Seattle, WA
Sam Darnold and Justin Jefferson lead surging Vikings past Seahawks 27-24
SEATTLE (AP) — Sam Darnold connected with a well-covered Justin Jefferson with 3:51 left for his third TD pass of the game, and the Minnesota Vikings outlasted Geno Smith and the Seattle Seahawks 27-24 on Sunday to keep pace with Detroit for the top spot in the NFC.
After the Seahawks took the lead on Smith’s third TD pass, Darnold led a 30-second drive that was aided by a 15-yard facemask penalty. He stepped up in a collapsing pocket and launched a deep ball that Jefferson hauled in just short of the goal line with two defenders closing in.
Jefferson finished with 10 catches for 148 yards and two touchdowns as the Vikings (13-2) won their eighth straight. If they can beat Green Bay and Detroit to close out the season, they will earn the top seed in the conference and a first-round playoff bye.
Darnold threw for multiple touchdowns for the 11th time this season and more than 200 yards for the 10th. He finished 22 of 35 for 246 yards, helping Kevin O’Connell become the first Vikings coach with multiple 13-win seasons.
Not bad for a veteran who was signed to a one-year deal as a placeholder after the Vikings drafted J.J. McCarthy, who suffered a season-ending knee injury in the preseason.
Smith threw for 314 yards and his 4-yard TD pass to AJ Barner gave the Seahawks a 24-20 lead with 4:41 left, but he couldn’t rally Seattle (8-7) after Jefferson’s TD catch. Jason Myers missed a 60-yard field goal try after the two-minute warning, and Theo Jackson picked off Smith with 49 seconds left to seal it.
The Seahawks have lost two straight after a four-game winning streak and fell one game behind the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC West.
Smith also had scoring passes of 25 yards to DK Metcalf and 18 yards to Jaxon Smith-Njigba. He was also intercepted twice. Smith-Njigba had eight receptions for 95 yards.
Minnesota improved to 8-1 in one-score games this season.
The Vikings ran a 12-play opening drive, consuming 6:54 on the way to a 7-0 lead on Darnold’s 5-yard pass to Jordan Addison, who was open in the middle of the end zone for his third catch of the series.
Smith found Metcalf in man-to-man coverage with Stefon Gilmore early in the second quarter in the right corner of the end zone. It was Metcalf’s first TD reception since Week 7.
Darnold responded two drives later to make it 14-7 on a 14-yard pass to Jefferson over Tre Brown, who was left in single coverage on the All-Pro’s corner route.
Joshua Metellus pressured Smith on the first play of Seattle’s ensuing drive and Dallas Turner stepped in front of a pass to Noah Fant for an interception that set up Minnesota at the Seattle 31. The Vikings settled for Will Reichard’s 52-yard field goal after Boye Mafe sacked Darnold.
Smith drove the Seahawks 88 yards in 1:05 on five plays to cut the lead to 17-14 with 20 seconds left in the half. He found Smith-Njigba three times on the drive. The first, a 13-yard reception, put the second-year player over 1,000 yards receiving for the first time. The second, for 25 yards to the Vikings 18, drew a biceps flex from Smith-Njigba for the cheering crowd. And the third went for the score.
Receiving milestones
Metcalf shook off a long scoreless streak to catch his 47th career TD with the Seahawks. That helped him pass Hall of Fame receiver Steve Largent and move into sixth on the team’s career touchdown list.
Smith-Njigba became the 10th Seahawks receiver to record a 1,000-yard season.
Injuries
Vikings: S Harrison Smith (foot) was inactive, missing a game for the first time since 2022.
Seahawks: Placed LB Trevis Gipson (ankle) on injured reserve. … RB Kenneth Walker III left the game with an ankle injury.
Up next
Vikings: Host Green Bay next Sunday.
Seahawks: At Chicago on Thursday.
___
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
Seattle, WA
Kraken (11-6-6) vs. Oilers (10-10-5) | Seattle Kraken
One: Pounce on a division rival – It’s no secret the Edmonton Oilers aren’t exactly where they want to be at this point. They’ve dropped four of their last five games and have given up a ton of goals in doing so. This home-and-away series for the Kraken five days apart is the chance to gain some Pacific Division separation.
Doing so will require taking at least three of a possible four points in the two games, and that starts at Climate Pledge Arena, where they’ve beaten the Oilers in their last two head-to-head meetings, including just five weeks ago. The Kraken are three points ahead of their 10-10-5 division counterparts with two games in hand, so you can see how valuable gaining some additional ground might be.
Nobody really factored the Kraken in for a playoff spot this season, and to gain one, they’ll need to slip into a power vacuum somewhere. No better one than this. Do not be fooled: The Oilers have pulled early-season stumbles the past few years ahead of roaring back into their usual playoff positioning come January and February.
