Connect with us
DAPA Banner

Sports

Vikings Connected to Three Trade Targets

Published

on

Advertisement

Giants CB Deonte Banks in 2025
New York Giants cornerback Deonte Banks (2) walks out of the locker room before a game against the Minnesota Vikings at MetLife Stadium, Dec 21, 2025, East Rutherford, NJ, USA © Yannick Peterhans / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images/

The frequency of the Minnesota Vikings’ trade regimen may reduce this offseason with Kwesi Adofo-Mensah no longer in the seat as general manager, but Bleacher Report believes the purple team could target three players nevertheless: Kyler Murray (QB), Mac Jones (QB, and Deonte Banks (CB).

Minnesota may never pull the trigger, but the trio shows the range of outcomes on the table, from QB swing to cheaper insurance and CB help.

The Vikings, in theory, can explore trades at anytime and agree to them in principle, even before the start of free agency in one month.

Advertisement

Three Trade Targets Suddenly Linked to the Vikings

It’s two quarterbacks and a cornerback per BR for Minnesota’s trade needs.

Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray warms up at State Farm Stadium. Vikings trade targets.
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray works through pregame warmups at State Farm Stadium, with the scene unfolding on Nov. 12, 2023, as anticipation built for Atlanta, capturing Murray’s footwork, posture, and focus during the final stretch before kickoff under stadium lights in a calm, field-level moment ahead of live action. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports.

1. Kyler Murray | QB

BR’s Alex Ballentine named the trio as Minnesota’s trade options and opined on Murray, “It would be much harder to figure out the money for a trade involving Kyler Murray. He would cost any team that trades for him $24.9 million. He would also pose a much bigger threat to McCarthy. Still, the Vikings have the defense and the skill talent to be a contender in the NFC and Murray could unlock that in O’Connell’s offense.”

Based on his career production to date and draft stock seven years ago — the first overall pick in 2019 — Murray is the best quarterback option the Vikings can find this offseason, unless one believes a trade for Joe Burrow or Lamar Jackson, for example, is realistic.

Advertisement

The Cardinals hired a new head coach, Mike LaFleur, and appear ready to move on from Murray after seven seasons and just one postseason trip.

In the last seven years, Murray’s EPA+CPOE sits ahead of Baker Mayfield, C.J. Stroud, Trevor Lawrence, and Daniel Jones — all quarterbacks currently projected to open 2026 as starters for their teams.

2. Mac Jones | QB

Ballentine noted on Jones as a Vikings’ trade candidate, “Mac Jones would be an ideal candidate. He has experience with Kyle Shanahan in San Francisco and he’s only going to cost a team that trades for him a $3.5 million cap hit.”

Advertisement

The problem here — unlike Murray — is that the 49ers are in no rush to trade Jones. He’s arguably the best QB2 insurance policy in the NFL, and San Francisco QB1 Brock Purdy is not Iron Man.

ESPN’s Nick Wagoner wrote Sunday, “Despite continued speculation, the San Francisco 49ers have no plans to trade quarterback Mac Jones this offseason and fully intend to bring him back as Brock Purdy’s backup, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter on Sunday.”

“In an ever-uncertain quarterback landscape, Jones has been a potential offseason trade target for teams in need of a starter. But at least for now, the Niners don’t plan to part with Jones, who is under contract for another year at a salary cap number of $3.07 million. Niners coach Kyle Shanahan said as much at his end-of-season news conference when asked about dealing Jones, though he also left the door cracked open.”

Patriots quarterback Mac Jones talks with coaches on the sideline.
New England Patriots quarterback Mac Jones confers on the sideline at Gillette Stadium, with the exchange dated Dec. 24, 2022, as Jones checks in with Bill Belichick and Matt Patricia during second-half action against Cincinnati, a snapshot of in-game communication amid shifting momentum, coaching input, and late-game decision-making pressure. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-USA TODAY Sports.

