Just to extend these notes-- We stunk during the 2nd and 3rd quarters, letting a 21-0 lead go to 24-17. Our running game suddenly looked ordinary after gashing them in the 1st qtr.Texas Vike wrote: ↑Mon Dec 17, 2018 11:34 am Couple of notes regarding differences I noticed in Stefanski's first few drives:
1) uptempo; lots of no huddle and always a good tempo.
2) Little to no straight back drops for Cousins. Much more play action passes and a good number of roll outs.
3) On 2nd or 3rd and short, we QB sneaked, numerous times.
4) Running was primary and it was used to set up the pass, not vice versa. Lots of runs between the tackles, nothing fancy or tricky.
5) On Cooks first TD, he gave the ball to Elflein to spike. Cool. Zimmer gave the game ball to the OL too. The OL seemed to respond to the JDF firing with some spunk. Nice to see.
6) They ran a lot of run plays with a WR or TE motioning to the edge of the line to help block the edge. They didn't always run when they did this. They also used Ham as a lead blocker, especially with Murray.
7) Cousins had time to pass; he was only pressured once on the first three drives.
8. Zimmer used smelling salts to make sure he wasn't dreaming.![]()
Twice, we had idiotic play from OL (Remmers and Elflein) on 3rd down. The latter negated a huge completion to Diggs that had us in FG range; instead, we were forced to punt. We also had a big 3rd down pick up from Cook come back due to a flag for holding on Compton that was a terrible call.
As Kapp noted in the chat: we seem to have a knack for doing this on huge plays. They impact the game in a major way. Why do we have this tendency? Is it just because we're the Vikings and that's what we've always done (as long as I can remember?)