ATLANTA — He saw Jaren Hall go down, saw Brian O'Neill wave the Vikings' medical staff over with an urgency that players who are inured to football's violence only use when something's amiss. Joshua Dobbs' immediate thought was for Hall, his teammate for all of 120 hours. His next was for the checklist he'd need to hot-wire an offense he'd never run.
First, the cadence: The Vikings' starting linemen had worked with Hall in practice all week, so Dobbs gathered the group to make sure they were clear on how he'd call for the ball. "I didn't take one snap with him all week," right tackle Brian O'Neill said. From the locker to O'Neill's right, center Garrett Bradbury chortled incredulously, "You didn't take one snap with him?!"
Dobbs met with running backs Alexander Mattison and Cam Akers for a quick once-over on handoffs, practiced taking the ball from Bradbury for the first time. Vikings quarterbacks ordinarily stand next to the left tackle in the huddle; Dobbs instead stood next to O'Neill, so the right tackle strained to hear play calls as the quarterback turned his head toward the rest of the huddle. Dobbs knew some teammates only by a nickname; as for full names, "that's for this week," he said later.
The Vikings had gone 5½ seasons without starting an injury replacement at quarterback before Kirk Cousins tore his right Achilles tendon last Sunday in Green Bay. By the second quarter of their 31-28 win in Atlanta on Sunday, they'd used two: Hall, who left with a concussion after he was hit near the goal line in the first quarter, and Dobbs, who'd landed in Minnesota late Tuesday night with four days to learn the playbook after a trade-deadline deal with the Cardinals.
The comeback victory played out like the kind of race-against-time summer blockbuster that's made Tom Cruise millions, right down to coach Kevin O'Connell's role as the guy in Dobbs' ear, translating play names from his old offense to his new one in real time, guiding him through route concepts and telling him to "remember his feet." The fact the Vikings were in a no-huddle offense during their game-winning two-minute drive, O'Connell said, gave him more time to talk to Dobbs before his headset cut off with 15 seconds left on the play clock.
"It's like if you were taking [AP] Spanish all year, you showed up and Wednesday, someone told you that you have that AP French exam on Sunday," Dobbs said. "Someone's got to talk to you in Spanish and translate it to French. That's kind of what was going on out there."
The ending was appropriately climactic, as Dobbs dodged Bud Dupree's grasp and slipped away from two more tackles on a 22-yard gain that kept the Vikings alive on fourth down with 51 seconds left. Three plays later, Dobbs threw a strike to a leaping Brandon Powell, who landed on his back in the Mercedes-Benz Stadium end zone with the game-winning score on a play Dobbs had watched, but not practiced.
"I introduced myself on Thursday, and we were with him in the huddle on Sunday," O'Neill said. "He made some incredible plays; that [fourth]-down scramble was pretty insane. It was almost like we were out there playing 'Madden'; you've just got to go ball."