Sunday, Sep. 10 1:00pm ET
Culpepper survives, gets first TD pass
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Daunte Culpepper proved he can throw, too.

Culpepper, who ran for three touchdowns last week in his first career start, was 23-for-37 for 355 yards and his first career touchdown pass in Minnesota's 13-7 victory over Miami on Sunday.

Kicker Gary Anderson kept the Vikings in the game until Daunte Culpepper's late touchdown.

He threw a 15-yard scoring pass to Randy Moss with 1:56 left to offset three interceptions.

"No quarterback is perfect," Vikings coach Dennis Green said. "I don't know what quarterback you know that's going to make a perfect decision every time."

Cris Carter caught nine passes for a career-high 168 yards, and Moss had six catches for 87 yards. Culpepper also ran for 37 yards on eight carries.

"I really didn't have to run because Chris and Randy were getting open more," Culpepper said, comparing the game to last week's 30-27 victory over Chicago.

"I knew there were going to be opportunities that Chicago did not present. So I knew I just had to be patient. They were the No. 1-ranked defensive team last week and when opportunities came, we had to take advantage of it."

TOM DONAHOE'S BREAKDOWN
This is a disappointing loss for Miami. The Dolphins were simply not able to generate enough offense.

They did get a touchdown late in the game, but anytime you can go to Minnesota and hold them to just 13 points -- you have to win those types of games.

It was another good game in the maturation of Daunte Culpepper. He threw for 355 yards and withstood the pressure from Miami's defense. He has certainly established himself as a quarterback to be reckoned with, and with the weapons he has in his offense this could be an exciting year for Minnesota.

After Culpepper teamed with Moss to give the Vikings a 13-0 lead, Miami cut it to six on Jay Fiedler's 2-yard TD pass to Thurman Thomas with 1:02 remaining. On the previous play, Fielder connected with Tony Martin on a 44-yard pass.

Orlando Thomas recovered Miami's onside kick and the Vikings ran out the clock.

Miami was limited to 209 net yards of offense, including just 49 yards rushing and was 3-for-13 on third-down conversions.

Lamar Smith, who rushed for 145 yards last week in Miami's 23-0 home victory over Seattle, gained just 27 yards on 11 carries against the Vikings.

"Our defense dictated the game," Orlando Thomas said. "We put a lot of pressure on them up front. They came in with a power running game and the things we did up front forced them into the types of situations they were in."

Miami coach Dave Wannstedt said his offense couldn't take advantage of the opportunities the Vikings offered.

"If we don't have the ability to run the ball, which we didn't today, we've got to make plays in the passing game," Wannstedt said. "As the game unfolded, they were bringing eight or nine guys up and blitzing us, giving us one-on-one coverage."

Orlando Thomas said the Minnesota defense felt a sense of vindication against the Dolphins.

"We heard this week about how terrible we were," he said. "We just wanted to come in and ... create some turnovers and not allow them to win on third down. We were able to do that."

Fiedler, also making the second start of his career, completed 12 of 31 passes for 175 yards with one interception. He was sacked three times for 15 yards.

"Jay's performance was about like our entire offense -- not good enough," Wannstedt said.

Miami's defense didn't look anywhere near as strong as the unit that shut out Seattle.

"We got out of our game plan late in the game and started blitzing to try and make something happen," Dolphins linebacker Zach Thomas said.

Mistakes kept both teams out of the end zone until the fourth quarter and forced the Vikings to settle for Gary Anderson's two field goals, a 28-yarder in the first quarter and a 49-yarder in the fourth quarter.

Keith Thibodeaux intercepted Fiedler's pass on the third play of the third quarter, but Minnesota's drive -- which was kept going by a holding penalty on Sam Madison on third-and-22 -- ended with Brian Walker's interception. Culpepper's pass bounced off tight end Andrew Jordan into Walker's hands, but Miami was forced to punt after gaining just 6 yards.

Penalties by Minnesota's offensive line also cost the Vikings two good opportunities in the second quarter. Brad Badger was called for holding in the second quarter, negating a 20-yard run by Robert Smith, and Korey Stringer was flagged for holding on a long run by Culpepper during Minnesota's final drive.

Culpepper's mistakes ended two Minnesota drives in the first half. Brock Marion intercepted a pass intended for fullback Jim Kleinsasser with 25 seconds remaining in the first quarter. Culpepper floated the ball between Kleinsasser and linebacker Zach Thomas, and Marion cut between the two for the interception.

Then with just 32 seconds left in the half and the Vikings facing first-and-15 at Miami's 23, Culpepper fumbled when Trace Armstrong reached in and knocked the ball away. Jason Taylor recovered for the Dolphins.

Game notes
Carter has 10,455 total yards in 11 seasons with the Vikings to break Darrin Nelson's team record of 10,365. ... Wannstedt is 3-10 against Green. The Miami coach was 3-9 while coach of the Bears. ... Culpepper's 26-yard run in the first quarter was the longest of his career. He runs of 24 and 21 yards last week against Chicago. ... Martin caught six passes for 120 yards for Miami.

 


ALSO SEE
NFL Scoreboard

Miami Clubhouse

Minnesota Clubhouse


Week 2 wrap-ups

Week 2 infirmary report

TJ's Take on Week 2

Week 2 stats leaders

Prime Time Players