The Minnesota Vikings‘ inability to find a suitable replacement for QB Kirk Cousins has probably already cost the team the playoffs. On Sunday in Detroit, it also finally exhausted the patience of star wide receiver Justin Jefferson.
Trailing 13-0 in a road game the Vikings needed to win to retain any hope of an NFC Wildcard playoff berth, quarterback Nick Mullens was able to muster 14-play, 59-yard drive spanning nearly eight minutes. The offense moved the football down to the Lions‘ 8-yard line before the drive fell apart.
Running back Alexander Mattison ran off left tackle for no gain on first down. Jefferson lost 12 yards on the next play — an end around run off the right edge, which defensive end Aiden Hutchinson blew up.
Mullens incurred a five-yard delay of game penalty ahead of third down, pushing Minnesota back into a third-and-goal from the 25-yard line. Mullens threw a short pass to Jefferson on the next play for a four-yard gain. The drive ended in a 39-yard Greg Joseph field goal to make the score 13-3 in favor of Detroit.
Fox Sports posted video on social media of Jefferson storming off the field following the unsuccessful third-down play, ripping off his helmet and barking loudly at no one in particular with disdain spread across his face. Analyst Daryl Johnston narrated Jefferson’s frustration, explaining it in the context of Mullens’ play.
Justin Jefferson is visibly frustrated on the Vikings sideline pic.twitter.com/Ees9vrVdpZ
— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX) January 7, 2024
“[It’s] the decisions, the little things. I really think that that one play was [a run-pass option] because [Mullens] just got stuck on Alexander Mattison too long,” Johnston said. “I think he’s trying to figure out whether to pull it, and he really should have on that play. He’s gonna have [tight end] Johnny Mundt, who had out-leveraged everybody. And then the next play after that, it’s Aiden Hutchinson.”
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Dobbs started the next four games, in which Minnesota went 2-2. The coaching staff pulled him in the fourth stanza against the Las Vegas Raiders on December 10, Jefferson’s first game back after missing seven contests, after the team mustered just 33 points over Dobbs’ previous 11 quarters under center. Head coach Kevin O’Connell inserted Mullens, who led the Vikings on a late field-goal drive to secure a 3-0 victory.
The win ushered in the Mullens era in Minnesota, as the Vikings moved to 7-6. Mullens threw for 300-plus and 400-plus yards in the next two games, respectively, but also tossed 6 interceptions over that span across two one-score losses.
O’Connell went back to Hall out of desperation in what was essentially a must-win contest against the Green Bay Packers in Week 17, but pulled him at halftime and re-inserted Mullens. Minnesota lost regardless, falling to 7-9, while their playoff chances dropped to below 3% with one game to play, per ESPN’s Football Power Index.
The Vikings’ backup QBs have been unable to capitalize on Jefferson’s talent, as the receiver hauled in just 20 catches for 311 yards and 1 TD between Weeks 14-17. Jefferson tallied 9 grabs for 147 yards and 1 TD through three quarters against the Lions in Week 18, though the Vikings trailed 20-13 at that point.