Mike Zimmer sought balance for his Vikings offense, but the closer Kirk Cousins has gotten to the opponent's end zone, the fewer passes he's thrown through a 2-1 start.
A revamped rushing attack featuring a healthy Dalvin Cook and coordinator Kevin Stefanski pulling the strings has been dominant, especially in the red zone. That's where the Vikings have run for six touchdowns in nine drives, and Cousins has only completed one pass on five attempts for 11 yards and an interception.
That's no typo.
The Vikings' top-10 red-zone attack through three weeks (at 5.3 points per drive) has been many things — schematically creative, elusive and productive. But it has not tested Cousins, instead sending him on more runs (2) near the goal line than completions (1) in three games.
As long as they're successful running, which they have been mostly in two games against the Falcons and Raiders, Zimmer said he sees the pendulum eventually swinging toward Cousins' time to make plays in the red zone.
"It's important that when the field gets shrunk like that, and let's say the ball is on the 10-yard line and you've got 20 yards to throw," Zimmer said, "every window is tighter. So if you can run the ball in, whether they're doubling the receivers or they're playing two-high [safeties], whatever it is, if you can run the ball in there, that's more power to you. It just makes it tougher."
"Then, like everything else, they'll start getting into single-high [safety] and zeros down there, and you have opportunities to throw the ball."
Zimmer's mettle will be tested Sunday in Chicago, where the Bears' fifth-ranked run defense is allowing just 68.7 yards per game.