News Vikings Team Notes

Daily Norseman Staff NFL Picks, Week 4

imagn-25316149.jpg


With this week’s game coming a little earlier, your favorite crew of learned pro football blowhards are putting our picks out there for this week’s slate of NFL games a little earlier than normal as well. Yes, it’s time to call our shots for Week 4 around the National Football League, and the picks are locked and loaded. Let’s get to it!

But first, we have our widget that will allow you to check out exactly how everyone is doing with their picks. You can check and see how the picks went for each individual week or for the entire season in any of the categories we make selections in.

If the widget will allow you to do so, as I was having some difficulties with it while I was putting this together, check out the picks against the spread so far, and particularly for last week. You could, potentially, get some solid bets from at least a few of our folks.

(Not me. Don’t follow anything I’m doing when it comes to these picks.)

With that, here are the picks for this week. As always, we remind you that any lines and numbers could be different for each of our selectors based on when they punched their numbers into the Tallysight system.

Mark’s picks will populate whenever he gets them punched in. For now, we roll with what we have.

Unanimous Picks​

  • Minnesota Vikings over Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Buffalo Bills over New Orleans Saints
  • Houston Texans over Tennessee Titans
  • Detroit Lions over Cleveland Browns
  • Los Angeles Chargers over New York Giants
  • Green Bay Packers over Dallas Cowboys

6-1 Picks​

  • Washington Commanders over Atlanta Falcons (Shawn dissenting)
  • New England Patriots over Carolina Panthers (GA Skol dissenting)
  • Los Angeles Rams over Indianapolis Colts (Chris dissenting)
  • Denver Broncos over Cincinnati Bengals (Sam dissenting)

5-2 Picks​

  • Baltimore Ravens over Kansas City Chiefs (Brandon and GA Skol dissenting)
  • Seattle Seahawks over Arizona Cardinals (majority gets it right)

4-3 Picks​

  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers over Philadelphia Eagles (Brandon, Eric, and Shawn dissenting)
  • San Francisco 49ers over Jacksonville Jaguars (Eric, GA Skol, and Sam dissenting)
  • Chicago Bears over Las Vegas Raiders (Chris, GA Skol, and Shawn dissenting)
  • New York Jets over Miami Dolphins (Chris, GA Skol, and Warren dissenting)

There’s only six games that we’re unanimous on for this week. I’d have to go back and look, but that seems like kind of a low number to me.

Those are our selections for Week 4 in the National Football League, folks. Who are you rolling with this week?

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/daily...s/91266/daily-norseman-staff-nfl-picks-week-4
 
Week 4: Snap Judgments

gettyimages-2237579627.jpg


Well, we didn’t quit. That’s a good sign at least.

I’m not going to sugarcoat it. That was ugly, and I’m a bit deflated. You can take a headfirst dive into the pool of denial and blame the travel and its related fatigue; that’s fine. Not me. We have some serious issues on our hands.

Optimism about this season is still visible, but it’s becoming adept at blending in with its surroundings.

Snap Judgments:

KOC’s play calling has been…questionable.
This is based solely on the initial game viewing, with no deeper data available, but the love of longer-developing routes is inexplicable. I don’t get it. With a decimated offensive line, you’d think our passing game would look more like Rodgers and company than Joe Gibbs/Air Coryell. I’m giving it time, of course, as he’s earned the benefit of the doubt. Duh. But something has to give – and quick.

Things don’t seem to be coming as easily as they did in the previous three years. Corners and safeties appear to be on everything, even on receptions. The well-schemed, wide-open gainers that we’ve been accustomed to are few and far between. Everything is a slog. Have tendencies been uncovered? Ineffective adjustments? I don’t know.

Injuries are officially catastrophic. It’s starting to look like our planned starting five on the offensive line may not play a single snap together this season. Ryan Kelly’s 2025 campaign (if not career) may sadly be in jeopardy at this point. You cannot mess with concussions. He needs to do what’s best for his long-term health. I’m hoping for the absolute best for him.

Elsewhere, I have a bad feeling about the Brian O’Neill knee issue. I’d be shocked he’s not on the shelf for weeks (or worse). Initial reports indicate an MCL, with an MRI to follow. Vibes are not good.

With that, KAM will surely be working the phones. I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a starter on the offensive line post-bye that isn’t currently on the roster. The only silver lining is that the implosion occurred before the trade deadline. Like the Cam Robinson deal last year, it’s only a matter of what draft capital we give up.

