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词条 2005 Minnesota Vikings season
释义

  1. Offseason

     2005 Draft 

  2. Preseason

  3. Regular season

     Schedule  Game summaries  Week 1: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers  Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals  Week 3: vs. New Orleans Saints  Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons  Week 6: at Chicago Bears  Week 7: vs. Green Bay Packers  Week 8: at Carolina Panthers  Week 9: vs. Detroit Lions  Week 10: at New York Giants  Week 11: at Green Bay Packers  Week 12: vs. Cleveland Browns  Week 13: at Detroit Lions  Week 14: vs. St. Louis Rams  Week 15: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers  Week 16: at Baltimore Ravens  Week 17: vs. Chicago Bears  Standings 

  4. Statistics

     Team leaders  League rankings 

  5. Personnel

     Staff  Final roster 

  6. References

{{Infobox NFL season
| team = Minnesota Vikings
| year = 2005
| record = 9–7
| division_place = 2nd NFC North
| coach = Mike Tice
| general manager = Rob Brzezinski
| owner = Zygi Wilf
| stadium = Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome
| playoffs = did not qualify
| uniform =
| shortnavlink = Vikings seasons
}}

The 2005 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 45th in the National Football League, and Mike Tice's fourth and final season as head coach. The Vikings finished the season with a 9–7 record and missed the playoffs despite going 8–3 over the final 11 weeks. Quarterback Daunte Culpepper was injured after seven games, resulting in Brad Johnson taking over as starter. The loss of Culpepper and the departure of Randy Moss to the Oakland Raiders resulted in the Vikings dropping from 2nd in passing offense in 2004 to 20th in 2005.

During the team's bye week in week 5, a scandal arose surrounding an alleged sex party aboard a pair of boats on Lake Minnetonka.

Offseason

In February 2005, Vikings owner Red McCombs agreed to sell the team to Arizona-based entrepreneur Reggie Fowler; however, Fowler was unable to prove his finances sound enough to complete the purchase and his application to buy the team was rejected by the league. He brought in various partners, including New York-based real estate developer Zygi Wilf, who took over as the lead owner, with Fowler as one of the minor partners. The deal to install Wilf as owner was concluded in May 2005.[1]

2005 Draft

{{main|2005 NFL draft}}
17Troy WilliamsonWide receiverSouth CarolinaRaiders trade|[a]}}
18Erasmus JamesDefensive endWisconsin
249Marcus JohnsonOffensive tackleMississippi
380Dustin FoxCornerbackOhio State
4112Ciatrick FasonRunning backFloridaRedskins trade|[b]}}
120Traded to the Washington Redskins{{ref|Redskins trade|[b]}}
5154Traded to the Washington Redskins{{ref|Redskins trade|[b]}}
6191C.J. MosleyDefensive tackleMissouri
7219Adrian WardCornerbackTexas-El PasoRaiders trade|[a]}}
230Traded to the New York Jets{{ref|Jets trade|[c]}}

{{note|Raiders trade|[a]}} Oakland traded their 1st round selection (7th overall), 7th round selection (219th overall), and LB Napoleon Harris to Minnesota in exchange for WR Randy Moss.

{{note|Redskins trade|[b]}} Minnesota traded their 4th round selection (120th overall) and 5th round selection (154th overall) to Washington to move up 8 spots to the 112th overall selection and make this pick.

{{note|Jets trade|[c]}} Minnesota traded their 7th round selection (230th overall) to the Jets for LB Sam Cowart.

