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Offseason in review for the Minnesota Vikings
Minnesota Vikings WR Justin Jefferson Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah had gone two seasons with the quarterback his predecessor signed, but after Kirk Cousins‘ fourth set of Vikings extension talks did not produce a deal in 2023, the current Minnesota GM finally cut the cord. Cousins’ departure headlined an eventful Vikings offseason, one that later included a market-setting wide receiver contract.

As the Vikings transition at quarterback, they will use some of the money freed up by Cousins’ departure – following a not insignificant dead money total stemming from void years – on one of their Rick Spielman-era acquisitions. While Minnesota’s offseason featured notable moves at several positions, the decisions made at quarterback and wideout defined it.

Extensions and restructures:

  • Gave WR Justin Jefferson four-year, $140M extension ($88.7M guaranteed)
  • Reworked S Harrison Smith‘s deal, settling on one-year, $9M agreement ($7M guaranteed)

Negotiations between the Vikings and Jefferson ran up to Week 1 last year. At that point, no team in the fifth-year option era (2011-present) had extended a first-round wide receiver with two years of rookie-deal control remaining. Jefferson and CeeDee Lamb were in that boat last year and while extension rumors surfaced, no deals came to pass. The Vikings submitted an offer worth more than $28M per year before the 2023 season started. With that proposal not topping Tyreek Hill‘s position-record AAV number, Jefferson predictably declined to set the stage for a 2024 reconvening. The superstar wideout was proven right by waiting.

Even though Jefferson sustained a hamstring injury that sidelined him for seven games, he still managed a 1,000-yard season. Jefferson, 25, had already shattered Randy Moss‘ NFL record for receiving yardage through three seasons, accumulating 4,825. Jefferson’s age, his monster production, the Vikings moving off a proven QB’s contract and the receiver market shifting – following a record cap spike – beyond the $30M place worked in the fifth-year pass-catcher’s favor. Jefferson secured whopping terms and returned to work to begin establishing a rapport with Sam Darnold and J.J. McCarthy.

Skipping the start of Vikings OTAs in an effort to become the NFL’s highest-paid non-quarterback, Jefferson succeeded by passing Nick Bosa‘s $34M-per-year contract. Also possessing leverage stemming from the Vikings’ natural interest in having their top player at workouts to begin training alongside its new QBs, the LSU alum pounced. Jefferson secured record-smashing guarantee figures, prevented the Vikings from backloading his deal the way Hill and Davante Adams‘ contracts are structured and managed this on a four-year agreement – one shorter than the Vikes initially sought.

The fifth wide receiver chosen in a memorable 2020 first round, Jefferson has set guarantee bars that are complicating the Cowboys and 49ers’ negotiations with their 2020 first-round wideouts. His total guarantees ($110M) checked in $26M north of A.J. Brown‘s new mark at the position. More importantly, the full guarantees ($88.7M) are $36M higher than those of the next-closest wideout. The WR investment business is booming and the guarantees the Vikings authorized may give teams pause.

Rumblings about teams considering two-first-rounder trade offers for Jefferson emerged, with the Vikings loosely linked to a trade-up for LSU’s Malik Nabers. Little in terms of concrete info – unlike the Vikes and Giants’ Drake Maye trade-up offers – came out, however. No wide receiver has fetched two first-round picks in a trade since the 2000 offseason saw it happen twice – for Joey Galloway (Seahawks to Cowboys) and Keyshawn Johnson (Jets to Buccaneers) – but after Hill and Adams fetched first- and second-round picks in 2022 swaps, Jefferson’s age and the exploding WR market would have made him a clear candidate to end this drought.

The Vikings have a history of extending receivers and then trading them, having taken this route with Moss (2005) and Stefon Diggs (2020). Minnesota also unloaded Percy Harvin (2013) rather than extend him, but the Adofo-Mensah regime finished the Jefferson process with a commitment.

As it stands, the Vikings will pair Jefferson’s megadeal with McCarthy and Jordan Addison‘s rookie contracts. Although Minnesota now has the NFL’s highest-paid wide receiver and tight end (T.J. Hockenson), getting off Cousins’ contract will help the club afford the market-setting accords.

For a second straight year, the Vikings gave Smith a pay cut. The safety market’s inconsistency over the past two offseasons has impacted accomplished veterans. Smith signed two extensions that placed him atop the position’s market – in 2016 and 2021 – but Adofo-Mensah has led the way in back-to-back contract reworkings.

