starter last year when Stafford was out with a broken back, with four touchdown passes and six interceptions after the undrafted rookie was acquired from Cleveland. That included a loss at Minnesota, when Blough had one touchdown, was sacked five times and intercepted twice in a 20-7 loss.

REMEMBER THEM?

Everson Griffen expected to face his former team this month, but the reunion was moved up two weeks when Dallas traded him to Detroit. The 11th-year defensive end with 77 career sacks will make his debut with the Lions on Sunday, a convenient addition to the lineup with defensive end Trey Flowers going on short-term injured reserve.

In addition to Peterson and Griffen, backup safety Jayron Kearse will make his return to Minnesota. Griffen could find himself lined up across from Vikings left tackle Riley Reiff, who’s been blocking as well as ever in his fourth season with the team. He played his first five years with the Lions.

HALL PASS

Marvin Hall has taken only one-fourth of Detroit’s offensive snaps, behind Marvin Jones, Kenny Golladay, Danny Amendola and rookie Quintez Cephus, but he has given the Lions a legitimate deep threat with an average of 24 yards per catch. With Golladay hampered by a hip injury this week, Hall could find more opportunity against a struggling Vikings secondary.

“The thing that he brings for us is speed,” Lions offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell said. “You can feel it, and that can really change some things in the back end.”

CORNERBACK CRUNCH

The Vikings, who have surrendered 30.6 points per game for the fourth-worst average in the league and rank third-to-last in passing yards allowed, have been fighting a dual challenge of inexperience and injuries at cornerback all season. The only one who has played in every game is rookie starter Jeff Gladney. Chris Jones, a recent waiver claim from the Lions, could see his first action for Minnesota with five other cornerbacks dealing with injuries this week.

HOMEWORK TIME

The Vikings have lost five straight at U.S. Bank Stadium, since beating Blough and the Lions on Dec. 8, 2019. That’s their longest such streak since 2011 and approaching the franchise record, set between the 1966-67 seasons when the Vikings lost six consecutive games at Metropolitan Stadium and tied a seventh before stopping the skid.

Zimmer spoke to the players this week about restoring their home-field edge, even if the absence of fans has negated the usual noise advantage.

“We need to bring our own energy. We need to bring our own excitement. We need to play like the fans are there,” Zimmer said. “Hopefully they can do it through it through osmosis or something.”

DETROIT (3-4) at MINNESOTA (2-5)

Sunday, 1 p.m. EST, CBS

OPENING LINE — Vikings by 3
RECORD VS. SPREAD — Lions 3-4; Vikings 4-3
SERIES RECORD — Vikings lead 76-39-2
LAST MEETING — Vikings beat Lions 20-7 on Dec. 8, 2019, in Minneapolis
LAST WEEK — Lions lost to Colts 41-21; Vikings beat Packers 28-22
AP PRO32 RANKING — Lions No. 23; Vikings No. 22
LIONS OFFENSE — OVERALL (22), RUSH (29), PASS (15).
LIONS DEFENSE — OVERALL (22T), RUSH (23), PASS (19).
VIKINGS OFFENSE — OVERALL (16), RUSH (6), PASS (23).
VIKINGS DEFENSE — OVERALL (29), RUSH (19), PASS (30).

STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES — The Vikings have won five straight games in the series, leaving Lions coach Matt Patricia winless in four matchups. … Lions QB Matthew Stafford passed for 364 yards, four TDs and one interception in his last game against the Vikings on Oct. 20, 2019, two weeks before suffering what became a season-ending back injury. … Lions RB Adrian Peterson returns to Minnesota, where he played the first 10 years of his career and became the all-time leading rusher for the Vikings. Peterson had 103 yards from scrimmage in his last visit, with Washington on Oct. 24, 2019. The Vikings are one of five teams in the league he has not recorded a rushing TD against. … Detroit WR Marvin Jones has six TD catches in his last four games against the Vikings. … The Lions have committed six turnovers, fifth fewest in the NFL. … Lions DE Everson Griffen plays his former team for the first time, after spending 10 seasons with the Vikings. … The Vikings have lost five straight home games, their longest such streak since 2011. Their last win at U.S. Bank Stadium was against the Lions last year. … Vikings RB Dalvin Cook last week became the fifth player in the NFL’s Super Bowl era with 200-plus yards from scrimmage, three or more rushing TDs and a receiving TD in the same game. The most recent of those feats was by Clinton Portis on Dec. 15, 2002, for Denver. … Cook leads the league with 10 rushing TDs in just six games played. He’s already fourth in Vikings history with 10 career 100-yard rushing games, in 35 career games. … Minnesota QB Kirk Cousins had a 138.1 passer rating last week against the Packers, his highest since Oct. 20, 2019, against the Lions (141.4). … The Vikings are hurting at CB, after missing two regulars last week and having three more players at that position leave the game in Green Bay with injuries. … The Vikings’ defense is fifth in the NFL on third downs, with a 35.4% conversion rate allowed. Since coach Mike Zimmer took over in 2014, the Vikings have the best mark in the league at 35.2%. … Fantasy tip: Lions TE T.J. Hockenson had a career-high seven catches for 65 yards last week. The Vikings have allowed 488 receiving yards to TEs this season, fourth most in the league. Packers TEs had eight catches for 125 yards last week.