Could the Biggest Vikings Rumor of Them All Finally Be Dead?

Since Aaron Rodgers left the Green Bay Packers following the 2022 season, a slow, steady drip of rumors linking him to the Minnesota Vikings has persisted. Rodgers wound up with the New York Jets for two years and the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2025, and after the Houston Texans flogged the Steelers in Round 1 of the postseason on Monday night, the Rodgers-to-Vikings rumors may be dead.
Rodgers still generates buzz, but the on-field decline and Minnesota’s roster timeline seem to indicate the end of a longstanding rumor.
While Rodgers will likely drag his announcement out for months, he looked like a quarterback playing his final game versus Houston — ineffective and over the hill.
Rodgers-to-Vikings Talk Could Finally Die
Rodgers may, alas, be done.

Rodgers Opines on His Future
Predictably, reporters asked Rodgers about his future after his team’s gruesome loss to the Texans.
He replied, “No, I mean, I’m not going to make any emotional decisions. Disappointed obviously. Such a fun year. A lot of adversity, but a lot of fun. Been a great year overall in my life in the last year, and this is a really good part of that, coming here and being a part of this team. So, it’s disappointing to be sitting here with the season over.”
Rodgers had previously hinted that 2025 would be his final season.
Media members also asked Rodgers about the job security of his head coach, Mike Tomlin. Rodgers teed off: “This league has changed a lot in my 21 years. When you hear a conversation about the Mike Tomlins of the world, Matt LaFleurs of the world, those are just two that I played for. When I first got in the league, there wouldn’t be a conversation about whether those guys were on the hot seat.”
“But the way that the league is covered now and the way that there’s snap decisions and the validity given to the Twitter experts and all the experts on TV now who make it seem like they know what the hell they’re talking about, to me that’s an absolute joke.”
Over the years, Rodgers has devolved into an angry soul, embracing strange conspiracy theories and blasting the media at every turn. Monday night was no different. He ended the interview prematurely after cursing at a reporter.
The Nonstop Brett Favre Parallel
When Rodgers finally departed Green Bay early in 2023, the Favre equivalence became relentless among fans. That is — a future Hall of Fame Packers passer leaves Wisconsin under a guise of disgruntlement, joins the Jets, and eventually signs with the Vikings.
Favre did that, and folks just assumed that Rodgers would maintain the pattern.
He did not. He signed with the Steelers last offseason, and for his troubles, he received a one-and-done in the postseason. Just because Favre had a certain career resume didn’t mean Rodgers was destined to follow suit. Still, the theory gained legs among Vikings fans, especially Facebook users who were adamant that Minnesota should find a way to get him.
Flirtation with Vikings Last Offseason
Of course, those same fans were almost right.
Rodgers allegedly campaigned to join the Vikings through back channels, as he and Kevin O’Connell have been friends for years. Ultimately, Minnesota decided that J.J. McCarthy offered the best path forward, even if McCarthy struggled for much of 2025 and succumbed to a litany of injuries.

Some claim the Vikings declined Rodgers’ request. Rodgers later said during the regular season that there was no smoke to the rumors.
However, for about two months of the 2025 offseason, Rodgers to Minnesota felt like a real possibility.
No Added Benefit to the Vikings
With Rodgers’ possible retirement looming, he would not have added much to the Vikings’ bottom line. Minnesota finished 9-8 after a 4-8 start, and out in Pittsburgh, Rodgers and Co. finished 10-7, gutted by Houston at home in the postseason. Rodgers, meanwhile, finished 20th in EPA+CPOE, a stark departure from his MVP heyday in Green Bay.
The Vikings’ goal should not be just to get to the postseason, only to be blasted at home in the 1st Round by the Texans. Purple fans have seen that movie in 2022 and 2024. The franchise ignored any Rodgers smoke because the goal is to win a Super Bowl. Losing before the championship doesn’t accomplish anything.

Rodgers offered a get-to-the-playoffs-and-lose-right-away ceiling. McCarthy, when healthy, provided a brighter upside.
If the Vikings wanted to get decimated in the postseason — like Pittsburgh — Rodgers in purple could have worked. If the Vikings wanted to develop a quarterback and eventually achieve a Super Bowl, signing Rodgers would have achieved zilch.

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