Vikings Rumors Heat Up on a Jordan Addison Trade, the QB Plan, More Rodgers Fodder

As the Minnesota Vikings approach Week No. 4 of the offseason, the third week brought some juiciness, including a blunt Jordan Addison trade idea, ESPN’s take on the offseason quarterback plan, and familiar Aaron Rodgers theories.
An NFL writer linked Addison to San Francisco while Minnesota keeps the quarterback depth plan wide open.
The Vikings’ rumor mill never sleeps, and this week was no exception.
A Week of Addison Trade Theories, Quarterback Uncertainty, and Familiar Rodgers Buzz
A glance at the Purple Rumor Mill for January 24, 2026.

Rumor: Jordan Addison could be traded to the San Francisco 49ers.
SI.com’s Grant Cohn injected early offseason juice into the rumor cycle this week by pushing the Addison angle into public view.
He said, “According to a source, the 49ers intend to be quite aggressive this offseason in terms of trades. They want to trade up in the draft, and they want to trade for a wide receiver. And the wide receiver they’re initially targeting in a trade is Jordan Addison of the Minnesota Vikings.”
“Addison is entering year four in the NFL, and the Vikings apparently don’t want to pick up his fifth-year option. They like Jalen Nailor, who’s going to be a free agent wide receiver on their team. They’d like to keep him, and since they’re not going to pick up Jordan Addison’s fifth-year option, they would be open to trading him.”
Cohn’s speculation leans heavily on the Jalen Nailor premise, and that’s where the argument starts to crater. Nailor has yet to demonstrate consistent WR2 reliability, and his production profile more often lands in WR3-WR4 territory. Building a trade rationale around the idea that Minnesota would move Addison because Nailor exists … is strange.
As with most offseason trade theories, the notion of Addison landing in San Francisco feels unlikely. The receiver has had off-field trouble follow him — too much of it — but the most recent incident, an odd trespassing situation, fizzled pretty quickly. Florida authorities dropped charges, and Addison has since filed a wrongful arrest lawsuit.
From a roster construction standpoint, the proposal doesn’t work either. Minnesota wouldn’t fetch a first-round pick for Addison, and anything materially less would struggle to justify the idea that comes with moving a 23-year-old, high-ceiling receiver still under team control.
Rumor: The Vikings will seek a high-profile quarterback this offseason, in addition to J.J. McCarthy.
Quarterback competition is coming to Minnesota, and the framework for 2026 is already evident, ESPN says.
Kevin Seifert laid out the organization’s plan clearly this week, writing, “The Vikings appear set this offseason to run back a similar process in building their quarterback room — but with a determination to cultivate better results. In public statements this week, Adofo-Mensah and coach Kevin O’Connell stressed the depth they want to create around J.J. McCarthy.”
“Neither committed to McCarthy as their 2026 starter, but they also have not written him off after his injury-filled, roller-coaster 10-game NFL debut. In other words, the Vikings have positioned themselves roughly where they were at this time in 2025: hoping to pair McCarthy with a starting-caliber quarterback as both competition and a safeguard against injuries and/or slower-than-expected development.”

The stance tracks with what McCarthy put on tape late in the year. Across his final four starts — Games 7 through 10 — he stabilized, cleaned up mistakes, and played like a Pro Bowl quarterback, distancing himself from the uneven opening stretch that defined his first six outings.
Minnesota’s approach suggests McCarthy’s evaluation remains up in the air. The door is open for McCarthy to earn the QB1 job again, yet the organization is clearly preparing to insulate itself against McCarthy’s injury resume. For now, the offseason plan hints at another prominent quarterback on the way.
Rumor: A plugged-in Steelers writer estimates Aaron Rodgers’ chances of joining the Vikings at 35%.
The speculation carries a bit more weight because it didn’t originate from inside Minnesota’s media walls.
The Athletic‘s Mike DeFabo weighed in this week on Aaron Rodgers’ future, acknowledging the futility of the exercise before diving in anyway: “Trying to predict what Rodgers will do is a fool’s errand — but we’ll do it anyway!”
“It sure seems like he’s growing tired of the spotlight. My best guess — and it’s nothing more than a guess: A 40 percent chance he retires, 35 percent chance he plays for the Vikings, and a 25 percent shot he’s back with the Steelers.”
Rodgers has hinted for months that 2025 could be his final season, yet once the postseason ended, he stopped short of retiring. He waffled.

DeFabo added, “Coach Kevin O’Connell has a personal relationship with Rodgers that dates about two decades. Last offseason, they had several conversations about a potential marriage and, according to The Athletic’s Alec Lewis, several people in the building wanted it to happen. Ultimately, O’Connell decided to spend the season developing second-year quarterback J.J. McCarthy.”
“That process didn’t go as planned; the Michigan product posted a passer rating of 72.6 with more interceptions (12) than touchdown passes (11). When Rodgers said he will probably have ‘one or two’ options, the Steelers and Vikings were the first two that came to mind.”
Rodgers to the Vikings will remain a talker until it’s not. It’s just the nature of the beast, even if the Vikings don’t have much to gain by signing a quarterback who will be 43 during the regular season.

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