Preseason

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance [https://www.profootballarchives.com/2005nflmin.html]
1 August 12 Kansas City Chiefs W 27–16 1–0 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 63,621
2 August 19 at New York Jets L 21–28 1–1 Giants Stadium 76,441
3 August 26 San Diego Chargers W 19–16 2–1 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 64,172
4 September 2 at Seattle Seahawks W 23–21 3–1 Qwest Field 63,746

Regular season

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 11 Tampa Bay Buccaneers L 13–24 0–1 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 63,939
2 September 18 at Cincinnati Bengals L 8–37 0–2 Paul Brown Stadium 65,763
3 September 25 New Orleans Saints W 33–16 1–2 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 63,952
4 October 2 at Atlanta Falcons L 10–30 1–3 Georgia Dome 69,552
5Bye
6 October 16 at Chicago Bears L 3–28 1–4 Soldier Field 62,143
7 October 23 Green Bay Packers W 23–20 2–4 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 64,278
8 October 30 at Carolina Panthers L 13–38 2–5 Bank of America Stadium 73,502
9 November 6 Detroit Lions W 27–14 3–5 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 63,813
10 November 13 at New York Giants W 24–21 4–5 Giants Stadium 78,637
11November 21|Monday}} at Green Bay Packers W 20–17 5–5 Lambeau Field 70,610
12 November 27 Cleveland Browns W 24–12 6–5 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 63,814
13 December 4 at Detroit Lions W 21–16 7–5 Ford Field 61,375
14 December 11 St. Louis Rams W 27–13 8–5 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 64,005
15 December 18 Pittsburgh Steelers L 3–18 8–6 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 64,136
16 December 25 at Baltimore Ravens L 23–30 8–7 M&T Bank Stadium 70,246
17 January 1 Chicago Bears W 34–10 9–7 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 64,023

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 1: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

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|date=September 11
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT
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The Vikings opened the season with five turnovers on the way to their first opening-day loss since 2002. Free agent signing Darren Sharper started off the scoring for the Vikings by returning an interception 88 yards for a touchdown, but the Buccaneers defense was able to limit the Vikings to 26 yards rushing, and intercepted reigning Pro Bowl quarterback Daunte Culpepper three times, including two for linebacker Brian Kelly. By contrast, the Buccaneers' rookie running back Cadillac Williams managed 148 yards rushing in his first NFL game, capped off with a 71-yard touchdown run with less than two minutes left to seal the game for Tampa Bay.

Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals

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|time=1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT
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|referee=Bill Carollo
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The Vikings' misfortunes continued in Week 2, losing 37–8 to the Cincinnati Bengals. Cornerback Fred Smoot was beaten by Chad Johnson on a 70-yard touchdown in the first minute of the game, with Carson Palmer adding two more touchdown passes in the first half to give the Bengals a 27–0 lead at halftime. The Bengals piled on 167 yards rushing, with wide receiver T. J. Houshmandzadeh adding a 16-yard touchdown run in the third quarter. Daunte Culpepper continued his early season struggles, throwing five interceptions, bringing his total to eight in the first two weeks. Culpepper did ensure the Vikings avoided the shutout by scoring on a five-yard touchdown run. The Vikings were again hampered by their rushing attack, being held to 77 yards rushing.

Week 3: vs. New Orleans Saints

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|state=autocollapse
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|date=September 25
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT
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|referee=Pete Morelli
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In Week 3, the Vikings looked to turn their season around at home to the New Orleans Saints, who were suffering from the effects of Hurricane Katrina, which had devastated their city only a few weeks earlier. The Vikings started positively, forcing a fumble from the Saints' return man Aaron Stecker on the opening kickoff. On the first play from scrimmage, Daunte Culpepper found Travis Taylor for a 24-yard touchdown, and the Vikings did not look back. Culpepper threw two more first-half touchdown passes, and stayed mistake free. The Vikings also found a running game, going for 146 yards, led by Mewelde Moore's 101 yards. Defensively, the Vikings held Aaron Brooks to just 12 completions on 32 pass attempts, intercepting him twice (Antoine Winfield and Keith Newman). Paul Edinger added four field goals for the Vikings in the victory.

Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons

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|time=1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT
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After notching their first win of the season the week before, the Vikings returned to form in Atlanta the following week, losing 30–10 to the Falcons. The visitors sacked Daunte Culpepper nine times, and added two more interceptions to bring his total for the season to 10 through four games. The Falcons' rushing offense was almost unstoppable, going for 285 yards, with almost half of that total provided by Warrick Dunn (126 yards). For the second time in the season, the Vikings' only points of the game came in the fourth quarter, via a 16-yard pass from Culpepper to Troy Williamson.

