12-11-2022, 04:08 PM
T.J. Hockenson returns to Detroit as a 'friendly target' on important downs for the VikingsA little more than a month after being traded from the Lions to the Vikings in a rare NFC North deal, the tight end will display his special skill set against his former team.Perhaps it's fitting that it took just three snaps after a mere three practices for T.J. Hockenson to become a guy Kirk Cousins can trust when things get hairy and the sideline sticks are screaming "3."
"It was weird," said Hockenson, remembering that first third down 90 seconds into the Washington game on Nov. 6, five days after the Vikings acquired him and two draft picks from NFC North rival Detroit for a 2023 second-round pick and a 2024 third-round pick.
"I remember we got the look we wanted, and I saw the ball in the air. At that point, I'm still not used to Kirk's ball, you know? So I'm like, 'Oh, man. It's going to be too high.'"
Instinctively, the 6-5, 248-pound tight end jumped.
"Then, all of a sudden, I'm up here and the ball is down here," said Hockenson, pointing to his thighs. "I was used to Jared [Goff's] ball. His would stay on the same plane."
Somewhere on the sideline, third-string quarterback David Blough was shaking his head and laughing. Former teammates in Detroit, Blough and Hockenson had spent the week cramming the Vikings' offense into Hockenson's head using Lions terms he could relate to. Blough also reminded him that even though Cousins has the arm strength to make every throw necessary, he doesn't always rifle the ball, a la Goff.
"Kirk has a gift of being able to layer the ball over the defenders," Blough said. "Kirk gave T.J. a nice, easy one to catch there. T.J. could have run through it, but he jumps. I had to give him a hard time for that one."
Meanwhile, Cousins gave the long-armed fella kudos for the 19-yard gain and all that has followed, especially on third and fourth downs the past five games. The Vikings have gone 4-1 against teams with a combined record of 38-22-1 and tote a 10-2 record into Detroit with a chance to clinch their first division title since 2017 with a win over a Lions team that's also 4-1 since the trade.
Cousins said it's now "funny to watch the tape" of the first game between the teams in Week 3 and see Hockenson on the opponent.
"He's done a great job for us," the quarterback said. "We've got to keep using his skill set and he'll continue to make a difference."
Playing against the Lions, who drafted him eighth overall out of Iowa in 2019, at Ford Field, not far from where he owns a house that's sitting empty, is going to be beyond strange for Hockenson.
"My career right now is totally, completely different compared to last year when the Vikings came in and we were [0-10-1]," Hockenson said of Detroit's 29-27 walk-off upset victory. "I give thanks to Detroit. Truly no hard feelings because this is a blessing I never imagined in my wildest dreams.
"I didn't think I'd be traded, and, frankly, I never thought it would be in the division because I didn't think they'd want to see me twice a year."
Lions coach Dan Campbell this week called Hockenson, a 2020 Pro Bowler, "a steady player" for the Vikings. He has 30 catches on 40 targets for 225 yards (7.5 yards per catch) and one touchdown for the Vikings after 26 catches on 43 targets for 395 yards (15.7) – including a franchise single-game record 179 for a tight end — and three touchdowns in seven games for Detroit.
"We knew we were going to lose some production, he was a good player," Campbell said. "But I do feel like our guys have stepped up. To [make the trade] you had to feel OK about spreading the load through the rest of the group."
That group now includes rookie receiver Jameson Williams, the player the Lions picked using the 12th overall selection they got in an earlier trade with the Vikings. Williams returned from his torn ACL to make his NFL debut with eight snaps and no touches in last week's win over Jacksonville.
Hawkeyes coach Kirk Ferentz, who recruited Hockenson out of a small high school in Chariton, Iowa, and guided him to the game's biggest stage, remembers first hearing the news of the trade.
