The struggling Vikings offense gave up eight sacks and threw three interceptions.
After
Detroit Lions defensive end Ezekiel Ansah crushed the Vikings
quarterback — and any hopes they had of a comeback — on fourth down late
in the fourth quarter, Teddy Bridgewater was sprawled on his back,
staring up at the picturesque blue sky above TCF Bank
Stadium.
The rookie
quarterback, who was sacked eight times Sunday and slammed down on four
other plays, lay still for a few seconds before one member of an
offensive line that had let him down all afternoon extended a hand and
pulled him up off the turf.
Bridgewater
slowly walked to the sideline, sat down on a steel bench and shook his
head. He had been battered all afternoon and threw three interceptions,
but what pained him most was that he couldn’t get the Vikings into the
end zone in the 17-3 loss, the first of his young NFL career.
“That just
shows how tough this league is,” said Bridgewater, who couldn’t remember
the last time he played a football game where his team didn’t score a
touchdown. “Each week is going to be a different task, a different level
of difficulty. So today we struggled a little, but it’s always good
when you can go back tomorrow and learn from today’s mistakes.”
But will they have enough time in one day to go over all the mistakes, and where do they begin?
After the
Vikings piled up 41 points and steamrollered their way to 558 yards of
offense in a blowout win over the Atlanta Falcons two weeks ago,
coordinator Norv Turner’s offense has skidded off the rails, scoring
only 13 points in the past two games.
The Vikings
turned the ball over six times in the losses to the Green Bay Packers
and the Lions, and their quarterbacks, Christian Ponder then
Bridgewater, were sacked 14 times.
Their running backs, Matt Asiata and Jerick McKinnon, averaged less than 4 yards per carry.
The team’s
top two wide receivers, Cordarrelle Patterson and Greg Jennings,
combined for nine catches and 87 receiving yards in back-to-back
double-digit losses.
A Vikings
quarterback hasn’t passed for a touchdown since the first quarter of the
Week 2 loss to the New England Patriots, back when Matt Cassel was
still their starter.
All of
those themes were prevalent throughout Sunday’s loss. The Vikings had
only 212 yards of offense — they lost 45 yards on sacks — against a
Lions defense that has one of the league’s most formidable front fours.
“This isn’t a one-guy-messed-up deal,” coach Mike Zimmer said. “It was a bunch of them today.”
The first fingers pointed should probably be aimed at the five guys up front, though.
The Lions
routinely rendezvoused at Bridgewater’s torso, with their defenders
splitting three of their eight sacks. Ansah racked up 2½ sacks. Lions
defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh bullied his way to two more. Seven Lions
were credited with at least half a sack.
Running
backs and tight ends also faltered in pass protection at times, but the
offensive line was physically no match for a defense that is one of the
stingiest in the league.
“They kicked our butt,” Zimmer said. “Give credit to Detroit. They did a good job.”
And for the first time since replacing Cassel in Week 3, Bridgewater looked very much like a rookie.
On the
team’s first drive, after the Lions roared down the field for a
touchdown, Bridgewater threw his first career interception. He locked on
to Patterson, who was running a deep post into the end zone, and
expected Lions safety Glover Quin to be preoccupied with Jennings, who
was running a shallower route. The veteran defender baited Bridgewater
into making the throw and picked it off.

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