On a critical third-down play in the third quarter Sunday, Carolina quarterback Cam Newton again locked onto his standout rookie wide receiver, Kelvin Benjamin.
He knew Benjamin would be lined up against cornerback Xavier Rhodes. And despite having no success attacking Rhodes to that point, Newton decided to try his luck another time.
At 6-5 and 240 pounds, Benjamin has the sheer size and wingspan to moonlight as an NBA forward. But Benjamin could not box out Rhodes, who darted in front of the rookie to get both hands on the ball, only to have it pop out of his grasp as the two wrestled for it.
A day later, Rhodes would lament simply knocking the pass down, saying that an interception there could have been a "game-changer" in a 31-13 victory for the Vikings at TCF Bank Stadium.
But while he might not yet have the interceptions he needs for personal validation, Rhodes already has become a game-changer for the Vikings by blanketing some of the NFL's most productive pass-catchers, from Benjamin to Brandon Marshall to Jordy Nelson. And if Rhodes can start hanging onto a few interceptions like the one that had him slapping the artificial surface in frustration Sunday, quarterbacks such as Newton might start avoiding him all together.
"I don't know if he's the most improved player that we have, but he's improved an awful lot throughout the course of this season," Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said. "I think his confidence level, his technique, the way he competes [have improved]."
Stats back him up
On Sunday, Newton threw to a receiver defended by Rhodes seven times. Rhodes got his hands on three of those passes and didn't allow a single completion. A pair of pass breakups in the third quarter might not have changed a game that the Vikings had under wraps, but they prevented the Panthers from making things interesting.
That shutout performance came a week after Rhodes allowed only two catches for 18 yards against the Green Bay Packers and their talented trio of wide receivers, led by Nelson. And two weeks after the Chicago Bears wisely chose to try to exploit other matchups.