In between gulps of the revelatory mood that swept over the state — and even extended to his commute home — following the Vikings' 34-31 win over the Packers on Sunday, Kirk Cousins paused to consider whether he needs to make some fine adjustments to the bombs-away mentality that helped him answer Aaron Rodgers.
Cousins threw for 341 yards in the victory, hitting Justin Jefferson for gains of 56 and 43 while drawing a 37-yard pass interference penalty from Darnell Savage on a deep ball to the receiver. It augmented the aggressive approach the Vikings used the previous week against the Chargers, when Jefferson surpassed 100 yards thanks to a couple of 27-yard jump balls along the sideline, and was likely necessary on Sunday as the Vikings tried to answer three second-half touchdown passes from Rodgers.
But Cousins was also quick to note how much good fortune he had in a game that easily could have gone the other way.
A Kingsley Keke roughing penalty bailed the Vikings out on Cousins' first interception to Savage, and the safety could've set the Packers up for a game-winning score if he'd been able to hold onto the ball after undercutting a deep route for Jefferson on the game's final drive.
" I think the ball I threw is more of a driven ball that may not have given Justin an opportunity to high-point [it]," he said. "And so that's kind of what I would take from it. I think the read wasn't necessarily a bad read but maybe obviously the throw didn't give him that chance."
Eric Stokes had a chance for an interception on a downfield throw to K.J. Osborn, and Savage essentially turned Adam Thielen into a defensive back on a third-quarter pass, where the receiver had to break up a would-be interception. Cousins recovered his own fumble, on a Preston Smith strip sack later on the same drive, though the would-be turnovers in that spot became moot when the Packers scored on the following drive anyway.
Asked about his 26-yard throw to Thielen on the game's final drive — after Rasul Douglas overran a chance for an interception — Cousins talked about the fine line between aggressiveness and recklessness.
"I could kind of point to a half-dozen throws there that were too aggressive and I could argue that that's one of them," he said. "I don't think you want to live doing that. I think that we got away with it a couple times. I keep saying we're [on a] razor's edge, but that's a play where it's an example of it. The difference between him catching that and making the play he did and it going the other way is very small.