The slumping Minnesota Vikings don’t have much time to rejuvenate their fading hopes for a second straight postseason berth.
Minnesota (4-6) has lost four of its last five games. The Vikings' next shot to turn things around comes Sunday at Lambeau Field, which has been surprisingly friendly territory for them lately.
The Vikings have won at Green Bay each of the last two seasons. A victory Sunday would give the Vikings three straight road wins over the Packers (6-3-1) for the first time since 1991-93, a streak that included two games in Green Bay and one in Milwaukee.
“The atmosphere and the environment's fun,” Vikings safety Josh Metellus said. “Anytime you can go to a place and feel like it's you against the world, as a competitor, it lights something up in you.”
The Vikings swept their two regular-season matchups with the Packers last season, winning 31-29 at Green Bay and 27-25 at Minnesota. That gives the Packers plenty of incentive. As center Sean Rhyan said, “we owe them.”
“We’re a new team this year,” Rhyan said. “We’re going to go out there, play four quarters, and leave it all out there.”
Minnesota also is a new team in at least one respect. J.J. McCarthy has taken over as quarterback for Sam Darnold, who left for Seattle after throwing for 652 yards and six touchdowns with two interceptions in the Vikings’ two wins over the Packers last season.
McCarthy has completed just 52.9% of his passes with eight interceptions and six touchdowns, though he also has run for two scores.
“I kind of make the analogy of a cork about to come off a bottle, just understanding that it’s one to three little things that I need to change about my game that is going to make a huge difference in the outcome of every single drive in every game," McCarthy said. "I feel like it’s really close, but it all comes down to the consistency of the fundamentals in my game.”
This game starts a critical stretch for Green Bay.
The Packers beat the defending NFC North champion Detroit Lions on the season’s opening Sunday, but they haven’t played a divisional game since. The Packers' next three games are all against NFC North foes.
Green Bay went just 1-5 in divisional games last season.
“We lost to Minnesota twice last year,” Packers cornerback Keisean Nixon said. “We lost to Detroit twice last year and then split with Chicago. We’re 1-0 against Detroit. We’re ready to go 1-0 against Minnesota and then 1-0 against Chicago. Division games are the biggest games. It’s playoff atmosphere.”
Packers’ RB situation
Green Bay’s Josh Jacobs left the Packers’ 27-20 victory over the New York Giants with a knee bruise, leaving his status uncertain for Sunday’s game. Jacobs, who earned his third Pro Bowl selection last season, has rushed for 11 touchdowns this year to rank second in the NFL to the 15 from Indianapolis’ Jonathan Taylor.
Emanuel Wilson likely would get the bulk of the carries with help from Chris Brooks if Jacobs is unable to play. Wilson rushed for 40 yards and a touchdown on 11 carries against the Giants.
Watson’s emergence
Recommended for you
Packers quarterback Jordan Love is missing a couple of his favorite targets, as tight end Tucker Kraft’s season is over due to a torn anterior cruciate ligament and Jayden Reed hasn’t returned after surgeries on his shoulder and foot in September.
Christian Watson has picked up the slack since recovering from his own torn ACL. In his fourth game back from that injury, Watson caught two touchdown passes against the Giants, including the winner with 4:02 remaining.
Wilson’s return to Green Bay
Last year’s Vikings-Packers game at Lambeau Field marked a homecoming for Minnesota running back Aaron Jones, who had rushed for 5,940 yards with Green Bay from 2017-23.
This time it will be Vikings linebacker Eric Wilson making his return to Lambeau Field. Wilson began his career in Minnesota from 2017-20 but spent the last three seasons in Green Bay. He rejoined the Vikings this year and has a team-high 63 tackles.
Turnover troubles
Neither the Packers nor the Vikings are generating as many takeaways as they did last season.
Minnesota forced 33 turnovers to tie for the NFL lead last season, but the Vikings have just nine takeaways this season. The Vikings have picked off three passes to rank next-to-last in the NFL after having a league-high 24 last season.
“We’ll continue to emphasize it,” defensive coordinator Brian Flores said. “I think people say they come in bunches at times. I don’t necessarily believe in that. We’ve just got to continue to work at it.”
Green Bay has forced eight turnovers, including Evan Williams’ last-minute interception in the end zone to seal the win over the Giants. The Packers had 31 takeaways last season.
This game could represent an opportunity for Green Bay's defense in that regard.
Minnesota has committed 18 turnovers this season for the league’s second-highest total, behind only Seattle’s 20.
AP Pro Football Writer Dave Campbell contributed to this report.
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

(0) comments
Welcome to the discussion.
Log In
Keep the discussion civilized. Absolutely NO personal attacks or insults directed toward writers, nor others who make comments.
Keep it clean. Please avoid obscene, vulgar, lewd, racist or sexually-oriented language.
Don't threaten. Threats of harming another person will not be tolerated.
Be truthful. Don't knowingly lie about anyone or anything.
Be proactive. Use the 'Report' link on each comment to let us know of abusive posts.
PLEASE TURN OFF YOUR CAPS LOCK.
Anyone violating these rules will be issued a warning. After the warning, comment privileges can be revoked.