
The clock in quarterback Kirk Cousins' head can't tick for long behind this Vikings offensive line. But blocking was no excuse for how poorly Cousins played against a Falcons defense that has allowed more passing touchdowns than any NFL team.
Three interceptions in the first half is a first in Cousins' nine-year NFL career. He's never sunk a team's chances so quickly. And while each pick presented a different set of problems, there's a consistent issue in Cousins locking onto receivers and not adjusting after the snap, according to coach Mike Zimmer.
"The first one was the worst one, if you will," Cousins said after the Vikings' 40-23 loss. "First play of the game, and the coverage was not confusing. It was just a zone drop, and I simply forced the football into coverage, tried to do too much. That's a mistake I may have made in Year 1, but I'm disappointed that I would do that now."
A brutally honest admission for a $32 million-per-year quarterback. The same lack of processing popped up on the second interception when Cousins didn't react to the corner sitting in zone coverage next to his target.
"He might have locked on, pre-determined some throws," Zimmer said Monday. "It's just pre-snap read, probably determined a couple things a little too soon. He made some good throws in the second half. We just started out so poorly in the first half."
1. Kirk Cousins' NFL-high 10 interceptions in six games are inflated by his fifth career start with at least three picks. While those turnover-heavy games are relatively rare for Cousins (five in 97 starts), interestingly they have come in bunches. In four of his five three-interception games, two of the picks came on back-to-back drives, including during Sunday's loss.
On this third-and-9 play in the second quarter, Cousins said he diagnosed the Falcons' Cover-2 coverage before the snap. But even with multiple indications of an underneath zone coverage, including the Falcons cornerback shifting outside with receiver Chad Beebe's pre-snap motion, and Falcons defenders Deion Jones (#45) and Isaiah Oliver (#26) showing pressure before dropping, Cousins locks onto receiver Justin Jefferson (#18) as if cornerback A.J. Terrell (#24) is playing man coverage on Irv Smith Jr. up the sideline.

Jefferson and receiver Adam Thielen (#19) run 'sticks' routes, stopping at the first-down marker, with Thielen drawing the attention of Jones (#45) and Oliver (#26). This leads Cousins to throw to Jefferson, he said, thinking he had the space.