When the Minnesota Vikings open training camp in a few weeks, the quarterback fight will be in full swing. Kyler Murray and J.J. McCarthy are set to battle for the QB1 job, and the length of that competition still isn’t known.
One thing that reportedly won’t matter, though, is how much the Vikings have invested in either passer. Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer recently said, "J.J.
McCarthy vs. Kyler Murray is going to be very much a let-the-best-man-win derby (with the team’s investments in either guy a nonfactor)."
That matters most in McCarthy’s case. Minnesota is paying Murray just $1.3 million for the 2026 season, and while the Vikings have used only a modest amount of draft capital on Murray, the bigger talking point is McCarthy, whom they selected 10th overall in the 2024 NFL Draft.
Even so, the expectation is that McCarthy won’t get any special treatment because of that first-round selection. If that holds true, it would mark a clear break from how things sometimes worked in previous Vikings regimes.
During the Rick Spielman era, Minnesota at times seemed to keep giving players chances simply because the team had already spent a high pick on them. Laquon Treadwell and Garrett Bradbury are two examples that fit that pattern; if either had been chosen after the first round, it’s not hard to imagine their Vikings runs ending even sooner.
So if Kevin O’Connell and new general manager Nolan Teasley handle this competition the way Breer described, the Vikings will be making the QB1 call based on performance alone this summer.
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Josh Metellus has been among the veterans noticing Thomas, and the appeal goes beyond simple rookie enthusiasm. Thomas has shown enough football IQ and feel for the system to suggest he may not be a long-shot project, which gives his progress a little extra weight with uncertainty still hanging over the safety depth chart. The next step is proving those early signs can hold once the reps get faster and the responsibilities get heavier. [Read more 🡒]