Week 6: at Chicago Bears

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|date=October 16
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT
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|referee=Bernie Kukar
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Following a bye week marred by the "love boat" scandal, the Vikings returned to action with a trip to face the 1–3 Chicago Bears. The Vikings marched down the field on their opening drive, only to botch a fake field goal attempt from the 18-yard line. After trading several punts, the Vikings put together a 13-play drive that resulted in a 23-yard field goal by Paul Edinger, who was making his first return to Chicago, for whom he had played for the last five years. However, those were to be the Vikings' only points of the game as they failed to get any further than the Bears' 30-yard line, while Daunte Culpepper added another two interceptions to his total for the season. The Bears' offense was limited by rookie quarterback Kyle Orton, who threw for 117 yards, but did find Desmond Clark for two touchdowns. The Bears were also held to 95 yards, led by 89 yards by Thomas Jones, who did find the end zone twice in the fourth quarter to close out the game.

Week 7: vs. Green Bay Packers

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|state=autocollapse
|title=Week 7: Green Bay Packers vs. Minnesota Vikings – Game summary
|date=October 23
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT
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|referee=Bill Leavy
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The Vikings hosted the Packers in Week 7 with the two teams propping up the NFC North with 1–4 records. After a scoreless first quarter, Brett Favre started to find success against the Vikings defense, leading the Packers on two second-quarter touchdown drives in a row, culminating in touchdown passes to Donald Driver and Antonio Chatman. After the Chatman touchdown, Koren Robinson returned the ensuing kickoff 72 yards to the Packers' 30-yard line, only for Mewelde Moore to fumble on the Vikings' first play from scrimmage. Favre then led the Packers downfield, and set up a 53-yard Ryan Longwell field goal as time expired in the first half, giving the Packers a 17–0 lead. The Vikings mounted a comeback in the second half; starting with a field goal on their opening drive, the Vikings defense then forced a three-and-out, before Daunte Culpepper capped the next drive with a 27-yard touchdown pass to Marcus Robinson. After a missed field goal by Longwell, Paul Edinger made a field goal of his own before Culpepper again led the Vikings down the field, finding Mewelde Moore for a 14-yard touchdown to give the Vikings a 20–17 lead with three minutes left. Favre then led the Packers down the field, resulting in a 39-yard Ryan Longwell field goal, to tie the game with 28 seconds left. Daunte Culpepper then completed back-to-back passes to Mewelde Moore and Marcus Robinson to set up a game-winning 56-yard field goal by Edinger as time expired.

Week 8: at Carolina Panthers

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|date=October 30
|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
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|stadium=Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, North Carolina
|attendance=73,502
|referee=Scott Green
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The Vikings failed to build on their come-from-behind win, falling to a 38–13 loss to the Carolina Panthers in Week 8. The Panthers received the opening kickoff and mounted a 10-play drive, resulting in a 7-yard touchdown run by Stephen Davis. On the final play of the first quarter, Daunte Culpepper tore his ACL, MCL and PCL in a low tackle by Panthers cornerback Chris Gamble following an 18-yard run. Brad Johnson replaced Culpepper at quarterback, but he was unable to prevent the Panthers from increasing their lead in the first half, going into the halftime interval with the score at 24–0. The Vikings did find the end zone twice in the second half, first with a Mewelde Moore touchdown to bring the score to 24–7, then a five-yard touchdown reception by Marcus Robinson with two minutes to go; however, the Panthers scored twice themselves to nullify the Vikings' attempted comeback. Panthers receiver Steve Smith finished the day with 11 catches for 201 yards.

