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Eagles-Vikings Final Injury Report: Landon Dickerson and Jalen Carter questionable

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The Philadelphia Eagles issued their third and final official injury report in advance of their Week 7 road game against the Minnesota Vikings.

The Eagles ruled one player OUT: Grant Calcaterra.

Calcaterra hasn’t practiced since suffering an oblique injury in Week 5. His absence means the Eagles will have Kylen Granson and Cameron Latu as rotational contributors behind starting tight end Dallas Goedert.

The Eagles ruled two players QUESTIONABLE: Landon Dickerson and Jalen Carter.

Dickerson was limited on Wednesday and Thursday before being upgraded to full go on Friday. Seems like he’s going to try to start at left guard. If Dickerson can’t make it through the game, Brett Toth figures to fill in for him.

Carter fully participated in practice on Wednesday and told reporters he’s going to play. But then he was limited on Thursday and Friday … and now he’s questionable. If the Eagles temporarily elevate Gabe Hall (or sign him to the roster since they have an open spot) from the practice squad prior to 4:00 PM Eastern on Saturday (which is the deadline to do so), that could be a bad sign for Carter’s chances of suiting up. We’ll find out if Carter is officially playing or not when Eagles-Vikings inactives are announced at 11:30 AM on Sunday morning.

Quinyon Mitchell, Zack Baun, and Jordan Davis are all listed without game statuses.

This means they’re ready to play despite appearing on the injury report this week.

Very good news that Mitchell will be able to play since starting both Adoree’ Jackson and Kelee Ringo against the Vikings’ wide receivers would’ve been really bad. Speaking of, Jackson figures to be CB2 with Ringo headed back to the bench.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES INJURY REPORT (FRIDAY)


OUT

TE Grant Calcaterra (oblique)

QUESTIONABLE

DT Jalen Carter (heel)
OG Landon Dickerson (ankle)



RESERVE/RETIRED

EDGE Za’Darius Smith

Smith unexpectedly retired from football earlier this week.

RESERVE/INJURED

CB Jakorian Bennett
WR Darius Cooper
OT Myles Hinton
LS Charley Hughlett
G/C Willie Lampkin
EDGE Ogbo Okoronkwo
EDGE Nolan Smith
FB Ben VanSumeren
OT Cameron Williams
WR Johnny Wilson

Hinton, Lampkin, and Williams are currently eligible to return from IR. Smith, Bennett, and Cooper are eligible to return from IR after Week 7 but we’ll see if the Eagles wait until after the Week 9 bye to activate them. Hughlett is eligible to return from IR after Week 8 but he might need longer to heal up. BVS, Wilson, and Okoronkwo suffered season-ending injuries.


MINNESOTA VIKINGS INJURY REPORT (FRIDAY)


The big news is that Carson Wentz will start against the Eagles; head coach Kevin O’Connell announced as much on Friday afternoon. Week 1 starter J.J. McCarthy was ruled questionable and is expected to serve as the emergency third quarterback behind Wentz and undrafted rookie Max Brosmer.

In addition to McCarthy, the Vikings ruled five other players questionable: starting right tackle Brian O’Neill, fill-in starting center Michael Jurgens (who’s had to play with Ryan Kelly on injured reserve), starting inside linebacker Blake Cashman, rotational defensive lineman Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, and depth outside linebacker Tyler Batty.

O’Neill was limited in practice this week so he might be a game-time decision. Ditto for Ingram-Dawkins.

Jurgens was full go in practice this week so he’ll probably play. Ditto for Cashman and Batty.

The Vikings ruled out starting outside linebacker Andrew Van Ginkel, who hasn’t played since Week 3 due to a neck injury.

Vikings starting outside linebacker Jonathan Greenard was listed without a game status despite unexpectedly popping up on Thursday’s report with a hamstring injury.

OUT

OLB Andrew Van Ginkel (neck)

QUESTIONABLE

OLB Tyler Batty (knee)
LB Blake Cashman (hamstring)
DL Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins (hip)
C Michael Jurgens (hamstring)
QB J.J. McCarthy (ankle)
OT Brian O’Neill (knee)



RESERVE/PHYSICALLY UNABLE TO PERFORM

TE Gavin Bartholomew

RESERVE/INJURED

OLB Tyler Batty (practice window open)
LB Blake Cashman (practice window open)
RB Ty Chandler
C Zeke Correll
RB Aaron Jones Sr.
C Ryan Kelly
WR Rondale Moore
OL Matt Nelson

The Vikings have until 4:00 PM Eastern on Saturday to activate Batty and/or Cashman to their roster in order for them to be eligible to play on Sunday.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...andon-dickerson-and-jalen-carter-questionable
 
Carson Wentz officially starting for Vikings against Eagles

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What was suspected to be the case is now officially official: Carson Wentz is the starting quarterback for the Minnesota Vikings this weekend against the Philadelphia Eagles.

