The Vikings are one of the most imbalanced offenses in the NFL. And they suddenly lack a point guard for their high-volume passing attack that attempted the most throws (315) and produced the second-most passing yardage (2,354) and touchdowns (18) with quarterback Kirk Cousins.
Head coach Kevin O'Connell said he used some of quarterback Jaren Hall's 11 reps in the win at Green Bay to evaluate the rookie for the starting job.
The more concerning evaluation from Sunday's win may be the Vikings' lackluster rushing attack, which does not look ready to help Hall or newly-acquired quarterback Joshua Dobbs in the wake of Cousins' season-ending Achilles injury. The good news is Dobbs brings mobility. He ran for 19 first downs and three touchdowns in eight games for Arizona this season.
The Vikings' run game ranks 27th in attempts, 28th in rushing yardage and tied for last in rushing touchdowns.
In Green Bay, running backs Alexander Mattison and Cam Akers together took 25 carries for 50 yards and the season's first rushing touchdown. Only seven of those runs gained more than two yards and/or a first down. Blocking stumbled, running backs didn't create, and they had more of the same bad results.
"I would have liked to have run the ball a little bit better," O'Connell said. "I would have liked to have seen us take advantage of some things a little more, but that is a good front over there. They are incredibly healthy. That defense got healthy."
Running the ball becomes even more important without Cousins, who was thriving moving the chains on third downs. The Vikings can't rely on Hall, Dobbs or Nick Mullens to have the same efficiency in difficult spots.
"It does become that much more critical when you're thinking about putting a young quarterback in third-and-long-type situations," offensive coordinator Wes Phillips said. "If you can have that early-down success, stay out of some third downs, stay out of particularly the third-and-long situations where you've got to have some longer-developing concepts and hold the ball a little bit longer. It's going to be big for us."