As Kirk Cousins works through his initial season as the Vikings' starting quarterback, there can be an inanity to the practice of marking his milestones: his first division game at Lambeau Field, his first prime-time game in Week 4, his first win over an NFC North opponent on Nov. 4, and so on.
That said, there's a uniqueness to what Cousins will do on Sunday night at Soldier Field: As the quarterback tries to lead the Vikings back to the top of the division standings, he'll attempt to do so as the foil for his favorite childhood team.
Growing up in Barrington, Ill., northwest of Chicago, Cousins developed an affinity for the Bears that continued after his family moved to west Michigan when he was 13. Mike Singletary was Cousins' youth football coach; the quarterback went to school with Walter Payton's kids and attended the youth camps Singletary did with former Bears defensive back and Vikings coach Leslie Frazier.
"There was close proximity to those guys; my dad did some chapels for the Bears," Cousins said. "There were a lot of connections to the Bears and to the community, and obviously, the '85 Bears, to this day, are still talked about quite a bit. That kind of lingered through the '90s as I was growing up.
"Any time you get to go there, it's a special place. There's a lot of history there. I love the opportunity to play at Soldier Field."
Cousins had played in Chicago twice before, leading the Redskins to wins over the Bears in 2015 and 2016. He'll have a crew of his friends from Michigan in town for the game Sunday night, as he tries to become the first Vikings QB to win his first start at Soldier Field since Tarvaris Jackson in 2007.
If Cousins is able to keep his undefeated record there, it will mean success for the Vikings QB in a building where many of his predecessors had nightmarish outings.
Brett Favre threw for 321 yards in his debut, but the Vikings lost an overtime game that doomed their chances at home-field advantage in 2009. Favre threw three interceptions the next year in his final game there and Donovan McNabb lost his job to Christian Ponder in 2011.