Isaiah Rodgers leads Vikings to blowout win over Bengals

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There were a few seconds left before halftime on Sunday afternoon at U.S. Bank Stadium and the Vikings were trying to gain a few extra yards to set up a shorter field goal attempt as time expired.

The camera briefly panned to cornerback Isaiah Rodgers on the sideline in that moment, inciting a massive roar from the home crowd, which actually prompted offensive players in the huddle to signal for everybody to quiet to down.

There was reason for the excitement as Rodgers had singlehandedly turned the game upside down with an unprecedented stretch of defensive dominance. He intercepted a ball and returned it for a touchdown, forced a fumble and returned it for a touchdown, and forced another fumble that set up a touchdown on the other end.

The playmaking from Rodgers helped the Vikings take complete control before halftime in what ending up being a 48-10 win over the Cincinnati Bengals.

How good was the game for Rodgers? He became the first player in NFL history to record a pair of defensive touchdowns and a pair of forced fumbles in a game. He just so happened to do it all before halftime.

Never mind that veteran quarterback Carson Wentz got the start and completed 14 of 20 passes for 173 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

Never mind that running back Jordan Mason provided a pulse in the run game, finishing with 16 carries for 116 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

Never mind that star receiver Justin Jefferson and star tight end T.J. Hockenson both reminded everybody how dynamic this passing attack can be at the peak of its powers.

This game belonged to Rodgers alone.

It helped that the Vikings got off to a fast start to take the edge off, as Wentz led an efficient opening drive, connecting with Jefferson a couple of times, then finding Josh Oliver for a touchdown to make it 7-0.

That set the stage for Rodgers.

As the Bengals were driving to potentially tie the game, the Vikings flipped the script as Rodgers intercepted a tipped pass from veteran safety Harrison Smith and took it 87 yards the other way for a touchdown to make it 14-0.

After both teams traded field goals to push the score to 17-3, Rodgers struck again, this time he forcing a fumble with a perfectly placed punch, scooping the ball off the ground, and racing 66 yards the other way for a touchdown to make it 24-3.

Though the game was already well in hand for the Vikings at that point, Rodgers wasn’t done, forcing another fumble on the next possession, which set up a touchdown from Mason to stretch the lead to 31-3.

As for that field goal attempt before halftime. It ended up being from 62 yards away and kicker Will Reichard connected to set a new franchise record and make it 34-3. It was that kind of game for the Vikings.

There were a few more times after halftime the game that the camera found Rodgers on the sideline. The cheers seemed to get louder each time.

A man who existed in relative obscurity has suddenly become a household name in Minnesota.

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Business People: St. Thomas Academy names new CFO and dean of students

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EDUCATION

Luke Marks

St. Thomas Academy, a Mendota Heights private preparatory school, announced Karsten Williams as chief financial officer and that Luke Marks has been promoted to dean of students. Williams most recently served as treasurer for Lime, and has held similar positions at Patterson Cos., Syngenta, G&K Services, Sleep Number and U.S. Bank. Marks, a 2011 St. Thomas grad, has served the school as a football and lacrosse coach and most recently as an English teacher since 2020.

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Deluxe, a Minneapolis-based business services and technology company, announced the election of Michelle T. Collins to its board of directors. Collins is a retired Deloitte partner and served as vice chair and a member of Deloitte’s U.S. board of directors.

HEALTH CARE

Essentia Health, a Duluth-based operator of hospitals and clinics, announced the following additions to its board of directors: Marc Adams, retired executive vice president and chief digital officer of Ecolab; Marci Knight, chief marketing officer at American Bank of the North; Dr. Josh Honeyman, emergency medicine physician at Essentia Health in Fargo, N.D., and Sister Jeanne Ann Weber, prioress at St. Scholastica Monastery.

HONORS

The Metropolitan Airports Commission announced that Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport has been named the best mega airport for customer and traveler satisfaction in the just-released J.D. Power 2025 North America Airport Satisfaction Study. MSP has earned the highest ranking in customer satisfaction for mega airports in three out of the past four years. …  The Associates of the Boston Public Library in Massachusetts announced Zarlasht Niaz of Minneapolis as its 2025-26 Writer-in-Residence, which includes a stipend of $70,000.

LAW

Dorsey & Whitney, Minneapolis, announced that Partner Peter Nelson was elected managing partner, succeeding Bill Stoeri. Nelson has been with the firm’s Minneapolis office since 2008. … Spencer Fane announced the addition of Heidi J. Bassett to the firm’s Minneapolis office as a partner in the Litigation and Dispute Resolution practice group.