The case for Jones landing in Minnesota — or anywhere — is simple. He started eight games in 2025, and San Francisco went 5–3 during that stretch. Stretch those eight games across a full season, and you’re looking at roughly 4,570 passing yards, 28 touchdowns, 13 interceptions, and a 69.6 percent completion rate.

That production tracks closely with Sam Darnold’s 2024 output, the same season Minnesota went 14–3. Nothing in Jones’ recent tape or efficiency suggests he would walk into Minnesota and suddenly fall apart.

Advertisement

It’s whether the 49ers price-gouge for his services, and whether the Vikings take the bait.

3. Deonte Banks | CB

The final former 1st-Rounder of BR’s exercise, Banks would evidently be a welcome addition to Brian Flores’s secondary. It’s just that fans would have to hope that he fundamentally improved upon arriving in Minneapolis.

His numbers through three seasons are grim. Here’s his passer-rating-against:

Advertisement

2025: 126.7
2024: 124.2
2023: 79.6

Giants cornerback Deonte Banks returns a punt for a touchdown.
New York Giants cornerback Deonte Banks breaks free on a punt return at Allegiant Stadium, with the play unfolding on Dec. 28, 2025, as Banks accelerates through traffic and turns special-teams execution into a game-swinging touchdown against Las Vegas during a wild second-half stretch that flipped momentum dramatically late. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images.

And the Pro Football Focus marks:

2025: 42.4
2024: 50.9
2023: 51.5

Full disclosure: these numbers suggest Banks is absolutely terrible. But maybe he could be fixed in Minnesota if Bleacher Report is on to something.

GMEN HQ‘s Matt Sidney on Banks last month: “It’s time for Joe Schoen to move on from Deonte Banks. If you’ve watched this team play football, Banks’ lack of effort, head-scratching angles, and not being able to turn his head around has likely made you want to throw the clicker through the television — I’m not just projecting, right? If Schoen can convince a team he just hasn’t been utilized properly (return game not included… maybe?), then perhaps there’s a market for the 24-year-old.”

Advertisement

“Every team needs a corner, and it shouldn’t be too hard for someone else to get tricked into believing the former Maryland star can turn things around. It’s amazing what youth, an ideal build, an athletic profile, and a first-round pedigree can do for you during negotiations. Giants fans can only wait for the Adam Schefter post reporting the news.”

Banks will turn 25 this offseason.


avatar

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Sports

March’s Monthly Juventus Thoughts: Good enough

Published

on

Here we are in the last two months of the 2025-26 season.

The title race completely passed us by months ago, and unfortunately that has become standard procedure in the last few years. After the tremendous run of results in January had us thinking of a comfortable spot in the top four in Serie A, the crushing reality of February and, to some extent March, made us realize that today’s Juventus team is barely/merely good enough to hang around the outskirts of the fourth, fifth and sixth positions.

Advertisement

Last month had a little bit of (almost) everything — dramatic comebacks, last-minute goals, crushing victories, penalty misses, and corto muso performances.

Advertisement

Let’s get started.

Falling into the Europa League?

We started the month with a blockbuster 3-3 draw away at Roma. After a tight first half, the hosts took the lead just before the break when Brazilian wingback Wesley cut inside from the edge of the box and curled a lovely right-footed shot into the top corner and just past Mattia Perin’s fingertips. We equalized immediately after the break when Conceição scored with an incredible half volley that almost ripped the net in half.

Advertisement

A 10-minute spell then turned the game firmly into Roma’s favor. Evan Ndicka barged his way past Andrea Cambiaso and volleyed home from Lorenzo Pellegrini’s corner kick. Then, the reborn Donyell Malen received an incredible pass from Manu Kone, beat the offside trap, and chipped the ball over Perin who was too slow to come off his line. (And I thought sweeper-keepers were overrated …) Jeremie Boga brought us back into the game when he scored with a tremendous volley after Edon Zhegrova’s deflected cross fell to him. His goal was the beginning of a great run of games he had in March.