Smith, 35, is the Vikings’ longest-tenured player by a wide margin. He had agreed to a four-year, $64M extension in August 2021, but after a 2022 restructure, the veteran Pro Bowler agreed to a $7M pay cut in 2023 and again reduced his deal in March. Smith’s 2021 extension ran through 2025; it now expires a year early, via void years which have become a thorny subject during the Adofo-Mensah regime. Smith reduced a $15.3M base salary to $9M, with a $7M signing bonus representing a solid guarantee for a 13th-year veteran at an unstable position.

Pro Football Focus ranked Smith, whose 176 career games are tied for fifth among defenders in Vikings history, 34th among safeties last season. If Smith is not re-signed before the 2025 league year, the Vikings will be tagged with $9.5M in dead money. This would remind of Dalvin Tomlinson‘s 2023 exit.

Free-agency additions:

Not traded for one another, Greenard and Danielle Hunter – PFR’s Nos. 5 and 6 free agents this year – will nevertheless move into each other’s 2023 roles. The Vikings added Greenard early in free agency, doing so before Hunter committed to the Texans. Minnesota showed interest in Bryce Huff but paid more for Greenard. The new Vikings edge-rusher’s age (27) works in his favor; he is three years younger than Hunter. The latter has delivered better work, but the Vikings are betting on Greenard’s best NFL stretch being ahead.

Drafted in Round 3 before Nick Caserio took over as GM, Greenard excelled under both Lovie Smith and then DeMeco Ryans. Greenard had tallied an eight-sack season (in 2021) before an injury-plagued 2022 stalled his early-career momentum. Last season brought new production territory. Ranking 20th with 33 quarterback pressures, Greenard led the Texans in sacks (12.5) despite Will Anderson Jr. winning Defensive Rookie of the Year acclaim and smashed his career-high with 22 QB hits. Greenard ranked sixth among edge rushers in ESPN’s pass rush win rate metric in 2023.

Starting over at OLB, the Vikings need this pace to continue. They still managed to land a 27-year-old edge defender at an upper-mid-market rate. Greenard’s $19M AAV ranks 15th among edges, though his $38M guarantee at signing sits eighth. He could certainly reward the Vikings on this deal, especially as the pass rush market – likely via Micah Parsons and a third Myles Garrett contract – moves toward $40M per year.

A year after moving off the Dalvin Cook contract, the Vikings made a short-term bet on another 2017 RB draftee. Jones does not have the rushing numbers Cook compiled in Minneapolis, but the seven-year Packer is a slightly better receiving option who certainly showed more gas in the tank last season. The Vikings are quite familiar with the versatile back, who closed last season with five straight 100-yard rushing games to propel the Pack to the divisional round and their interest emerged soon after Green Bay cut bait.

The Packers added a younger back (Josh Jacobs) but one that has not shown what Jones has as an outlet option. After reducing Jones’ pay in 2023, the Packers aimed to cut his wages once again. The sides could not agree on common ground and the team dropped Jones shortly after the Jacobs deal was finalized. Jones’ Vikings guarantee surpasses Alexander Mattison‘s 2023 number, though not by too much, as the Vikes have one of this era’s best RBs at a midlevel rate.

The team will bet on the aging (by RB standards) talent having juice left. The 1-A back in timeshares with Jamaal Williams and AJ Dillon in his career, Jones has logged 1,449 career touches. That ranks ninth among active RBs, though the number is close to where Cook’s count stood (1,503) when the Vikings dropped him.

Jones rounds out an impressive skill-position cadre that includes Jefferson, Addison and Hockenson. This array of weaponry will be available to McCarthy in the long term, but it also could represent (by far) the best options Darnold has worked with as a pro. Brock Purdy enjoyed the 49ers’ unmatched arsenal during Darnold’s San Francisco year; his Jets and Panthers arrays, with Christian McCaffrey largely injured, do not rival what the Vikings possess. Although Darnold has been given plenty of time (56 starts) to show he is a mediocre quarterback, the former No. 3 overall pick chose an interesting opportunity in Minnesota.