Week 9: vs. Detroit Lions

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|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
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|referee=Bill Vinovich
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With Culpepper out for the rest of the season, Brad Johnson made his first start for the Vikings since week 2 of the 1998 season. After a defensively dominated first quarter resulting in only a Vikings field goal, Johnson found Michael Bennett for a five-yard touchdown in the second quarter. Joey Harrington then fumbled on a Brian Williams sack, leading to a touchdown run by Ciatrick Fason. Harrington then compounded the Lions' problems, throwing an interception to Antoine Winfield three plays later, leading to a 15-yard touchdown pass from Johnson to Nate Burleson, giving the Vikings a 24–0 lead. The Lions added a touchdown before halftime on an Artose Pinner run. After a scoreless third quarter, Harrington found Marcus Pollard for a 23-yard touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter, cutting the Vikings lead to 10. In an attempt to wind down the clock, the Vikings leant on their running game, rushing for 164 yards, including 106 yards by Michael Bennett. Darren Sharper sealed the victory for the Vikings, intercepting Harrington with 18 seconds left to give the Vikings their third victory of the season.

Week 10: at New York Giants

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|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
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|referee=Terry McAulay
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In Week 10, the Vikings traveled to the Meadowlands seeking consecutive victories for the first time in the season against the 6–2 New York Giants. The Vikings were unable to capitalize on a fumble by Willie Ponder on the opening kickoff, as Paul Edinger missed a 40-yard field goal after the Vikings failed to earn a first down. After trading punts, Eli Manning was intercepted by Darren Sharper, only for Edinger to have a 32-yard field goal attempt blocked on the ensuing possession. After the scoreless first quarter, Sharper intercepted Manning a second time, this time returning it 92 yards for his second touchdown of the season. The Vikings offense was unable to add to the scoreboard in the first half, and a pair of field goals from Jay Feely meant the Vikings went into the halftime break with a 7–6 lead. To start the second half, Koren Robinson returned the opening kickoff 86 yards for a touchdown, giving the Vikings a 14–6 lead. The Giants responded immediately, with Manning finding Amani Toomer for a 23-yard touchdown pass to again reduce the Vikings' lead to a single point. The Vikings punted on their next possession, before forcing the Giants to do the same, with Mewelde Moore returning Jeff Feagles' kick 71 yards to give the Vikings a 21–13 lead; the score made the Vikings the first team in NFL history to return an interception, kickoff and punt for a touchdown in the same game. Manning was intercepted two more times, including a third for Sharper; however, a non-existent Vikings offense (including 12 yards rushing on 21 carries) meant the Giants still had a chance. Following the two-minute warning, Manning put together a drive in which he completed 5 out of 7 pass attempts, leading to a three-yard touchdown run by Tiki Barber; Barber then ran in the two-point conversion to tie the scores. With 1:21 left, Johnson was sacked by Osi Umenyiora on the first play of the ensuing drive. After a Giants timeout trying to get the ball back, Johnson completed passes to Jermaine Wiggins, Marcus Robinson and Travis Taylor to set up Paul Edinger's 48-yard game-winning field goal, giving the Vikings consecutive wins for the first time in 2005.

Week 11: at Green Bay Packers

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|date={{tooltip|November 21|Monday}}
|time=9:00 p.m. EST/8:00 p.m. CST
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|stadium=Lambeau Field, Green Bay, Wisconsin
|attendance=70,610
|referee=Walt Anderson
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The Vikings were again on the road in Week 11, traveling to Green Bay for a Monday night contest against the 2–7 Packers, as the Vikings attempted to get back to .500 and reignite their hopes of making the playoffs; however, the Vikings fell behind in the first quarter with Brett Favre finding Donald Driver for a 15-yard touchdown. The Vikings leveled the scores late in the second quarter, with Dovonte Edwards returning an interception 51 yards for a touchdown, only for Favre to throw another touchdown pass to Driver, hitting him on a 53-yard touchdown with 28 seconds remaining, to give the Packers a 14–7 halftime lead. Late in the third quarter, the Vikings snapped a streak of eight consecutive quarters without an offensive touchdown, tying the game on a 1-yard touchdown by Ciatrick Fason at the end of a 14-play drive. A fourth-quarter Edinger field goal gave the Vikings the lead for the first time in the game, only to be matched by a Longwell field goal with three minutes remaining. The Packers then attempted a short kickoff to avoid a big return by Koren Robinson, only to give the Vikings strong field position. Mewelde Moore ran three times for 18 yards on the drive, giving him 122 yards for the game. Brad Johnson then found Robinson for 35 yards, bringing the Vikings to the Packers' 6-yard line. After three kneeldowns by Brad Johnson to run down the clock, Edinger connected on a 27-yard field goal as time expired, giving the Vikings their third consecutive victory.

