The stat was fresh in receiver K.J. Osborn's mind Monday because players had just left a team meeting before he hopped on a video call with local reporters. During the meeting, one of the key reasons for the Vikings' 34-26 win against the Cardinals was highlighted.
"We were 5-for-5 or something like that" in the red zone, he said. "Coaches are putting together a great game plan and we're going out and executing it. It's a total thing with coaches and players."
Five trips inside Arizona's 20-yard line resulted in five touchdowns — 100% efficiency that has boosted the Vikings offense into a top-10 scoring group (tied for ninth at 24.7 points per game) and is starting to become a trend.
No NFL offense has been more efficient turning red-zone trips into touchdowns over the past three games than the Vikings, crossing the goal line 11 times in the last 12 trips with the only miss a third-down field goal as time expired before halftime in Miami. They've scored touchdowns on 12 of the last 13 trips going back to the end of the Oct. 2 win vs. New Orleans. The Vikings rank fifth overall with a 66% conversion rate this season.
Versatility has been a key. Defenses gain an advantage when there's less ground to cover. They don't have to worry about getting beat deep in the end zone. The best red-zone offenses find ways to create space for runners and receivers through play designs and advantageous matchups. They also need to be able to run and pass effectively to keep defenses guessing. In the past 13 red-zone trips, the Vikings ran for seven touchdowns and threw for five; nine different players held the ball at the end of a score.
"That's what marrying the run and the pass is all about," O'Connell said. "Those mantras and philosophies matter in situational football, especially when you are a team that wants to be diverse in the red zone and apply a lot of different types of pressure to the defense.
"But when this field shrinks, some of that illusion can be hard to come by sometimes if you don't have the ability to run it or protect in the pass game that. Five of five is a credit to all those guys. Really, when I think how many times we've had lapses in the red zone, it's really been by our own doing, in my opinion. I think that really serves us well moving forward to know the types of things we can activate down there."
Pre-snap motion, fake handoffs and leveraging defensive attention were all on display against the Cardinals. Running back Alexander Mattison's 7-yard touchdown run to regain the lead in the third quarter had a little bit of everything.