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News | Minnesota Vikings – vikings.com

Vikings to Open Playoffs in New Orleans Against Saints

The Vikings are starting the postseason in the same stadium and city that they started the 2019 preseason.

Minnesota (10-6), the No. 6 seed in the NFC, will visit New Orleans (13-3) at 12:05 p.m. (CT) Sunday for a Wild Card game on FOX.

If the Vikings are to #GoGetIt and win the franchise's first Super Bowl trophy, they'll have to do so on the road throughout the playoffs.

Join the conversation online: Use #GoGetIt on social media when talking about the playoffs.

Gear up: "It you want it, GO GET IT" T-shirts and hoodies are available through the Vikings Locker Room Official Team Store.

Tickets: NFL Ticket Exchange is the NFL's approved secondary ticket marketplace.

The Vikings-Saints matchup will mark the fifth postseason meeting between the franchises and the first since the Minneapolis Miracle game on Jan. 14, 2018.

The dramatic ending — a 61-yard touchdown pass from Case Keenum to Stefon Diggs — gave the Vikings their third postseason win in four games against the Saints and provided a memorable moment in the only playoff game that has been hosted at U.S. Bank Stadium.

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This will be the third time for the teams to meet in the Superdome. The Vikings won the first such meeting 44-10 as a Wild Card team on Jan. 3, 1988, but lost 31-28 in the NFC Championship on Jan. 24, 2010.

Although the Vikings were locked in at No. 6 heading into Week 17, Minnesota's destination was not determined until the final game of the regular season between San Francisco and Seattle.

A win by the 49ers over the Seahawks sent the Saints to the No. 3 seed, and the last-second win by the Packers over the Lions kept Green Bay from landing in the No. 3 spot.

Minnesota tried to strike a balance between resting starters and establishing its playoff mindset on Sunday against Chicago.

Here is a snapshot of the 2019 Saints, who were the first NFC team to secure a division crown this season by distancing themselves from the rest of the NFC South.

Head Coach: Sean Payton (131-77 regular season; 8-6 postseason)

Payton, who worked with Vikings Head Coach Mike Zimmer in Dallas from 2003-05, turned 56 on Sunday. After three consecutive 7-9 seasons from 2014-16, the Saints have gone 11-5, 13-3 and 13-3.

Familiar faces: The Mississippi River isn't the only common link between Minnesota and New Orleans. Nick Easton, Zach Line and Latavius Murray join Bridgewater as former Vikings who are playing key roles for the Saints.

Key to making it this far: Teddy Bridgewater

Aside from Drew Brees' second game back from injury, the eventual first-ballot Hall of Famer has been on fire during the latter part of 2019. The team's season, however, was set up for greatness when Bridgewater stepped in and returned to a starting role and led the Saints to a 5-0 showing without Brees. The former Vikings QB got wins at Seattle, against Dallas and Tampa Bay, then at Jacksonville and Chicago from Weeks 3-7. He has completed 67.7 percent of his passes for 1,370 yards with nine touchdowns and two interceptions (passer rating of 98.9).

Biggest question mark: Health of the defense

New Orleans has already placed defensive linemen Marcus Davenport and defensive tackle Sheldon Richardson, a pair of former first-round picks, on Injured Reserve. Saints safeties Marcus Williams (groin) and Vonn Bell (knee) and cornerback Eli Apple (ankle) did not play in Sunday's game.

View photos of the Vikings 53-man roster for the 2019 season.

Saints Statistical leaders

Passing: Drew Brees — 281-of-378 passing (74.3 percent, which fell 0.1 percent shy matching of Brees' own record from 2018), 2,979 yards, 27 TD, 4 INT, 116.3 passer rating

Rushing: Alvin Kamara — 171 rushes for 797 yards and 5 TDs; 81 receptions for 533 yards and a TD

Receiving: Michael Thomas — 149 receptions (NFL single-season record) for 1,725 yards and 9 TDs

Tackles: Demario Davis — 109 (league stats)

Sacks: Cameron Jordan — 15.5

Interceptions: Marcus Williams — 4

Kickoff returns: Deonte Harris — 644 yards on 24 returns (26.8 avg.)

Punt returns: Harris — 338 yards and a TD on 36 returns (9.4 avg.)

Scoring: Wil Lutz — 144 points (32 of 36 field goals and 48 of 49 extra points)

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