The Minnesota Vikings have been pretty clear that J.J. McCarthy is their guy moving forward and that he is the frontrunner to land the QB1 job during training camp this summer.
But at the NFL owners’ meetings in Florida on Wednesday, April 2, Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah was equally clear that the team is going to add more depth to a quarterback room currently comprised only of McCarthy and Brett Rypien — the latter of whom finished last season as No. 4 on the depth chart, which relegated him to the practice squad.
“We want [McCarthy] to be our starting quarterback for a long time,” Adofo-Mensah told Tom Pelissero of NFL Network. “Obviously he had an injury and a setback, but we’re excited about everything he’s done from that point, and we’re going to go forward with that. We’re gonna look to obviously always add depth to that room, to upgrade it.”
Aaron Rodgers Appears Off Table for Vikings
Who that quarterback might be remains up in the air, but there are only so many viable options remaining.
Minnesota appears to have all but shut the door on an acquisition of Aaron Rodgers after a week or so of deliberation late last month. However, Rodgers remains a free agent despite a standing offer from the Pittsburgh Steelers, who read like the only viable option remaining for him with the Vikings ostensibly off the table.
If Rodgers is 100% out of the mix, then the conversation likely comes down to available veterans who can both help shepherd McCarthy through his second season (though one that will serve as his rookie campaign in many ways) and step in and play competent QB if McCarthy struggles mightily and/or suffers another injury.
The three veteran names remaining with the most history of success, but who also won’t pose an overwhelming threat to McCarthy’s starting job or his status with the fans should the young QB struggle, are Ryan Tannehill, Joe Flacco and Carson Wentz.
Vikings Likely to Look at Veteran QB Behind J.J. McCarthy

Rodgers is looking for a starting job, one last payday and a final shot at glory. Tannehill was looking for something similar last year, which is why he didn’t take any job offers and remained a free agent all season long while waiting for an opportunity to start somewhere that never materialized.
Tannehill turns 37 years old this summer and just sidelined himself for an entire season. However, he has a winning record across a dozen years in the league, roughly 100 more TD passes than INTs, as well as a Pro Bowl and a trip to the AFC Championship Game on his resumé. Minnesota has already been in touch with him, though nothing solid has yet come of that contact.
Flacco, 40, is a former Super Bowl champion who started several games for the Indianapolis Colts last season and the Cleveland Browns the year prior, leading Cleveland to a playoff berth. He remains a free agent and is looking to play at least one more NFL season.
Wentz is the youngest of the three at just 32 years old. He served as the Kansas City Chiefs backup quarterback last season.