Ryan Longwell

1 January 2009

I'm a bit late on commenting on the Vikings' last-second win over the New York Giants to catapult them into the playoffs on Sunday, but I do want to put in my two cents worth on the Vikings' effort.

Continue reading "Vikings 20, Giants 19: Getting the Job Done"

Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet

20 October 2008

table 48-31 lead.

Although the Vikes did make a late charge to try and tie the score (thanks to a Ryan Longwell field goal and a TD pass from Frerotte to Berrian), the game ended when Frerotte (after being sacked on the previous play) threw his fourth pick of the contest with roughly a minute left to play, giving the Bears that final 48-41 victory.

Continue reading "Wek 7 Review: How Did We Lose? Let ..."

Posted by Zach Koenig | 2 comments

13 October 2008

the Berrian long score, the Vikings punted, fumbled (Adrian Peterson) in Lions territory, and had a Ryan Longwell field goal blocked after an offensive penalty made the kick more difficult than it needed to be.  So, after one more drive ending with Chris Kluwe, the Vikings got the ball with 4:41 remaining in the game, down by a 10-9 score.  The Vikings moved to nearly midfield with ease, but then a screen pass to Peterson (5-yard loss) and a false start penalty set up a 2nd-and-20 down and distance situation.  On the next play, Frerotte uncorked a deep bomb (in the direction of Berrian, if I'm not mistaken), and while the catch wasn't made, pass-interference was called on the Lions' defender, putting the ball at the Lions' 26 yard line.  After reviewing the replay, it was clear that there was minimal (if any) actual interference on the play, so the Vikings essentially caught a game-winning break, as a few plays later Longwell knocked the game-winning kick through the uprights.

Continue reading "Despite Safety, Win Over Lions Is Anything But"

Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet

8 October 2008

ze (or did the Vikings succeed?!).

For the rest of the first quarter, each kicker (Grammatica and Ryan Longwell) traded field goals to make the score 10-10.  Of course, this likely did little to placate Vikings fans, as it was the WAY in which the teams were moving the ball that seemed to indicate who was the better team.  While the Saints were moving the ball down the field with ease (only to inexplicably stall out), the Vikings would have to fight for every yard just to claw themselves into field goal range.  It seemed for all the world as if the Saints would eventually stop shooting themselves in the foot and start racking up the score.

Continue reading "Crazy"

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