Three years ago, the playoff-bound Kraken headed into Edmonton for a mid-January contest with a five-point lead on the Oilers and a chance to stretch it to seven. Alas, they lost and the Oilers soon roared on by them in the standings and topped it all off by winning 18 of 21 down the stretch to finish nine points ahead of a pretty good 100-point Kraken team.
Last season, starting on New Year’s Eve, the Oilers went on a run that saw them win eight of nine and 12 of 15. Two seasons ago, they were 5-12-1 just before Thanksgiving, then won eight in a row and came late December, embarked on an epic 16-game win streak that helped propel them to the playoffs and the Stanley Cup Final.
That isn’t to say the Oilers will automatically rebound this season. But recent history tells us it’s probably best not to tempt fate with the defending two-time Western Conference champs and to pounce on them now while you still have a chance. Otherwise, odds are pretty good they’ll find another gear in weeks ahead.
Two: Score some goals – This game essential risks getting repetitive but to pounce on the Oilers, the Kraken will need to do something other teams have frequently managed and that’s putting pucks past their goalies. While the Kraken took more shots on goal in a 3-2 loss to Dallas the other night, they didn’t score enough. One goal every 14 shots still won’t cut it in a league where an average team needs just nine or 10 to strike paydirt.
It doesn’t help that the Kraken on Friday announced that Jaden Schwartz, tied for the team lead with eight goals, is now out an estimated six weeks with a lower-body injury.
“That’s a big one,” Kraken head coach Lane Lambert said after Friday’s practice.
The good news is that winger Kaapo Kakko practiced Friday without a red no-contact jersey and could be back for Saturday’s game. Kakko was practicing on a line with Berkly Catton and Freddy Gaudreau, which could make for an interesting third trio if it holds.
“I think he’s progressing nicely, he’s getting closer – which is nice to see,” Lambert said, not tipping his hand as to whether Kakko will play against Edmonton.
Jared McCann also got to shake some rust off – as well as a tooth – his first game back against Dallas and now the team needs him to keep providing an offensive boost.
“We have to have other guys step up,” Lambert said. “Not only on the ice but off the ice.”
The Kraken somehow went 2-1-1 on their recent road trip despite averaging just two goals per game. They’ve also now gone five straight games without scoring more than twice in regulation and that’s somewhat different from the opening six weeks or so when they were scoring at least three goals on a more frequent basis.
Three goals in regulation will get this defensive-minded team a win almost every time as the Kraken are 8-0-3 in such situations. Two goals is a dice roll usually involving some overtime luck to generate points, as they are 2-6-3 when failing to score at least three in regulation.
So, that one added goal makes all the difference. The Kraken certainly took more shots against Dallas. Now, it’s a matter of converting those chances. The team has talked about getting the puck out of their own end more quickly to increase their offensive zone time and did do that against the Stars on Wednesday night. But whichever way you slice it, once the Kraken do gain possession somebody needs to put the puck in the net more often.
Three: Know the foe – If these weren’t the two-time defending Cup finalists, you could almost say the Oilers are the perfect tonic for what ails the Kraken offense. They’ve given up 25 goals in their last five games, including 22 of them in four losses that span.
Dallas hung an eight-spot on Edmonton earlier in the week and that came just 17 days after Colorado scored nine times on them. Not surprisingly, the Oilers are second-worst in the league in goals given up per game at 3.72 and worst in save percentage at .868.
Stuart Skinner usually bears the brunt of netminding criticism for the Oilers, and this season is no exception as he’s played twice as many games as backup Calvin Pickard in posting a record of 8-7-3 with a goals against average of 3.18 and a save percentage of .878. But numbers-wise, Pickard has been even worse with a 2-3-2 mark, a 4.04 goals against average and .847 save percentage.
Still, the usual Oilers caveats apply. You don’t give their best offensive players a chance to bury you, starting with Connor McDavid and his team-leading 34 points, Leon Draisaitl and his club-best 14 goals and Evan Bouchard – whose 21 points as a defenseman is seven better than any active Kraken player now that Schwartz is out.
Journeyman Jack Roslovic, 28, is having himself a season as well, tied with McDavid for second most goals on the team at 10 after coming over as a last-minute depth addition out of training camp on a one-year, $1.5 million deal after previously going unsigned all summer as a free agent forward.
Still, the Oilers don’t feel as deep offensively as in the past, and that shows in their 3.08 goals per game scored – only 17th of 32 teams. It gets even more concerning once you move past their third-ranked power play unit and discover they’ve averaged only 2.4 goals per game in even-strength play. For context, that’s not all that much better than the Kraken’s 2.04 goals per contest at 5-on-5. We’ve discussed Kraken offensive shortcomings ad nauseam, but these are the Oilers we’re talking about! They used to be lethal in any offensive situation. Not so thus far.
A big reason has been the Oilers’ limiting shots to the perimeter and not getting in tight for “greasy goals” from high-danger chances. That plays right into the Kraken’s defensive strategy and should bode well for the home team if it continues.
