Bills vs. Steelers: Key matchups to watch in Wild-Card round

#Bills vs. #Steelers: Key matchups to watch in Wild-Card round:

The Buffalo Bills will host the Pittsburgh Steelers in their upcoming Wild-Card matchup at Highmark Stadium.

The two teams have been rigorously preparing for the contest throughout the past week. Buffalo (11-6) and Pittsburgh (10-7) will think they know their upcoming opponent, inside and out, after all the practicing and studying they have put in.

Because of that, despite all the off-field talking, speculation and discussion, it will still be the games, within the game, that will make all the difference when it comes to the final outcome of this upcoming weekend.

With that, here are three key matchups to watch during Sunday’s Bills-Steelers contest:

39 days until Vikings season opener: Every player to wear No. 39

11 players have worn No. 39 for the Minnesota Vikings, including three players since 2020.

It’s the final countdown…

Well, sort of.

The Minnesota Vikings will kick off their 2023 regular season in 39 days at home against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sept. 10.

From now until then, we will take a trip down memory lane and count each day by revisiting the players that have worn that specific jersey number.

With 39 days until kickoff, here’s a look at every player to wear No. 39 with the Vikings (via Pro Football Reference):

List of Vikings free agents who remain unsigned

After the first few weeks of free agency, the Minnesota Vikings still have multiple free agents on the market.

The Minnesota Vikings have had a pretty active free agency thus far. They spent a lot of resources on Josh Oliver, Marcus Davenport and Byron Murphy Jr. and have also done a great job in re-signing their talent

Free agency isn’t over yet and the Vikings still have multiple roster spots open and there are still players on last year’s roster. Here are the remaining Vikings free agents.

Vikings Wire staff: 1 player the Vikings shouldn’t re-sign

The staff at Vikings Wire each picked one player they don’t want the purple and gold to re-sign this offseason

The Minnesota Vikings entered this offseason with 25 free agents. They added a couple of them to futures contracts, lost OG Kyle Hinton to the Atlanta Falcons and re-signed both exclusive rights free agents Blake Brandel and Khyiris Tonga.

As it sits currently, the Vikings have a lot of decisions to make when it comes to free agency. They are nearly $24 million over the salary cap and will need to find ways to save money while also having capital to go and bring in talent.

Last week as a staff, we looked at the players that we wanted the Vikings to re-sign, including one from today’s list. Here are four players that we identified that we don’t want the Vikings to re-sign this offseason.

Vikings projected to get one compensatory pick in 2023 NFL draft

The Vikings will gain at least one draft pick this year

The Minnesota Vikings currently have four picks in the 2023 NFL draft — one each in the first, third, fourth and fifth rounds. They are also projected to receive a compensatory draft pick.

Over The Cap compensatory pick expert Nick Korte has the Vikings projected to receive a fifth-round pick for the loss of tight end Tyler Conklin to the New York Jets in free agency last offseaon.

They were initially slated to get a fifth-round pick and sixth-round pick, but the bonus structure for cornerback Chandon Sullivan might have knocked them out from getting that second compensatory selection for losing safety Xavier Woods to the Carolina Panthers.

With the Vikings having such limited draft capital to begin with, missing out on an extra compensatory selection is an unfortunate loss. Announced in March, the compensatory selections will be distributed to teams based on how many unrestricted free agents they lose.

It is worth noting that this list is a projection, but Korte is very plugged in and usually is spot-on with his projections.

Vikings players react to the Packers being eliminated from the playoffs

The Packers saw their season end and it was glorious

The Minnesota Vikings clinched the third seed in the NFC with a 29-13 win over the Chicago Bears on Sunday, but it was the Sunday night game featuring the other two NFC North teams that also had an impact on the playoffs.

The Green Bay Packers had an opportunity to make the playoffs with a win and the Detroit Lions only had the ability to eliminate the Packers from contention with the Seattle Seahawks having won earlier on Sunday.

The Lions pulled it off and beat the Packers in Lambeau Field by a score of 20-16 with a Jared Goff fourth down conversion to D.J. Chark.

After the game, a few Vikings players went to Twitter to celebrate the Packers loss and it was glorious.

Fans got in on the action as well and it got even better.

The Packers had their Super Bowl last week only to have the Lions beat them twice. A shame, really.

Vikings news roundup: Fines, behind enemy lines and more

Get caught up on all the news before the Vikings take on the Giants

It’s finally game day as the Minnesota Vikings are hosting the New York Giants on Saturday afternoon in the first-ever Winter Whiteout.

The game is set to be a fun one as the Vikings have just clinched the NFC North and are still playing for the two seed while the Giants could theoretically clinch their first playoff spot since 2016 with a win and some help.

Friday is usually a slow news day, but there were plenty of topics that ended up being worth discussing.

Get yourself caught up on the day’s news prior to kickoff.

Vikings’ Chandon Sullivan, Colts Stephon Gilmore fined from Saturday

The corners were both fined for different infractions

Saturday’s historic comeback against the Indianapolis Colts wasn’t all sunshine and roses for the Minnesota Vikings. The officials ended up taking two scoop-and-score touchdowns off of the board from cornerback Chandon Sullivan.

The first one the referees ruled that Michael Pittman Jr. had his forward progress stopped. The second one was when Deon Jackson blatantly fumbled standing up and Sullivan did not act kindly to that, removing his helmet in disgust. That prompted a fine for his unsportsmanlike conduct.

It wasn’t the only fine from Saturday’s game, as Stephon Gilmore also received one. His fine was for this hit on Justin Jefferson.

The hit was one that wasn’t awful in comparison to others that have received fines, but you can’t hit a defenseless receiver like that. It earned him a fine of $15,914.