Advertisement

The game had a dramatic conclusion in the 93rd minute thanks to our beloved bricklayer Federico Gatti. Once again, Zhegrova was the catalyst as his cross from the free kick created havoc in the box. Gatti pounced (ha!) on the loose ball and smashed in the half volley to deny Roma the victory in a brilliant game of football.

We returned to winning ways with a big 4-0 home win against Pisa. Remarkably, all goals came in the second half and, curiously, after Spalletti switched to a 3-4-3 with Boga/Yildiz as a false 9. Cambiaso scored the first goal when he headed in from a great chipped cross from Yildiz. The second came quickly afterwards: Manuel Locatelli’s pinpoint shot hit the post and the rebound fell to Khephren Thuram who tapped the ball into an open goal.

Advertisement

The goals kept coming. Yildiz collected a pass from Conceição, slipped past the defender, and blasted the ball into goal. Boga put the cherry on top with a goal in stoppage time after he received a perfect through ball from Locatelli, rounded the goalkeeper, and scored in the empty net: 4-0!

Boga continued his great month by scoring the game’s only goal in a tight 1-0 victory over Udinese. Kelly played a fantastic long ball to Yildiz, who charged into the box and crossed low to Boga. The Ivorian held his run excellently and, as a result, was in the perfect position for the easy tap-in. The Bianconeri controlled the rest of the game and probably should have scored more to put the game to bed, but in fairness Udinese posed such little offensive threat that the victory was never in doubt.

Advertisement

The final game of the month against Sassuolo was the one that, in my eyes, ended our chances of qualifying for next season’s Champions League. Remarkably, goalkeeper Perin created the first goal when his excellent long outlet pass released Conceição on the counterattack. He dribbled his way into the box and squared the ball for Yildiz, who scored with a low, accurate shot.

As has happened time and time again this season, Juventus conceded from its first (and only!) shot on target. Sassuolo played a nice bit of one-touch passing on the edge of the box and the ball came to Berardi on the right wing. The winger squared the ball for Andrea Pinamonti who, after bullying Gleison Bremer of the ball in the buildup to the goal, ghosted past the Brazilian defender to poke the ball into goal from Berardi’s low cross. The Bianconeri won a very soft penalty after Jonathan David’s cross hit a defender’s arm, but goalkeeper Arijanet Muric caught Locatelli’s incredibly weak penalty kick. It ended 1-1 and we fell further behind in the race for Top 4.

Advertisement

Juventus Women

Juventus Women opened the month with a solid 2-0 victory over Fiorentina in the first leg of the Coppa Italia semifinal. Chiara Beccari scored in the ninth minute thanks to a nice assist from Ana Capeta. The Portuguese forward then capped a match-winning performance with a goal in the 51st minute after latching onto Viola Calligaris’s great through ball and scoring with a shot at the near post.

It wasn’t a great month of results in the league, though.

Advertisement

AC Milan beat the Bianconere 1-0 thanks to Thea Kyvag’s goal early in the second half, but the deciding moment came just a few minutes earlier in stoppage time of the first half. Kay-Lee de Sanders fouled Capeta in the box but goalkeeper Sandra Estevez saved Emma Stolen Godo’s penalty, resulting in a disappointing 1-0 loss. We followed that loss with a frustrating goalless draw against bottom-of-the-table Genoa.

Thankfully, Juve ended the month on a high note with a 2-1 victory over Fiorentina in the second leg of the Coppa Italia semifinal. Capeta ended a fantastic month with two goals in this game. The first was a wonderful curled shot from the edge of the box that went in off the post and the second a header from a corner kick. Iris Omarsdottir scored from a rebound after a corner kick resulted in Katla Tryggvadottir hitting the post. Juventus cruised to a 2-1 victory (4-1 on aggregate) over Fiorentina and will meet Roma (who else?) in the final!

Advertisement

New starts with false 9s?

During the winter transfer window, the big story was Juventus’s attempt to get another striker, likely on a short-term deal. Dusan Vlahovic has since only recently returned from injury and still hasn’t extended his contract that expires in a few months, Arek Milik has risen from the dead after missing nearly two seasons due to injury, and Loïs Openda and Jonathan David haven’t worked out the way we thought they would.

