Monday, November 7, 2022

Vikings - Commanders

Whew.

The Minnesota Vikings got out of their own way in the fourth quarter and pulled out a 20-17 win over the Washington Commanders. The Vikings scored the final 13 points of the game and that was the difference. 

Another one-score game. It’d sure be a nice change if the Vikings could get some comfortable distance between themselves and an opponent. At least the Vikings are winning these close games. It’s their sixth consecutive one-score win. 

The Vikings offense has had a maddening pattern of starting fast and then slipping into some sort of hibernation for a quarter or more. Against the Commanders, they took the opening kickoff and sailed down the field. Nine plays, 78 yards. The final play was a nine-yard toss from Kirk Cousins to Justin Jefferson. On the drive, Jefferson accounted for 48 of the 78 yards. The Vikings followed that beautiful opening drive with four first half punts. The third quarter was just as ineffective. The Vikings offense ran only nine plays in the third. The middle 45 minutes of the game was mostly offensive futility. They must put an end to these long stretches of doing nothing. A reason for these stretches is a stunning inability to get the ball to Jefferson. A reason for that inability against the Commanders was a very handsy Benjamin St.-Juste. The big corner grabbed, pulled, and pushed his way through his tough assignment. For some reason, the officials allowed it. The Vikings briefly broke out of their offensive funk and managed a terrific scoring opportunity at the end of the first half. 2nd-and-15 from the Commanders 25-yard line with seconds to play, Cousins gave Jefferson an opportunity in the end zone. St.-Juste grabbed, pulled, and pushed his way to a pass break-up. The deflection ended up in the hands of Commander corner Danny Johnson for an interception. The Vikings came up empty when they should’ve had at least a field goal. 

The officials? The officiating crew showed a great reluctance to throw flags, especially for pass interference. One official even went out of his way to hand the Commanders their first touchdown. On the opening drive of the second half, Commanders quarterback Taylor Heinicke tossed the ball fifty yards into triple coverage. A clueless official ambled into the path of Camryn Bynum. The Vikings safety had an easy interception headed his way. Instead, the official knocked Bynum to the ground and the ball somehow ended up in the hands of Commanders receiver Curtis Samuel. He stumbled past Harrison Smith and Patrick Peterson into the end zone. Instead of a Vikings takeaway, an official that lost his place on the field handed the Commanders a seven-point gift. I get that officials are part of the field but they have to realize their place on it. It was a ridiculous play. It should forever be part of official tutorials on what not to do on a football field. 

While the Vikings offense spent most of the game not doing much, their defense played well. Excluding the touchdown gifted by the officials, the Vikings defense gave up 10 points. The biggest play of the game was probably Harrison Smith’s interception in the fourth quarter. That takeaway triggered the comeback. The Vikings had just scored a field goal, cutting Washington’s lead to 17-10. Smith intercepted the ball at the Commanders 47-yard line and returned it to the 12-yard line. Two plays later, Cousins found Dalvin Cook in the end zone for a touchdown. In three minutes of game time, the Vikings scored 10 points and tied the game at 17-17. They had successfully come back from a 10-point fourth quarter deficit. 

Then came the final six minutes and a really stupid penalty that changed the game. 

The Vikings defense followed up Smith’s interception with a three-and-out. With 6:12 to play the Vikings offense had the ball. 15 plays, 44 yards, and six minutes later, Greg Joseph kicked a 28-yard field goal. With 12 seconds to play, the Vikings had a 20-17 lead. It was the second field that Joseph made on the drive. The first one made it 20-17 with 1:52 to play. The Commanders should’ve had a decent opportunity to tie or win the game. Instead, John Ridgeway made the stupid mistake on the field goal attempt of roughing up Vikings long snapper Andrew DePaola.This penalty took away the Commanders opportunity to respond. Instead of the Commanders offense getting the ball, the Vikings offense returned to the field and drained most of the remaining time on the clock. Thankfully, Joseph was successful once again when he returned to the field. 

The Vikings still had to survive one desperation play. They did. 

The new guy. 

On Tuesday, the Vikings made a trade deadline deal with the Detroit Lions to acquire tight end T.J. Hockenson. From Tuesday night to game time, he had a crash course on the Vikings offense. Apparently his book and field work was effective, Hockenson made a difference in this game. He had nine catches on nine targets for 70 yards. His day would’ve been even more efficient if it weren’t for some very ineffective screen plays. The Vikings offense would’ve been much better off if they’d scrapped all screen plays before the game. Tight ends, running backs, didn’t matter. The Commanders wrecked every screen play the Vikings attempted. In his first game, Hockenson presented a terrific intermediate target for Cousins. His role is only going to grow. I still can’t believe that the Vikings were able to add a player like him in the middle of the season. Hockenson made a difference in this game and should make an ever bigger difference moving forward. 

