Vikings thrive under coach of year 
		favorite O'Connell, a relatable state for Packers with LaFleur 
		 
		 
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			 [December 27, 2024]  
			By DAVE CAMPBELL 
		
			MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minnesota Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell's 
			stirring locker room tribute to his team last week at Seattle was 
			respectfully interrupted by seven-year veteran right tackle Brian 
			O'Neill, who flipped the script on the game ball awards by tossing 
			one to the boss in honor of his second 13-win season in three years. 
			 
			The Vikings have obliterated even the most optimistic of external 
			predictions for this transitional season, taking a sparkling 13-2 
			record into their matchup against the Green Bay Packers that has 
			made O'Connell the current favorite for the NFL Coach of the Year 
			award. 
			 
			“It’s a credit to who he is as a person, as a coach and as a 
			leader,” tight end T.J. Hockenson said. “We’re very fortunate to be 
			able to play under him.” 
			 
			The Vikings can not only win the NFC North for a second time in 
			three seasons, but get the No. 1 seed with a first-round bye and 
			home-field advantage throughout the NFC tournament if they beat both 
			the Packers at home on Sunday and the Detroit Lions on the road next 
			week. 
			 
			Don't expect the Vikings to ponder that possibility, though, as 
			tantalizing as it would be. 
		
			
			  
		
			“It can be a very tired cliché to talk about going 1-0 until you’ve 
			systematically built your entire operation daily of just trying to 
			do that every single day,” O'Connell said after Minnesota's eighth 
			consecutive victory. “These guys, it’s not a cliché at that point. 
			It becomes part of your football foundation and the makeup of your 
			locker room, of your leadership, your coaching staff.” 
			 
			The Packers could be forgiven for being less than impressed by the 
			impact O'Connell has made, for a reason beyond simply him coaching 
			their biggest rival. Green Bay enjoyed even better out-of-the-gate 
			success under coach Matt LaFleur, who was hired in 2019 and won 13 
			regular-season games in each of his first three years. 
			 
			Though they're in third place at 11-4, two games behind the Lions 
			and the Vikings, the Packers too have secured a place in the 
			playoffs even if they can't win their loaded division. They'll 
			likely be the visiting team as long as they're alive this 
			postseason. 
			 
			"I think that just all of us going against one another, it’s forced 
			you to be at your best every week," LaFleur said. “You can’t afford 
			a slip-up, just to keep up with everybody.” 
			 
			The road team has won each of the past three matchups in this 
			series. The Packers are 0-4 against the teams with the top three 
			records in the NFC: Detroit, Minnesota and Philadelphia. 
			 
			“We’ve got to be able to go win these games against the really good 
			teams in the league and set ourselves up for the situation we’ll be 
			in for the playoffs,” quarterback Jordan Love said. 
			 
			[to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
            Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O'Connell walks down the sideline 
			during the first half of an NFL football game against the Seattle 
			Seahawks, Sunday, Dec. 22, 2024, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Stephen 
			Brashear) 
              
 
			 The running men 
			Aaron Jones rushed for 93 yards on 22 carries for Minnesota in a 
			31-29 victory at Green Bay on Sept. 29. Released by the Packers for 
			salary cap relief in favor of their premier free agency addition, 
			the three-plus-years-younger Josh Jacobs, Jones just hit the 
			1,000-yard mark last week and can't hide from the significance of 
			facing his former team. 
			 
			"They respect you because they were on your team or they've seen the 
			work that you put in, but you want to gain their respect in another 
			way from playing against them, like, ‘Man, this dude is really as 
			good as I thought he was,’" Jones said. 
			 
			Jacobs, for his part, is fourth in the NFL entering Week 17 with 
			1,216 rushing yards for the most by a Packers player in a season 
			since Ryan Grant (1,253) in 2009. 
			 
			Minimizing their mistakes 
			The earlier matchup this season featured seven combined turnovers, 
			four by the Packers and three by the Vikings. Both of these teams 
			are among the NFL's best in the turnover department, with Green Bay 
			at a plus-12 margin and Minnesota at a plus-10. The Packers have 
			allowed a total of three sacks and have committed just two turnovers 
			over their past five games. 
			 
			Picking up the Pace 
			The Vikings are eagerly anticipating the return of second-year 
			linebacker Ivan Pace, the sparkplug who has missed four games on 
			injured reserve with a hamstring strain. They’ll be cautious with 
			him and the tricky nature of that injury, but getting Pace back in 
			the middle of the action with fellow linebacker Blake Cashman would 
			be a big boost to the play-calling options for defensive coordinator 
			Brian Flores. 
			 
			“He flies around. When he blitzes, he’s as impactful as anybody, and 
			when you can really get him and Cash out there at the same time, 
			they both can really play to their strengths,” O’Connell said. 
			“They’re both really good blitzers. Cash is phenomenal in coverage 
			and reading the quarterback, and when you can kind of pair those 
			guys together, run and pass, that’s when we’re at our best.” 
			
			
			  
			Kicking correction 
			Brayden Narveson missed both of his field-goal attempts for Green 
			Bay, from 37 and 49 yards, in the two-point decision at Lambeau 
			Field in Week 4. The Packers released Narveson a couple of weeks 
			later in favor of 11-year veteran Brandon McManus, who has gone 16 
			of 17 on field-goal tries including game-winners as time expired 
			against Houston and Jacksonville. 
			
			
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