Greg Joseph took his spot 4 yards shy of midfield, standing on the neck hair of the Norseman logo that had been painted white for the Vikings' winter whiteout game on Christmas Eve.
Only one kicker in team history (Blair Walsh) had tried a longer field goal than the 61-yarder Joseph would attempt with the Vikings and Giants tied at the end of regulation Saturday. The last time a Vikings kicker tried one even close to as long in Minneapolis, Ryan Longwell's 57-yard attempt was returned by Antonio Cromartie for a 109-yard touchdown in 2007. With safety Julian Love stationed in the end zone to return Joseph's kick if it fell short, right tackle Brian O'Neill knew he might need to make a game-saving stop.
"I started running down the field," O'Neill said, "and Greg started running the other way."
Joseph's kick drew toward the center of the uprights, disappearing into a blizzard of fans in white jerseys and chill bumps. He trotted toward the opposite zone, spinning his right index finger in the air. His winner last weekend helped them complete the largest comeback in NFL history; his 61-yarder that gave the Vikings a 27-24 victory Saturday was the longest in team history.
"I looked over at Greg. I could just see he had a great look in his eye," coach Kevin O'Connell said. "He absolutely hammered that kick.
And so the Vikings had won for the 12th time this year, in a manner that long ago became a feature instead of a bug. The victory over the Giants was their NFL-record 11th by one score; it was their sixth this season where they had been outgained. But as they have all season, the Vikings summoned a certain kind of magic on deadline, scoring 17 of the 28 points in a wild fourth quarter that featured two lead changes and a tie.
"We've been in situations like this all year, whether it's overtime, last play, [last] down, whatever, and if it's gone this way the whole year, you can't be surprised if it keeps happening," O'Neill said. "We've had some experience and been able to come out on top, so I hope it prepares us well [for] the next couple of weeks."
The Vikings (12-3) retained a one-game lead for the NFC's No. 2 seed over the 49ers, who beat the Commanders on Saturday to improve to 11-4. The Vikings still have a chance at the No. 1 seed over the Eagles, but more likely they will need to stay ahead of San Francisco to keep the conference's second spot and a chance to begin the playoffs with two home games; Saturday's game again showed how much they need to improve before the postseason.