Most NFL fans are pretty savvy about the value of screaming their brains out any time the enemy faces third down. And those who aren't as astute typically get eardrum-splitting cues via piped-in sound effects and overcaffeinated public address announcers screaming that it's time to become verbally unhinged.
No venue is better at this than the Mercedes-Benz Superdome.
And yet it was Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins who outclassed future Hall of Famer Drew Brees on third-down plays as a 7½-point road playoff underdog in Sunday's 26-20 overtime upset.
Against the Saints' No. 6-ranked third down defense, Cousins completed nine of 12 passes with seven first downs, no turnovers, 110 yards and the game-ending touchdown in overtime.
Meanwhile, against the Vikings' 19th-ranked defense, Brees completed five of seven passes with two first downs, no touchdowns, an interception and a measly 17 yards, 14 of which came on his last third-down attempt.
"It's a tough [third-down] environment, but you also understand that and train for it," Cousins said. "That's my job, our job as a team, as an offense to be effective in those situations no matter how challenging they may be. Fortunately, we made enough plays."
Indeed.
In fact, Cousins would have been 11 of 12 with nine first downs and about 50 more yards if rookies Bisi Johnson and Alexander Hollins hadn't dropped passes.