Vikings Rumors Gain Steam around Breece Hall, Harrison Smith’s Future, Theo Jackson

Jets RB Breece Hall in 2024
Oct 20, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Jets running back Breece Hall (20) runs he ball against the Pittsburgh Steelers during the third quarter at Acrisure Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Minnesota Vikings rumor mill will only intensify as the offseason nears, with three games to go before the franchise must start contemplating 2026 free agency and the draft. Consider this a peek at Week 16 rumors.

Minnesota’s weekend rumor wheel touches RB help, Harrison Smith’s timeline, and a shifting safety pecking order entering Week 16.

While the team prepares for a contest against the New York Giants on Sunday, here’s the current state of affairs inside the Purple Rumor Mill.

Three Rumors Worth Tracking for Vikings in Week 16

The first batch of Vikings rumors in Week 16.

Breece Hall celebrating with Jets teammates after a fourth-quarter touchdown. Vikings rumors Breece Hall
New York Jets running back Breece Hall celebrates with teammates after scoring a fourth-quarter touchdown at MetLife Stadium, with the date Jan. 5, 2025 marking a late-season game in East Rutherford. Hall capped off a decisive drive by finding the end zone and energizing the Jets’ sideline as the offense closed out the contest in front of the home crowd. Mandatory Credit: Kevin R. Wexler–NorthJersey.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Rumor: Running back Breece Hall would be a good free-agent fit for the Vikings.

The idea is floating around, and Bleacher Report’s Alex Kay is the one putting it into circulation. In theory, at least, Hall ending up in Minnesota isn’t being treated as totally far-fetched.

Kay laid out the logic this week, writing, “Although Jordan Mason has fared well when called upon, he’s logged just 10 starts across his first 59 professional games. He’s also struggled with health when taking on heavier workloads.”

He continued, “After a fast start to the 2024 season, he was limited by various injuries and ultimately wound up on the IR for the final five games. That’s not what a team wants to see in a potential lead back, a concern that could lead Minnesota to make a run at a surer option in Hall. Despite a torn ACL that derailed the back half of an Offensive Rookie of the Year-worthy season, availability has been one of Hall’s strong suits.”

This isn’t the first time Hall’s name has brushed up against the Vikings, either. Around the trade deadline, when the Jets were in full sell-off mode, Minnesota was loosely mentioned as a speculative landing spot — nothing wild, but not entirely out of bounds.

Kay reinforced the durability angle as well, adding, “He returned from that knee injury in rapid fashion and went on appear in all 17 games the following season. He only missed one contest last year and has remained healthy throughout the current campaign.”

“That combination of skill and availability is rare in the modern NFL, making Hall a fantastic choice for the Vikings (or any other RB-needy squad) to target in free agency.”

The Vikings are already heavily invested in Aaron Jones and Jordan Mason next, probably disqualifying another tailback like Hall, but the NFL world seems to believe it’s possible.

Rumor: Harrison Smith is just taking his future day by day.

With the Vikings coming off a win in Dallas, Harrison Smith found himself squarely in the spotlight after the Sunday Night Football broadcast. The panel didn’t dance around it, asking the veteran safety directly about what comes next once the season wraps in a matter of weeks.

Harrison Smith reacting after intercepting a pass during a Vikings game
Minnesota Vikings free safety Harrison Smith reacts following an interception at U.S. Bank Stadium, with the date Dec. 7, 2025, falling during a second-half sequence against the Washington Commanders in Minneapolis. The veteran defender showed visible emotion after the takeaway, punctuating a key moment for Minnesota’s defense as it worked to maintain control late in the game. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel–Imagn Images

Smith didn’t offer anything definitive. Instead, he answered in the way someone with nearly a decade and a half in the league often does: present-focused and noncommittal. “I’m just enjoying day by day. You know how it is, when you’re getting towards your later years, it’s harder to go to practice, harder to get ready to go every time. On gameday, I always feel ready.”

“I’ve always been on top of my body — my nutrition. Everything. It’s not fancy or anything, but you stay on top of it — it stacks up over the years.”

For fans who have convinced themselves that Smith is immune to time and should play indefinitely, that answer will likely register as vague. Read more realistically, it sounds like a player acutely aware of where he is in his career — and how close the end might be. At 36, the final three games on the schedule could very well represent the last stretch of his NFL life.

What stood out most, though, was what Smith didn’t say. He wasn’t cornered or rushed, and the moment was there if he wanted it. He simply chose not to declare, “I will retire in a few weeks,” leaving the door open — even if only slightly — as the season winds down.

Rumor: Safety Theo Jackson was quietly benched last week at the Cowboys.

By the end of Week 15 preparation and practice, there was nothing physically keeping Jackson off the field. He was cleared, scrubbed from the injury report entirely, and treated as available by every standard that matters.

Then last Sunday arrived in Dallas, and he never factored into the defensive plan. Jackson’s night consisted of nine special-teams snaps — and nothing else.

Sam LaPorta stiff-arming Theo Jackson during a Lions–Vikings game at Ford Field
Detroit Lions tight end Sam LaPorta stiff-arms Minnesota Vikings safety Theo Jackson at Ford Field, with the date Nov. 2, 2025, tied to a first-quarter play in Detroit. LaPorta fought through contact after the catch, gaining extra yardage as Minnesota’s defense attempted to limit early momentum in a divisional matchup. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel–Imagn Images

Minnesota leaned heavily on its two-safety look with Harrison Smith and Josh Metellus, but when Brian Flores needed a third body, the choice wasn’t Jackson. It was Jay Ward. That decision was notable. Ward is still early in his career, but he plays with urgency, physicality, and an edge that fits what Flores typically rewards.

The snap count tells the story. Ward logged 11 defensive plays. Jackson logged zero. That’s a meaningful shift, especially considering Jackson was still listed as a starter on the depth chart not long ago.

If that usage continues, Ward isn’t just filling in — he’s actively auditioning for a bigger role in 2026.

That said, with Metellus now sidelined for the remainder of the season because of a shoulder injury, Jackson may have caught a break at exactly the right time, whether the coaching staff intended it or not. He should see the field again this weekend in New York.


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Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His debut thriller, The Motor Route , is out now. He ... More about Dustin Baker