Week 12: vs. Cleveland Browns

{{Americanfootballbox
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|title=Week 12: Cleveland Browns vs. Minnesota Vikings – Game summary
|date=November 27
|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
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|attendance=63,814
|referee=Tony Corrente
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The Vikings returned home in Week 12 to face the 4–6 Cleveland Browns, seeking their fourth straight victory, and a return to a winning record. Brad Johnson recorded his best game of the season so far, throwing for 207 yards and three touchdowns, all to Marcus Robinson, while Mewelde Moore added a further 67 yards rushing. Defensively, Darren Sharper intercepted both Browns quarterbacks, Trent Dilfer and Charlie Frye, while Antoine Winfield also picked off Dilfer. The Vikings also sacked Dilfer five times, and held Cleveland to 78 yards rushing. The Browns did find the end zone with one minute remaining, with Dennis Northcutt catching a 9-yard touchdown pass from Dilfer.

Week 13: at Detroit Lions

{{Americanfootballbox
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|state=autocollapse
|title=Week 13: Minnesota Vikings vs. Detroit Lions – Game summary
|date=December 4
|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
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|stadium=Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan
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|referee=Tom White
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The Vikings headed to Detroit in Week 13 seeking their fifth straight win, and an opportunity to firmly entrench themselves in the playoff race against the 4–7 Lions. The Vikings completely shut down Jeff Garcia and the Lions passing attack, holding him to 17 completions on 35 attempts for 126 yards. Offensively, Brad Johnson bettered his performance from the previous week against the Browns, completing 17 of 23 passes for 256 yards and two touchdowns, including an 80-yard touchdown pass to Koren Robinson in the first quarter. Michael Bennett also had a strong game, scoring touchdowns in the second and third quarters, finishing with 89 scrimmage yards. The Lions finally scored a touchdown in the fourth quarter, as an Artose Pinner rushing touchdown brought them to within five points with 7:42 remaining. After the Lions forced a Vikings punt, Corey Chavous intercepted Jeff Garcia on the goal line with a minute remaining, securing the Vikings fifth consecutive victory.

Week 14: vs. St. Louis Rams

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week 14: St. Louis Rams vs. Minnesota Vikings – Game summary
|date=December 11
|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
|Road=Rams
|R1=0|R2=6|R3=7|R4=0
|Home=Vikings
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|stadium=Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota
|attendance=64,005
|referee=Larry Nemmers
}}

The Vikings returned home again in Week 14 to face a St. Louis Rams team quarterbacked by rookie Ryan Fitzpatrick making his second career start. The Vikings opened the scoring with a 13-yard end-around by Koren Robinson. Both teams added a pair of field goals each in the second quarter, resulting in the Vikings taking a 13–6 lead into the locker at halftime. The Rams capped their opening drive of the second half with a 14-yard touchdown run from Fitzpatrick to tie the contest. The Vikings responded with a long pass from Brad Johnson to Marcus Robinson, setting up a 7-yard touchdown run by Michael Bennett. Fitzpatrick then threw five interceptions to four different Vikings (Brian Williams (2), Darren Sharper, Fred Smoot, and Antoine Winfield), as the Vikings increased their lead to 14 points on a touchdown run from Ciatrick Fason. There were no further points in the fourth quarter, with the Vikings holding on despite Johnson only throwing for 146 yards, to give them an 8–5 record on the season.

