Earlier in the day on Sunday, we laid out the case for J.J. McCarthy as the Minnesota Vikings’ QB1 in 2026. You can read that here. The team claims it will hold a real training camp battle between McCarthy and Kyler Murray, so now it’s time to make the case for Murray.
The pressure on McCarthy changed dramatically.
Murray is the heavy frontrunner to prevail — a -1,000 moneyline — and here’s why.
Minnesota Suddenly Has a Real QB Competition
Do you think Murray will take down McCarthy at training camp?
Vikings Have Murray for One Year; McCarthy for Three More
If the Vikings are in the mood, they totally own McCarthy’s rights through the end of 2028. They can play him for every snap; they can park him on the bench for three more years.
With Murray, he has one pivotal season before testing the free-agent market next March. Based on his track record, Murray deserves an audition to see if the Vikings are tailor-made for his skill set. Minnesota has one chance to try this — in 2026.
If Murray doesn’t work out, well, McCarthy will be ready and waiting as an option in 2027.
Something to Prove
Arizona drafted Kyler first overall in 2019, just a year after squandering a first-round pick on Josh Rosen. Murray was immediately seen as a franchise reset. For seven seasons, he capably held the Cardinals’ QB1 job, making the franchise appear legitimate at the sport’s most crucial position, yet he ultimately secured zero playoff wins.
The significant 2026 offseason brought a cleanout. Arizona fired Jonathan Gannon, hired Mike LaFleur, and decided their next chapter would begin without Murray. With virtually no trade leverage, the Cardinals released him in March, opting for Jacoby Brissett and Carson Beck as their new quarterback solution. It remains astonishing: a former No. 1 pick, still in his prime, pushed out while his former team still pays him to play for someone else.
Minnesota emerged as the obvious landing spot. The Vikings needed genuine quarterback competition for McCarthy, and Murray sought a fresh start in a better football environment.
His childhood fandom for the Vikings only made the fit feel more natural after Arizona cut him. And the price tag was nearly irresistible: one year, $1.3 million, with the Cardinals still shouldering most of the cost.
Arizona may have treated him as a bust, but the Cardinals have hardly been a quarterback factory or a beacon of NFL success. Beyond rare exceptions like Larry Fitzgerald and Kurt Warner, the franchise has often failed to maximize the potential of its stars.
So, perhaps Murray is damaged goods. Or perhaps he’s simply the latest reminder that one team’s discarded problem can become another team’s bargain treasure. Murray will do everything in his power to make the Cardinals look like morons for dropping him, including slicing and dicing opponents as a member of the Vikings.
Speed, Arm Strength, Accuracy, Experience Clear JJM
Kyler Murray is faster than J.J. McCarthy.
Kyler Murray has a stronger arm than J.J. McCarthy.
Kyler Murray is more accurate than J.J. McCarthy.
Kyler Murray is the fifth-most accurate quarterback in NFL history.
Kyler Murray has more experience than J.J. McCarthy.
This is not that complicated. Murray is the guy to lead the Vikings in 2026.
The Career Production Is Undeniable
Murray averages these numbers every 17 starts:
— 3,997 Passing Yards
— 30 Total Touchdowns
— 11 INTs
— 67.1% Completion
— 623 Rushing Yards
Minnesota doesn’t need Murray to conduct a career renaissance. He just needs to play like his healthy self. Those numbers would nibble at MVP consideration, so long as the squad had a winning record.
Murray Is Just a Better QB
One can study the pros and cons of Murray or McCarthy as the Vikings’ QB1 in September until they’re blue in the face, but it really boils down to this: in 2026, Murray is a better quarterback. McCarthy has done absolutely nothing since April 2024 to state a case that suggests he’s more productive than Murray. That may sound brutal, but it is the truth.
Will Murray be better than McCarthy forever? Maybe. Maybe not. In the here and now, however, Murray has the more advanced skills and experience.
Former NFLer Bart Scott said this week, “I think at the end of this season, I think we may say that Kyler Murray is the most talented quarterback within that division. You play here with Kevin O’Connell, with the weapons that he has, a tight end and TJ Hockenson, you have Justin Jefferson, you have Jordan Addison, go out and get a gritty guy like Jauan Jennings.”
“I think the sky’s the limit for Kyler Murray. When you’re doing all that, you’re going to have little Mandalorian running around here for 25 seconds with guys just one-on-one down the field.”
For a team that wants to win now, Murray is simply the smarter option. Head coach Kevin O’Connell can always pivot to McCarthy if Murray struggles.