Also tied to the Broncos and Commanders, Darnold chose the Vikings. Denver did not make a firm offer and it is unknown where Washington went. Regardless, Darnold is poised to enter training camp as Minnesota’s starter. Darnold has flashed at points, but for the most part, the USC alum has struggled as a pro. The 27-year-old QB has never ranked higher than 25th in QBR, but he did not have enough snaps to qualify during an intriguing 2022 season in which he helped lead the Panthers back into the playoff race. Granted, this was due to a terrible NFC South, but Darnold averaged 8.2 yards per attempt with a limited Carolina skill corps that season.

It would not surprise to see the Vikings slow-play McCarthy’s climb; this would give Darnold a window to show better form and create a potential starter market for himself in 2025.

In addition to rebooting on the edge, the Vikes spent midlevel cash to add linebacking help. Van Ginkel can be classified as a hybrid player, having experience on the edge and off the ball. He helped the Dolphins as a rotational rusher and emergency OLB starter last season, compiling six sacks and 19 QB hits.

The Dolphins drafted Van Ginkel during Brian Flores‘ time in Miami and he reached 20 QB hits in the current Vikings DC’s South Florida finale (2021). This made the Vikings’ interest unsurprising, and the team’s Cashman move points Van Ginkel to the edge. A rumored Flores-Christian Wilkins reunion did not happen, but the Vikes did not leave free agency without adding one of their DC’s ex-charges.

Cashman will join emerging UDFA Ivan Pace in the Twin Cities and this payday marks the culmination of a journey that had the ex-Jet as a special-teamer not long ago. Strictly a special-teamer from 2020-21, Cashman still only played 14% of the Texans’ defensive snaps in 2022. But Ryans gave him steady work last year, using him at a 71% snap rate. Cashman notched 106 tackles to eclipse his career-best number by a cool 66, adding nine tackles for loss en route to PFF ranking him as a top-10 ILB regular. The Vikings are giving the Minnesota alum a chance to come home as well, as Cashman grew up in nearby Eden Prairie.

Mentioned as one of the many suitors for franchise-tagged Chiefs cornerback L’Jarius Sneed, the Vikings only exited free agency with Griffin. While Griffin has 79 starts on his resume, two teams – the Jaguars and Texans – cut the soon-to-be 29-year-old CB in 2023. PFF still rated Griffin as a top-50 corner last season, but the former Seahawks mainstay qualifies as more stopgap than difference-maker. As it stands, Griffin has a path to a starting role. The Vikings, as should be expected, are still being tied to seeking CB help.

Re-signings:

Even as the guard market produced five eight-figure-per-year UFA agreements this offseason, Risner is having a tough time convincing teams he is near that level. A Broncos starter for four seasons, the former second-round pick had not exactly received poor marks from the advanced metrics providers. But Risner has now struck out twice in free agency, waiting into the 2023 season before landing a gig and sitting on this year’s open market until May. Now heading into his age-29 season, the veteran guard is running out of time to cash in. He is sitting on 73 career starts, 11 coming with the Vikings last year.

Risner made his way into Minnesota’s starting lineup in October 2023, eventually replacing the traded Ezra Cleveland. PFF assigned Risner a mid-pack rating (46th), though ESPN’s pass block win rate metric slotted him ninth among all interior linemen. He will battle Brandel for the Vikes’ left guard gig. Despite having just five starts and just 503 offensive snaps on his NFL resume, Brandel commanded more money than Risner this offseason.

Notable losses:

  • Cam Akers, RB
  • Anthony Barr, LB
  • Kirk Cousins, QB
  • Marcus Davenport, OLB
  • Josh Dobbs, QB
  • Troy Dye, LB
  • Greg Joseph, K
  • Jordan Hicks, ILB
  • Danielle Hunter, OLB
  • Dean Lowry, DL (released)
  • James Lynch, DL
  • Alexander Mattison, RB (released)
  • K.J. Osborn, WR
  • Chris Reed, G
  • Austin Schlottmann, OL
  • Khyiris Tonga, DL
  • Oli Udoh, OL
  • Nick Vigil, ILB
  • D.J. Wonnum, OLB

The contracts Cousins and Hunter played out made the Vikings a historical outlier regarding an ability to retain top talent. Minnesota could not use its franchise tag on Hunter due to the parties’ August 2023 reworking and Washington having tagged Cousins twice made a third tag – which no team has applied since the 2006 CBA made doing so prohibitive – a non-starter. This led to a nine-year Vikings sack ace and the team’s six-year quarterback heading south.

