If the impressive opening statement delivered by the Vikings' offense in their first preseason game against the Denver Broncos must be taken with a grain of salt — and it should — so must the rocky performance the group turned in on Saturday.
The Vikings' offense had faced a stout Jacksonville Jaguars defense that stood out in two days of joint practices even without defensive end Dante Fowler and cornerback Jalen Ramsey, and they figured to have a tough assignment in their preseason home opener on Saturday. They again played without center Pat Elflein, who remains on the physically-unable-to-perform list. They gave two more linemen (tackle Rashod Hill and guard Mike Remmers) the chance to rest ankle injuries, and they again sat running back Dalvin Cook, choosing not to stage his return from a torn ACL behind a makeshift line against a skilled defense.
But even though the offense's showing in a 14-10 loss to the Jaguars at U.S. Bank Stadium should be placed in its proper context, it still provided a reminder the group has plenty to work on.
A week ago in Denver, the Vikings' first-team offense was on the field for just eight plays, marching 85 yards for a touchdown in an abbreviated night of work. The Vikings kept their starters in for twice that many plays on Saturday, but the group was able to gain just 21 yards against a Jaguars defense that finished the year ranked No. 2 in the league last season and didn't afford Kirk Cousins much room to work downfield.
For the day, the Vikings went 0-for-12 on third down, finishing with only 238 yards against a Jaguars team that handed over another 140 yards on 13 penalties.
"Obviously, it's a good defense, and they're pressuring us, and we have some guys banged up, but, hey, this is the NFL," coach Mike Zimmer said. "We have to do better than that. It kind of looked like it did in practice this week, to be honest with you."
Cousins went 3 of 8 for 12 yards on Saturday, looking primarily to short throws underneath the Jaguars' zone coverage. Things played out in a similar fashion to how Cousins projected they would on Thursday, when he said, "We found yesterday [in the first day of joint practices between the teams] that there's probably a greater number of check-downs, of settling for a completion as opposed to getting a home run, because of the nature of their defense."
The quarterback couldn't connect with Adam Thielen and Kyle Rudolph on the Vikings' first drive, as Tyler Patmon broke up a throw that was slightly behind Thielen on first down and Cousins' third-down pass went off Rudolph's hands.