Week 15: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

{{Americanfootballbox
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|state=autocollapse
|title=Week 15: Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Minnesota Vikings – Game summary
|date=December 18
|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
|Road=Steelers
|R1=3|R2=7|R3=6|R4=2
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|stadium=Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota
|attendance=64,136
|referee=Ed Hochuli
}}

The Vikings hosted the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 15. With both teams holding an 8–5 record, victory was essential for their playoff chances. The Vikings had a strong defense and only allowed a 21-yard field goal by Jeff Reed on the Steelers' first possession; however, the offense struggled and had to be content with tying the scores with a Paul Edinger field goal late in the first quarter. Brad Johnson struggled in particular, and was intercepted by both Joey Porter and Deshea Townsend in the first half. Ben Roethlisberger scored the game's only touchdown towards the end of the second quarter, running in from three yards. Johnson failed to complete a pass in the second half, and the Vikings' only first down came via a penalty. Reed added two more field goals for the Steelers in the third quarter, and rounded out the game's scoring with a fourth-quarter safety after tackling Michael Bennett in the end zone. The loss put the Vikings at 8–6 and on the brink of playoff elimination.

Week 16: at Baltimore Ravens

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week 16: Minnesota Vikings vs. Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
|date=December 25
|time=8:30 p.m. EST/7:30 p.m. CST
|Road=Vikings
|R1=7|R2=7|R3=6|R4=3
|Home=Ravens
|H1=7|H2=3|H3=7|H4=13
|weather=Cold, {{convert|43|F|C}}
|stadium=M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
|attendance=70,246
|referee=Gerald Austin
}}

In Week 16, the Vikings traveled to Baltimore for a Christmas night game in the knowledge that a loss would eliminate them from playoff contention. Brad Johnson recovered from his poor performance against the Steelers and led the Vikings to a touchdown on their opening drive, finding Travis Taylor on a 13-yard pass for the score. Kyle Boller responded for the Ravens, leading them on a 17-play drive that culminated with a 6-yard touchdown reception for Todd Heap. It took until late in the second quarter for the next points to arrive, with Johnson finding Jermaine Wiggins in the end zone on a 5-yard pass with 1:06 remaining in the half; however, Matt Stover cut the Vikings' lead to 14–10 going into the half with a 37-yard field goal as time expired. The Vikings opened the second half with a 36-yard field goal from Paul Edinger, only for the Ravens to score with passes of 47 yards and 39 yards to Mark Clayton and Derrick Mason respectively, either side of another Edinger field goal to leave the Vikings trailing 24–20 with 14:47 remaining in the game. The Ravens' defense forced two consecutive punts and a Brad Johnson fumble, which resulted in two field goals by Stover to give the Ravens a 30–20 lead with just over a minute to play. Edinger cut the Ravens' lead to 7 points with 15 seconds remaining, but the Ravens recovered the ensuing onside kick, giving the Ravens the win, and eliminating the Vikings from the playoffs.

Week 17: vs. Chicago Bears

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week 17: Chicago Bears vs. Minnesota Vikings – Game summary
|date=January 1
|time=1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
|Road=Bears
|R1=3|R2=0|R3=0|R4=7
|Home=Vikings
|H1=0|H2=17|H3=7|H4=10
|weather=Indoors, {{convert|65|F|C}}
|stadium=Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota
|attendance=64,023
|referee=Mike Carey
}}

