
Are you ready for some real serious football?
That's what's going to take place Sunday night in Detroit, when the Lions host the Vikings in one of the more consequential games in recent memory.
Following their too-close-for-comfort 27-25 win over Green Bay at US Bank Stadium, the Vikings close out the reguylar season at Detroit on Sunday night.
Both teams have only two losses, and the winner gets not only the NFC North championship, but also gets a first-round bye and home-field advantage throughout the conference playoffs.
A loss by the Vikings at Detroit would drop them to fifth seed, meaning no first-round bye and having to go on the road to start the playoffs.
The Lions play at San Francisco on Monday night, and that game's outcome does not affect the stakes in Sunday's game.
The Vikings were ready to start their postgame ritual in honor of a ninth consecutive victory before realizing Sam Darnold was still missing from the raucous locker room because he was finishing his interview with the TV broadcasting crew.
He was well worth the wait, on so many levels.
Darnold added another exploit to his career-altering season, passing for a personal-best 377 yards and three touchdowns as the Vikings hung on to beat the Green Bay Packers and moved tantalizingly close to the NFC’s top seed for the playoffs.
“Just to see how he’s ultimately been able to maximize everything about his opportunity, our football team loves him for it,” coach Kevin O’Connell said. “I’ve had an absolute blast coaching him.”
The Vikings (14-2) finished 7-1 at US Bank Stadium where their blitz-fueled defense has fed well off the deafening crowd.
Darnold hit Jalen Nailor, Jordan Addison and Cam Akers for scores to raise his passing touchdown total to 35, the fourth-most in NFL history by a player in his debut season with a team.
When Darnold jogged into the locker room after his interview with, of all people, Tom Brady, the seven-time Super Bowl champion and now the lead analyst on Fox, he was doused in water by his teammates and hoisted in the air.
“It was just mayhem,” Darnold said, smiling wide. “I think I blacked out when Aaron Jones grabbed me and lifted me up.”
Love’s only touchdown pass for the Packers (11-5) came with 2:18 left, a 3-yard toss to Malik Heath that trimmed their deficit to two points and reignited the “Go Pack Go!” chants from the green-clad fans mixed in among the purple in another classic edition of this divisional rivalry.
Despite another fierce climb out of a gaping hole against Minnesota this season, following a 31-29 loss in Green Bay on Sept. 29 that started with a 28-0 deficit, the Packers fell to a troubling 0-5 against the top three teams in the NFC.
“We know what type of team we are,” Love said. “There’s just a lot of stuff to clean up.”
The Packers were swept by the Lions, too, and lost their opener in Brazil to the Eagles.
“I can’t sit up here and say, ‘Yeah, we’re on the same level,’ if we ain’t beat them,” safety Xavier McKinney said. “We’ve got to be more on our details. We’ve got to play cleaner. We’ve got to start faster.”
Josh Jacobs and Emanuel Wilson rushed for second-half touchdowns to fuel the late surge by the Packers after Will Reichard’s second missed field goal of the game for the Vikings with 9:18 remaining prevented them from pushing the lead to 20.
But with the score too close for comfort and the Packers holding all their timeouts before the two-minute warning, O’Connell didn’t hesitate to trust Darnold to win it.
Darnold ran bootlegs for completions for two vital first downs, one to fullback C.J. Ham and one on third-and-2 that Akers snagged just before it hit the turf to force the Packers to use their final timeout. On the play before that, Darnold hit Justin Jefferson in tight coverage for 9 yards on another rollout.
“We can be aggressive, but he’s still going to be a great decision-maker,” O’Connell said. “He’s playing quarterback at a very, very high level.”
Good company
Darnold went 33 for 43 with one interception as the Vikings ran 70 plays for 441 yards, their second-highest total of the season.
He passed Brett Favre (33, Vikings, 2009) and Vinny Testaverde (33, Ravens, 1996) for fourth place in touchdown passes in a debut season. The third overall pick in the 2018 draft by the Jets trails only Matthew Stafford (41, Rams, 2021), Brady (40, Buccaneers, 2020) and Peyton Manning (37, Broncos, 2012). Stafford and Brady won the Super Bowl those years. Manning is in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Injury report
Packers: WR Christian Watson (knee) was inactive. LB Quay Walker (ankle) missed his second straight game and CB Jaire Alexander (knee) was sidelined for the sixth consecutive game and the ninth time this season. ... Two backups, FS Zayne Anderson and DE Brenton Cox, entered the concussion protocol during the game and did not return.
Vikings: Jones (quadriceps) was pulled in the fourth quarter as a precaution, O’Connell said. ... OLB Patrick Jones (knee) limped off after Packers TE Tucker Kraft delivered a low, diving block that drew loud boos after the replay was shown on the video board but no penalty.