The Vikings, struggling with their offense, couldn’t match the passing success of the Eagles today in a costly 28-22 home loss at U.S. Bank Stadium.
Minnesota, now 3-3, was playing at home for the first time since September 21. The Vikings play at the Chargers Thursday night and two weeks from now at the Lions before coming back to Minneapolis on November 9 to play the Ravens.
Philadelphia quarterback Jalen Hurts threw three touchdown passes including two to wide receiver A.J. Brown. Hurts completed 19 of 23 passes for 326 yards while avoiding multiple potential sacks.
“We couldn’t do anything today to slow that man down,” radio analyst Pete Bercich said of Hurts on the Vikings Radio Network.
Coming into the game the prevailing thought was the Vikings were in for a long day if they couldn’t control the Eagles’ running attack led by All-World Saquon Barkley. However, the Vikings held Barkley to 44 yards on 18 rushing attempts and in total gave up 55 yards running.
Blake Cashman, Vikings linebacker back today after a four games absence because of a hamstring, said the defense “loaded the box” to control the run game. However, Hurts put the hurt on the Purple with his arm.
“He had too much time to throw,” Cashman also said on KFAN Radio after the game.
That left the Vikings secondary vulnerable. Isaiah Rodgers got beat on two touchdowns and the other corner Byron Murphy was out of position on the third.
The fourth Eagle score of the day came on a 42-yard interception score by linebacker Jaylx Hunt. The second quarter pick came off an errant throw by Minnesota quarterback Carson Wentz. That mistake made the score 14-3 Eagles.
On the next Vikings’ possession Wentz threw another pick on a day where his play improved in the second half after Minnesota trailed 14-6 after two quarters. For the game Wentz was 26 of 42 for 313 yards.
It was a frustrating day for the Vikings offense which made six trips into the red zone but produced just one touchdown, a one-yard third quarter run by Jordan Mason that made the score 21-16 in favor of Philly. Otherwise, the Vikings had to settle for five field goals by Will Reichard, a career record for one game.
Wentz, playing with a painful left shoulder, made a couple of gutsy scrambles on the Vikings’ last drive of the game when they were trailing 28-19. Inside the red zone it appeared he completed a 15-yard touchdown pass to tight end T.J. Hockenson, but the initial call was reversed with the ruling he didn’t control the football. The Vikings settled for a field goal to cut the Eagle lead to 28-22/
Bercich described the controversial call as “unbelievable” while others in Vikings nation, including in the locker room, would have used words frowned upon on the Sabbath and the other six days of the week.
Worth Noting
The Golden Gophers played their best game and earned their biggest win of the season Friday night defeating No. 25 ranked Nebraska, 24-6. In his ninth season, P.J. Fleck set a school coaching record in total career wins over top 25 teams with seven. The other victories are:
2024: over No. 11 ranked USC and No. 24 Illinois.
2023: No. 24 Iowa.
2021: No. 21 Wisconsin.
2019: No. 5 Penn State and No. 9 Auburn.
The Timberwolves Anthony Edwards, who at 24 aspires to be the best player in the NBA, is ranked No. 7 by both Bleacher Report and CBS among top players in the league going into the season. ESPN and Sports Illustrated have him at No. 6, with The Ringer giving him the No. 5 spot.
Edwards has some maturing to do on and off the court. He led the NBA in technical fouls last season.
The Wolves see two of the best players in the world during the first eight days of the season which begins Wednesday night in Portland. Minnesota faces two matchups with Laker superstar Luka Doncic, with the first in Los Angles Friday night and October 29 in Minneapolis. Three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets are in town October 27 to face their Northwest Division rival Wolves.
The Gophers’ Grayson Grove, the 6-9 and 220-pound Alexandria native, has been a power forward in the past but is now switching to center in a reserve role. He will be undersized against Big Ten beasts and admitted that even in practice the “physicality part” is challenging. Grove believes his mobility and outside shooting can provide a change of pace on the floor against opponents to help the team. The redshirt freshman didn’t play last season.
Sportswriters’ birthdays: Gregg Wong, struggling with Alzheimer’s, turned 79 last week. His colleague for years at the Pioneer Press, Patrick Reusse, was 80 on Friday.
Reusse, with the Star Tribune for most of his career, was a fellow columnist with Sid Hartman who died five years ago yesterday, October 18, 2020. Hartman would be 105 if still alive.
Former Vikings quarterback Sam Darnold, now with the 4-2 Seahawks, can on Monday night against the Texans achieve the highest passer rating ever by an NFL player in his first four home games, surpassing Pro Football Hall of Famer Kurt Warner (129.1 rating with the St. Louis Rams).

No Hay Problema: The Amazing Story of Tony Oliva is on the book market. Authored by Tony’s son, Ric Oliva, this is a children’s book talking about the Hall of Famer’s journey as an immigrant from Cuba and the obstacles he faced. The Olivas will be at the Fan HQ Ridgedale store from 6 to 6:45 p.m. Tuesday to meet the public and sell copies of the book.
ESPN.com’s recent listing of its top100 NHL players had seven from the Stars, six from the defending champion Panthers and three from the Wild. Kirill Kaprizov was No. 15, Brock Faber No. 49 and Matt Boldy No. 53. https://www.espn.com/nhl/story/_/id/46582574/nhl-2025-26-rankings-top-100-players-predictions-stats
The future of the University of Minnesota’s Les Bolstad Golf Course remains in limbo. The Board of Regents has been notified of the school’s intent to sell the 140.9-acres Falcon Heights property, but other public entities have passed on the purchase opportunity and there remains strong pushback from the public. As of several days ago over 1,000 signatures had been recorded on a petition in opposition to selling the legacy course. https://www.change.org/p/save-les-bolstad-golf-course-for-future-generations
Brian Cosgriff, who before retiring this spring from girls’ high school basketball coaching had won eight state titles, was asked by Sports Headliners to name the top teams for the 2025-2026 season. He listed Hopkins, Minnetonka, Providence Academy and Lakeville North.
Best players? Senior Maddyn Greenway, Providence Academy; junior Erma Walker, Hopkins; senior Lanelle Wright, Minnetonka; senior Tori Oehrlein, Crosby-Ironton; sophomore Ari Peterson, Minnetonka; senior Cail Jahnke, St. Michael-Albertville.
Cosgriff, 63, is teaching PE at DeLaSalle High School and is not interested in coaching again, and is happy being “done at 3 o’clock” each day.