Many hands helped propel Case Keenum to a career game in Sunday's 34-17 win against the Buccaneers, but Adam Thielen's left mitt got a lot of the credit from the Vikings quarterback.
"I think the shot early to Adam kind of calmed me down a little bit," Keenum said. "He made a heck of a play" on a one-handed catch.
The Vikings entered Sunday with a game plan still centered on running back Dalvin Cook, who took six carries in the first eight plays. But, after an uninspiring attack in Pittsburgh, a more comfortable Keenum pushed the ball downfield starting with the third play of the game – the 45-yard strike to Thielen that further settled Keenum's nerves after a full week of practice in the starting huddle.
"A lot of it had to do with the timing of when [Keenum] knew he was going to play, changing the plan," head coach Mike Zimmer said. "I think he was confident going in, felt good about the plays and then you have to give all the guys some credit. They executed. The offensive line, we ran the ball well. Cook had some really good runs, the offensive line blocked, protected well."
Let's take a look at four examples of Keenum's career day, a driving element to the Vikings' win vs. Tampa Bay. Here to help is Dan Hatman, a former NFL scout and Director of Scouting Development at The Scouting Academy. You can follow Dan on Twitter at @Dan_Hatman.
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Fullback C.J. Ham's career-high 22 snaps came Sunday in a plan centered on feeding Cook and building off that with play-action passes. The first three plays, leading to the opening touchdown, exemplified that approach. Cook picked up 10 yards on two carries. Then Ham, as the lead blocker, fronted a fake handoff on the third snap. From a remarkably clean pocket, Keenum's "excellent" ball placement on his first throw of the game allowed Thielen to make an impressive grab, despite illegal contact from the defender.