Among the streaking Vikings who collectively wanted to prove themselves against the Bills on Sunday, the team's offensive line saw an opportunity to show themselves and the world that they can hang with the league's best.
Von Miller, Ed Oliver and a deep roster of Bills defensive linemen had their moments against quarterback Kirk Cousins, but right tackle Brian O'Neill said the Vikings proved to be the "more physical" team in a 33-30 overtime win against a dominant defense that had ranked No. 1 in points allowed since the start of the 2021 season.
"You want to do really well against the best," O'Neill said. "I was proud of the way all of our guys stepped up and took it on the chin and just competed no matter the situation, no matter if we were down 10 in the second half or overtime. It wasn't always perfect, but we stepped up and swung our shot. That's all you can ask for."
The going was tough on early downs. Cousins was often put into tough third and fourth downs that were the foundation for most of the game's highlights. The Vikings offense converted four times on third-and-10 or longer as well as a fourth-and-6 play and the fourth-and-18 catch by Justin Jefferson that will be replayed until the end of time.
Cousins had clean pockets like on the 20-yard toss to K.J. Osborn to convert a third-and-10. The Vikings quarterback also created with his feet, shuffling around Miller and Oliver when O'Neill and right guard Ed Ingram got beat on a 5-yard throw to Osborn. It wasn't always perfect, as O'Neill said, but they came away proud of bringing the fight to Buffalo.
The Vikings offensive line was particularly glad Monday when watching back and counting the number of times they knocked a Bills defender to the ground. Left guard Ezra Cleveland sideswiped a defensive lineman on a fourth-down conversion to tight end T.J. Hockenson, taking out the defender whom center Garrett Bradbury was blocking.
"The guy just disappeared because Ezra blew him across the screen," O'Neill said. "We talk about trying to get those shots. Anytime you take them throughout the game, they're going to add up in the fourth quarter. I think we counted over 10 times [Sunday] where we threw somebody to the ground or laid a big hit and played really physical. We were excited to watch those [Monday], it was pretty fun to see."
This video shows the block by Cleveland (#72), running back Dalvin Cook's 81-yard touchdown run and a clean pocket on a late third-down conversion.