Joe Burrow Trade Theories Are Taking Over the Vikings’ Offseason

Until there’s reason for the rumor to die, Minnesota Vikings fans will believe that Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow is in play via trade. Burrow expressed frustration down the stretch of the 2025 season, prompting retirement and trade theories. Now, one voice claims the Vikings have reached out to Cincinnati about a trade.
Burrow trade theories keep resurfacing around the Vikings, and fans are not mad about them.
Generally speaking, it’s highly unlikely the Bengals trade the elite passer, but don’t tell that to hungry Vikings faithful, who would welcome a reunion between Burrow and wide receiver Justin Jefferson from their LSU days.
Joe Burrow Talk Keeps Circling the Vikings
Burrow-to-Vikings overtook Vikings discourse late last week.

The Alleged Interest
SI.com‘s Grant Cohn is the current epicenter of Vikings-Burrow trade rumors.
He posted a video to X, formerly known as Twitter, last week, saying, “The Vikings want to get right back into contention. They’re planning to offer J.J. McCarthy and Jonathan Greenard, and two firstโround picks to the Cincinnati Bengals for Joe Burrow. If the Bengals say no, then they might go out and get Kirk Cousins, bring him back.”
Naturally, Vikings fans really want the theory to be real, so it was easy to classify the rumor as legitimate.
Offshoot Draft Website Doubles Down
Another party piled on, though it’s unclear if the source was just Cohn.
Walter Football tweeted Friday, “Just heard from a source that the Vikings reached out to the Bengals to trade for Joe Burrow. Asking price was too high. Bengals wanted multiple first-round picks, a defensive player, and J.J. McCarthy.”
It’s worth noting that Walter Football is almost exclusively a draft-themed website and strangely has been subject to accusations of racist and sexist remarks, often tucked inside its draft analysis.
Nevertheless, casual fans saw the Walter Football tweet and interpreted it as further validation of Cohn’s take.
A King’s Ransom Trade
Truth be told, the price(s) mentioned by Cohn and Walter Football aren’t too far off reality. Trading for Burrow could involve multiple picks, an EDGE rusher โ the Bengals need those, especially if they don’t make nice with Trey Hendrickson โ and perhaps McCarthy. Aside from Malik Willis and possibly Mac Jones or Kyler Murray, other starting quarterbacks aren’t stranded on a deserted island waiting for the Bengals. McCarthy may be required in the theoretical swap.
What’s more, this April’s draft is not known for quarterback talent. Fernando Mendoza will go to the Las Vegas Raiders at pick No. 1, some team will draft Alabama’s Ty Simpson in the first 40 picks, and that’ll be it for high-profile quarterbacks early on. Passers like Arch Manning, LaNorris Sellers, and Dante Moore opted to return to school in 2026, making this class weak and somewhat reminiscent of the 2022 group.
Still, the Vikings, in theory, would have to decide if shipping McCarthy, Greenard, and three 1st-Rounders to Cincinnati for Burrow would be worth it. Usually, when such trades go down, the team receiving the king’s ransom โ not the one getting the single player โ “wins” the trade.
Matt Fitzgerald of Strype Hype, a Bengals-themed website, weighed in: “Would it stun me if the Bengals actually listened to a Joe Burrow trade proposal? Not in the slightest. This is still a cheap organization, plagued by conservatism, and the idea of rebooting the roster on a rookie QB contract, three young first-round draft assets, and a defensive veteran probably appeals to Mike Brown and those in his ownership orbit.”
“Do I personally want it to happen? No way. Nor do fans. The more realistic scenario for a Burrow trade is if Cincinnati misses the postseason again in 2026. At that point, I can’t imagine Joe would want to stick with the team. And why would he? The bottom-line veracity of these Joe Burrow trade rumors is less important or worth focusing on than the timing.”
Cincinnati would eat $56.5 million in dead cap if it traded Burrow before June 1st.

Fitzgerald added, “Per OverTheCap.com, trading Burrow prior to June 1 would result in a net negative $8 million in 2026 cap space for Cincinnati. That’s another huge reason why 2027 feels way more feasible. Roast me for giving oxygen to these Vikings-Burrow reports if you want to.”
“Like it or not, the Joe Burrow trade talking point ain’t going away any time soon till the actual games start and a healthy Joe Brrr starts winning a lot of ’em.”
Instant Super Bowl Contendership
That doesn’t mean Minnesota shouldn’t do it. Burrow will turn 30 in December; he has about 5-10 years left of upper-echelon performance. The Vikings would rapidly morph into a Super Bowl contender and stay that way for the next five years, assuming wise free agency hauls and better draft processes.
Minnesota would have to nail picks outside of the 1st Round for the next three years, pray Burrow stays healthy, and it would contend for the NFC North and a Super Bowl annually. That’s the perk of netting Burrow.

It’s just that the current theory is based on anonymous sourcing and a game of telephone if Walter Football is sourcing Cohn.
When Burrow last played a full season (2024), he threw for nearly 5,000 passing yards and 43 touchdowns.

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