Dropping back with less than a minute to play against the Lions on Sunday, Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins expected he might find Adam Thielen open on a deep out route. But he saw K.J. Osborn pulling away from former Vikings cornerback Mike Hughes, raising his hand to call for the ball.
Cousins let the ball fly with a defender converging on him, unsure if he'd put enough on it to lead Osborn to the end zone. "Please be far enough," he said to himself, trying to coax it like a golfer might with an approach shot as the ball traveled through the air.
It landed perfectly in Osborn's arms, for a game-winning touchdown that continued to burnish the receiver's reputation in the Vikings' most important moments.
Osborn, who played his first offensive snaps for the Vikings in 2021, has 60 catches on 96 targets in 20 games since then. Those number pale in comparison, of course, to Justin Jefferson's (126 catches on 196 targets) and lag behind the ones Thielen has posted (80 catches on 114 targets) in 16 games.
But in two-minute situations, when the Vikings' offense becomes more egalitarian, Osborn has thrived. He has 20 catches on 31 targets in those situations since the start of 2021; Jefferson has 19 catches on 32 targets, and Thielen has 16 catches on 22 targets.
Considering that Cousins ranks second in the NFL in completions (77) and attempts (136) while placing third in yards (840) in two-minute situations since the beginning of last year, Osborn's emergence has been critical to the Vikings' performance in those spots.
"So much of a game plan you devise to try to get certain people opportunities, so you move people around to create that," Cousins said. "In the two-minute you sort of have guys in their spots and you don't really move people around, so it ends up being a more organic way of getting people the football, if that makes sense. It just kind of happens, whoever is open. That's what happened last year with K.J. a lot in two-minute: he was now in primary spots, where during the normal game he was in secondary, tertiary spots, if you will.
"So the plays he was making in two-minute last year, I realized, there is a lot more to this guy than maybe we're giving him the [opportunities] to do. When you have Adam, Justin, Dalvin, Alex Mattison, Irv Smith, you don't feel the pressing need maybe to give him those [opportunities], but then in two-minute again today he takes advantage of them and shows up."