I hoped that this game would be an easy one but I doubted that it would be. The Commanders defense is a problem. Defensive tackle Jonathan Allen is a beast and he spent most of the game in the Vikings backfield. He was probably the best, most impactful player of the game. Fellow defensive tackle DaRon Payne can also be a problem. Defensive end Montez Sweat, linebacker Jamin Davis, safety Kamren Curl. All are problems. The corners can be effective if the officials allow them to assault receivers like St.-Juste repeatedly did to Jefferson. Defensive end Chase Young is close to returning from last season’s ACL injury. The Commanders have a formidable defense. On offense, they have a load of playmakers. I knew this game was going to be difficult. It was probably even more difficult than I anticipated. 

The Vikings win streak continues. Six games. The record climbs to 7-1. Next week is a big one. Next week brings a trip to Buffalo and a game with the Bills. The Vikings offense can not sleep through half a game against the Bills. 


Sunday, November 6, 2022

Flea Flicker Week 9 Predictions

It’s suddenly November. Here are some guesses at the Week 9 games. 

Byes: Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys, Denver Broncos, New York Giants, Pittsburgh Steelers, San Francisco 49ers

Minnesota Vikings @ Washington Commanders
Pick: Vikings
The Vikings must get win #7 in advance of games against the Bills and Cowboys.

Los Angeles Chargers @ Atlanta Falcons
Pick: Chargers
The Falcons have been frisky. The Chargers are better.

Miami Dolphins @ Chicago Bears
Pick: Dolphins
I don’t think that the Bears can slow the fleet Dolphins.

Carolina Panthers @ Cincinnati Bengals
Pick: Bengals
I’m guessing that the good Bengals show up this week.

Green Bay Packers @ Detroit Lions
Pick: Lions
The Packers keep losing. The Lions get win #2.

Indianapolis Colts @ New England Patriots
Pick: Patriots
Both teams are a puzzle. Both flip flop between tough and terrible. How did this Colts team beat the Chiefs?

Buffalo Bills @ New York Jets
Pick: Bills
The Bills should roll over the Jets.

Las Vegas Raiders @ Jacksonville Jaguars
Pick: Jaguars
Just going with the home team.

Seattle Seahawks @ Arizona Cardinals 
Pick: Cardinals
The Seahawks have been tough. The Cardinals find a way at home.

Los Angeles Rams @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Pick: Rams
The winners of the past two Super Bowls have six wins between them. 

Tennessee Titans @ Kansas City Chiefs
Pick: Chiefs
The Titans can’t keep up with the Chiefs.

Baltimore Ravens @ New Orleans Saints
Pick: Ravens
Through eight games, the Ravens have been inconsistent. If they have any hope of staying with the Bills and Chiefs, they have to find some consistency.  

Saturday, November 5, 2022

All - Time Boston Braves/Boston Redskins/Washington Redskins/Washington Commanders Team

The Minnesota Vikings travel this weekend to play the Washington Commanders tomorrow. The Commanders have a long, often troubling, sometimes successful history. The team carried a wildly racist name for most of it’s history. Perhaps all the heat now is punishment for that. On the field, Washington has had some great teams with great players. They won NFL titles in 1937 and 1942 and Super Bowls in 1982, 1987, 1991. They had a knack for winning Super Bowls during seasons with work stoppages. On the eve of their big game with the Vikings, here’s a look at some of the best players in the 90 year history of the Boston Braves/Boston Redskins/Washington Redskins/Washington Commanders. 

Offense

Quarterback
Sammy Baugh

Halfback
Cliff Battles

Fullback
John Riggins

Wide Receivers
Bobby Mitchell
Charley Taylor
Art Monk

Tight End
Jerry Smith

Offensive Tackles
Trent Williams
Turk Edwards

Offensive Guards
Dick Stanfel
Russ Grimm

Center
Len Hauss

Defense

Defensive Ends
Dexter Manley
Charles Mann

Defensive Tackles
Diron Talbert
Jonathan Allen

Linebackers
Chris Hanburger
London Fletcher
Chuck Drazenovich

Cornerbacks
Darrell Green
Champ Bailey

Safeties
Ken Houston
Sean Taylor

Special Teams

Kicker
Mark Mosley

Punter
Sammy Baugh

Returner
Brian Mitchell





Friday, November 4, 2022

Trading Frenzy

Tuesday was the NFL’s Trade Deadline. Despite great buildup by media and fans, the deadline has often been a modest event. This year was different. This year was closer to the dream deadline of media and fans. 