Adofo-Mensah made it work with Cousins in 2022 and 2023, an arrangement that generated a surprise 13-4 season. Cousins sought guarantees into year three during the sides’ 2023 extension talks; the Vikings did not budge. Guarantees remained an issue this year. The fully guaranteed contract Cousins signed in 2018 armed him with leverage in each of his extension talks with the Vikes, leading to guarantee-heavy extensions in 2020 and 2022.

No deal in 2023 pointed Cousins toward the market and although he expressed interest in staying in Minneapolis on several occasions, the financially savvy QB became a hotshot free agent once again. Cousins doing so ahead of his age-36 season and despite his Achilles tear illustrates the value above-average passers bring when free to negotiate with multiple teams.

The Vikings did make Cousins an offer and upped the guarantees before free agency; it just did not rival where the Falcons went. Ex-Kevin O’Connell Rams coworkers Raheem Morris and Zac Robinson are running the show in Atlanta, and it made sense for the team to chase a stable QB – given the trouble the NFC South club has encountered post-Matt Ryan – with experience in the system Robinson is implementing. The Falcons gave Cousins a $100M practical guarantee on a four-year, $180M deal, with locked-in money stretching into 2026 (this agreement produced a tampering penalty). Although Cousins may have reconsidered his path had he known the Falcons would turn around and draft Michael Penix Jr., another $100M – which will push his career earnings past $330M – would have been difficult to turn down under any circumstances.

Excluding alternate nods, Cousins has all of one Pro Bowl on his resume. That came under O’Connell in 2022. The Vikings jumping off this ride makes sense, even though it runs the risk of hurting their aerial capabilities this season. But Cousins logged five healthy seasons in Minnesota; the Vikes made the playoffs in two of them. The Vikings won one postseason contest with their affable passer and while Cousins became the third-longest-tenured QB1 in Vikings history, he offered next to no mobility and has probably delivered his best NFL work. Though, the 12-year vet’s rapport with Jefferson will be difficult for Darnold and/or McCarthy to replicate this season.

Cousins departing after a void years-laden restructure moved $28.5M in dead money onto Minnesota’s payroll. Dead money issues notwithstanding, the third-year GM used void years once again via more restructures this offseason. No such option was available for Hunter, whose run of contract reworkings stopped after last season.

Hunter’s 2023 redo pointed him toward free agency, even though the Vikings did not throw in the towel on keeping him. The Pro Bowl OLB made his first market trip after a career-best season. Hunter saw a borderline-dominant season (16.5 sacks, NFL-most 23 tackles for loss) catapult him into a position in which he commanded a near-fully guaranteed deal from the Texans.

Not long after losing Greenard, Houston guaranteed $48M of the $49.5M in his two-year deal. That rare agreement, which will bring Hunter back to the city where he attended high school, came after the former third-round pick reestablished his value following two major injuries.

After a neck injury nixed Hunter’s 2020 season and a torn pec sidelined him for 10 games in 2021, the Mike Zimmer-era third-rounder moved his count of double-digit sack seasons to five. The Vikings depended on Hunter’s bounce-back effort, as their Davenport plan fizzled quickly last year. Davenport’s four-game season led to another “prove it” deal, this one a $6.5M pact with the Lions.

Although the sack era excludes the famed Purple People Eaters D-line’s work, Hunter leaves Minnesota after racking up the third-most official sacks (87.5) in team history. Wonnum, who became a pivotal edge component due to the injuries the Vikings sustained in recent years, caught a bad break by suffering a torn quad in January. He joined the Panthers on a one-year deal.

Mattison could not match his off-the-bench production as a starter, averaging 3.9 yards per carry and finishing in the bottom third in rushing yards over expected. The Vikings bailed on a two-year deal, and after ex-fifth-round pick Ty Chandler showed a spark late last season, he promises to mix in as a Jones 1-B.

Osborn offered slot consistency with Cousins, producing 655- and 650-yard seasons from 2021-22, before finishing with 540 tethered to the Vikes’ gaggle of backups. Osborn did not make sense as a keeper, given the Jefferson payment. That said, the Patriots added the slot regular for just $4M in March. Osborn’s exit leaves some questions about Minnesota’s WR3 role, with Sherfield (one 400-yard season in six tries) not having offered anything close to Osborn’s consistency.

