Three times during his postgame news conference on Sunday, Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins used the term "razor's edge" to describe the differences between wins and losses.
For a while, the Vikings' season seemed destined to be a death by a thousand cuts. They are 1-2 in overtime games. Nine of their 10 games have been decided by one score or less. They were on the wrong end of more of these swing games than they cared to be and have not looked like a playoff team for most of the season.
But they are 5-5 now, and holders of a wild card spot, after Cousins and Co. engineered a 64-yard drive in the final 2 minutes, 8 seconds to Greg Joseph's game-winning field goal as they turned back the Packers at U.S. Bank Stadium. The Purple picked themselves up off the mat after Aaron Rodgers delivered a haymaker, a 75-yard touchdown strike to Marquez Valdes-Scantling that allowed Green Bay to tie the game late in the fourth quarter.
The Vikings didn't just pick themselves up. They got up swinging back.
Joseph's winning kick was set up by an offense that charged down the field after an apparent interception by Cousins was overturned when replays showed that Packers safety Darnell Savage did not hold on to the ball as he fell to the ground.
The Vikings had 14 plays that gained at least 10 yards on Sunday, with three coming on the final drive of the game. They are beginning to figure things out offensively, showing more aggressiveness and verticality in their aerial attack and realizing that when you have Justin Jefferson, throwing the ball up to him is a good thing. A lot of it was displayed on the final drive.
Cousins first hit Jefferson for a gain of 6, then flipped a pass to Dalvin Cook, who ended up with a 19-yard gain. Cousins gambled next, firing a pass while under pressure to Adam Thielen that looked like it was going to be intercepted by cornerback Rasul Douglas. But the ball zipped by Douglas to Thielen, who turned upfield for a gain of 26 yards to Green Bay's 19.
"I could probably point to a half dozen throws that were too aggressive," Cousins said, "and I could argue that's one of them."