Latavius Murray threw a stiff arm into Cardinals safety Antoine Bethea, releasing five games' worth of frustration from a lackluster rushing attack, on his way to a 21-yard touchdown in the Vikings' 27-17 win on Sunday.
"It felt good," Murray, wearing Michael Jordan's No. 23 Bulls jersey, said after the game. "It really did."
As Murray racked up a career-high 155 rushing yards, the Vikings channeled a physicality not unlike that in the 1990s NBA. A Cardinals nine-man defensive front wasn't enough to stall Murray on his touchdown run. He squeezed between tight ends David Morgan and Kyle Rudolph, breaking one listless Cardinals arm tackle before throwing his limb into Bethea's facemask.
The run gave the Vikings a 7-3 lead. They did not trail the rest of the game.
"It's one of the greatest feelings when you see a running back go flying by you without stopping at all," guard Mike Remmers said. "The crowd gets into it. It's amazing. I felt bad because for a few games we weren't running the ball as well as we should have. It was good to get it going today."
On a day when running back Dalvin Cook was ruled out after a pregame workout, Murray put together a rushing day not seen from a Vikings back since Adrian Peterson had 158 rushing yards on Nov. 29, 2015.
That was the Vikings' game plan. Entering Sunday, the Cardinals' last-place rushing defense had allowed a league-high eight touchdowns on the ground. Murray and quarterback Kirk Cousins made it 10.
"Part of it is, you know, stick with it some," head coach Mike Zimmer said. "You just have to keep pounding away and pounding away and that's kind of how these things happen."