This might be the end of the road for veteran safety Harrison Smith.
Though he hasn’t made any sort of formal announcement garnering a farewell tour — or really even hinted at his plans for the future — it wouldn’t surprise anybody if Smith decided to retire upon the conclusion of this season.
It’s fitting then that Smith turned back the clock on Christmas in what could end up being the penultimate game of his career.
Never mind that Smith is a 36-year-old who has seen pretty much everything there is to see in the NFL. He looked more like a 26-year-old in his prime while leading the Vikings to a 23-10 win over the Detroit Lions on Thursday afternoon at U.S. Bank Stadium.
The stats spoke for themsleves as Smith finished with one sack, two tackles for a loss, one interception, and three passes defended. That vintage performance from Smith served a catalyst for a dominant defensive display that featured the Vikings forcing six turnovers as the Lions suffered a loss that dropped them into the cellar of the NFC North.
That made up for a historically bad offensive output that included rookie quarterback Max Brosmer completing 8 of 15 passes for 41 yards while taking seven sacks for a loss of 48 yards. It marked the first time a team has won a game with negative net passing yards since the Houston Texans beat the Oakland Raiders on Dec. 3, 2006.
It wasn’t so much that Brosmer couldn’t get anything going when he dropped back to pass. It was that it started to feel like something bad was going to happen whenever the ball was in his hands.
Luckily for the Brosmer, defensive coordinator Brian Flores made life equally miserable for veteran quarterback Jared Goff on the other end. It looked like Goff’s brain melted as he threw two interceptions in the game and lost three fumbles.
The writing was on the wall from the onset as the Vikings took control after edge rusher Andrew Van Ginkel dove on a loose ball deep in enemy territory. A few plays later, veteran running back Aaron Jones plunged into the end zone, pushing the Vikings in front 7-0 in the early stages.
The only positive momentum the Lions could generate in the game came on an 80-yard drive that took 10 minutes, 8 seconds off the clock. It ended with Goff finding receiver Isaac TeSlaa for a touchdown that tied the game at 7-7.
That held up as the score at halftime with the Vikings only gaining 36 yards of total offense at that point in the game. It was the lowest yardage for any team leading or tied at halftime in the past 20 years.
The defensive dominance from the Vikings coming out of the locker room was something else. It started with cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. hauling in an interception before Smith made an incredible break on a ball to record an interception of his own.
Both of those takeaways led to long field goals from kicker Will Reichard as the Vikings went in front 13-7.
Just when it looked like the Lions might claw their way back into the game, the Vikings forced another turnover, this time with Van Ginkel and edge rusher Dallas Turner teaming up for a strip sack before defensive tackle Jalen Redmond recovered the fumble.
After the Lions netted a field goal to cut the deficit to 13-10, the Vikings put the game away when receiver Jordan Addison took a jet sweep 65 yards to th house to make it 20-10.
Fittingly, the Vikings finalized the score at 23-10 after one final turnover by the Lions.
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