
GLENDALE – In a candid conversation with TMZ Sports, former Cardinals WR DeAndre Hopkins mentioned that he would love to play with now-former Cardinals QB Kyler Murray after his release and signing with the Vikings.
Some comments echo louder than intended. Hopkins saying he’d “love” to reunite with Kyler Murray, just not in Arizona, lands like a reopened wound for Cards fans. Because this isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about proof of concept.
WR DeAndre Hopkins on playing with Kyler Murray again on the Minnesota Vikings:
“If Kyler need me he know I’m there, if the Vikings need me they know I’ll be there… I think Kyler fits in perfect there… one of the best accurate quarterbacks in the game and his stats show that.”… pic.twitter.com/814wwSKDqw
— VNS Media (@VikingsNewsSkol) March 22, 2026
With an incredible start to the 2021 NFL season with a 10–2 record, Arizona wasn’t fluky. With Hopkins drawing double coverage and Murray extending plays, the Cards ranked among the league’s most efficient passing attacks. The connection was precise, improvisational, and, most importantly, scalable. It worked against contenders, not just weak schedules. Then came the unraveling. Injuries to Hopkins and along the offensive line didn’t just slow the offense; they fundamentally altered its identity. Murray’s time to throw dropped, explosive plays disappeared, and Arizona limped into the postseason without the traits that made them dangerous.
That context is why Hopkins’ Minnesota comments cut deeper. This isn’t a veteran chasing comfort, it’s a star identifying unfinished business. Pairing that chemistry with a stable roster and offensive infrastructure raises a compelling question: was Arizona’s window smaller than it should have been, or simply mishandled? For Arizona fans, the emotional math is brutal. Watching a potential reunion succeed elsewhere wouldn’t just sting; it would validate years of “what if.” Elite chemistry in the NFL is rare, but fragile. Arizona found it, lost it, and hasn’t fully replaced it. This isn’t about where Hopkins lands, it’s about what his words reveal. Sometimes the most painful rebuild isn’t about starting over, but knowing you were already close enough.
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