Minnesota’s kicker from 2021-23, Joseph is now in Green Bay as Anders Carlson‘s top competitor. That represents a step down for the veteran, who kicked in every Vikings game over the past three seasons. Sixth-round pick Will Reichard, Alabama’s kicker for five seasons, is positioned to take over.

Trades:

Earlier this offseason, it looked like a team that wanted McCarthy would need to complete a notable trade-up transaction to secure necessary real estate. That did not end up being required, but the Vikings acquired more ammo by trading up 19 spots. Minnesota forked over a 2025 second to do so, giving Houston an important future asset. As it turned out, the Vikings used this pick to replace Hunter rather than Cousins. Though, the team made a memorable attempt to climb up for a quarterback.

Draft:

  • Round 1, No 10 (via Jets): J.J. McCarthy (QB, Michigan)
  • Round 1, No. 17 (via Jaguars): Dallas Turner (EDGE, Alabama)
  • Round 4, No. 108: Khyree Jackson (CB, Oregon) (signed)
  • Round 6, No. 177 (from Panthers through Jaguars): Walter Rouse (T, Oklahoma) (signed)
  • Round 6: No. 203 (from Texans through Browns, Broncos and Jets): Will Reichard (K, Alabama) (signed)
  • Round 7, No. 230 (from Falcons through Browns and Cardinals): Michael Jurgens (C, Wake Forest) (signed)
  • Round 7, No. 232 (from Broncos through 49ers and Texans): Levi Drake Rodriguez (DT, Texas A&M Commerce) (signed)

With Darnold as the bridge, the Vikings made no secret of their interest in selecting a quarterback in the first round. Adofo-Mensah indicated the team would be comfortable with multiple options and while Jayden Daniels interest surfaced, the Commanders confirming only one offer came in for their No. 2 pick – presumably from the Daniels-obsessed Raiders – it became clear Minnesota focused its post-Cousins efforts on another passer. Drake Maye what-ifs may follow McCarthy’s career, as the Vikings and Giants made offers to move up to No. 3.

Neither NFC club was able to convince New England to pass on Maye. The Giants proposed Nos. 6 and 47, along with their 2025 first, for No. 3. Competing with this during the early part of the draft, the Vikings are believed to have sent the Pats an offer including Nos. 11 and 23, along with their 2025 first. Minnesota-Maye buzz built before the draft, with New York also enamored with the North Carolina prospect. The Vikings discussed terms with the Cardinals and Chargers, but no move that high became necessary for a player who appeared the team’s Maye backup plan.

While the Giants shifted away from the position altogether, the Vikings were effectively pot-committed on adding one of this class’ arms. That turned out to be McCarthy, with a Sean Payton-led smokescreen effort potentially influencing the Vikings to part with a fourth-round pick and moving out of the fifth round (via the Jets) to jump up one spot for their QB hopeful.

McCarthy joined the rest of the top six non-Caleb Williams QB options in visiting Minnesota pre-draft; all but Daniels went through a workout. The Vikings were not closely tied to Michael Penix Jr., so it is not certain if the Falcons’ surprise move affected their plan. McCarthy will be expected to move into Minnesota’s lineup, potentially early in the season.

McCarthy said he spent more time with the Giants pre-draft, but the Vikings made him the first top-10 QB draftee in franchise history. Ownership is believed to have nudged the front office to concentrate on a long-term QB, after its recent year-to-year Cousins plan; that potentially helps explain the trade with the Texans.

This will give the Vikings a rookie-deal QB starter – once McCarthy takes the baton from Darnold – for the first time since Teddy Bridgewater and the 2014 first-rounder’s contract (marred by a severe knee injury) finished out with Sam Bradford on the books as well. McCarthy’s deal will give the Vikes a building block and while teams’ interest in the Michigan prospect may have been exaggerated – as the Jim Harbaugh pupil fell to No. 10 – Minnesota obviously felt comfortable enough to make a pivotal investment.

Wowing NFL staffers at his pro day, McCarthy was not asked to operate in a high-octane fashion. He attempted 332 passes in each of the past two seasons, reaching that number despite 14- and 15-game campaigns. McCarthy became the rare modern top-10 QB draftee without a 3,000-yard passing season, though his accuracy numbers (72.3% in 2023) impressed. McCarthy averaged nine yards per attempt last season and his development becomes the central Vikings storyline.

