Safety Harrison Smith shrugged, caught between the logical half of his brain and the passionate side that badly wanted a shutout after his Vikings defense surrendered 444 yards and four touchdowns on a Monday night in Seattle.
Lions quarterback David Blough, the rookie making his second NFL start, had few answers for Vikings blitzes that were put on the back burner once the Vikings led 20-0. Otherwise unable to sustain a drive longer than 38 yards, Blough marched 75 yards against mostly soft zones for a touchdown with two minutes left.
"I get it," said Smith, siding with Zimmer. "You're playing the numbers game, time and stuff like that. But you always want to pitch shutouts as a defense, especially when you'd had a couple bad games and need to bounce back, and we did bounce back."
Had Zimmer continued his game plan of peppering aggressive, varied pressure schemes, a shutout should've been had. One of defensive end Danielle Hunter's three sacks in the first half showed how Vikings pass rushers set each other up for success through blitz designs. The end result for Detroit led to questions such as, "Why was a tight end blocking Hunter?"
"Most of these teams don't want to get blitzed," Zimmer said. "So that's their way to help, help in protection and things like that. So, you know, pick your poison."
1. For one key snap, the Lions chose Hunter as their poison.
It was against Blough, the undrafted rookie from Purdue, and therefore an underwhelming Lions offense, but the Vikings defense has continually been one of the NFL's most effective blitzing groups and this season is no different. This is the product of savvy defenders and creative schemes, which Blough noted when discussing how linebackers Anthony Barr and Eric Kendricks toy with opposing centers and quarterbacks in blitz disguises.
This 3rd-and-10 blitz on the game's opening third down did not work because of trickery. The Vikings got the desired matchup with defensive end Danielle Hunter (#99), whose first of three sacks came by breezing past Lions tight end Jesse James.