DENVER – Five times on Sunday night, the Vikings' defense stiffened near its own goal line, holding the Broncos to field goals. Even with Minnesota's first three-turnover game since September, even with their longtime nemesis Russell Wilson on the other sideline, it appeared the red-zone stops might provide enough of a bulwark to preserve a win.
Over the past 11 seasons, though, the Vikings have learned too many times Wilson isn't done without the strike to finish him. For the eighth time in his nine career games against the Vikings, Wilson sent them home with a painful defeat.
The Broncos saved their only touchdown drive for the game's final three minutes, as Wilson lobbed a pass to Courtland Sutton in the back corner of the end zone, and snatched a 21-20 victory away from Minnesota to end the Vikings' five-game win streak. Wilson, who's now 8-1 against the Vikings, completed 27 of his 35 passes for 259 yards.
"We've learned this lesson before: Playing good football teams, you can't give them three extra opportunities," coach Kevin O'Connell said. "We'll have to continue to stress the importance of ball security, and that's what we're going to do."
Denver finished the game without a turnover, while the Vikings gave the ball away three times. The Broncos scored on three fourth-quarter drives, handing the Vikings a Sunday night loss much in the same manner the Seahawks did in 2020: with Wilson throwing a late touchdown pass to a receiver wearing No. 14 while beating a young cornerback.
Joshua Dobbs completed 20 of his 32 passes for 221 yards and a touchdown, but was hit as he threw a second-half interception. The Vikings ran for a season-high 175 yards, but Dobbs' interception came one series after an Alexander Mattison fumble.
After a stretch in September and October where they'd turned the ball over on their opening drive four times in five games, the Vikings had gone three games without giving the ball up to start the game. That streak ended on Sunday night, with a fifth opening-drive turnover that ranked as one of the season's most perplexing giveaways.
With the Vikings facing a third-and-1 from their own 34, they called a trick play where tight end T.J. Hockenson motioned to take the snap from center Garrett Bradbury, before pitching to Dobbs. But as Dobbs strained for the first down, Baron Browning stripped the ball before Kareem Jackson drilled the quarterback with a high hit.