"There was a time when you didn't trade inside your division," said Ferentz, who was Bill Belichick's offensive line coach with the Browns in the early 1990s. "Well, that still sounds like a good rule. Especially in this case for Detroit. I think the Vikings could be thrown in jail for pulling that trade off."
https://www.startribune.com/vikings-lions-tight-end-tj-hockenson-nfc-north-trade-iowa-kirk-ferentz/600234792/
"It was weird," said Hockenson, remembering that first third down 90 seconds into the Washington game on Nov. 6, five days after the Vikings acquired him and two draft picks from NFC North rival Detroit for a 2023 second-round pick and a 2024 third-round pick.
"I remember we got the look we wanted, and I saw the ball in the air. At that point, I'm still not used to Kirk's ball, you know? So I'm like, 'Oh, man. It's going to be too high.'"
Instinctively, the 6-5, 248-pound tight end jumped.
"Then, all of a sudden, I'm up here and the ball is down here," said Hockenson, pointing to his thighs. "I was used to Jared [Goff's] ball. His would stay on the same plane."
Somewhere on the sideline, third-string quarterback David Blough was shaking his head and laughing. Former teammates in Detroit, Blough and Hockenson had spent the week cramming the Vikings' offense into Hockenson's head using Lions terms he could relate to. Blough also reminded him that even though Cousins has the arm strength to make every throw necessary, he doesn't always rifle the ball, a la Goff.
"Kirk has a gift of being able to layer the ball over the defenders," Blough said. "Kirk gave T.J. a nice, easy one to catch there. T.J. could have run through it, but he jumps. I had to give him a hard time for that one."
Meanwhile, Cousins gave the long-armed fella kudos for the 19-yard gain and all that has followed, especially on third and fourth downs the past five games. The Vikings have gone 4-1 against teams with a combined record of 38-22-1 and tote a 10-2 record into Detroit with a chance to clinch their first division title since 2017 with a win over a Lions team that's also 4-1 since the trade.
Cousins said it's now "funny to watch the tape" of the first game between the teams in Week 3 and see Hockenson on the opponent.
"He's done a great job for us," the quarterback said. "We've got to keep using his skill set and he'll continue to make a difference."
Playing against the Lions, who drafted him eighth overall out of Iowa in 2019, at Ford Field, not far from where he owns a house that's sitting empty, is going to be beyond strange for Hockenson.
"My career right now is totally, completely different compared to last year when the Vikings came in and we were [0-10-1]," Hockenson said of Detroit's 29-27 walk-off upset victory. "I give thanks to Detroit. Truly no hard feelings because this is a blessing I never imagined in my wildest dreams.
"I didn't think I'd be traded, and, frankly, I never thought it would be in the division because I didn't think they'd want to see me twice a year."
Lions coach Dan Campbell this week called Hockenson, a 2020 Pro Bowler, "a steady player" for the Vikings. He has 30 catches on 40 targets for 225 yards (7.5 yards per catch) and one touchdown for the Vikings after 26 catches on 43 targets for 395 yards (15.7) – including a franchise single-game record 179 for a tight end — and three touchdowns in seven games for Detroit.
"We knew we were going to lose some production, he was a good player," Campbell said. "But I do feel like our guys have stepped up. To [make the trade] you had to feel OK about spreading the load through the rest of the group."
That group now includes rookie receiver Jameson Williams, the player the Lions picked using the 12th overall selection they got in an earlier trade with the Vikings. Williams returned from his torn ACL to make his NFL debut with eight snaps and no touches in last week's win over Jacksonville.
Hawkeyes coach Kirk Ferentz, who recruited Hockenson out of a small high school in Chariton, Iowa, and guided him to the game's biggest stage, remembers first hearing the news of the trade.
"There was a time when you didn't trade inside your division," said Ferentz, who was Bill Belichick's offensive line coach with the Browns in the early 1990s. "Well, that still sounds like a good rule. Especially in this case for Detroit. I think the Vikings could be thrown in jail for pulling that trade off."
https://www.startribune.com/vikings-lions-tight-end-tj-hockenson-nfc-north-trade-iowa-kirk-ferentz/600234792/