Vikes head coach Kevin O’Connell stated as much during his Friday press conference.

Wentz began the 2025 season as J.J. McCarthy’s backup but the second-year signal caller got hurt in Week 2. There was thought that McCarthy might return for Week 7 but he was limited in practice while Wentz was a full participant despite a recent shoulder injury. McCarthy is expected to serve as the emergency third quarterback while undrafted rookie Max Brosmer backs up Wentz.

Wentz is 2-1 in three starts for the Vikings so far this season. He’s completing 69% of his passes, which is nice, for 253 yards per game, five passing touchdowns, and two interceptions. He’s taken 12 sacks and has fumbled once.

On that note, we all know too well that Wentz is prone to losing control of the football. He’s fumbled 74 times in 102 career games played. The Eagles’ pass rush has struggled to notch sacks this season but maybe they can finally get going against Wentz playing behind a banged up offensive line?

The Eagles sacked Wentz nine times the last time (and first time) Philly’s former franchise quarterback started against his original NFL team. That was back in September 2022, when Wentz was playing for the Washington Commanders.

With the Birds entering Sunday as 2.5-point road favorites, they’re expected to win. But if Wentz can lead his Vikings to an upset, the Eagles will suffer their third straight loss to drop to 4-3. Losing would be bad enough. Losing to Wentz would only be salt in the wound.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...fficially-starting-for-vikings-against-eagles
 
Eagles Opponent Film Room: Scouting the Minnesota Vikings’ offense

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I’ve watched the most recent games of the opponents, focusing on specific areas: touchdowns, deep passes, turnovers, sacks, and explosive runs. Think of it less as a prediction piece and more as a scouting report. Each week, I’ll publish two articles on the opponent’s offense and defense to give a picture of what the Eagles will be up against.

Defense​


Kevin O’Connell’s offense is one of the better-designed units in football. Even with the injuries, inconsistency at quarterback, and an offensive line that’s been nothing short of a disaster, it’s clear on film that this is still a pretty good offense. He loves to use motions to manipulate leverage, switch releases to open throwing lanes, and play-action that’s designed to isolate defensive backs. However, the offense has a very obvious weakness, which we will get into.

Touchdowns


When the Vikings do finish drives, it’s often because of Kevin O’Connell’s play design. Their red-zone efficiency (10th in the league) is one of the few metrics that still looks healthy. They use condensed splits, motion, and play-action to create misdirection and space near the goal line. And they have this guy called Justin Jefferson, who’s pretty good…

Vikings' Offense All22 Thread. 1) This is a very well-designed offense, for the most part. I'm a big fan of Kevin O'Connell and how he uses scheme to maximise Justin Jefferson and create openings down the field. Look at the motion here to create a switch release and open up a… pic.twitter.com/nQaUvWeUw8

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

The Vikings’ run game isn’t explosive, but it’s physical in the red zone. It’s built on staying ahead of the sticks, being vertical, using double-teams, and is designed to punish soft fronts. Losing Aaron Jones hurt, but Jordan Mason has stepped in as a physical downhill runner who finishes runs and fights through contact. The Eagles struggled with a physical run game last week, so they will get a chance to bounce back this week against another physical back.

2) They aren't an explosive running game, and losing Aaron Jones has cost them a weapon out of the backfield, but Jordan Mason is a physical downhill back, and he will punish a lack of physicality. Last week, the Eagles struggled against a physical back, so we get to see if they… pic.twitter.com/RSQxmZcO2a

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025
3) It might not be explosive, but they want to stay ahead of the sticks and pick up important yards on 1st and 2nd down. It's a very vertical run game with a lot of double teams at the point of attack. It's not a great offensive line, but you need to be prepared for the double… pic.twitter.com/K5cy5jXZat

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

Once they fall behind the sticks, the playbook shrinks due to a massive issue at the offensive line, which we will get to! It’s tough to predict who will start at quarterback; both of them have shown the ability to create outside of structure, partly due to a weak offensive line. We will get into the quarterbacks more, below.