Desperate times call for desperate measures, and Spalletti has tinkered accordingly to find a solution while his strikers find their purpose in life form. He has tried two solutions: playing Weston McKennie as a striker and playing a false nine. Remarkably, McKennie was actually quite good in that position — is it still a surprise that McKennie plays well everywhere on the pitch? — but we need him more urgently in other areas.

Advertisement

The false 9 experiment began catastrophically when the attack was terrible in the first half of the first game against Napoli. But the experiment has caught fire recently as a combination of Yildiz and, more importantly, Boga have done quite well as false 9s. The Ivorian, in particular, seems to be a good fit for the position as he is faster and more physically dominant than the Turkish forward and more comfortable with his back to goal.

But as I mentioned earlier, Milik and Vlahovic are now (fully?) fit, which means that Spalletti has another problem on his hands: who do you play/drop? Boga is in fantastic form, Yildiz is the team’s top contributor in attack, and McKennie is one of the most important players in the team. Conceição is hot and cold, but we don’t have many players comfortable on the right wing.

Advertisement

It’s an important question to ask because, despite having the third-best attack in the league, we are remarkably wasteful in attack. We have 12 shots per game compared to Inter’s 13 shots per game, but the league leaders have scored 14 goals more than us, highlighting the significant difference in the teams’ effectiveness in front of goal. To emphasize this even further, the two teams have essentially the same number of shots per target (185 for us, 184 for Inter).

So what is the new power ranking for the Bianconeri’s attackers? Let’s find out after the international break.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

This is what a real leader looks like”, “Ronaldo would never

Published

on

Lionel Messi was the subject of praise from fans after he gifted teammate Nicolas Otamendi a penalty during Argentina’s 5-0 win over Zambia on Tuesday. It was an emotional moment as the match was most likely Otamendi’s last game on Argentine soil, marking the end of an era for one of the country’s most committed defenders.

In a bid to head into the 2026 World Cup on a high, La Albiceleste started the game strongly and took the lead after four minutes through Julian Alvarez, with Messi providing the assist. Just before the break, Messi doubled the advantage following a one-touch move with Alexis Mac Allister.

The lovely gesture came after Albert Kangwanda committed a foul on Thiago Almada three minutes into the second half. Rather than take the penalty, Messi signaled to Otamendi and handed the ball to him. The veteran defender seized the opportunity and sent the goalkeeper the wrong way to score his country’s third of the night and his eighth goal for the national team.

Advertisement

Zambia’s woes were worsened as Dominik Chanda scored an own goal midway through the second half while Valentin Barco added the cherry on top in stoppage time.

While Argentina fans were thrilled with the convincing victory, some were drawn to Messi’s ‘selfless’ act and took to X to laud him for it.

One wrote:

“This is what a real leader looks like.”

Another tweeted:

Advertisement

“This is one of the many reasons players love sharing the pitch with him ❤️”

A third poked fun at Lionel Messi’s archrival, Cristiano Ronaldo, saying the Portuguese would never do something like that.

“Ronaldo would NEVER do something like this in a million years lol,” they remarked.

“That’s why they adore and respect him,” another chimed in.

Otamendi, meanwhile couldn’t hold back his tears after being substituted in the 69th minute, hugging his teammates including Lionel Messi before leaving the pitch.

Lionel Messi reaches goal scoring milestone after scoring in Argentina’s 5-0 win over Zambia

In what was his likely last-ever home game with Argentina, Lionel Messi added another feather to his illustrious cap. His 43rd minute stunner against Zambia meant he has now scored against 40 different countries with Argentina, for 117 national team goals.

Messi is expected to retire from the national team after the World Cup, which is scheduled to take place in the United States, Canada and Mexico. However, he has yet to guarantee his presence at this competition this summer.

Advertisement

The 38-year-old is currently Argentina’s most capped player and all-time leading scorer.