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

Cirtec Medical, a Brooklyn Park-based outsourcing manufacturer of implantable devices and precision components, announced the appointment of Shar Matin as chief executive officer, effective Sept. 2. Matin most recently served as CEO of Cordis. The company also announced the addition of Chris Cleary to its board of directors. Cleary is CEO of Biomergence Capital and previously led global acquisition and investment strategy at Medtronic.

OPENINGS

Les Schwab Tires, a national chain, announced the opening of a location at 15026 Cimarron Ave., Rosemount. Jose Andres Montuya is store manager. … Twin Cities Premium Outlets, Eagan, announced the planned additions of shoe retailer Heydude and juvenile clothing retailer Children’s Place to the center.

ORGANIZATIONS

The Better Business Bureau Serving Minnesota and North Dakota announced the elections of Denise E. Williams and Armetha Pihlstrom to its board of directors. Williams is a professor and former department chair of Management, Entrepreneurship, and Human Resources at Metropolitan State University and founder and CEO of DEW Consulting Group. Pihlstrom is founder and CEO of Pihlstrom Consulting Group.

POLITICS

Cozen O’Connor Public Strategies, a government relations and communications affiliate of international law firm Cozen O’Connor, announced the addition of political strategist Julia Donnelly to its Minneapolis office. Donnelly has worked with Minnesota politicians, including Gov. Tim Walz, and has represented corporate clients and nonprofits before Minnesota’s state Legislature and regulatory bodies.

TECHNOLOGY

Infios, a Bloomington-based provider of supply chain software for business, announced the appointment of Aadil Kazmi as head of artificial intelligence (AI). Kazmi’s experience includes founding a Shopify-backed startup to leading AI deployments for Fortune 100 companies, including Amazon. … Atomic Data, a Minneapolis-based IT-as-a-service company with a focus on sports and large public venues, announced the hire of Jay Bozicevich in the dual roles of president of Atomic Data and chief operating officer of shared services over the three business units of Atomic Data, Game Day Technologies and Foundation Technologies. The firm also announced the promotion of Managing Director Matt Woestehoff to president of Foundation Technologies.

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EMAIL ITEMS to businessnews@pioneerpress.com.

Harrison Smith and Christian Darrisaw active for Vikings against Bengals

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In desperate need of a win, the Vikings got a major boost on Sunday morning when veteran safety Harrison Smith and star left tackle Christian Darrisaw were activated for a noon kickoff against the Cincinnati Bengals at U.S. Bank Stadium.

It will be the first time Smith and Darrisaw have played for the Vikings this season.

It’s been a slow build to this point, as Smith has been dealing with a personal health issue, and Darrisaw has been working through the final stages of his recovery from a torn anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments in his left knee.

In addition, edge rusher Andrew Van Ginkel was active and set to make his return after clearing concussion protocol.

The inactives for the Vikings include quarterback J.J. McCarthy, center Ryan Kelly, left tackle Justin Skule, receiver Tim Jones, tight end Nick Vannett, defensive tackle Elijah Williams, and quarterback Desmond Ridder, who was available on an emergency basis.

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Real World Economics: How bad is it going to get?

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Edward Lotterman

The American economy is in a “very dynamic state right now” — a phrase we used in Vietnam for situations where no one knew what the hell was going on — and many people are rightfully uneasy.

Interlocking issues engender many questions. Most are about how one might see sundry crises developing and how the government might respond, if at all, to such challenges.

Some concern the general economy.

Will stock, cryptocurrency or house prices fall? How much? How precipitously? Can the government — Trump administration or Federal Reserve — respond? Should they?

With high mortgage servicing costs on farmland after a historic land price boom, together with high input costs, sick exports, falling crop prices, does the farm sector face another wave of bankruptcies and foreclosures akin to the farm crisis of the 1980s?

More seriously, are we headed toward an economy-wide recession? Inflation? Both? How serious might these be? What can the Fed or the Treasury or other executive branch agencies do? How will markets respond?

Ratcheting up from all that, what is the likelihood that asset market declines in an uncertainty-plagued economy, with new institutions like crypto, might prompt established financial institution failures — as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers did in 2008 — that then lead to a 1929-level financial collapse?

Unfortunately, none of these concerns are baseless. In fact, odds that some of these crises will occur are frighteningly high. Moreover, the track record of predicting market downturns or financial collapses is pretty dismal. There are myriad cases of respected pundits lauding high stock prices just before the bottom drops out, or of respected economists continuing to deny the signs of a recession months after the point-of-no-return has passed, identified by rearview-mirror research as the starting point of a downturn, or Fed officials miscalculating long-term inflation as “transitory.”

That said, let’s look at some of the warning signs.

Stock market indexes are at historic highs after a long run. History and common sense tells us that they are likely to decline. The Fed just cut short-term interest rates — a move Wall Street had already priced in — but mortgage, business and farm loans are coming off years of being below long-term averages. These low rates were supported by large expansion of the money supply that, so far, has not caused accelerating inflation for consumers or producers.

