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Next QB? Look beyond the names you are hearing?
#1
One veteran player hasn’t come up much in connection to the Vikings, but would fit their QB room perfectly.

The two most popular candidates to share the Vikings’ quarterback room with J.J. McCarthy are Mac Jones and Kirk Cousins. The Vikings might not be able to land either.

Jones is the backup with the San Francisco 49ers and is a favorite target of speculative Vikings fans.

But why would the 49ers, who have championship aspirations, and a starting quarterback who is frequently injured, trade their high-quality backup? And what would it cost if they did?

Cousins recently reworked his massive contract with the Atlanta Falcons so that he could become a free agent this summer. He would be ideal for the Vikings as someone who has succeeded in the Vikings’ system, but would he come back to Minnesota to back up a less-accomplished quarterback, and how much would the Vikings be willing to pay someone who might not see the field?

While Jones and Cousins will become the stars of Speculation Season, I think there are more logical targets out there.

McCarthy should be the Vikings’ starter entering 2026. But the Vikings can’t be assured he will stay healthy or keep the job. So what they need is someone who can win games if needed but not someone who will come to town with the expectation of starting.

This will require some needle-threading.

Let’s look at what they did last year.

They traded for Sam Howell, who failed almost immediately.

They picked up Carson Wentz as a “street” free agent, meaning he was sitting at home.

They tried Max Brosmer, who had played one year of major college football.

My suggestion: How about doing none of the above this offseason?

I think there is a sleeper candidate who is being overlooked.

He has not only played in a Super Bowl, he had a 10-point lead in the fourth quarter before Patrick Mahomes took over the game.

His postseason record is 4-2.

His career completion percentage is 67.4, better than Cousins’ 66.7 or Jones’ 66.5.

He has learned under two of the best offensive coaches in football in Kyle Shanahan and Sean McVay.

Because he plays for McVay, he is familiar with the offense run by Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell.

This player has a far better résumé than Daniel Jones, Cousins or Sam Darnold did before those players arrived in Minnesota.

And because he’s been a backup the past two seasons, he’s healthy and couldn’t make realistic demands about being a starter.

He might also look at the Vikings’ current quarterback situation the way Jones looked at Indianapolis’ last offseason. Jones thought he could beat out young Anthony Richardson, and he was right.

Who am I talking about?

You’ve probably guessed by now: Jimmy Garoppolo.

The name might not excite you. I would encourage you to compare his résumé with every other attainable quarterback on the market.

Now, if Joe Burrow demands a trade from Cincinnati, he would become the subject of a bidding war, and the Vikings would probably at least try to acquire him.

But there is a problem with Burrow: He makes a massive amount of money. To acquire him would cost draft picks, players and funds, which would leave the Vikings in the same situation that Burrow is now trying to extricate himself from — a team that pays its skill-position players so much money that it can’t fund an offensive line or defense.

Garoppolo is on a one-year deal with the Rams. Unless Matthew Stafford retires and the Rams are willing to hand the job to Garoppolo, he will likely be looking for a place where he can make one more run as a starter.

With McCarthy and Garoppolo, the Vikings would have a talented youngster and an accomplished veteran in the room, with Brosmer as their developmental quarterback.

The Vikings could do a lot worse. We know, because they did a lot worse at the backup quarterback position this season.

credit:  Souhan/Strib
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#2
I would be perfectly fine with Jimmy G in the QB room this year...Probably more so than Rogers tbh.

I reserve the right to edit this post after the Steelers play their first rd playoff game too Wink
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#3
I just about puked reading this, Jimmy G is the last thing other than Rodgers that we need, if we wanted a weak arm Cousins, why not just get Cousins. Not that I think Cousins is the answer either. We need someone who can seriously compete for the job. I do not think JJM should be the starter going into next year, he can compete and win it if he deserves to, but no way based on his performance this year should he be named the starter. .
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#4
Jimmy G is definitely a viable option given his experience in the McVay offense, which is very similar to ours. He's only 34 and can play too. But he's decidedly on the backup end of the continuum along with Mariota and a few others. If the Vikings want a starter or even someone who can legitimately compete with JJ, they'll have to aim higher.
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#5
There's no world in which the Vikings hire a starter and put JJM on the bench. That's basically the end of JJM in purple if it happens, because they aren't going to run him back in his 4th year (if KAM/KOC even still have jobs then) to FAFO JJM.

They sold ownership on the draft/develop a qb on a rookie contract idea and jettisoned Darnold and by default Jones in the process. The process isn't going to now morph into, "Quick, find a starter, call Aaron Rodgers!" Who btw will either play in Pittsburgh again next year or retire, he will not be in purple.

What they need is a backup who can run KOC's YOLO shit that he loves so much and I can think of one guy who would be just right, but like several potential backups out there, he's under contract. But that should not be a huge issue because his team is about to hire a new HC and he might not be in their plans and they probably would take a low level draft pick for him if they don't just cut him. And that's Jameis Winston.