Not exactly breaking news, but it’s impossible to overstate how important Blake Cashman and Andrew Van Ginkel are to this defense. Dallas Turner appears to have taken some critical steps in development, but Van Ginkel’s anticipation and ability to execute the coverage wrinkles that Brian Flores loves are undeniable.

Eric Wilson is solid, but no one is going to argue that he’s superior to Cashman, given his savvy as the director of Flores’s scheme. The three-game stretch he missed with turf toe last year saw the Vikings give up two of the three highest point totals of the season. Granted, they were against the Lions and Rams, but still.

Parity is real. You can’t lose this many starters and not suffer the consequences.

I’m officially done with Chris Kuper. For the vast majority of his three-plus years here, Kuper’s been in quicksand.

Injuries have nothing to do with defenders running free at the quarterback. I’ve lost count of how many times J.J. McCarthy and Carson Wentz never stood a chance. It’s now happened twice in four weeks. Not even getting bodies on defenders is a failure of basic protection responsibilities. It’s coaching. The injuries will likely save him, but they shouldn’t.

It should also be noted that, heading into Week 4, Ed Ingram is sitting at a 75.6 Pro Football Focus (PFF) grade so far this year with the Texans, which is apparently good for 3rd out of 95 qualifying guards. Ezra Cleveland sits at a solid 66.5 overall (26th out of 95) for the Jaguars. And while his overall PFF grade isn’t excellent (56.2) for the Patriots, Garrett Bradbury is sitting at 3rd in overall pass-blocking grade (75.5) for centers. That was, of course, his primary issue as a member of the Minnesota Vikings.

There is no quarterback controversy. I never thought there was one, but it’s been floated out there and discussed. J.J. McCarthy is the QB of this team. There’s an argument you don’t want to risk David Carr’ing him behind a second-rate, United Football League line, but it’s not because he shouldn’t have the job.

Err on the side of caution. Even if he’s healthy, you cannot put McCarthy out there with a turnstile offensive line against that vaunted Cleveland Browns defense. Josh Allen would get brutalized. You can’t do that to the highest drafted QB in team history. KOC is fond of saying that organizations fail young quarterbacks far more than they fail the organization. Well, he should take that advice. Wait until after the bye, when Donovan Jackson returns, along with a possible reinforcement via a trade.

I applaud Carson Wentz. He showed incredible guts to take that beating and hang in there. He officially took six sacks but got pummeled far more than the numbers indicated. However, his official numbers – 30/46 for 350 yards, 2TDS, 2INTS – look better on paper than they appeared in reality. Interceptions aside, when he wasn’t running for his life, it did seem like he was locking onto his primary receiver a bit too long and not making the timely progressions we saw last week. Again, though, I don’t think KOC was doing him any favors, either. It’s all just a mess.

The defense will have to save the season. It’s becoming clear that we’re going to need a Herculean effort from Flores and company if we want to see the postseason. Today was another shaky performance, overshadowed by an even worse offensive effort. Not quite as bad as the Falcons game, but close. Issues stopping the run persist (131 yards/4.5 per rush), and it was frustrating watching Aaron Rodgers do exactly what everyone knew he was going to do in the first half with those tedious, one-step quick hitters.

That being said, given everything, if my concern level for the offense is a 7, it sits somewhere between 0 and 1 for the defense. Flores is arguably the best defensive coordinator in the league, with only Steve Spagnuolo, Vance Joseph, and Vic Fangio in the conversation. He’ll right the ship. Cashman is returning, and Van Ginkel should be ready for next week.

You need to find optimism somewhere, because it’s a lot harder to do on offense. I’m a huge fan of McCarthy, but you can’t stick your head in the sand either. There were always going to be growing pains, regardless of whether we stayed healthy. However, the offensive line catastrophe has thrown a massive spanner in the works. I think that’s the term they use in Ireland, so it fits.

The magic formula was always going to be a steadily improving McCarthy and a lights-out, Top 5 (or better) defensive unit over the course of the season. This is technically still possible. Then again, it’s technically possible to win the Powerball, too.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...-minnesota-vikings-pittsburgh-steelers-dublin
 
Pittsburgh Steelers 24, Minnesota Vikings 21 : Sacks, Turnovers Doom Vikings in Dublin

gettyimages-2237894075.jpg


The Minnesota Vikings had their chances to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 4, but they couldn’t get out of their own way long enough to make it happen.

Carson Wentz was sacked seven times on Sunday, and the Vikings’ last-second effort fell short as they lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers by a score of 24-21 in the NFL’s first-ever game in Dublin, Ireland.

