Welcome to the first week of the Minnesota Vikings’ offseason, with the purple team needing to wait eight long months […]
Welcome to the first week of the Minnesota Vikings’ offseason, with the purple team needing to wait eight long months before forging an adventure that could perhaps return them to the playoffs after a year off. Each week, VikingsTerritory tracks the latest rumors in Minnesota’s orbit, so consider this the first offseason batch.
Three threads are driving early offseason talk — an RB splash idea, a DC carousel angle, and a loud QB forecast that won’t die.
The Vikings have very little cap room to spend this offseason, but more draft picks than usual. Here’s how the rumor jibes with that reality.
The First Rumor Cycle of the 2026 Offseason for Vikings
The Purple Rumor Mill rides again for the 2026 offseason.
Rumor: Breece Hall is a free-agent fit for the Vikings.
Fansided‘s Cody Williams ranked Hall as the league’s sixth-best free agent entering the offseason, tying him to Minnesota as a logical destination.
He wrote this week, “Amid the Jets’ fire sale at the trade deadline, it was perhaps most shocking that Breece Hall stayed put in New York. Some have speculated that means they’ll look to retain him — but are the Jets really in the business right now of being able to pay a running back?”
“I don’t think so, especially with Hall projected to get something in the $12 million AAV range that Josh Jacobs got. But with Aaron Jones aging and Jordan Mason not working out, he’d make a ton of sense around J.J. McCarthy moving forward under Kevin O’Connell. Prediction: Minnesota Vikings.”
The Vikings are already operating roughly $35 million over the cap, making any link to a premium free agent a bit tricky. It also undercuts the reality of Minnesota’s current RB commitments, with more than $20 million tied up in the running back room through Jones and Mason alone.
The on-field production from the Vikings’ 2025 halfbacks was serviceable. It just didn’t strike fear into defenses or elevate the offense into postseason range, largely because Kevin O’Connell leaned heavily on the passing game even as quarterback play faltered. The Vikings have functional backs, but nothing that consistently bedazzles fans.
That’s where Hall becomes intriguing. The résumé has flashes of ample production, and the Jets’ offense hasn’t exactly been a launchpad for maximizing it. A geographical cure has the appeal of unlocking what draft gurus once projected for Hall.
The obstacle is cap math. Hall won’t come cheap, and a deal in the $15 million-per-year range clashes with Minnesota’s historical allocation of resources at the position. Unless Kwesi Adofo-Mensah is willing to make a roster cut for Jones or Mason and fully reset the room, the numbers don’t check out.
Rumor: ESPN claims Brian Flores will end up with the Las Vegas Raiders.
With speculation swirling around Brian Flores, Solak weighed in this week, pointing to Las Vegas as a potential landing spot.
He noted on the Raiders and Flores: “Big prediction for the offseason: If Carroll goes one-and-done, Brady will call an old New England friend to be head coach: current Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores. He’ll get a well-deserved second crack at a head coaching gig after getting fired by the Dolphins in 2022.”
Carroll was dismissed shortly afterward, lending momentum to Solak’s projection and keeping Flores firmly in the conversation.
From a roster standpoint, the Raiders remain far from an attractive franchise. There’s no quarterback of the future in place, and the offense lacks top-end receiving talent. The Geno Smith experiment collapsed in 2025, while Aidan O’Connell continues to profile as a long-term QB2 or QB3. Tre Tucker leads the receiver room, but film paints him as a complementary option on most rosters.
Las Vegas does, however, control the first overall pick, putting the franchise in position to select Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, widely expected to be the first player off the board. That opportunity comes with a caveat. Flores has built his reputation on defense, disrupting quarterbacks rather than cultivating them.
If Flores were to take over in Las Vegas, the success of the move would hinge on assembling a strong offensive staff, one capable of guiding a rookie quarterback on his journey.
As of this article’s publication, the Raiders had not requested an interview with Flores.
Rumor: Paul Allen says J.J. McCarthy is a “massive favorite” to quarterback the Vikings in Week 1 of 2026.
All things considered, Allen has firmly planted his flag on McCarthy opening next season as the Vikings’ starter.
He said on his show Monday, “I would make J.J. McCarthy -700 to be the starting QB for the Vikings Week 1 next year. Yeah. -700 minimum. Massive favorite.”
For anyone fluent in betting lingo, that’s decisive as hell. A -700 moneyline roughly translates to a 13-point spread in NFL terms. In Allen’s framing, McCarthy enters the offseason with about a two-touchdown edge over the field.
He’s convinced that the franchise’s front office still has the utmost faith in McCarthy, despite McCarthy’s intense injury struggles and poor play through his first six starts. Allen’s declaration is the first emphatic message anywhere that McCarthy’s job as the QB1 is safe-safe.
Category: General Sports