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Gotta love the mentality....
#1
Its not always going to be rainbows and sunshine or translate to W's, but I like the approach....

Packers cornerback Jaire Alexander said he wanted to shadow Jefferson. The receiver said he expected it was coming, too, and the Vikings seemed to be preparing this week for the idea Alexander could match Jefferson in coverage. The Packers never put Alexander on Jefferson, for whatever reason, and the receiver tormented second-year Packers cornerback Eric Stokes much like he did last year, on his way to a career-high 184 yards and two touchdowns.
It's foolish to assume teams are going to leave Jefferson with as much open space as the Packers did on Sunday. He will see Eagles cornerback Darius Slay on Monday night, and figures to be the focal point of defensive coordinators' game plans all season. Teams will likely roll their coverages toward Jefferson, assign a cornerback to follow him — basically anything they can do to keep one of the game's most electric receivers from taking over.
The Vikings, however, showed they're not going to make it easy for teams to take Jefferson away. On Sunday, Kevin O'Connell called plays that had Jefferson lined up in the backfield for a third-quarter swing pass, motioning across the formation for free releases, catching shallow crossing routes that put him on a linebacker in zone coverage and streaking across the middle of the field on deep over routes that gave him room to run after the catch.
Moving Jefferson can help the Vikings gain clues about a defense's coverage scheme on a certain play, but they can also do it to get the matchups they want for him. When I talked to offensive coordinator Wes Phillips for my Sunday profile of O'Connell, he said one of the things that set coaches like O'Connell and Sean McVay (Phillips' and O'Connell's boss in Los Angeles) apart from the rest is they know how to "attack coverages — not just run plays." They both know how to learn an opponent's coverage rules and use those rules against them, Phillips said.
McVay did that masterfully in the Rams' 38-31 win over the Vikings in 2018, moving receivers to exploit the Vikings' matchup zone principles. Jared Goff posted a perfect 158.3 passer rating that night, and O'Connell undoubtedly will move Jefferson to create easier throws for Kirk Cousins, especially as defenses try to deny Jefferson the ball.
"It's one of those things where depending on if it's a man-based coverage or zone-based coverage, if there's pressure or not, there's a lot that goes into that for a defense when you're talking about a guy that's not just going to line up in one spot," O'Connell said. "And then ultimately how it affects the other 10 guys — or nine guys, if there's a double team — and their jobs of being in position to have success against some of our other eligibles and still have the same type of teeth to the rush. ... If you want to bring pressure, what does that do to your coverage? If you want to play coverage, what does that do to your other matchups and your ability to get pressure? So it all works hand-in-hand. It's that chess game that goes on snap in and snap out.
"I thought for the most part [on Sunday], our guys did a really nice job of taking advantage of some things where I didn't think it was schematically something wrong that Green Bay did, but just within our rhythm and timing and how we put together plays. It starts with the quarterback, but then the detail and our group of 11 doing their jobs started to show itself a little bit.
"https://www.startribune.com/minnesota-vikings-justin-jefferson-one-big-question/600206355/
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#2
Just wait for the next defense to try to shut JJ down.   KJ and AT will have a field day as will the RBs out of the backfield.   This offense is going to be a pick your poison dilemma for opposing defensive coordinators.
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#3
Vikings film review: How Kevin O'Connell's playbook created opportunities for Justin JeffersonJefferson's dominant 184-yard performance was aided by a new offense that moved receivers before, during and after the snap against the Packers.

Kevin O'Connell faced an immediate crossroads in the first drive of his first game as Vikings head coach and offensive play caller. Receiver Adam Thielen was ruled short of the marker in Packers territory. The offense faced a fourth-and-1 play from the Packers' 5-yard line.
"You're thinking about possibly challenging the spot," O'Connell said. "About five seconds into it I said, 'I love this call. We'll go get this thing in the end zone.'"
O'Connell, a 37-year-old former NFL backup quarterback, trusted the playbook to spring Justin Jefferson in a key moment that gave the Vikings an early 7-0 lead during Sunday's 23-7 win. The play design embodied the reason Packers head coach Matt LaFleur cited when asked why coaches didn't have Green Bay's best coverage defender, cornerback Jaire Alexander, follow Jefferson around the formations.
"If you just commit to playing man coverage the whole game, sure," LaFleur said. "But they do a good job of putting them in different positions, whether it's in the slot, whether it's motioning. It seemed like he was in motion quite a bit, just moving him all over the place. You've got to give them credit. They put him in premier spots and attacked our coverage well, and certainly we had a couple blown coverages."
Jefferson's career-high 184 receiving yards marked a dominant performance, especially a 21-yard leaping grab on third down in which he soared over the defender. But Jefferson was also aided by O'Connell's playbook that moved receivers before, during and after the snap, showing the potential of the new offense. Here's a brief look at how Jefferson was used differently.
Starting with the fourth-and-1 play on the opening drive, Jefferson was hard for the Packers to pin down even while predominantly playing zone coverage intended to keep everything in front of them. The Packers' backed-off zone defense didn't produce at the goal line.
Jefferson (#18) is sent in a fly motion before the snap. Packers cornerback Rasul Douglas (#29) appears to signal to teammates across the defense that Jefferson is coming. That message was not received. The ball is snapped when Jefferson just passes quarterback Kirk Cousins in motion.
Snapping while Jefferson is on the run allows him to get a jump into the flat, where Packers cornerback Eric Stokes (#21) briefly abandons his side of the zone to follow receiver Adam Thielen (#19), previously the outer-most receiver before Jefferson slipped underneath.
"He was pretty open," Cousins said, "so it was just good design."
This was an early win in a gotta-have-it moment for O'Connell's Vikings. But LaFleur, who said Jefferson was in motion "quite a bit," was deceived by his memory immediately after the game. The play was the second and final time Jefferson motioned at the snap, but the Vikings also moved Thielen, receiver K.J. Osborn, fullback C.J. Ham and others to create hesitation and space within the defense.
The Vikings offense ran motion at the snap on 23% of plays against Green Bay, including Jefferson's 36-yard touchdown in which Thielen motioned only a few yards inside to get moving on a deep over route. Only the Steelers and Jaguars last season had as few passing plays with motion at the snap as the Vikings in 2021.
"That's the thing that I like about our offense," Jefferson said. "We move so much."
https://www.startribune.com/justin-jeffe...600206420/

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#4
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