4) I've got to be honest, it's been cool seeing Carson Wentz back. He's still got the same positives and negatives. Despite a bad offensive line, he is less likely to run due to his age, but he can create plays out of structure, too. He's done a good job of creating since… pic.twitter.com/yNgxqeViTe

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

Explosive Passes


You can see why O’Connell is so highly regarded. The film is full of small details that open up space. The way he uses switch releases and late motion to help Justin Jefferson shake brackets, or how he schemes Jefferson onto safeties through deep crossers and posts. It’s clear on film that when they get time, the passing game is excellent. They love to hit Jefferson on deep overs, isolate him outside against single coverage, and use Jordan Addison as a secondary vertical threat. The issue isn’t design, it’s the ability to protect.

5) If this pass game has time, you don't have a chance at stopping Jefferson, no matter who the QB is. If you can't win up front and give this much time for routes to develop, someone will get open. O'Connell loves running deep crossers and posts and getting Jefferson matched up… pic.twitter.com/sK4GMZ3QV8

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

Both Carson Wentz and J.J. McCarthy can make every throw, but their rhythm is different. Wentz still has flashes of his old gunslinger self, firing deep balls into tight windows, while McCarthy is a little more unpredictable.

6) Wentz still has that gunslinger in him. Love it. He will throw balls into coverage, giving the defense a chance at interceptions. There is no doubt. Despite how good this throw is, this is a tough catch into a tight window. However, you can get away with it when targeting… pic.twitter.com/ZvDtKxVhZY

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

If you give either QB time, the deep passing game will be dangerous because of Jefferson and the scheme. Personally, from watching both of them, I think I would rather face McCarthy than Wentz. Neither option is terrifying from an Eagles perspective, but Wentz is playing better than McCarthy on film this season.

Sacks


This is the single biggest problem with the Vikings’ offense. They’ve given up 21 sacks already and have the worst sack rate in the league (12.6%). It’s not just the offensive tackles (though Justin Skule in particular has been a major weak link), it’s the whole unit that has struggled.

7) Despite all the positives, this offense has a huge Achilles heel. They are bad at pass protection. The left tackle (Justin Skule) is getting beaten frequently, and the Vikings can't protect long enough to enable their concepts to develop. The Eagles desperately need to get… pic.twitter.com/Ym63kDbARO

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

Communication is poor. You can see them repeatedly blow stunt pickups, and late blitzers catch them by surprise constantly. The left tackle has struggled with speed rushers, and the interior lacks cohesion after rotating through different linemen due to injuries.

9) The offensive line has struggled picking up stunts up front, which is something the Eagles have had a lot of success with this season. I expect to see a lot of stunts on obvious passing situations because communication on the Vikings' OL doesn't look great. pic.twitter.com/2toPJjybc7

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

As we all know, sacks are also a quarterback statistic. Neither quarterback helps out the offensive line. McCarthy holds the ball for too long as he takes too long to process things. Wentz is a little different. He gets the ball out quicker, but he still doesn’t diagnose pressure well. He’s still fearless, and his “hang tough” mentality gets him hit over and over again. Sack-fumbles have been a recurring issue.

8) Late rushers can still catch out Wentz. He doesn't diagnose pressure well and prefers to hang tough in the pocket, letting things develop down the field. Sack fumbles remain a good way of slowing down this offense. pic.twitter.com/gYFXsbApYr

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

The Eagles have to take advantage here. This game is tailor-made for stunts, simulated pressures, and delayed blitzes from the second level. The Vikings’ communication can’t handle complexity. I expect the Eagles to get after the quarterback this week. If the Eagles’ front doesn’t dominate this matchup, that’s going to be a huge issue. This could be a massive Jalen Carter game. I’m hopeful!

Turnovers


This offense lives on the edge. Wentz is still Wentz. He’s capable of a highlight-reel touchdown followed immediately by a disastrous throw. His confidence in Jefferson’s ability to win one-on-ones leads to high-risk throws. While that aggression creates big plays, it also gives defenses chances to make momentum-swinging plays.

McCarthy, on the other hand, looks overwhelmed at times. He’s a rookie who holds the ball too long, floats passes, and struggles to throw with anticipation. He has higher long-term upside but would give the Eagles far more turnover chances.