And yes he's a turnover machine but so is Sam Darnold who leads the league this year and certainly showed no signs of slowing down in that department when he was with us. It doesn't matter. He's entertaining, looks like a hero on one play and a heel the next, he's a YOLO-ball savant, and the 2026 Vikings are going to need to find a way to be entertaining because unless there is some sort of miracle improvement from JJM, whoever they get to quarterback this thing is simply not going to be elite, and if Flores leaves the defense that has carried the team for the last few years is likely to fall off badly.

KOC hates the 12 personnel, run-oriented stuff that JJM is best suited for. And taking into account JJM's mechanical, accuracy and maturity issues, none of which look like they will be easily fixed, I see KOC/KAM running him back but with a guy like Winston at the ready. This gives KOC the flexibility to pull JJM off the field at any time during the season, but doesn't require a big spend or a promise of starting time to Winston when he's acquired. I guarantee you that as soon as he gets to the point where he can legit bench JJM without blowback from ownership or whoever makes the real decisions over at TCO, he will breathe a huge sigh of relief and get back to calling epic-fail triple reverse tight end option deep shots on 3rd or 4th and 1.
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#6
(Yesterday, 11:30 AM)Montana Tom Wrote: One veteran player hasn’t come up much in connection to the Vikings, but would fit their QB room perfectly.

The two most popular candidates to share the Vikings’ quarterback room with J.J. McCarthy are Mac Jones and Kirk Cousins. The Vikings might not be able to land either.

Jones is the backup with the San Francisco 49ers and is a favorite target of speculative Vikings fans.

But why would the 49ers, who have championship aspirations, and a starting quarterback who is frequently injured, trade their high-quality backup? And what would it cost if they did?

Cousins recently reworked his massive contract with the Atlanta Falcons so that he could become a free agent this summer. He would be ideal for the Vikings as someone who has succeeded in the Vikings’ system, but would he come back to Minnesota to back up a less-accomplished quarterback, and how much would the Vikings be willing to pay someone who might not see the field?

While Jones and Cousins will become the stars of Speculation Season, I think there are more logical targets out there.

McCarthy should be the Vikings’ starter entering 2026. But the Vikings can’t be assured he will stay healthy or keep the job. So what they need is someone who can win games if needed but not someone who will come to town with the expectation of starting.

This will require some needle-threading.

Let’s look at what they did last year.

They traded for Sam Howell, who failed almost immediately.

They picked up Carson Wentz as a “street” free agent, meaning he was sitting at home.

They tried Max Brosmer, who had played one year of major college football.

My suggestion: How about doing none of the above this offseason?

I think there is a sleeper candidate who is being overlooked.

He has not only played in a Super Bowl, he had a 10-point lead in the fourth quarter before Patrick Mahomes took over the game.

His postseason record is 4-2.

His career completion percentage is 67.4, better than Cousins’ 66.7 or Jones’ 66.5.

He has learned under two of the best offensive coaches in football in Kyle Shanahan and Sean McVay.

Because he plays for McVay, he is familiar with the offense run by Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell.

This player has a far better résumé than Daniel Jones, Cousins or Sam Darnold did before those players arrived in Minnesota.

And because he’s been a backup the past two seasons, he’s healthy and couldn’t make realistic demands about being a starter.

He might also look at the Vikings’ current quarterback situation the way Jones looked at Indianapolis’ last offseason. Jones thought he could beat out young Anthony Richardson, and he was right.

Who am I talking about?

You’ve probably guessed by now: Jimmy Garoppolo.

The name might not excite you. I would encourage you to compare his résumé with every other attainable quarterback on the market.

Now, if Joe Burrow demands a trade from Cincinnati, he would become the subject of a bidding war, and the Vikings would probably at least try to acquire him.

But there is a problem with Burrow: He makes a massive amount of money. To acquire him would cost draft picks, players and funds, which would leave the Vikings in the same situation that Burrow is now trying to extricate himself from — a team that pays its skill-position players so much money that it can’t fund an offensive line or defense.

Garoppolo is on a one-year deal with the Rams. Unless Matthew Stafford retires and the Rams are willing to hand the job to Garoppolo, he will likely be looking for a place where he can make one more run as a starter.

With McCarthy and Garoppolo, the Vikings would have a talented youngster and an accomplished veteran in the room, with Brosmer as their developmental quarterback.

The Vikings could do a lot worse. We know, because they did a lot worse at the backup quarterback position this season.

credit:  Souhan/Strib

Weak arm, injury prone and suspended 2 games for PED. No.
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#7
It's amazing how the talent at QB has diminished through the years. The issue could have something to do with poor coaching. To find a guy like a Wade Wilson is next to impossible.
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