The Vikings avoided disaster on their first drive, as Jordan Mason fumbled the ball away and it was recovered by Jalen Ramsey for what appeared to be a 60-yard defensive touchdown for Pittsburgh, but it was ruled that Mason had touched the loose ball with a leg out of bounds, making it a dead ball. The Vikings took advantage of their reprieve, getting a 41-yard field goal from Will Reichard to stake the Vikings to an early 3-0 lead.

Pittsburgh answered on its second possession, taking the lead on a 1-yard touchdown run by Kenneth Gainwell to take a 7-3 lead with less than a minute left in the first quarter. They then added to it early in the second quarter, as Aaron Rodgers found D.K. Metcalf on a short pass that some horrible angles from the Vikings’ defense allowed him to turn into an 80-yard touchdown, giving the “home” team a 14-3 lead.

Minnesota turned the ball over on its next possession, as a pass from Carson Wentz intended for Jordan Addison was tipped at the line of scrimmage by Derrick Harmon into the hands of DeShon Elliott for a Pittsburgh interception. Pittsburgh marched into Minnesota territory again and appeared poised to score more points, but Chris Boswell’s 30-yard field goal attempt was blocked by Isaiah Rodgers to keep the score at 14-3.

Isaiah Rodgers blocks the field goal!

THIS MAN CAN'T BE STOPPED.

MINvsPIT on @nflnetwork
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/stEGdMXtg8

— NFL (@NFL) September 28, 2025

The Vikings turned that blocked field goal into a 28-yard field goal from Will Reichard to make it 14-6 going into halftime.

Minnesota’s offense made another mistake midway through the third quarter, as another pass from Wentz was deflected at the line of scrimmage and wound up getting intercepted by T.J. Watt to set the Steelers up in Minnesota territory.

Pittsburgh turned the turnover into points, as Gainwell got his second touchdown of the afternoon, going over from 4 yards out to make it 21-6 with just over two minutes remaining in the third quarter of play. Boswell then connected on a 33-yard field goal to make it a three-score game at 24-6 with just over eleven minutes remaining in regulation.

The Vikings finally got into the end zone midway through the fourth quarter, as Wentz scrambled and found Zavier Scott for his first NFL touchdown, with Scott making a great catch and keeping his feet down for the score. Wentz then found Jalen Nailor on the two-point conversion to make it 24-14 with less than eight minutes remaining in regulation.

.@zavierslight catches his first career TD!

📺: @NFLNetwork pic.twitter.com/Vejv2SstFO

— Minnesota Vikings (@Vikings) September 28, 2025

The Steelers took their next possession all the way down to the Minnesota 3-yard line and faced a fourth-and-goal. They chose to go for a game-clinching touchdown, but the Vikings stopped Gainwell short to get the football back with a little over four minutes remaining and just one timeout left.

Then the Vikings hit a huge play, as Wentz found the returning Jordan Addison for a huge 81-yard pass to get the ball down to the Pittsburgh 3-yard line.

Blown coverage and Addison gets all the way down to the goal line with an 81-yard play ‼️

MINvsPIT on @nflnetwork
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/sGB9TyonKp

— NFL (@NFL) September 28, 2025

Then, Wentz connected with Nailor for a 2-yard score to cut the lead to 24-21 just ahead of the two-minute warning.

Not done yet.@jalennailor helps cut into PIT's lead.

📺: @NFLNetwork pic.twitter.com/kEoTRrlMtN

— Minnesota Vikings (@Vikings) September 28, 2025

The Vikings then attempted an onside kick, but the Steelers wound up falling on it. The Vikings’ defense needed to get a stop to have any hope, and they got one as the Steelers took a delay of game penalty on 4th-and-1 from inside of Minnesota territory to give the Vikings the ball at their own 20 with a minute remaining.

Wentz’s first through appeared to be a game-sealing interception, but a review said that the Steelers’ defensive back bobbled the ball, so the Vikings kept possession. The Vikings moved to near midfield, but Wentz was then flagged for an intentional grounding penalty to back the Vikings up. Minnesota had one last play, but Wentz’s pass towards Addison fell incomplete, and the Steelers took a knee to seal the victory.

The Vikings will remain overseas in Week 5, as they will travel to London to face the Cleveland Browns at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London.

Your Minnesota Vikings fall to the Pittsburgh Steelers in Dublin, Ireland by a final score of 24-21. Thank you to everyone who got their coverage of this week’s game right here at The Daily Norseman!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...sburgh-steelers-final-score-game-recap-dublin
 
Back
Top