10) If McCarthy does play, he will give you chances when he is late to throw. I think I would rather face McCarthy from what I've seen, and although he has more upside, he has a lot more turnover-worthy plays and could lose the Vikings the game if he plays poorly. He often holds… pic.twitter.com/7DyCOVuY4o

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

As I said earlier, I’d rather face McCarthy. He’s late too often and doesn’t handle pressure well. If the Vikings choose to throw him in too early against a Fangio defense full of disguised coverages, it could get ugly. I assumed this overthrow was classic Wentz, but it was McCarthy!

11) You can see that McCarthy is still pretty raw as a thrower. There are some bad misses and overthrows on film, such as this one. My guess is that Wentz plays, partly due to injury and partly to give McCarthy more time to sit and learn, but both quarterbacks will give you a… pic.twitter.com/K43fd37DIx

— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9) October 16, 2025

Expect at least one turnover-worthy play from whichever QB starts.

Explosive Runs


The Vikings’ run game isn’t explosive. Minnesota’s line isn’t dominant, but it’s cohesive enough to double and climb. If the Eagles lose physicality at the point of attack, Mason can churn out four and five yard gains that keep the offense alive. I would be disappointed if Mason had long runs, though, and it would be a real concern.

Without Aaron Jones, they lack a home-run threat, and the offensive line’s injuries make it hard to get movement consistently. This is more grind-it-out than game-breaking.

Final Thoughts


This is a really well-schemed offense, but its offensive line traps it. If the Vikings can protect, they’ll move the ball. O’Connell will scheme Jefferson open against a banged-up Eagles’ secondary, and he could have a huge game. For the Eagles, this game is all about dominance up front. Win with the front four, create third and longs, and force O’Connell out of his rhythm. If the Eagles apply consistent pressure, they should create turnovers, especially if McCarthy starts.

This is one of those games where, schematically, I think most things work in the Eagles’ favour, but they have Justin Jefferson. Great players can turn games. I hope this isn’t one of those games.

Thank you for reading! I’d love to hear your thoughts, so feel free to comment below and ask any questions. If you enjoyed this piece, you can find more of my work and podcast here. If you would like to support me further, please check out my Patreon here!

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...m-room-scouting-the-minnesota-vikings-offense
 
Eagles vs. Vikings: The good, the bad, and the ugly

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For the brief time that they were together, Jalen Hurts was relegated to the nerds table in the NovaCare Complex, often ignored while Eagles’ starter Carson Wentz and his pals, backup quarterback Nate Sudfeld and quarterback’s coach Press Taylor, would yuk it up at the cool kid’s table.

Hurts never said anything. He never caused a problem. He kept to himself, and he kept to his grind, put his head down, and focused on what he had to do to be a better quarterback and earn the starting job.

A year later, Wentz, Sudfeld and Taylor were gone—and Hurts was on his way to eventually winning Super Bowl MVPs and Super Bowls. Wentz, meanwhile, was on his way to six different teams in the last six years, the latest being the Eagles’ opponent on Sunday, the Minnesota Vikings.

A glaring reason why was on full display at U.S. Bank Stadium on Sunday.

The Eagles beat the Vikings, 28-24, led by Hurts completing 19 of 23 passes, with almost as many touchdowns (3) as incompletions (4), throwing for 326 yards. It marked the first time Hurts threw for over 300 yards since he completed 29 of 38 for 311 yards in the Eagles’ 15-12 at New Orleans on September 22, 2024.

Hurts posted a 158.3 passer rating (the third perfect passer rating in team history), while Wentz completed 26 of 42 for 313 yards and two interceptions, compounded by going 1 for 6 in the red zone. He was rattled easily, made dubious decisions, held the ball too long, and was, well, “typical Wentz.”

It was the first time this season that Minnesota gave up over 200 yards passing, and Hurts did it with Brett Toth playing center for the most of the game for the injured Cam Jurgens and did a decent job.

There were still some troubling numbers: In every game this season, the Eagles have been outgained. This time, it was the Vikings who outgained the Eagles, 387/361, and if not for Wentz making some nervous red zone mistakes, the outcome could have been far different.

It looks as if Howie Roseman and the Eagles made the right choice.

A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith combined for 13 receptions for 304 of the Eagles’ 361 total yards of offense.

This was the kind of rebound victory that the Eagles needed after coming off their horrid 34-17 beatdown by the New York Giants, who the Eagles have next Sunday at 1 p.m. at Lincoln Financial Field.

The Eagles are now 5-2, and the only team in the NFC East over .500, two games ahead in the victory column over Washington (3-3) and three over Dallas (2-3-1) and the New York Giants (2-4).

There was a mountain of good, some bad, and a pinch of ugly in the Eagles’ reviving 28-24 victory over the Minnesota Vikings.