But inflation-adjusted interest rates will return to the mean. The money supply probably will have to return to its historic balance with the value of output. I think odds are that the prices of corporate stocks, crypto, houses and farmland all will decline to some degree. Don’t ask how much.

What can government do about this? What should it? Realistically, not much. Reducing the enormous level of uncertainty that President Donald Trump continues to generate daily would be good for the economy as a whole and for those, like farmers and businesses, first-time home buyers and those nearing retirement, who need some trusted foundation on which to make long-term decisions. But can the leopard change his spots or even want to? I doubt it.

Yes, the Fed might be able to step in judiciously to prevent retreats from turning into routs. But the Fed has intervened so often in recent decades, after 9/11, during the 2007-09 mortgage crisis and during COVID, that its credibility and capabilities may be worn down. All a central bank can do is vary the money supply and during the last 20 years the Fed has fired most of its ammunition. The wolf is finally coming on federal budget deficits, China may be facing adjustments similar to Japan 40 years ago and Europe is mired in slow growth.

Unfortunately, an un-random sampling of financial pundits in print or online shows remarkable numbers who expect the Fed to step in to prevent asset prices falling, even if there is no systemic risk.

The same is true for farmers. Commodity traders and producer associations, input suppliers and grain traders all talk of another bailout as a done deal, to offset the impact of Trump’s tariffs on a bumper crop of supply. Assumptions are that it will happen soon along the lines of Trump’s in 2018-20, done at the decree of the president and without any congressional action drawing on an anachronistic replenishable agricultural slush fund dating to the 1930s.

The problem is that this will be a bandage on a suppurating wound. Farmers shot themselves with a hollow-pointed bullet by bidding up land prices beyond sustainable levels in response to two successive commodity price booms, the most recent one prompted by the war in Ukraine. That boom is ebbing just as the administration’s spastic trade offensives are hammering U.S. ag export prospects over the foreseeable future.

Economy-wide recession? There are “leading indicators” of recessions like an inverted “yield curve” that shows interest rates relative to loan durations. When interest rates on short-term loans “invert,” or rise above the traditionally higher longer-term ones, it means markets expect rates will fall, making short-term gains more profitable than long-term risk. This shows expectations of a downturn. But that is only one indicator and not a flawless one. Sophisticated econometric forecasting models are bad at calling inflection points, when a lasting upward trend bends into a lasting downward one or vice versa.

Gut instincts and history might tell us that stock, crypto and housing prices cannot retreat without collateral damage to the economy. Ditto for the deepest and widest trade war in 90 years. But when a recession might start, how deep or long it might be, and who it will most affect are unknown.

What about a financial sector crisis like the one that slowly unfolded over 2008 with aftershocks that went on for years? These are harder to predict than simple recessions. Both 1929 and 2008 involved financial innovations outrunning inadequate regulation. Are we seeing that now with crypto? In 1893, 1907, 1929 and now, there is an extreme concentration of wealth with few limits to the influence of that wealth on government.

Even Trump has lauded that we are entering a new Gilded Age (justifying his tariffs), but glancing over the fact that the previous Gilded Age was one of stagnant incomes and prospects for a great many while a relatively few basked in opulence. Yes, the comparisons abound, but maybe not to many working-class Trump voters’ likings. It is telling that a key economic indicator, “Personal Consumption Expenditures,” is now skewed by the fact that the richest 10% of all households account for 50% of all such personal consumption spending. Economists no longer can look at changes in this metric for clues on the overall economy because variations might be driven by the spending of a few hundred AI or hedge fund moguls.

So can the Fed save us from systemic collapse even if it cannot ward off garden variety drops in output, employment and incomes? One can only hope so.

If uneasy, history may provide equal insights with economics. Sample the following:

• Anyone concerned about the economy can benefit by reading John Kenneth Galbraith’s slim volume, “The Great Crash, 1929”. Galbraith is both insightful and droll.

• From there go to Charles Kindelberger’s classic “Manias, Panics, and Crashes.” The author is an expert on trade issues and on the Great Depression and is almost as good a writer as Galbraith.

• If you do want to dip into economics as well as history, sample Hyman Minsky’s “Stabilizing an Unstable Economy.” Minsky is insightful but not droll. But if you have a lot of money in cryptocurrencies, learning about the “Minsky moment” — bubbles suddenly implode — may be useful, or frightful.

• Finally, to understand the Trump administration, look for old Superman comics written by Otto Binder. Here, he introduces the evil doppelganger Bizarro and Bizarro World, in which everything is askew from where it should be. That is about as good a description of official Washington now as one can find.

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St. Paul economist and writer Edward Lotterman can be reached at stpaul@edlotterman.com.