The Associated Press
Zac Boyer
LONDON–Case Keenum had one of the more miserable performances of his career the last time he played a game at Twickenham Stadium.
That was not the case yesterday.
Keenum threw for two touchdowns and Kai Forbath made four field goals as the Minnesota Vikings beat the Cleveland Browns 33-16 in the last of four games held this season in London.
Adam Thielen had five catches for 98 yards and a touchdown for the NFC North-leading Vikings (6-2), who trailed 13-12 at halftime–the first time the Browns, 0-8 for the second-straight year, held a mid-game lead this season.
Keenum, who threw four interceptions while with the L.A. Rams a year ago, helped pull the Vikings out of their first-half rut.
After an eight-play drive that restored Minnesota’s lead at 23-16, Keenum oversaw a nine-play drive aided by 43 yards in defensive penalties that left the outcome no longer in doubt.
“We just weren’t executing [in the first half],” conceded Keenum, who finished 27-for-43 for 288 yards and also threw an interception.
“I think we made a few good plays on first and second down that kept drives going in the second half, and obviously converting on third downs on scoring drives.”
Cleveland scored first, taking a 6-0 lead on just its second play from scrimmage before kicker Zane Gonzalez missed the extra point.
Middle linebacker Joe Schobert’s interception return to the Vikings’ 37-yard line led to a 26-yard touchdown run by running back Isaiah Crowell.
A one-yard run by rookie quarterback DeShone Kizer with 40 seconds left in the first half helped overcome Forbath’s first field goal and an 18-yard touchdown reception by Thielen to push Cleveland’s lead to 13-9.
Forbath ended the half with a 34-yard attempt to make it 13-12, then scored first in the third quarter when a fumble by Crowell set up a 43-yard attempt.
Gonzalez’s 23-yard field goal restored the Browns’ lead at 16-15 with 5:34 left in the quarter.
But the Vikings stormed back by scored 18 unanswered points.
“We walked into halftime with the lead, with momentum, and with the ball coming back to us,” Kizer noted.
“We tasted that same taste that we had after four victories in pre-season.
“But this is a four-quarter game,” he stressed. “This is a game where you’ve got to go out there and expect that the team who’s down is going to come back with a vengeance, and they’re going to make a push. . . .
“And unfortunately, as an offence, we didn’t execute the way we should in the second half.”
The Vikings could have quarterback Teddy Bridgewater back from a knee injury sustained in the summer of 2016 when they visit the Washington Redskins on Nov. 12 after a bye.