With the Vikings now out of the playoff race, they returned home for the final game of the season against the division champion Chicago Bears, who would go into the playoffs as the NFC's #2 seed. The Bears rested their now-healthy starting quarterback Rex Grossman, with Kyle Orton under center. Orton and running back Thomas Jones led the Bears to a field goal to start the scoring, before most prominent Bears players were removed from the game at the end of the first quarter. With the Bears defense now missing the likes of Brian Urlacher, Lance Briggs and Charles Tillman, the Vikings scored 17 points in the second quarter, starting with a 54-yard Paul Edinger field goal, followed by a 2-yard run by Ciatrick Fason and a 17-yard pass from Brad Johnson to Travis Taylor. Johnson threw for 247 yards and two touchdowns in the game, with Mewelde Moore adding 101 yards from scrimmage. Moore added another touchdown for the Vikings late in the third quarter, followed by another Edinger field goal from 27 yards to start the fourth. The Bears found the end zone in the fourth quarter on a 4-yard touchdown pass from Jeff Blake to Justin Gage. The Vikings then capped the scoring with a 61-yard touchdown run from Michael Bennett, giving Minnesota a 34–10 win, securing a winning season for the Vikings. Defensively, the Vikings held the Bears to 97 yards passing, with Kevin Williams recording two sacks. Despite the team finishing with a winning record, owner Zygi Wilf announced the dismissal of head coach Mike Tice only a few hours after the game.

Standings

{{2005 NFC North standings}}

Statistics

Team leaders

Passing yards Brad Johnson 1,885
Passing touchdowns Brad Johnson 12
Rushing yards Mewelde Moore 662
Rushing touchdowns Ciatrick Fason 4
Receiving yards Travis Taylor 604
Receiving touchdowns Marcus Robinson 5
Points Paul Edinger 106
Kickoff return yards Koren Robinson 1221
Punt return yards Mewelde Moore 245
Tackles Antoine Winfield 98
Sacks Lance Johnstone 7.5
Interceptions Darren Sharper 9
Forced fumbles Brian Williams
Richard Owens
2

League rankings

{{small|(out of 32)
Passing offense 3,146 196.6 20th
Rushing offense 1,467 91.7 27th
Total offense 4,613 288.3 25th
Passing defense 3,332 208.2 22nd
Rushing defense 1,841 115.1 19th
Total defense 5,173 323.3 21st

Personnel

Staff

{{NFL final staff
|Year=2005
|TeamName=Minnesota Vikings
|Front Office=
  • Owner/Chairman – Zygi Wilf
  • Owner/President – Mark Wilf
  • Vice President of Football Operations – Rob Brzezinski

|Head Coaches=
  • Head Coach – Mike Tice
  • Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator – Ted Cottrell

|Offensive Coaches=
  • Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line – Steve Loney
  • Quarterbacks – Rich Olson
  • Running Backs – Dean Dalton
  • Wide Receivers – Wes Chandler
  • Tight Ends/Assistant Offensive Line – John Tice
  • Offensive Assistant/Assistant Quarterbacks – Randy Hanson

|Defensive Coaches=
  • Defensive Line – Brian Baker
  • Assistant Defensive Line – Jim Panagos
  • Linebackers – Pete Bercich
  • Coverage Coordinator – Chuck Knox, Jr.
  • Assistant Secondary – Kevin Ross

|Special Teams Coaches=
  • Special Teams Coordinator – Rusty Tillman
  • Assistant Special Teams – Jim Panagos

|Strength and Conditioning=
  • Strength and Conditioning – Kurtis Shultz
  • Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Mark Ellis

}}[2]

