Completing one of the more stunning first halves in recent NFL history, the Colts enter Week 9 an NFL-best 7-1. Their offense has rolled to a historic modern-era point, scoring more points through eight games than any post-merger team in franchise history. At the center of this surprising charge: Daniel Jones, who needed to beat out Anthony Richardson for the starting job.
Richardson is now on IR, and Jones’ performance through eight games both showed no indication the QB competition would be revisited and has rocketed the Colts’ enduring core back to relevance. Jones chose the Colts over the Vikings in free agency, and Minnesota has seen its QB quality drop significantly after also letting Sam Darnold walk. While the Vikes did not aggressively pursue a second Darnold contract, The Athletic’s Michael Silver notes they did expect to re-sign Jones as J.J. McCarthy insurance.
At the time the Colts signed Jones to a one-year, $14MM contract, it was known the Vikings made an offer to keep the QB — one they mostly employed as a practice squad stash late last season (Jones was not even the backup in the Vikings’ playoff game). However, Silver reports the Vikings made a bigger offer — one that topped the $13.15MM guarantee in the Colts’ proposal.
Shortly before the legal tampering period, we heard the Colts were preparing to enter the Jones market. Jones faceplanting on his four-year, $160MM Giants deal naturally did not lead to a multiyear guarantee. But the market for his “prove it” deal did escalate. Jones, 28, determined his best chance to see immediate action came in Indianapolis. Being in the building as the Vikings were grooming McCarthy, Jones correctly surmised he had a better chance to unseat Richardson than delay McCarthy’s ascent.
Jones went so far as to communicate to the Vikings, per Silver, Kevin O’Connell‘s presence creating a QB-friendly infrastructure would lead to McCarthy succeeding — and thus little chance for the veteran free agent to block his path. The Vikings continued down this road with Aaron Rodgers, who almost definitely would have blocked McCarthy’s route to the lineup.
Rodgers expressed interest in joining O’Connell in Minnesota, pegging the Vikings as his preferred destination. But he ended up in Pittsburgh, forming a partnership in which neither side received its desired outcome (the Steelers had wanted to either re-sign Justin Fields or trade for Matthew Stafford over signing Rodgers).
With Jones committed to Indianapolis, Minnesota traded for Sam Howell during the draft and signed Max Brosmer as a UDFA. Howell’s struggles in camp led to the Vikings trading him to the Eagles and then signing Carson Wentz. The Wentz experiment is over, as the QB nomad is out for the season with a shoulder injury, while Brosmer is still being prioritized as Minnesota’s QB2.
Entering the season as the Vikings’ third-stringer, Brosmer (per Silver) drew some internal Brock Purdy comps. It is obviously too early there, but Purdy did impress as a 49ers third-stringer behind Trey Lance and Jimmy Garoppolo in 2022 — before injuries opened the door to the starting job. Brosmer is now one injury away, and while McCarthy is returning in Week 9, the former top-10 pick has already suffered two notable maladies since entering the NFL.
Prior to the 2024 draft, Vikings ownership was believed to be pushing for a young quarterback who could keep the role long term. This offseason, Silver adds the Mark and Zygi Wilf remain committed to seeing if McCarthy can be that long-term answer.
The Vikings did roster Kirk Cousins for six years but had not had much luck through the draft since 1999 first-rounder Daunte Culpepper. The former standout’s severe knee injury — sustained shortly after the Wilfs bought the team — in 2005 wrecked his Twin Cities stay, leading to a slew of veterans. Teddy Bridgewater‘s injury-marred stay interrupted this, and McCarthy’s meniscus tear last year reminded of some unfortunate knee-related setbacks for Minnesota QBs. The Vikings will now hope McCarthy can prove O’Connell and Kwesi Adofo-Mensah right for passing on franchise-tagging Darnold or signing Rodgers.
The Jones offer does show some degree of hesitancy with McCarthy this year, as the Vikings offered more than they paid Darnold in 2024 (one year, $10MM). Jones is flourishing in Indy, sitting third in QBR during a bounce-back season. The Colts, whose QB carousel has spun much faster than the Vikings’ in recent years, are interested in extending him. The Vikings reside as an interesting “what if?” for the former first-round quarterback.

Daniel Jones: “Why would any QB want to sign with a team that can offer Justin Jefferson as a target”. lol.
The more likely evaluation was determining which recently drafted QB would flame out faster, clearing a path to a starting position. Richardson was the hands down choice…it may take another year fior JJ to get the boot.
More likely, Danny Dimes didn’t want to play backup while McConnel insisted on playing the Michigan kid who just doesn’t seem to have it…..smart move by Jones….why be “insurance” when you can lead a team that is desperate for leadership in a market that doesn’t crucify you for every move you make like in my NY market….
Daniel Jones: “Why would I want to sit the bench when I can start instead”
Fixed that for you.
And before you bring it up, the only reason Wentz saw action was because of the injury to JJ.
Jones is going to write his own ticket this off-season.
He is similar to how Baker Mayfield was a few years ago. Played a prove it deal and ended up getting 3/100 out of it.
Jones should see something similarly structured.
D. Jones bet on himself being able to beat out Richardson and he was right. He knew the Vikings were set on starting JJM so more money wasn’t going to sway him. He made the right decision.
Him and his agent knew that Richardson was over rated and a bust. And they were right. Good for them
too be fair i think anyone with a pair of eyes knew AR5 was a bust. maybe one of the biggest draft reaches in a long time
The Vikings really effed the QB position up this year. Passed on Darnold, Rodgers, Jones… for a rookie who can’t stay healthy and Carson Wentz. OUCH.
They waited too long to jettison Cousins. Could have traded up and drafted Stroud which would have put them in a much stronger position than they are now.
Jones said NO To the Vikings because his path to start was far better with the colts because their QB basically quit on the team last year. he probably knew along w his agent that the Vikings were high on Mc.Carthy so the colts were the better option
I’m not a fan of Colts or Giants, but I like a bounce back story from a guy most wrote off.
AFC South is a weaker division than NFC North. Also, not like it was a lot more offered by MIN than what he got from INDY.