The Good


Hurts carried the Eagles. Hecompleted 19 of 23 for 326 yards. What was more crucial was how well he played on big downs, scrambling free to hit Brown with a 13-yard pass on a third-and-13 with 8:40 to play.The play extended the Eagles’ drive, which resulted in Brown’s second touchdown catch and a 28-19 Eagles’ lead. In the last two minutes, Hurts later hit Brown for a 45-yard completion on third-and-nine to seal the win. He played patient. He played smart. He threw accurately.

A.J. Brown’s 45-yard reception with 1:36 left was the play of the game. It came on a crucial third-and-nine at the Eagles’ 44, and sealed the victory. It wrapped up Brown’s four-catch, 121-yard reception performance, highlighted by two touchdowns. His 37-yard touchdown reception came on the opening drive and ended with a 26-yard score in the fourth quarter. On the first score, Hurts hadall the time in the world, it seemed, even pointing down field noticing the mismatched Joshua Metellus trying to keep up with Brown down the sideline. The protection was perfect, and despite the Vikings dropping eight, Hurts found a crease and exploited it. Brown was put in motion, and Metellus simply could not keep up with him. On the second score, Brown beat Vikings’ cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. on an inside route in the middle of the field. On the 45-yard reception, Brown beat former Eagle teammate Isaiah Rodgers for the clincher.

DeVonta Smith’s career game, with a game-high nine catches for a career-best 183 yards—the most by an NFL receiver this season—which included a 79-yard, third-quarter touchdown strike, the longest play of his career. The Eagles ran the play with Hurts under center, on a play-action fake to Saquon Barkley. Rodgers, who is having a nice season for Minnesota, bit and looked up. That created the opening for Smith, who blew right by Rodgers. Hurts hit Smith in stride for a 21-6 lead with 8:07 left in the third quarter. Smith’s previous career long was 63 yards in 2023 against the Vikings. Smith later made an incredible 28-yard catch with less than a minute left in the third quarter. Unfortunately, Jake Elliott missed a 42-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter on the drive.

Edge rusher Joshua Uche’s eight-yard sack on a first-and-goal at the Eagles’ 18. Uchebeat Minnesota right tackleBrian O’Neill, taking Wentz down from behind. The Uche play forced the Vikings into their fifth field goal, preserving a 28-22 lead, and going one-for-six in the red zone.

Moro Ojomo’s seven-yard sack on a third-and-five at the Eagles’ 17 with 10:44 to play. It was typical Wentz. He had problems reading man coverage, and doing what he does, held the ball too long,when Ojomo took him down and forced another Minnesota field goal. It was the fifth time Minnesota was in the red zone and the fourth time the Eagles held the Vikings to a field goal.

Linebacker Nakobe Dean knifing through to take down Zavier Scott for a four-yard loss
at midfield on the Vikings’ second drive of the second half. Dean played very well coming off the debilitating torn patellar tendon in his left knee he inured during the Eagles’ 22-10 Wild Card playoff victory over the Green Bay Packers on January 12, 2025. Until the injury, Dean was having his best—and healthiest—season as a pro, making 128 tackles in the regular season, with three sacks, and six quarterback hits. He underwent surgery in January. Against the Vikings, Dean had six tackles, three solo, including the Scott tackle for a loss.

Rookie safety Andrew Mukuba’s interception on the Vikings’ third drive. Wentz, a gift who gives on giving, made a poor decision and rather than checking down, he instead decided the throw one up to for an easy pick for Mukuba, who had his issues against the New York Giants’ Wan’Dale Robinson that led to a TD. It was Wentz’s second interception on successive drives. Later on, Mukuba returned to his missed-tackling ways.

Edge rusher Jalyx Hunt’s 42-yard touchdown interception return. It was a great play by Hunt, and a great call by Eagles’ defensive coordinator Vic Fangio. Hunt showed at the line of the scrimmage on the Vikings’ right, cheating toward Justin Jefferson in the slot. As the play unfolded, Hunt then peeled back into coverage. Wentz was completely fooled, looking at Jefferson and never seeing Hunt sitting there in the middle of the field. Hunt scored his first touchdown—on his first NFL interception. Fangio showed six up front, confusing Wentz as to who was rushing and who was backing into coverage. Jalen Carter had a lot do with that play, pressuring Wentz up the middle and forcing the shellshocked former Eagles’ first-round draft into making a “Wentz” play.

