Welcome to our morning-after Vikings blog, where we'll revisit every game by looking at three players who stood out, three concerns for the team, three trends to watch and one big question. Here we go:
Three years ago today, when I was still covering the Vikings for ESPN, I wrote a piece on defensive line coach Andre Patterson's impact on the Vikings' defensive front. In an interview for that story, Patterson said something about Danielle Hunter — then 22 years old — that popped back into my head on Sunday.
With Hunter in the midst of a breakout season, during which he posted 12 1/2 sacks in 2016, Patterson said there were a number of areas where the defensive end could still improve. How so?
"The thing you'd be able to see is more tackles for loss for him in the running game," Patterson said then. "That part of his run play hasn't showed up yet. He plays his blocking schemes well. He can stretch and make tackles on the other side of the field. But he'll get to a point where he'll read the scheme so fast that he'll be able to get off it and get the back before he gets close to the line of scrimmage."
This season, as Hunter puts himself in the NFL Defensive Player of the Year conversation with his 13 1/2 sacks, he's continued to close in on Patterson's vision of what he can be as a run defender. On a day where the Vikings recorded seven takeaways in a game for the first time in 24 years, Hunter started things off with the kind of play we've seen him make with increasing frequency this year: He shed wide receiver Keenan Allen's block, ranged to his left to catch up to Melvin Gordon and pried the ball loose after Mike Hughes' initial hit. It was the first of Hunter's two forced fumbles on a day where he also recovered one and posted a sack, and it underscored what a complete player he's become on the defensive line.
According to Pro Football Focus, Hunter entered Sunday tied for 11th in the league among edge defenders with 18 run stops this season. He finished tied for sixth a year ago, with 26 run stops, and he's now set a career high with three forced fumbles this season.
Hunter was the NFC's defensive player of the week after notching 2 1/2 sacks against the Lions, and he might keep the award again after what he did on Sunday — fulfilling Patterson's words by showing he can wreck opposing offenses in more ways than one.