Written by James Carter â NFL Correspondent at Swikblog
Christmas Day brings a divisional meeting in Minneapolis with a milestone chase in the spotlight â and a major quarterback change for Minnesota.
Is Justin Jefferson playing today?
Yes â Justin Jefferson is expected to play for Minnesota, and he enters the matchup with a clear storyline that travels well beyond Vikings fans: heâs within striking distance of passing a long-standing Randy Moss benchmark for receiving yardage over a playerâs first six NFL seasons. Even with Minnesota eliminated from playoff contention, Jeffersonâs pursuit of history gives this Christmas game a headline hook â and it forces Detroit to choose between bracketing a superstar or leaning into pressure and trusting its coverage.
The complication is obvious: the Vikings are changing quarterbacks, and explosive downfield passing is harder to bank on. But Jefferson doesnât need a perfect offensive day to impact the game. He can turn quick throws into chunk gains, draw coverage that frees teammates, and tilt third downs with one route. If youâre tuning in primarily to track Jefferson, the early possessions matter â thatâs when scripted touches tend to appear and when the home crowd expects Minnesota to feature its best player.
How to watch Vikings vs Lions
Kickoff is 4:30 p.m. ET on Thursday, December 25 at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. The game is part of the NFLâs Christmas slate and is available to stream on Netflix.
If youâre trying to confirm platform details in your region, the simplest approach is to check official listings and game hubs shortly before kickoff. A helpful explainer for viewers on where and how the Christmas Day matchup is carried can be found via this viewing guide: how to watch LionsâVikings on Christmas Day .
Looking for more game-day coverage and NFL reads? You can also browse the latest on Swikblog.
The QB situation: why J.J. McCarthy is out, and who starts instead
Minnesotaâs biggest change is under center. J.J. McCarthy is out due to a hairline fracture in his throwing hand, and the Vikings are set to start rookie Max Brosmer. That switch shapes everything about the game plan â from how aggressive Minnesota can be on early downs to how much it leans on the run and quick, defined reads.
The injury news was widely reported this week, including by the leagueâs own coverage: NFL.comâs update on McCarthyâs status and Brosmerâs start . For viewers, itâs the single most important context point: this isnât âJefferson vs Detroitâ in a normal sense â itâs Jefferson trying to bend the game around a new quarterback and a more conservative script.
Whatâs at stake (and why Detroit still has urgency)
The records tell you this is closer than it looks: Lions 8â7, Vikings 7â8. But the motivation is lopsided. Minnesota has already been eliminated, while Detroitâs path is narrow but still alive â the kind of situation that can sharpen decision-making, especially late in games when coaches choose between playing safe and playing to win.
Detroit also has a practical reason to show up fast: the Lions were stung in the first meeting, losing 27â24, and theyâre coming off a frustrating defeat to Pittsburgh. Another slip, on a short week, would turn Christmas into a long post-mortem about what happened to an offense thatâs been among the leagueâs best.
Key matchups to watch
1) Detroitâs rushing attack vs Minnesotaâs defense
This is the blunt-force question for Detroit: can it run well enough to keep the Vikings honest? When the Lions are one-dimensional, the game can tighten quickly. Minnesotaâs defense has been the brighter unit â disciplined, physical, and comfortable forcing opponents into long-yardage situations. If Detroit canât create efficient runs, it will be leaning heavily on Jared Goff to win from the pocket against a defense that thrives on discomfort.
2) Brian Floresâ pressure packages vs a battered Lions line
Minnesotaâs defensive identity is pressure: blitz looks, simulated pressure, late movement â the kind of chaos that forces quick decisions and punishes protection leaks. Detroitâs counter is usually precision and timing: quick reads, screens, and getting playmakers in space before the rush can arrive. If the Lions can turn Minnesotaâs aggression into easy yards, the game opens. If not, it becomes a fourth-quarter slog where one sack or one hurried throw decides it.
3) Jeffersonâs opportunities vs Detroitâs coverage choices
Detroit has to decide what it fears more: Jefferson breaking the game, or Minnesotaâs offense finding rhythm through easier completions. With a new quarterback, some defenses choose to âtake away the superstarâ and dare everyone else to win. Others flood the line with pressure and trust the back end. Watch the first two drives: if Detroit shades safety help to Jefferson early, itâs telling you exactly what it thinks Minnesota can (and canât) do today.
Players to keep an eye on
- Justin Jefferson (Vikings): The headline attraction, chasing a historic mark and still capable of swinging any drive with one catch.
- Max Brosmer (Vikings): The spotlight is harsh on a holiday stage. Minnesota will try to simplify reads and protect him with the run game.
- Jared Goff (Lions): When heâs clean, Detroitâs offense hums. When pressure gets home, the margins shrink.
- Amon-Ra St. Brown & Jameson Williams (Lions): Detroitâs receivers can turn short throws into long gains â especially if Minnesota blitzes.
What to expect
This matchup has two competing scripts. One is Detroitâs: throw with variety, get the ball out quickly, and turn pressure into yards after the catch. The other is Minnesotaâs: slow the tempo, lean on the run, and let its defense keep the game within one score long enough for a late swing.
If Jefferson gets early touches and Minnesota stays on schedule, the Vikings can make this uncomfortable. If Detroit jumps ahead and forces Minnesota to chase points with a new quarterback, the Lionsâ offensive depth is built to take over. Either way, the Christmas question most viewers arrive with remains the same: can Jefferson make history â and can Minnesotaâs QB situation hold up long enough for him to take a real run at it?