Deadline Day Trades since 2012:

2012: 1
2013: 1
2014: 2
2015: 0
2016: 1
2017: 3
2018: 5
2019: 2
2020: 2
2021: 3

Especially compared to the past decade, 2022 brought a trading frenzy. The following players changed teams on Tuesday.

T.J. Hockenson - Vikings
Chase Claypool - Bears
Bradley Chubb - Dolphins
Chase Edmonds - Broncos
Calvin Ridley - Jaguars
William Jackson III - Steelers
Jeff Wilson - Dolphins
Jacob Martin - Broncos
Nyheim Hines - Bills
Zack Moss - Colts
Rashad Fenton - Falcons
Dean Marlowe - Bills

Bradley Chubb and Chase Edmonds were part of the same deal. Nyheim Hines and Zack Moss were part of another deal. 12 players changed teams in ten deadline deals. Those ten trades doubled the previous decade high. 

The biggest deal is obviously the one that sent tight end T.J. Hockenson from the Detroit Lions to the Minnesota Vikings. The general belief, certainly my belief, was that Hockenson was a building block player for anything that the Lions are trying to do. Now, he’s a building block player for the Vikings. Tight end was a need for Minnesota. It was a need even before Irv Smith Jr. went on the injured reserve list on Tuesday with a high ankle sprain. Production from the tight end position had been a season-long issue. The Vikings could’ve found a modest boost at the position with a street free agent signing or a ho-hum trade for a promising third-stringer. Instead, first-year general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah made a team-changing deal. Never in my wildest dreams did I think that Hockenson was an option. He might not be in the elite tight end class of Travis Kelce, George Kittle, and Mark Andrews but he has the talent and potential to be. This is one of the rare in-season deals that should be a boost for this season and future seasons. Hockenson is only 25. His best years are in front of him and he should be a Vikings offensive fixture moving forward. 

The only trade that involved a first-round pick was the trade that sent pass rusher Bradley Chubb from the Denver Broncos to the Miami Dolphins. The details of the trade:

Dolphins receive:
Bradley Chubb
2025 5th-round pick

Broncos receive: 
2023 1st-round pick
2024 4th-round pick
Chase Edmonds

Much has been made of the fact that the first-round pick that was the focus of this deal was the final first-round pick acquired from the San Francisco 49ers in the Trey Lance deal. Much has been made of these picks because the Dolphins turned the three first-round picks into Jaylen Waddle, Tyreek Hill, and Bradley Chubb. That’s quite a haul. 

12 players moving in 10 deadline deals. All of the 10 deals involved players in their prime. The 2022 NFL Trade Deadline is more like what the fans, the media, and the league have been dreaming. It was a trading frenzy. 






Thursday, November 3, 2022

Minnesota Vikings Week 8 Superlatives

I was distracted by the big deal for T.J. Hockenson. 

The Minnesota Vikings outlasted the Arizona Cardinals in Week 9. 34-26. It was an anxious fourth quarter but the Vikings defense was the difference. The offense scored five touchdowns but it was the defense that sealed the win. The Vikings are now 6-1 on the season. They keep doing enough, making the needed plays, to keep stacking up wins. Here are some of the players that made the sixth win possible. 

Offensive Player of the Game

Dalvin Cook, RB

Dalvin Cook had his first 100-yard game of the season.

20 carries, 111 yards, and a touchdown.

He also added 30 yards on five receptions. Cook paced a rushing attack that totaled 173 yards. Hopefully this 100-yard is the first of many moving forward. The Vikings offense is better when the run game is setting up nice second downs. 

Defensive Player of the Game

Za’Darius Smith, OLB

The Vikings defense played well but this one’s easy. Za’Darius Smith was brilliant. He was the most dominant player on the field. 

3 sacks
7 tackles
4 tackles for loss
1 tipped pass

Smith went down with an injury. It was a scary moment as his impact on the game had been huge. Fortunately, he soon returned to the game and continued to ruin the Cardinals day.

Special Teams Player(s) of the Game

Troy Dye, ST

One of the big plays of the game came when Cardinals punt returner Greg Dortch botched the handling of a Ryan Wright punt. Troy Dye recovered the loose ball. It set the offense up nicely on the Cardinals 25-yard line and led to the touchdown that was the difference in the game. 






Wednesday, November 2, 2022

Vikings Swing A Deadline Deal

The Minnesota Vikings approached yesterday’s NFL Trade Deadline with a nifty 6-1 record. They had a 3.5-game lead over their nearest division rivals. They were in a good place. To compete for something better than a nifty Week 8 record they had to get better. Kwesi Adofo-Mensah has been the Vikings general manager since January. There’s no way to know how bold he might be with his first trade deadline. Does he stand on a good situation? Or, does he try to make it better? I believe that we got our answer. Adofo-Menash took a big swing at his first trade deadline. 

