PacificNorseWest wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 10:07 pm
Vikings’ Mike Zimmer, Kirk Cousins Share Troubling Disconnect After Titans Loss
“I want our offense, you know, those guys are all veteran guys. I want them to take charge in those moments when we have the opportunity to go down and win the football game. Instead, it was chaos,” Zimmer said. “So we’re going to have to get that squared away...The last possession, when you’ve got a chance to go down and win the game with a field goal, is a complete disaster,” Zimmer said. “Those are the things that are causing us to lose.”
“Anytime you have almost 500 yards and score 30 points you’re doing something correct,” Cousins said.
https://heavy.com/sports/minnesota-viki ... sconnect/
I'm just going to watch how this unfolds, because as much as I feel this is overblown, possibly out of context, etc., I also believe where there's smoke, someone or something is always standing by with lighter fluid or a fire extinguisher. Typically, the latter is possessed by a solid winning streak....the former could be anywhere.
Personally, I think they both are falling short on leadership. That's a problem.
I think you’re exactly right.
It absolutely amazes me that the Vikings would extend BOTH Zimmer and Cousins within a short period of time. Together they’re 19-17-1. The very definition of mediocrity. Zimmer wants to control the clock. Cousins, at his core, wants to sling it. Before he came to Minnesota, he threw it all over the yard. Now he’s been molded (browbeat) into a game manager on a team with a bad defense. Those types of teams need a Russell Wilson or a Deshaun Watson, guys who can improvise and find ways to make first downs. Cousins can’t do that. But at one time in his career, he could move an offense through the air.
So now against the Titans, when we needed Cousins to be more than a game manager at the end of the game, Zimmer complains. The same coach who has coached any gunslinging tendencies out of his quarterback, who has insisted on an offense that controls clock and doesn’t turn it over, now expects that quarterback to flip a switch and suddenly gunsling his way to the winning score.
There is a definite lack of leadership. Part of leadership is preparing for any situation. The Minnesota Vikings have hired a coach who expects to be in the lead at the end of every game, and a quarterback who has historically failed when his team is behind late.
It’s a match made in hell.