12-03-2022, 01:32 PM
Kevin O'Connell arrived at the Vikings facility on Wednesday already planning for the afternoon practice — the team's first full session in nearly two weeks — to be a hard day of work in full pads. The messages he received from several of the team's veterans only confirmed that approach.
"I had three or four of our guys say, 'Today is a big day,' before I even mentioned to our guys in the team meeting about the importance of having a great practice today and preparation," O'Connell said Wednesday. "So they get it. They understand, some of our veterans that have been through successful seasons, really what lies ahead."
As soon as Sunday, the Vikings could ensure one of the things that lies ahead is their first home playoff game since the Minneapolis Miracle. A win over the Jets, and a Lions loss to the Jaguars, would give the Vikings their first NFC North title since the 2017 season, making them one of seven teams in the Super Bowl era to clinch their division with five games to go. Otherwise, they could wrap up the division the following Sunday with a win at Detroit.
Their felicitous 9-2 start has put the Vikings in position to balance a basket of competing priorities as the calendar turns to December. Players and coaches in their first year together still speak of a need for on-field work, to tune up an offense ranked 12th in the league in points and improve a defense ranked 21st.
The Vikings, at the same time, aim to preserve a roster that's been only marginally affected by injury to this point. Clinching early could allow coaches to shift snaps from veterans who have shouldered a heavy workload to unproven young players whose time could come in the playoffs, and yet, an inviting December schedule could give the Vikings a chance to snatch the NFC's No. 1 seed (and its only first-round bye) from the Eagles
O'Connell was the Rams' offensive coordinator a year ago when the team ended a three-game losing streak on the first Sunday of December and won nine of its final 10 games on the way to a Super Bowl LVI victory. Now in charge of it all for the first time in Minnesota, he's trying to get to the postseason with a team that's both sharp and fresh
"The best teams in this league, I believe, improve during stretches like this — three home games in a row leading into December — and now we're going to be in December, and that's when you want to play your best football," O'Connell said. "You want to feel like you've kind of identified the strengths of your team and played to those, while also trying to always improve in areas where — there's obviously going to be areas of improvement for any football team as this 17-week grind kicks forward and continues to go."
https://www.startribune.com/minnesota-vikings-jets-kevin-oconnell-nfc-north-division-title-december-losses/600232323/
"I had three or four of our guys say, 'Today is a big day,' before I even mentioned to our guys in the team meeting about the importance of having a great practice today and preparation," O'Connell said Wednesday. "So they get it. They understand, some of our veterans that have been through successful seasons, really what lies ahead."
As soon as Sunday, the Vikings could ensure one of the things that lies ahead is their first home playoff game since the Minneapolis Miracle. A win over the Jets, and a Lions loss to the Jaguars, would give the Vikings their first NFC North title since the 2017 season, making them one of seven teams in the Super Bowl era to clinch their division with five games to go. Otherwise, they could wrap up the division the following Sunday with a win at Detroit.
Their felicitous 9-2 start has put the Vikings in position to balance a basket of competing priorities as the calendar turns to December. Players and coaches in their first year together still speak of a need for on-field work, to tune up an offense ranked 12th in the league in points and improve a defense ranked 21st.
The Vikings, at the same time, aim to preserve a roster that's been only marginally affected by injury to this point. Clinching early could allow coaches to shift snaps from veterans who have shouldered a heavy workload to unproven young players whose time could come in the playoffs, and yet, an inviting December schedule could give the Vikings a chance to snatch the NFC's No. 1 seed (and its only first-round bye) from the Eagles
O'Connell was the Rams' offensive coordinator a year ago when the team ended a three-game losing streak on the first Sunday of December and won nine of its final 10 games on the way to a Super Bowl LVI victory. Now in charge of it all for the first time in Minnesota, he's trying to get to the postseason with a team that's both sharp and fresh
"The best teams in this league, I believe, improve during stretches like this — three home games in a row leading into December — and now we're going to be in December, and that's when you want to play your best football," O'Connell said. "You want to feel like you've kind of identified the strengths of your team and played to those, while also trying to always improve in areas where — there's obviously going to be areas of improvement for any football team as this 17-week grind kicks forward and continues to go."
https://www.startribune.com/minnesota-vikings-jets-kevin-oconnell-nfc-north-division-title-december-losses/600232323/