The Vikings acquired tight end T.J. Hockenson from the Detroit Lions. When it comes to trying to improve the team, Adofo-Mensah has no issue dealing with division rivals. This is a big deal and the Vikings are a much better football team because of it. 

The particulars of the big trade:

Vikings receive:
T.J. Hockenson, TE
2023 4th-round pick
2024 conditional 4th-round pick

Lions receive:
2023 2nd-round pick
2024 3rd-round pick

The conditional 4th-round pick becomes a 5th-round pick if the Vikings win a playoff game this season. Here’s hoping for that 2024 5th-round pick.

The Vikings didn’t have much salary cap space. They are responsible for less than $600,000 of Hockenson’s 2022 salary. This is the final year of his rookie deal. The Lions already picked up the fifth-year option. So, the Vikings have Hockenson under contract next year for $9.4 million. This is no short-term rental. It wouldn’t be a surprise if there’s a long-term deal in the offseason. Hockenson is a potential franchise cornerstone player, a building block, a player to keep. 

The Vikings have needed more from the tight end position. Irv Smith Jr. has been slow to return from missing last year to a knee injury and training camp to a thumb injury. Johnny Mundt was signed in the offseason to be a nice second tight end. With Smith’s slow return to form, Mundt has had to play a bigger role than was probably intended. I thought that the Vikings might look to add a tight end at the trade deadline. Tight end became an even greater need when Smith injured his ankle during Sunday’s game against the Arizona Cardinals. That injury put him on injured reserve. It also made tight end an even greater need. The high end tight end target was probably Mike Gesicki of the Miami Dolphins. He reportedly has been on the market. While I was never a fan of his blocking, his pass catching has always been among the best. After Gesicki, the options never felt great. With the way that Ryan Poles has been cutting ties with players like Robert Quinn and especially Roquan Smith, I jokingly thought about taking Cole Kmet from the Chicago Bears. I never thought for even a moment that T.J. Hockenson was an option. I only ever thought of him as a fixture of the Lions present and future. He’s one of the best young tight ends in the league. He’s one of the best tight ends in the league. 

With all respect to Dalvin Cook, Justin Jefferson is the Vikings best offensive player. At times, opponents have been able to throw enough resources at Jefferson to slow him. When that’s happened the Vikings offense has often stumbled to pedestrian levels. They have too many playmakers to ever be pedestrian. Some have thought a consistent deep threat is needed. A little more speed would be nice. Perhaps a little more speed is already on the roster. I wouldn’t mind seeing rookie Jalen Nailor get some snaps. A much greater need was a tight end that could threaten the defense at all levels. Hockenson is a threat. He’s a threat at the line, off the line, intermediate depths, and deep. He can drop 179 yards in a single game. He can also block. He changes the Vikings offense. He makes it more versatile. He makes it more dangerous. 

Dalvin Cook, Alexander Mattison, Justin Jefferson, Adam Thielen, K.J. Osborn, Jalen Reagor, and now T.J. Hockenson. An improving offensive line. I’d like to see Kene Nwangwu and Jalen Nailor added to that fun group of playmakers. Kirk Cousins has everything he could possibly need. 

The Minnesota Vikings definitely aren’t sitting on that nifty record.


Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Flea Flicker Week 8 Power Rankings

Here’s a look at how the 32 NFL teams rank after eight weeks of football. 

1.   Philadelphia Eagles (7-0)
2.   Buffalo Bills (6-1)
3.   Kansas City Chiefs (5-2)
4.   Minnesota Vikings (6-1)
5.   Dallas Cowboys (6-2)
6.   Baltimore Ravens (5-3)
7.   Los Angeles Chargers (4-3)
8.   San Francisco 49ers (4-4)
9.   Cincinnati Bengals (4-4)
10. Miami Dolphins (5-3)
11. New York Giants (6-2)
12. New York Jets (5-3)
13. Tennessee Titans (5-2)
14. Seattle Seahawks (5-3)
15. Los Angeles Rams (3-4)
16. Green Bay Packers (3-5)
17. Arizona Cardinals (3-5)
18. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (3-5)
19. New England Patriots (4-4)
20. Atlanta Falcons (4-4)
21. Cleveland Browns (3-5)
22. Indianapolis Colts (3-4-1)
23. New Orleans Saints (3-5)
24. Washington Commanders (4-4)
25. Las Vegas Raiders (2-5)
26. Jacksonville Jaguars (2-6)
27. Chicago Bears (3-5)
28. Denver Broncos (3-5)
29. Detroit Lions (1-6)
30. Pittsburgh Steelers (2-6)
31. Houston Texans (1-5-1)
32. Carolina Panthers (2-6)

Until next week.