Projected lines (not official):
Marchment-Beniers-Eberle
McCann-Stephenson-Tolvanen
Kakko-Gaudreau-Catton
Kartye-Wright-Winterton
Dunn-Larsson
Lindgren-Montour
Evans-Oleksiak
Daccord
Seattle, WA
3 numbers that matter as Seattle Seahawks’ JSN chases history
For a second time this year, Seattle sports fans are watching a local player chase down an unbelievable record.
Record-chasing JSN could be NFL’s first 2,000-yard receiver
This summer it was Cal Raleigh’s race to set a new record for home runs by a catcher. Then he smashed it and advanced to 60, becoming one of just seven players ever to do so.
This fall, Seattle Seahawks fans are watching as third-year receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba isn’t just chasing the NFL record for receiving yards in a season that’s stood for 13 years, but also has a chance to do something we’ve never seen before: 2,000 receiving yards in a single season.
Here are three numbers you need to know as JSN chases the record.
Your first number that matters is: 1,964
Let’s get the most obvious one out of the way since you’ll be hearing it repeated frequently for the next six weeks.
Detroit Lions receiver Calvin Johnson set the current record (1,964 yards) back in 2012. He became the first player to touch 1,900 yards in a season, and since then just one player has come close – current Seahawks receiver Cooper Kupp, who had 1,947 for the Los Angeles Rams in 2021.
Interestingly, a few players — including Smith-Njigba — have outpaced Johnson at this point in the season. Previous names have, obviously, failed to surpass him. But could JSN?
JSN has 1,313 yards right now, just a bit over the 1,257 yards Johnson had through Week 12. But not did Johnson set the record back when the season was just 16 games instead of 17, but his pace improved rapidly in the second half; he added nearly 500 yards between Week 8 and Week 12 alone.
Producing at a similar pace to JSN was Tyreek Hill in 2023, who hit the 1,324 mark at the same point in the season for Miami. Perhaps it was a nagging ankle injury in December, but Hill averaged under 100 yards in the final four games of the season and finished with 1,799 yards (seventh place all-time).
Your second number that matters is: 109
Now we’re just doing math. To break Johnson’s record by one yard, JSN would need to average 109 yards per game (108.6) in the final six weeks. Averaging 115 (687 yards for the next six games) would put him at 2,000.
Two of Seattle’s next six opponents are bottom-10 defenses against the pass this year: the 49ers, who rank 26th (240 passing yards allowed per game), and the Colts, who are 28th (245 passing yards allowed per game). They’re 11th and 12th, respectively, in fantasy points allowed to receivers.
Only one of the Seahawks’ remaining opponents is a top-10 defense against the pass: the Vikings, who they play Sunday.
Your third number that matters is: 1
This is less about JSN chasing history and more about one of the weird quirks with this specific bit of history.
Of the top 10 players in single-season receiving yards during the Super Bowl era, just one has made it to a Super Bowl (ironically, it’s JSN’s teammate Kupp). Johnson’s Lions finished 4-12. Julio Jones’ Falcons didn’t make the playoffs, nor did Isaac Bruce’s 1995 Rams (though both players would eventually make a Super Bowl with those teams).
The 8-3 Seahawks feel like a sure thing for the playoffs, but just how far could they get? Could Smith-Njigba, like his teammate, have the opportunity to chase history and a Lombardi in the same season?
More on the Seattle Seahawks
• Seahawks make a flurry of roster moves, including Quandre Diggs’ return
• Seahawks sign former Rams RB Cam Akers to active roster
• Rams swoop in to take CB Derion Kendrick from Seahawks
• Seahawks legend Earl Thomas named Pro Football HOF semifinalist
• Pass rush bounces back but Seattle Seahawks looking for more
Seattle, WA
Dallas Stars beat Seattle Kraken 3-2 after late tie-breaker
Dallas defenseman Vladislav Kolyachonok broke a tie with 5:44 left with his first goal of the season to help the Stars beat the Seattle Kraken 3-2 on Wednesday night.
The right-handed shooting Kolyachonok beat goalie Joey Daccord with a long, low wrist shot from near the left boards.
Roope Hintz and Esa Lindell also scored for Dallas, and Casey DeSmith made 26 saves. Coming off an 8-3 victory Tuesday night in Edmonton, the Stars took seven of eight points on a four-game trip. At 15-5-4, they are second in the NHL, five points behind Colorado.
Brandon Montour and Vince Dunn scored for Seattle.
Daccord stopped 18 shots. He and the Kraken were coming off a 1-0 shootout loss at the New York Islanders on Sunday night.
Dunn tied it at 2 for Seattle 19 seconds into the third period.
Hintz opened the scoring at 5:52 of the first, and Montour tied it at 9:06. Lindell put Dallas back in front at 6:13 of the second.
Stars: Host Utah on Friday night.
Kraken: Host Edmonton on Saturday.
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