Believe it or not, the deep pass that ultimately propelled the Vikings into Saturday night's playoff game at Green Bay was actually an incompletion.
In Week 5.
By Andrew Luck.
Go figure.
In the NFL, you never know where inspiration might be found. But in order for the Vikings to supply their longest passing play all season -- Christian Ponder's 65-yard bomb to Jarius Wright in the fourth quarter last weekend -- a seed had to be planted 12 Sundays earlier in Indianapolis. As Luck would have it ...
In examining the Colts' 30-27 upset of Green Bay from Oct. 7, Vikings offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave found a dash of creative stimulation. In the fourth quarter of that game, on second-and-4 from the Green Bay 49-yard line, Indianapolis isolated receiver Donnie Avery to the left against Packers cornerback Sam Shields. Facing a coverage with only one deep safety, rookie quarterback Luck baited Green Bay with play action. Avery froze Shields with an in cut 9 yards beyond the line of scrimmage, then broke open deep down the left hash.
Everything was in sync. Until Luck's potential touchdown throw sailed a foot-and-a-half too long.
It went into the boxscore as an incompletion. But it entered Musgrave's mind as a play that would work.