Officials explain odd calls on Vikings CB Chandon Sullivan’s two reversed touchdowns

Vikings cornerback Chandon Sullivan had two touchdowns called back by officials against the Colts. Here’s how it was all explained.

Not that it mattered in the end, as the Minnesota Vikings engineered the greatest comeback in NFL history in their 39-36 overtime win over the Indianapolis Colts, but the Vikings also had two fumble return touchdowns by cornerback Chandon Sullivan reversed in this game, and neither reversal made a lot of sense.

With 7:03 left in the first half, and the Colts already up 23-0, Indianapolis quarterback Matt Ryan threw a short pass to receiver Michael Pittman, who fumbled at the Indianapolis 40-yard line. At that point, cornerback Chandon Sullivan picked the ball up and rumbled for a touchdown.

Or so he thought. Referee Tra Blake ruled that Pittman’s forward progress had been stopped, negating the touchdown.

“The ruling on the field was that the runner’s forward progress had been stopped,” Blake told pool reporter Chip Scoggins of the Minneapolis Star Tribune after the game. “Once he’s wrapped up by the defender and his forward progress is stopped, the play is over. So, any action that happens subsequently after that is nullified because the play is dead. That was the ruling on the field.”

Sounds good, except that’s not what happened. On the replay, you can see that Sullivan had Pittman in the grasp, Pittman was arching forward, trying to make extra yards, and it was the hit by linebacker Brian Asamoah that rocked Pittman back. Sullivan stripped the ball just after Pittman moved backward, so we don’t actually know whether Pittman would have kept trying to make additional yards were it not for that hit. If you want to argue that Asamoah’s hit stopped Pittman’s forward progress, that’s an entirely different matter.

There is also the small matter of when the whistle was blown, signifying a dead ball.

“We see plays where running backs extend plays or plays not be blown as fast,” Scoggins asked Blake. “How do you determine when forward progress is? Is there a certain amount of time?

“Forward progress ends once the runner is not making progress towards his goal line any longer. Once we determine that, the play is over.”

Blake also confirmed that forward progress calls are not reviewable, for whatever nonsensical reason.

Sullivan’s bad luck with this particular crew was only beginning. With 3:28 left in regulation, Indy running back Deon Jackson clearly fumbled at his own 38-yard line. Sullivan picked the ball up, and appeared to score another return touchdown.

No dice, as Blake once again ruled against him. This time, the call was that Jackson was down by contact, which clearly wasn’t the case. Upon review, the Vikings were awarded the ball, but there was nothing to be done about the touchdown that should have counted and didn’t. The score was 36-28 Colts at that point, so Blake and his crew were pretty fortunate that the comeback that happened, happened.

“The original ruling on the field was that the runner that was in the pile was down by contact,” NFL Senior Vice President of Officiating Walt Anderson told Scoggins. “Subsequently, a Minnesota player got it back. We had a look and could tell right away that the runner was still up when the ball came loose. We had a good view that it was a clear recovery by Minnesota No. 39.  But the ruling on the field was the runner was down by contact. There was a subsequent loose ball and then a recovery by Minnesota and an advance. Minnesota challenged that and by the time they challenged, we had good views. We had an expedited review to announce that it was a fumble, and we had a clear recovery. But all we could do was give Minnesota the ball at the spot of the recovery.

“It’s technically a dead ball when the officials rule that he’s down by contact. However, the replay rules do allow you to award the defense the ball if that recovery is clearly a fumble and if that recovery is in the immediate continuing action from when the ball comes loose. But you cannot give an advance.”

After the ruling, Sullivan was handed a 15-yard unsportsmanlike contact penalty for taking his helmet off and throwing it on the field, and who on earth could have blamed him?

This, Blake and his crew seemed to see unusually clearly.

“I could feel why he was so frustrated.,” Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell said of Sullivan. “The first one, they just ruled forward progress stopped. When they do that, doesn’t matter if I agree or disagree with the call. It’s out of my hands at that point. I cannot challenge that. Then I was able to challenge the other one and get that ball out, get that ball back. Some of those stops defensively we had, we just kept on urging them to keep going at the football, see if we can change the game, which we thought we did at that one point, but unfortunately we didn’t. Sully is one of those guys that keeps battling. Veteran player, smart, tough. You don’t win a game like this and hold the team to three points in the second half without guys like Sully gutting it out.”

The NFL has discussed points of emphasis over the years regarding officials holding their whistles on fumbles they think aren’t fumbles to avoid this exact scenario, but we are where we are with that.

Referee Tra Blake explains 2 Chandon Sullivan TDs called back

The explanations make sense, but they don’t answer the root of the issue

There was some frustrating officiating on Saturday afternoon, especially if you are a fan of the Minnesota Vikings. Not only were there some poor calls, but most importantly, the Vikings had two touchdowns on fumble recoveries by Chandon Sullivan that were arguably unfair calls.

One of those was Michael Pittman Jr. who was deemed to have stopped forward progress and the other was late in the fourth quarter when Deon Jackson fumbled it while standing up in traffic and the whistle was blown dead.

The PWFA pool report came out where they interviewed referee Tra Blake and the NFL’s SVP of Officiating Walt Anderson and they walked through what happened, and it all made complete sense. Pittman Jr. was deemed to have stopped moving forward and they thought Jackson was down (when it was clear he wasn’t).

Surprisingly though, nobody asked why.

Why was the whistle blown so quickly on both? That’s the issue here but the question wasn’t asked and quite frankly, it’s disappointing that it wasn’t. That’s what everyone wants to know.

In the end, it didn’t make a difference as the Vikings still scored enough points to win the football game.