Sports
What J.J. McCarthy Had to Say about His Status as the Vikings’ QB1
Right now, the identity of the Vikings’ QB1 is somewhat mysterious, though there are some with opinions. Maybe it’s worth stepping back to loop J.J. McCarthy into the mix. After all, he’s the one who occupied the position last season.
In fact, the reason why there’s a debate is because Mr. McCarthy didn’t do well enough as the Vikings’ QB1 in 2025. He was therefore asked about the sturdiness of his claim on that starting spot after the season concluded. Circling back around to his words feels appropriate given all that’s being said, implied, and prophesied given the additions of Kyler Murray and Carson Wentz.
J.J. McCarthy on Needing to Earn His Job
“After today,” McCarthy said when asked about having completely nailed down the top job, “maybe.” He offered that take on January 4th.
Pay attention to what he said immediately thereafter: “But tomorrow there’s nothing promised and the next day there’s nothing promised. That’s something that I take very seriously. It’s not something that you buy and you get for the rest of your life; you rent it, you lease it every single day.”
Sticking around as the QB1 means “trying to make daily deposits” so that he can be “in this house for a long time.” From January 5th onward, McCarthy has been working on making these payments.
At the risk of being overly literary, allow me to dig into the metaphor that Mr. McCarthy is inhabiting within his answer.
Being the starting quarterback of the Minnesota Vikings is like leasing a house. Being able to continue living in this house is contingent on paying rent on an ongoing basis through strong play. When the strong play disappears, so will his permission to continue living in the house.
Has J.J. McCarthy been evicted?
The answer, of course, is an obvious yes. But then the answer is also an obvious no.
Best case is still a future where the 23-year-old quarterback turns into a franchise passer. Sinking the No. 10 pick into him proves how serious the internal conviction was when opting to turn the Michigan man into a Minnesota man. Some of the shine has worn off, but powerful people in Eagan are still pulling for the kid.
What has changed is that other actions have since been taken, moves that challenge J.J. McCarthy’s status as the franchise passer (as the No. 10 draft slot strongly suggests).
Signing Murray is about both pushing McCarthy while enhancing the chance of competing in 2026. Those two things — pushing McCarthy to develop while still making a move to win now — aren’t in conflict. The central detail to remember here is how Minnesota added Murray.
Shipping out a high-level draft pick(s) while inheriting that slobberknocker of a contract for Murray would mean that McCarthy’s status on the roster gets put on life support; signing the veteran for just $1.3 million, in contrast, does nothing to guarantee who takes the first snap in Week 1.
Likewise, the Wentz deal tells us that Minnesota is committed to a quarterback room with robust depth. A wily vet who has won a Super Bowl, been a journeyman, and who is proven fit on the Vikings’ roster is to be coveted. He’ll push McCarthy while demanding essentially zero maintenance. He’s the perfect QB3.
Think of it this way: while J.J. McCarthy tries to chase down Kyler Murray, Carson Wentz will be pushing J.J. McCarthy. Done right, the push/pull dynamic of the overhauled QB room will function as the pressure that makes a diamond sparkle.
J.J. McCarthy, 23, comes in at 6’3″ and roughly 215 pounds. He went 6-4 last season while completing 57.6% of his passes for 1,632 yards, 11 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions.
As the probable QB2, McCarthy will be working toward getting the keys back so that he can continue living as the Minnesota Vikings’ QB1.
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