The Eagles’ first offensive drive against Brian Flores’ vaunted Vikings’ defense. The Eagles chewed through Minnesota for 8 minutes, 1 second in going 74 yards over 12 plays. The Eagles converted two fourth downs, ran the ball eight times, passed three times, and Hurts was sacked once. Hurts received great protection early, Barkley had open running lanes, and that translated into the Eagles rushing for 36 yards on the drive. Then the Eagles forgot Barkley.

Coach Nick Sirianni running Hurts under center, and going for it on fourth-and-four at the Vikings’ 37 on their first drive. Sirianni’s call looked brilliant, considering the Eagles scored on the play, although Sirianni, knowing Philadelphia, would have been buried if the play flopped and the Eagles got nothing. Sirianni and offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo had Hurts under center, ran motion, ran play action and aimed for explosive plays.

The Eagles’ first play of the game, Barkley’s eight-yard run to the left behind left tackle Jordan Mailata and healthy left guard Landon Dickerson. It helped establish what the Eagles like to do, and what they need to do to be successful offensively. Everyone on the offensive line kicked their man out, giving Barkley an eight-yard running lane and starting the Eagles toward a 7-0 lead.

The Bad


What was a real dubious call on Jordan Mason’s reach out from a yard to score with 3:38 left in the third quarter. It appeared Zack Baun and Andrew Mukuba had stopped Mason short, but the replay somehow showed Mason breaking the plain of the goal, reversing the call on the field, which allowed the Vikings to draw within 21-16.

Hunt called for pass interference on a trick play on the Vikings’ second drive of the second half. The flag got the Vikings going toward their first touchdown of the game.

Kicker Jake Elliott kicking the ball outside the landing zone, giving the Vikings possession at the Minnesota 40 after Smith’s 79-yard, third-quarter touchdown.

Brown’s false start on the Eagles’ second drive, taking them from a third-and-one to a third-and-six at the Eagles’ 43.
It was a slight flinch,but it was still called.

Cornerback Adoree’ Jackson getting burned inside by Adam Thielen on a third-and-six on the Vikings’ first drive for a 10-yard gain to the Minnesota 34.

The Ugly


Jake Eilliott missing his first field goal of the season, wide right on a 42-yard attempt when the Vikings were late getting personnel on the field with 14:15 left to play. Prior to that, Elliott was six-for-six on field goal attempts and 19-for-19 on extra points.

Myles Price’s 38-yard kickoff return to open the second half for Minnesota. It placed the ball at the Vikings’ 48.
Eight plays later, Minnesota reached the Eagles’ nine. But fortunately, the Eagles’ X factor, Wentz, made another auspicious appearance. On second-and-eight at the nine, Wentz inexplicably proceeded to throw the ball to no one, when he had C.J. Ham wide open in the left flat and did not see him—and this coming from a 10-year NFL veteran. It may explain why the Vikings are the sixth different team he has been with in the last six years. Wentz was flagged for intentional grounding on what was many questionable plays by a quarterback the Eagles found out years ago is not a viable, winning NFL quarterback. That was the third time that the Vikings were in the red zone, and had to settle for field goals each time. Prior to that, the Vikings had failed to score a touchdown only five times in 15 trips in the red zone.

The Eagles’ first half offense. Take away the first drive, and the Eagles finished with 42 yards of offense and two first downs the rest of the half. They ran 12 plays on their first drive and then could only muster a total of 13 plays the remainder of the half, going three-straight drives of three-and-out, and going four plays on their fifth drive. Barkley only had 10 yards rushing since the opening drive touchdown.

Mukuba, apparently, can’t tackle—kind of an important part of football. The rookie safety has a great nose for the football, but when it comes to open-field tackling, he is poorly lacking. As mentioned earlier, he blew the tackle against Robinson that led to a touchdown. On the Vikings’ fourth drive, he missed Justin Jefferson, resulting in a 40-yard play and another Vikings’ field goal.

Vikings’ defensive end Jalen Redmond blowing up Brett Toth, replacing Cam Jurgens at center, and then blowing up Barkley for a six-yard loss, and ruining great field position after the Mukuba interception on the Eagles’ third possession. Cornerback Quinyon Mitchell making a rare mistake, not picking up Jordan Addison in zone coverage, allowing a 34-yard reception on a first-and-10 at the Eagles’ 32. The Vikings botched the chance with a snap over Wentz’s head, settling instead for a 59-yard field goal.

Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com...gles-vs-vikings-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly
 
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