12-22-2019, 05:47 PM
‘A Great Opportunity’ Awaits Cousins & Vikings on ‘MNF’
EAGAN, Minn. — Kirk Cousins anticipated the
question was coming, even if it happened to be the very final one
Thursday morning at his weekly podium session in the Vikings locker
room.
It’s public knowledge that Cousins has never won on Monday Night Football, posting an 0-8 record between his time in Minnesota and Washington.
And with the Vikings set for the final Monday night game of the
2019 season, it’s only natural the topic would come up again. Especially
with the Vikings Week 16 contest coming at home and against their
biggest rival in a game that features two teams with 10-plus wins and
big-time playoff implications.
“Yeah, I’d love to get a win for a lot of reasons. Hopefully we can
get that done,” Cousins said. “It is what it is. Can’t change the past
but we certainly have a great opportunity Monday night.”
Vikings Head Coach Mike Zimmer was also asked about Cousins’ record
so far. He brushed off the notion that one player has a bigger hand
than any other in determining the outcome of a game.
“Kirk has done a great job for us this year. He’s been outstanding,
he’s played great all year long,” Zimmer said. “If we get beat on
Monday night, it’s not going to be because of Kirk Cousins. It’s because
we didn’t win as a team.
“When we’ve won games this year, it hasn’t been because of Kirk …
even though he’s played good, but we’ve won as a team. So we’re just
going to stick to that mantra, that that is who we are and how we do
things here,” Zimmer added. “Hopefully he has a great game and hopefully
we win, but it’s not all on him. We have 21 other players, and they
have to go out and execute just as much as he does. But unfortunately,
[he] and I get all the blame.”
A deeper dive into Cousins’ history on Monday night shows that perhaps the quarterback isn’t to be blamed.
He has completed 191 of 292 passes (65.4 percent) for 2,153 yards
with 11 touchdowns and five interceptions, and his passer rating is 92.7
in those games.
question was coming, even if it happened to be the very final one
Thursday morning at his weekly podium session in the Vikings locker
room.
It’s public knowledge that Cousins has never won on Monday Night Football, posting an 0-8 record between his time in Minnesota and Washington.
And with the Vikings set for the final Monday night game of the
2019 season, it’s only natural the topic would come up again. Especially
with the Vikings Week 16 contest coming at home and against their
biggest rival in a game that features two teams with 10-plus wins and
big-time playoff implications.
“Yeah, I’d love to get a win for a lot of reasons. Hopefully we can
get that done,” Cousins said. “It is what it is. Can’t change the past
but we certainly have a great opportunity Monday night.”
Vikings Head Coach Mike Zimmer was also asked about Cousins’ record
so far. He brushed off the notion that one player has a bigger hand
than any other in determining the outcome of a game.
“Kirk has done a great job for us this year. He’s been outstanding,
he’s played great all year long,” Zimmer said. “If we get beat on
Monday night, it’s not going to be because of Kirk Cousins. It’s because
we didn’t win as a team.
“When we’ve won games this year, it hasn’t been because of Kirk …
even though he’s played good, but we’ve won as a team. So we’re just
going to stick to that mantra, that that is who we are and how we do
things here,” Zimmer added. “Hopefully he has a great game and hopefully
we win, but it’s not all on him. We have 21 other players, and they
have to go out and execute just as much as he does. But unfortunately,
[he] and I get all the blame.”
A deeper dive into Cousins’ history on Monday night shows that perhaps the quarterback isn’t to be blamed.
He has completed 191 of 292 passes (65.4 percent) for 2,153 yards
with 11 touchdowns and five interceptions, and his passer rating is 92.7
in those games.
Cousins’ first four starts on Monday Night Football were
all at home with Washington, but they came when he was either not the
full-time starter, or in his first or second season as a starting
quarterback.
Cousins, like most NFL players, has progressed over the years and improved overall as a player.
Yet unfortunately for him, his past four starts on Monday Night Football
have not only been on the road, but have taken place in Kansas City,
Philadelphia and Seattle (twice) — three places generally regarded as
some of the toughest to win at in the NFL, no matter the day.
In the 2017 game against the Chiefs, Kansas City’s defense scored
on the final play of the game to make the 29-20 score look more lopsided
than it was.
Cousins also lost in Philadelphia in 2017, which was the same year the Eagles won the Super Bowl.