CHICAGO - Three hundred and sixty-five days before the Vikings took the field in Chicago on Monday night, Kirk Cousins boosted his bona fides with one of the most dramatic comebacks in Vikings history, electrifying a capacity crowd at U.S. Bank Stadium with a 20-point second half rally in a game where the Broncos' first half had all but eliminated the run game as an option.
There would be no crowd of Bears fans at Soldier Field for the quarterback to silence Monday night, but the Vikings' annual trip to their own personal theater of the absurd would come with its own frights: a Chicago defense that could contain NFL rushing leader Dalvin Cook, a continuing series of special teams gaffes and new installments in the series of miscues that only seem to happen here.
Cousins had only thrown 34 passes in the Vikings' previous two games, but he wasn't getting out of this one quietly. His oft-discussed 0-9 record on "Monday Night Football," and the Vikings' 3-15 record in this building during the 21st century, would have to go down the hard way.
The quarterback proved equal to the formidable challenge, never more than when the game got tough. He connected on 10 of his 11 third-down throws, amassing 149 yards and hitting Adam Thielen for a pair of third-down TDs, as the Vikings overcame the Bears 19-13 and continued their charge back into the NFC playoff race with a third consecutive division victory.
Cousins outdueled Nick Foles, his former teammate at Michigan State, by completing 25 of 36 passes, solving a Bears defense that wouldn't give him many deep shots and keeping Chicago's pass rush at bay with a series of quick throws. He was sacked only once, on a play where he blamed himself for holding the ball too long, and connected with seven different receivers.
"We got a lot of split safety tonight, very soft in coverage," Cousins said. "It didn't lend itself to taking shots. … When you're a top defense, it's likely because you're not giving up many explosive plays, and I'm sure that's part of the reason they've been so good this year."
Cook, who'd never carried the ball more than 14 times at Soldier Field, had reached that number by the end of the first half, as the Vikings stuck with the run in a building where their former offensive coordinator — John DeFilippo, fired two years ago in part for his philosophical differences with coach Mike Zimmer over the run game — stood on the home sideline as the Bears' QB coach.