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Offenses Await Vikes in Final Games
As measured by yards per game, the Vikings
will play three of the NFL’s top offenses in their final regular season
games. Arizona ranks fourth, Atlanta fifth and the New York Giants
sixth. If defensive tackles Kevin and Pat Williams are
available for those games it dramatically increases the likelihood the
Vikings, 8-5 after beating Detroit Sunday, can qualify for the playoffs
for the first time since 2004.
Saying he needed more time to review the
case, a federal judge prevented the NFL last Friday from suspending
Kevin and Pat Williams, and three other league players, for violating
the NFL’s anti doping policy. While the two Vikings played
against Detroit, their future availability isn’t so clear but it’s
evident the Vikings will face much more competent offenses in the final
weeks than some teams on the schedule earlier. (New
Orleans, No. 1 in the league at 405.9 yards per game, is the only top 10
team the Vikings have seen so far.)
“This whole situation is going to be
interesting based on teams we have left to play,” Vikings linebacker
Ben Leber told Sports Headliners last week. Leber is part of
a defense that ranks No. 2 against the run and No. 20 versus the pass in
yards per game.
As pretty much known throughout the
planet, those Williams guys are particularly extraordinary against the
run. Kevin Williams can put pressure on the passer, too. Overall, a
dominant Vikings’ defense stopped Chicago from scoring a touchdown on
four downs inside the five yard line a week ago Sunday, a stand that
seemed to be a catalyst in Minnesota’s 34-14 win and likely a turning
point in 2008 as the franchise tries to win its first division
championship since 2000.
Defense defines the Vikings and that unit,
no matter who is on the field, will be on trial starting Sunday in
Arizona against the Cardinals. Arizona is second in the league in yards
passing per game, with an offense that includes 37-year-old quarterback
Kurt Warner (second in the NFL in touchdown passes and passing
yards) and wide receivers Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin,
both among the NFL’s top eight in receiving yards.
Atlanta, here on December 21, is second in the NFL in rushing yards per
game, while the Giants, who come to Minneapolis for a game on December 28,
are first. Michael Turner of the Falcons, with 1,269 yards, is
second in the NFL in rushing. The Falcons also have a productive passing
game with rookie quarterback Matt Ryan and receiver Roddy
White, first in the NFL in receiving yards per game.
The Giants have the NFL's ninth leading
rusher in powerful Brandon Jacobs (1,002 yards). A second
rusher, Derrick Ward, has 669 yards. Then, too, the Giants have
some guy named Eli Manning. Oh, yeah, the quarterback of last
season’s Super Bowl champs.
Arizona, Atlanta and New York? No doubt that kind of competition gives
the Williams lads something to keep their minds focused on instead of
the court room.