The shared DNA of the Vikings' and Browns' offenses can be traced back to 2019, when then-Vikings offensive coordinator Kevin Stefanski called Klint Kubiak about being part of a coaching staff that would also feature his father, Gary, as an offensive adviser and two longtime Kubiak assistants, Rick Dennison as offensive line coach and Brian Pariani as tight ends coach.
Stefanski had been a fan of the scheme dating back to Gary Kubiak's time in Houston with running back Arian Foster, and as it spread around the league, it also gave the Vikings an offensive foundation in the months after John DeFilippo's firing. It would put Kirk Cousins back under center, feature Dalvin Cook on wide-zone runs and pair those concepts with play-action passes designed to punish defenses for overcommitting to the run.
Cleveland has remained committed to the scheme with Stefanski as head coach, pairing it with some of offensive line coach Bill Callahan's power runs to build one of the better ground games in the league. Quarterback Baker Mayfield handed off 36 times in Cleveland's 14-7 win over the Vikings on Sunday, and the Browns gained 173 yards with Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt running behind a line that featured four players who received All-Pro votes last year.
"Did we get pushed around today? Probably," Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said. "But I'm telling you now, they know how to run the football and those two backs run hard. I'm not discouraged one bit about the lack of stopping the run."
The Vikings' inability to stop the run, though, came on a day where they could do little against the league's third-ranked run defense. The Browns, put simply, beat the Vikings at their own game.
Minnesota ran for only 65 yards on 23 attempts, and 34 of those yards came on three runs; Dalvin Cook gained 11 on the Vikings' opening touchdown drive, K.J. Osborn picked up 10 on a fly sweep and Cook got 13 more on an inside zone shotgun run with 3:45 to play. Setting aside those three plays — and a Cousins kneel-down at the end of the first half — the Vikings ran 19 times for 32 yards, short-circuiting their offense on a day where they did not score after their opening possession.
"I think, typically when you're running the wide zone like we are, you start them one way and you get the back side cut off," Zimmer said. "I don't think we did a good job of getting the back side cut off [Sunday]."
That issue presented itself in several forms, with the Browns sending in defenders from the second level to stop plays from the back side, but the Vikings' primary problem was with defensive ends Myles Garrett and Jadeveon Clowney. Garrett had two tackles for loss — one on Cook in the second quarter, and one on Alexander Mattison in the fourth — and Clowney combined with Troy Hill to stop Mattison for a 2-yard loss in the third quarter after beating right tackle Brian O'Neill on the back side of the play.