CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The Vikings quarterback whose late-game wherewithal has been maligned for much of his career stood on a podium Sunday, answering questions mostly about his fourth and fifth late-game drives in six weeks.
Two of those Kirk Cousins-led drives resulted in field goals from Greg Joseph to tie or win the game. The fourth-quarter march Cousins directed on Sunday ended just like the one he'd facilitated three weeks earlier, with Joseph missing a game-winning attempt.
But the overtime coin toss fell the Vikings' way on Sunday, providing Cousins an opportunity for a nine-play, 75-yard drive that ended with K.J. Osborn catching a high corner route in Bank of America Stadium, stretching into the end zone and doing his best Stefon Diggs impersonation by throwing his helmet after the game-winner in the Vikings' 34-28 victory over the Carolina Panthers.
Cousins has attempted 239 passes through the Vikings' first six games; 35 have come in the final two minutes of games with his team tied or trailing by one score. No other NFL quarterback has even half as many passes in those do-or-die situations this year. As the 33-year-old looked toward the Vikings' bye week late Sunday afternoon, he made no effort to conceal his exhaustion.
"I'm spent," he said. "It's an absolute grind, and it's an absolute grind every Sunday. It takes everything I got. But I've been on the other side of those losses, too, in my career over the 10 years, so it's rewarding when you know how the other side feels too. You really enjoy it when you do make a play and win it."
The week off will likely bring an examination of how the Vikings keep finding themselves in these situations, after they blew a double-digit lead for the second straight week to a quarterback who'd appeared overmatched for the game's first 53 minutes. There would have seemed to be no need for late-game heroics, not when the Panthers' Sam Darnold had committed turnovers, overshot targets and watched his receivers drop at least a half-dozen passes.
The Vikings could have also put the game away by turning two short field goals into touchdowns, or converting either of the two-point conversions coach Mike Zimmer chose to attempt, or by not fumbling to set up a first-quarter Panthers touchdown, or by not allowing Carolina to block a punt for a TD, or by stopping Darnold from scrambling for 30 yards with seven minutes left before he led a tying 96-yard drive for eight points in the final two minutes of regulation.
But for all their issues — 11 penalties, periods of offensive stagnancy, a bundle of special teams mistakes and another late defensive swoon — the Vikings are alive and kicking in the playoff race because of the quarterbacking mettle they have so often lacked.