As the idea of trading Kirk Cousins lingers, here are three deals the Vikings should actually make.
The NFL quarterback carousel is already spinning this offseason, with trades that swapped Matthew Stafford for Jared Goff and sent Carson Wentz to the Indianapolis Colts. With those deals has come speculation about what other quarterbacks could be moved, and the potential trade value of Kirk Cousins has gotten some attention from Minnesota Vikings fans.
On the surface, the dead-money implications ($20 million) makes it hard for the Vikings to trade Cousins. But an acquiring team could see the cost theyād take on for this year, $21 million guaranteed, and see a reasonable cost before his $35 million salary for 2022 becomes fully guaranteed on March 20.
If Wentz can fetch a possible first-round pick among two draft picks coming off a dreadful season (as long as he plays as much for the Colts as heās expected to), itās not unreasonable to think Cousinsā value would be at a peak right now. I tabbed a solid return at two second-round picks in late-January, but the Wentz deal changes the price of poker. Supply and demand, economists of all levels might say.
This side of Watson, is there a better quarterback who might be available via trade than Cousins? The Vikings would have to have a plan to replace him, but trading Cousins shouldnāt be totally off the table until further notice.
Here are three deals involving Cousins the Vikings should consider making.
3 realistic Kirk Cousins trades the Vikings should do
3. Kirk To Foxboro
There may be no more quarterback-needy team out there than the New England Patriots. Cam Newton didnāt work out in the first year post-Tom Brady. The draft, perhaps as early as the No. 15 pick (if they stay put there), is sure to yield someone.
But another path says Bill Belichick will make every effort to secure a veteran signal caller. The Patriots have the third-most cap space in the league right now ($62.2 million, according to Over The Cap), so money wonāt be an issue. Itās easy to tie them to bringing Jimmy Garoppolo back, assuming the San Francisco 49ers move on. But Cousins is a better quarterback, and Belichick openly praised him ahead of a game against the Vikings a couple years ago.
āHeās a smart guy,ā Belichick said. āHeās a tough kid. I have a lot of respect for him. Heās another guy whoās kind of come up the hard way, earned his stripes. Nobodyās given him anything. Heās had to go out there and earn it, and he has.ā
Hereās an offer the Patriots could make for Cousins to get Minnesotaās attention.