Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell served as offensive coordinator on coaching staffs that were pass-heavy on offense (Rams, 2020-21) and those that were among the most run-heavy (Washington, 2019).
After the 37-year-old former NFL backup quarterback called 52 passing plays to 19 runs during the Vikings' win against the Giants last weekend, O'Connell said there's a middle ground he can better find. His next opportunity comes Sunday in Green Bay, where the Packers' 27th-ranked run defense has had as many holes as those cheeseheads at times.
"Want to definitely be more balanced. That's on me as the play caller," O'Connell said. "I thought Dalvin [Cook] ran the ball well and definitely probably deserved a few more opportunities. It's just how that game kind of went."
The Giants win marked the Vikings' 11th one-score victory, meaning there haven't been many large leads for Cook to salt away. But O'Connell said running more can help better set up an entire offense that has been largely successful. The Vikings rank seventh in scoring and 12th in yardage.
But the results of runs against the Giants illustrate how both O'Connell and players can better adapt. After Cook's 18-yard run on the opening possession, center Austin Schlottmann was quickly shed by Giants nose tackle Dexter Lawrence, who tackled Cook for a 1-yard loss. Only the Jaguars have as many runners tackled at or behind the line as often as the Vikings at 24%, according to Football Outsiders.
"It makes it hard to defend if you can establish that run game, win some of those matchups on the line of scrimmage," O'Connell said.
A successful running game can further open up O'Connell's playbook, he said, with play designs that are built off running plays.
"Things that end up looking the same, but end up being hard to defend because they're different," he added. "Passes, different types of runs, screens, play-pass, getting Kirk [Cousins] on the perimeter."