Vikings QB Shock Could Change Everything About This 2026 Run

Can the Minnesota Vikings defy expectations and make a playoff push despite being overlooked in the 2026 season?

The Minnesota Vikings are heading into 2026 with a label this franchise has worn before: overlooked. And on the latest episode of The Real Forno Show, Tyler Forness and Garret Greenlee leaned right into that idea, arguing that the national conversation may be missing what could make this team dangerous.

Greenlee pushed back on the notion that Minnesota has no real postseason path. “Our quarterbacks cumulatively had 17 touchdowns to 21 picks last year,” he noted, “and whatever you think of Kyler Murray heading into the season, I don’t think he’s gonna throw 17 touchdowns to 21 picks.”

Forness matched that energy by pointing to the 1998, 2000, and 2017 teams, all of which were overlooked before making deep runs. Both also stressed how much changes if the offensive line is healthy, especially after the full starting five didn’t play together until mid-season in 2025.

Quarterback remains the biggest conversation point, and Forness delivered the episode’s boldest prediction. Both men expect Murray to open the season as the starter, but Forness said, “J.J.

McCarthy will not be on this roster for week one,” adding that it could happen through a trade or injury. He tied that to Kevin O’Connell’s long-standing preference not to have his starter constantly looking over his shoulder.

Greenlee wasn’t shy about his own view of Murray, either. He put the quarterback at a “seven, seven and a half out of 10” and said Arizona’s environment has weighed heavily on his career. “This franchise hasn’t made the playoffs in nine of the past 10 years,” Greenlee said of the Cardinals.

The wide receiver room also came under the microscope. Greenlee said Justin Jefferson “had the worst year of his career” individually, not just from a numbers standpoint, while also noting that McCarthy’s 10.8% drop rate - compared to Wentz’s 3.5% - put extra strain on every pass-catcher.

Tight end was another area that drew a harsh assessment. Greenlee called it “one of the worst in the NFL,” pointing to T.J.

Hockenson’s decline after his ACL/MCL injury and Josh Oliver’s limited role. Both analysts expect 2026 to be Hockenson’s final season in purple, with a young receiving tight end in a future draft seen as the cleaner long-term answer.

The discussion also turned to the roster-building philosophy taking shape under Nolan Teasley. Greenlee said, “Building trench play is a prerequisite for success in January,” and pointed to Donovan Jackson, Caleb Banks, and Dallas Turner as signs of that shift. Jackson, notably, reportedly played last season from Week 3 on with a broken bone in his wrist.

One of Greenlee’s bigger season-end ideas centered on running back Demond Claiborne. He expects Claiborne’s usage to rise significantly by the end of the year and compared his style to De’Von Achane.

As for how far this team can go, Greenlee sees a playoff berth as the realistic ceiling, with a Divisional Round exit. He also admitted he’d “shave his head” for a Super Bowl run.

And if the Vikings are going to make noise, they’ll have to do it in a brutal division. Greenlee called the NFC North “the most complete division in football,” which makes every game inside it matter even more for Minnesota in 2026.

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