SEATTLE - There has been an assumption that new Vikings offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave's scheme will rely on having tight ends and running backs involved in the passing game.
Considering the Vikings' approach in the first half of their 20-7 victory over Seattle on Saturday night at CenturyLink Field, it appears that assumption is an extremely safe one.
As the Vikings took a 13-0 lead after the opening 30 minutes, tight ends Kyle Rudolph and Jim Kleinsasser combined for four receptions and running backs Adrian Peterson and Toby Gerhart combined for three of the team's 10 catches.
Just as telling, Vikings quarterbacks Donovan McNabb and Christian Ponder looked for the running backs seven times and the tight ends six times. Wide receivers were targeted four times.
Actually, almost all of the production from the first- and second-team offense came in the second quarter as the Vikings ran only three (yes, three) offensive plays in the opening 15 minutes. That meant coach Leslie Frazier had to wait longer than expected to see quarterback Donovan McNabb and his No. 1 offense.
Frazier said last week he had a set number of plays for McNabb to be in the game, and that figure ended up being 16. What Frazier probably didn't figure was that 13 of them would come on a second-quarter drive.
Tarvaris Jackson, who signed with Seattle as a free agent after spending his first five seasons with the Vikings, ran 26 plays for the Seahawks in the first quarter, but the Vikings still led 7-0 when it ended. That was because cornerback Marcus Sherels returned an interception of a Jackson pass 64 yards for a touchdown.
Sherels' heroics came shortly after he played the role of goat. The former Gopher, who is among those auditioning for the punt-return job, fumbled a Jon Ryan boot at his own 45-yard line after getting 16 yards. But on the ensuing Seattle possession Jackson, whose time in Minnesota was marked with untimely interceptions, threw a pick to Sherels on a third-down pass that was intended for Golden Tate.