Once upon a time, former Vikings coach Mike Tice disclosed publicly his "Randy Ratio" idea, an ill-fated plan that called for 40% of the team's passes to be thrown to Randy Moss.
That brainchild was bound to backfire and is not something anyone should consider duplicating. And yet … I'd throw the ball to current Vikings rookie Justin Jefferson a lot, without adhering to a specific ratio.
However many times he gets targeted each game — that number was 12 on Sunday — it's probably not enough because this guy is that good this early in his NFL career.
"I'm so grateful that we drafted him," quarterback Kirk Cousins said.
Even when the rest of the Vikings offense looks somewhere between stagnant and incompetent, Jefferson rises above the mess.
Jefferson continued to produce at a historic clip Sunday in an otherwise ragtag offensive performance in a 27-24 overtime victory against the bumbling Jacksonville Jaguars.
A win is better than a loss — especially for a team clawing back into the playoff race — but the Vikings should not feel satisfied with much of their offensive outing against perhaps the NFL's worst defense. Turnovers remained a troubling theme for the second game in a row. Play-calling and game management were strange at times. The whole operation was just blah.
Jefferson wasn't flawless either. He had two penalties in overtime, one of them a questionable offensive pass interference that he labeled a "bad call." His positives far outweigh any hiccups.