The Vikes also met with Turner pre-draft and they joined the Colts in benefiting from the draft’s offense-focused start. As a record 14 offensive players started the draft, the top pass-rushers fell to the mid-teens. The Colts (Laiatu Latu), Seahawks (Byron Murphy) and Vikings capitalized and addressed their pass rush. Though, Minnesota needed to trade a fifth-round choice and 2025 third- and fourth-rounders to move up six spots. The Vikes had made the Seahawks an offer for No. 16 as well, appearing to emphasize the NFC North team’s interest in pass rushers.

Turner blazed to a 4.46-second 40-yard dash at the Combine, boosting his stock after he followed former teammate Will Anderson Jr. by winning SEC Defensive Player of the Year honors. Turner totaled 10 sacks and 14.5 TFLs during his final Alabama season. The Vikings added some edge options in Greenard and Van Ginkel; Turner becoming a quick study would make this a formidable pass rush.

Other:

Continuing the trend of Spielman giving Adofo-Mensah building blocks, the former GM’s final first-round pick has become one of the NFL’s best young tackles. ESPN’s run block win rate metric ranked Darrisaw sixth in 2022; Pro Football Focus slotted him second among all tackles that season. PFF graded the Virginia Tech product as the NFL’s eighth-best tackle last season. Understandably, the Vikings are interested in extending Darrisaw. Talks have begun, but the 25-year-old blocker may need to wait.

Minnesota extended Jefferson going into his fifth year, though the team tried to re-up the 2020 first-rounder last summer. The Vikings getting in early on Darrisaw may matter, as a Tristan Wirfs Buccaneers extension has not happened yet.

Wirfs is likely to eclipse Penei Sewell‘s tackle-record $28M-per-year number. Rashawn Slater is also now extension-eligible. While Darrisaw does not have the accolades those first-rounders do, he can boost his value with a strong fourth season. The price figures to rise the longer the Vikings wait, but with only Brian O’Neill signed to an upper-crust contract up front, Minnesota should have a salary slot open for a Darrisaw deal.

Cousins’ lofty dead money sum also impacts the Vikings on the contract front, but the team joined the Patriots in a full-court heave of sorts by asking about Herbert at the Combine. Tied to a $52.5M-AAV contract, the Chargers standout is now tied to a new regime. Of course, Herbert’s presence played a central role in Harbaugh selecting the Bolts as his vehicle to return to the NFL. It represented a non-starter, though the inquiries make for a fun “what if?” Only two QBs (Deshaun Watson, Jim Plunkett) have been traded for three first-round picks since the merger. Herbert almost definitely would command such a haul, but both Minnesota and New England moved on to rookies.

McCown coached Maye when the Tar Heels passer was in high school; the assistant will look to rebound from a rough stint as the Panthers’ QBs coach. Carolina axed the former quarterback shortly after firing first-year HC Frank Reich. McCown, who famously knocked the Vikings out of the 2003 playoffs as the Cardinals’ QB, will be tasked with tutoring another first-rounder after his Bryce Young mentorship featured some complications. Phillips served his three-week ban, stemming from a 2023 DWI arrest, this offseason.

Top 10 cap charges for 2024:

  1. Brian O’Neill, RT: $22.93M
  2. T.J. Hockenson, TE: $14.04M
  3. Byron Murphy, CB: $10.91M
  4. Harrison Phillips, DL: $8.83M
  5. Justin Jefferson, WR: $8.61M
  6. Harrison Smith, S: $7.32M
  7. Josh Oliver, TE: $6.17M
  8. Garrett Bradbury, C: $5.77M
  9. Jonathan Greenard, OLB: $5.74M
  10. Sam Darnold, QB: $5M

Darnold and McCarthy working with Kevin O’Connell will be interesting, given how Cousins performed in the third-year HC’s offense. After a dormant NFC North period, however, the Vikings are breaking in their new QBs at an interesting point for this division.

The Lions more than justified last year’s hype, delivering their best season since the Bobby Layne years, while the Packers navigated historic Aaron Rodgers dead money to reach the playoffs behind his replacement. With the Bears appearing to upgrade at QB via the Justin Fields-to-Caleb Williams switch and making key WR additions, this division appears deeper. This could result in a Vikings transition year, though the team exceeding expectations under O’Connell in the recent past offers some hope.

