Minnesota Vikings Get Major QB Shakeup in New ESPN Trade Pitch

The Minnesota Vikings already have one of the NFL’s most fascinating quarterback rooms. ESPN’s latest trade exercise would make it even more complicated.

In a May 27 feature built around possible summer trades, ESPN analyst Seth Walder pitched the Vikings sending a 2027 fifth-round pick to the Indianapolis Colts for quarterback Anthony Richardson Sr. ESPN Colts reporter Stephen Holder then picked that Vikings offer as the best deal for Indianapolis, making Minnesota the preferred landing spot in the exercise.

That is not the same as reporting that a trade is imminent. But it is notable because Richardson has already been given permission to seek a trade, according to ESPN, and the Vikings are already trying to sort through a quarterback picture that includes Kyler Murray, J.J. McCarthy, Carson Wentz and Max Brosmer.

ESPN’s pitch would add Richardson as another high-upside option for Kevin O’Connell, and another moving piece in a room that already has enough uncertainty to define Minnesota’s 2026 season.


ESPN’s Vikings Trade Pitch Would Add Another Former Top-5 Pick

The proposed deal is simple:

Vikings receive: Anthony Richardson Sr.
Colts receive: 2027 fifth-round pick

Walder’s reasoning centered on O’Connell’s track record with quarterbacks and Richardson’s need for a reset. Richardson would be able to learn in Minnesota behind Murray, who is on a one-year deal, while giving the Vikings another potential option beyond 2026.

That last part is the key.

Murray may be the most proven quarterback in the room, but the Vikings are expected to hold a true competition between Murray and McCarthy rather than simply handing Murray the job.

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Richardson would not necessarily enter as the starter. He might not even enter as the No. 2 quarterback if Minnesota kept Murray and McCarthy. But he would immediately become the most physically gifted developmental passer on the roster and would give the Vikings another lottery ticket at the sport’s most important position.

For a fifth-round pick, that is the argument.

The counterargument is just as obvious: Minnesota may already have too many quarterbacks who require time, reps and patience.


Anthony Richardson Would Put J.J. McCarthy’s Vikings Future Back Under the Microscope

The most interesting part of ESPN’s pitch is not Richardson backing up Murray. It is what his arrival would say about McCarthy.

Walder noted that Minnesota could theoretically keep Richardson and McCarthy, but called that a “pretty risky backup room.” He also raised the possibility that the Vikings could deal McCarthy in another trade.

That would be the real shakeup.

McCarthy was supposed to be the young quarterback O’Connell developed. Instead, after two uneven years, the Vikings added Murray and now are being linked in a national trade exercise to Richardson, another former first-round pick whose career has not stabilized.

Richardson’s appeal is not hard to understand. He is still only 23, has rare size and athletic ability, and entered the league as the No. 4 pick in the 2023 NFL draft. But the reason he is available in this scenario is also the reason Minnesota would have to be careful. The Colts’ Richardson era has been defined by injuries, benchings and uncertainty, and ESPN reported in February that Indianapolis gave him permission to seek a trade.

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For the Vikings, this would be less about replacing Murray today and more about deciding whether Richardson is a better long-term swing than McCarthy.

That is a major evaluation.


The Price Is Low, but the Roster Cost Is Not

A fifth-round pick is not a massive price for a quarterback with Richardson’s tools. It is the kind of move that can look smart quickly if the player improves in a better situation.

The Vikings also have a coach who gives this idea some logic. O’Connell has built a reputation as a quarterback-friendly play caller, and Minnesota has not been afraid to reset the position aggressively.

But there is a practical cost beyond the draft pick.

The Vikings’ current ESPN depth chart lists Murray, McCarthy, Wentz and Brosmer at quarterback. Adding Richardson would almost certainly require another move. Carrying five quarterbacks into training camp is possible, but carrying that many into the season is not realistic.

That means a Richardson trade would likely force Minnesota to answer one of three questions:

Would Wentz become expendable as the veteran backup? Would Brosmer lose his developmental runway? Or would McCarthy become part of a larger quarterback reset?

None of those answers are small.

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This article was originally published on HEAVY


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