Final roster

{{NFL final roster
|Year=2005
|TeamName=Minnesota Vikings
|BC1=#3B0160
|FC1=#FFFFFF
|BDC1=#F0BF00
|Active=49
|Inactive=9
|PS=2
|Date=
|Quarterbacks={{NFLplayer|14|Brad Johnson|d=American football}}{{NFLplayer|13|Shaun Hill|rookie=y}}
|Running Backs={{NFLplayer|23|Michael Bennett|d=running back}}{{NFLplayer|39|Adimchinobe Echemandu}}{{NFLplayer|35|Ciatrick Fason|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|30|Mewelde Moore}}
|Wide Receivers={{NFLplayer|81|Nate Burleson}}{{NFLplayer|18|Koren Robinson}}{{NFLplayer|87|Marcus Robinson|d=American football}}{{NFLplayer|89|Travis Taylor|d=American football}}{{NFLplayer|19|Troy Williamson|rookie=y}}
|Tight Ends={{NFLplayer|86|Richard Angulo}}{{NFLplayer|83|Jeff Dugan|FB}}{{NFLplayer|40|Jim Kleinsasser}}{{NFLplayer|49|Richard Owens}}{{NFLplayer|85|Jermaine Wiggins}}
|Offensive Linemen={{NFLplayer|67|Melvin Fowler|C}}{{NFLplayer|73|Adam Goldberg|d=American football|G}}{{NFLplayer|64|Anthony Herrera|d=American football|G|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|76|Chris Liwienski|G}}{{NFLplayer|72|Marcus Johnson|d=offensive lineman|G/T|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|74|Bryant McKinnie|T}}{{NFLplayer|75|Mike Rosenthal|T}}{{NFLplayer|60|Cory Withrow|C}}
|Defensive Linemen={{NFLplayer|99|Erasmus James|DE|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|97|Spencer Johnson|d=American football|DT}}{{NFLplayer|51|Lance Johnstone|DE}}{{NFLplayer|96|C. J. Mosley|d=defensive lineman|DT|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|98|Darrion Scott|DE}}{{NFLplayer|93|Kevin Williams|d=defensive tackle|DT}}{{NFLplayer|94|Pat Williams|d=American football|DT}}
|Linebackers={{NFLplayer|55|Sam Cowart|MLB}}{{NFLplayer|50|Rod Davis|d=American football}}{{NFLplayer|59|Heath Farwell|OLB|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|58|Napoleon Harris|MLB}}{{NFLplayer|56|E. J. Henderson|OLB}}{{NFLplayer|57|Raonall Smith|OLB}}{{NFLplayer|54|Dontarrious Thomas|OLB}}
|Defensive Backs={{NFLplayer|33|Ralph Brown|d=cornerback|CB}}{{NFLplayer|21|Corey Chavous|SS}}{{NFLplayer|36|Dovonte Edwards|CB|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|25|Will Hunter|SS|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|42|Darren Sharper|FS}}{{NFLplayer|27|Fred Smoot|CB}}{{NFLplayer|29|Brian Williams|d=cornerback|CB}}{{NFLplayer|26|Antoine Winfield|CB}}
|Special Teams={{NFLplayer| 5|Chris Kluwe|P|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|46|Cullen Loeffler|LS}}{{NFLplayer| 1|Paul Edinger|K}}
|Reserve Lists={{NFLplayer|78|Matt Birk|C|IR}}{{NFLplayer|11|Daunte Culpepper|QB|IR}}{{NFLplayer|79|Toniu Fonoti|OG|IR}}{{NFLplayer|28|Laroni Gallishaw|CB|IR}}{{NFLplayer|90|Steve Martin|d=American football|DT|IR}}{{NFLplayer|52|Keith Newman|OLB|IR}}{{NFLplayer|24|Willie Offord|SS|IR}}{{NFLplayer|95|Kenechi Udeze|DE|IR}}{{NFLplayer|20|Moe Williams|RB|IR}}{{NFLplayer|82|Keenan Howry|WR|IR}}{{NFLplayer|22|Ken Irvin|CB|IR}}
|Practice Squad={{NFLplayer|90|Eric Taylor|d=Canadian football|DT|rookie=y}}{{NFLplayer|34|Butchie Wallace|RB|rookie=y}}
}}

References

1. ^{{cite news |first=Brandt |last=Williams |title=NFL owners approve Vikings sale to Wilf |url=http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/2005/05/25_williamsb_vikingsale/ |publisher=Minnesota Public Radio |date=May 25, 2005 |accessdate=February 7, 2018 }}
2. ^{{cite book |title=2009 Minnesota Vikings Media Guide |page=251 |url=http://www.vikings.com/news/media-guide.html |accessdate=March 6, 2010 }}
{{Minnesota Vikings}}{{Minnesota Vikings seasons}}{{2005 NFL season by team}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2005 Minnesota Vikings Season}}

3 : Minnesota Vikings seasons|2005 National Football League season by team|2005 in sports in Minnesota

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