This article first appeared on Pro Football Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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NFL

Browns officially make decision on starting quarterback

Cleveland Browns insider Tony Grossi of ESPN Cleveland/The Land on Demand noted late Sunday night that head coach Kevin Stefanski was "undoubtedly" going to name veteran Joe Flacco the team's Week 1 starting quarterback as soon as Tuesday. It turns out Stefanski didn't need to wait that long. Kelsey Russo of the Browns' website confirmed on Monday afternoon that Flacco will serve as Cleveland's QB1 for its regular-season opener against the Cincinnati Bengals on Sept. 7. That post officially ended what truly became a quarterback competition in name only after presumed backup Kenny Pickett suffered a hamstring injury on July 26 that kept him out of the club's first two preseason games. Even before Pickett experienced that setback, there was no indication that Stefanski wanted to start either 2025 third-round draft pick Dillon Gabriel or 2025 fifth-rounder Shedeur Sanders against the Bengals. Gabriel missed Cleveland's 30-10 win over the Carolina Panthers on Aug. 8 because of a hamstring issue but then had a solid outing in the Browns' 22-13 win over the Philadelphia Eagles this past Saturday. Sanders played well against Carolina but sat out the Eagles contest because of an oblique injury. As for Flacco, the perception exists that the 40-year-old didn't need preseason reps to be ready to go for the Cincinnati game. During the 2023 season, the one-time Super Bowl MVP won four of five starts to guide the 2023 Browns to a playoff berth. For a piece published shortly before the Browns shared their expected announcement, Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated mentioned that other players in the Cleveland locker room "know Flacco is their best option" regarding Week 1. Breer added that "the Browns are comfortable keeping four quarterbacks" on their active roster through at least the early parts of the upcoming season. As of Monday, it was unclear if Pickett will be able to play in Cleveland's preseason finale versus the Los Angeles Rams this coming Saturday. One wonders if Pickett will push to take the field on Aug. 23 so that he can audition for a team that may feel its long-term answer at the position isn't on the roster today. Then again, Browns general manager Andrew Berry may elect to hold onto Pickett until Stefanski decides that either Gabriel or Sanders is ready to face a live defense in a meaningful game. For now, the Cleveland starting job is officially Flacco's to lose for the first time since January 2024.

Do Steelers already have Aaron Rodgers reconsidering retirement plans?
NFL

Do Steelers already have Aaron Rodgers reconsidering retirement plans?

In June, quarterback Aaron Rodgers revealed that one reason he agreed to a team-friendly contract to join the Pittsburgh Steelers was because he was "pretty sure" he would retire following the 2025 season. It sounds like Rodgers' teammates could already have him thinking twice about those plans. During the latest edition of the "Not Just Football with Cam Heyward" podcast, Pittsburgh wide receiver DK Metcalf suggested that Rodgers could "run it back" with the Steelers for the 2026 season. "Maybe," Rodgers responded, as shared by Ross McCorkle of Steelers Depot. Numerous reports have detailed how Rodgers has impressed his teammates and coaches with how he hasn't been "too big for anyone" ever since he inked his contract. That said, it remains to be seen how Rodgers' body will respond when he starts taking hits in meaningful games. Rodgers largely looked like a shell of his former self last season coming off the torn Achilles he suffered in September 2023. He also reportedly dealt with a serious hamstring issue, a nagging hip problem, injuries to both his knees and a low ankle sprain before he turned 41 in December 2024. Earlier this summer, Rodgers hinted that he wanted to finish his career "the right way" with Pittsburgh. He expanded on his mindset during the podcast. "I've had a 20-year career," Rodgers added. "I've had a lot of success, accomplished everything I wanted to accomplish. But I fell in love with this game when I was five years old. And I wanted to get that love back to where I felt like it should be in the twilight of my career." Signing Rodgers was a win-now move for a franchise that has lost five straight playoff games and that last notched a postseason victory in January 2017. If Rodgers turns the clock back and guides Pittsburgh on a memorable playoff journey, he could be asked to stick around as a bridge option at the position. One wonders how Metcalf and other Steelers players will view Rodgers after he faces the New York Jets, his former team, in Pittsburgh's regular-season opener on Sept. 7.