The Minnesota Vikings haven’t been terribly active in free agency so far, but Vikings’ new acting GM Rob Brzezinski is quietly working to get the Vikings’ salary cap in better shape with smaller deals, restructuring existing contracts, and terminating others. Some would say he’s cleaning up the mess left behind by Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, which included a salary cap deficit of roughly $45 million for this season and some bloated contracts.
In the lead up to free agency, Brzezinski and the Vikings targeted contracts made by Adofo-Mensah last year in a failed gambit to get the Vikings deep into the playoffs behind J.J. McCarthy. Javon Hargrave’s contract was terminated. So was Jonathan Allen’s. Aaron Jones’ 2025 extension was restructured with a pay cut. T.J. Hockenson’s contract was also negotiated down more in line with his market value.
Brzezinski has also been dealing with Jonathan Greenard’s camp as they are looking for a pay raise. Greenard’s contract is below market value but demanding a pay raise after a 3-sack season that ended with a shoulder injury is not the ideal circumstance to ask for a pay raise. The Vikings have responded by shopping Greenard for a possible trade partner. At the moment, the Eagles are rumored to be the most interested party, which sets up a negotiation between two long-time veterans in Howie Roseman, GM of the Eagles, and Brzezinski. How such a deal turns out, if indeed a trade is made, could be at least a contributing factor into whether Brzezinski has the active or interim tag removed from his title.
Brzezinski has also completed some simple restructurings of Justin Jefferson’s, Christian Darrisaw’s, and Byron Murphy Jr.‘s contracts to free up cap needed space this year with three contracts the Vikings are unlikely to terminate early.
At the same time, Brzezinski has been prudent with the new contracts he’s signed. The only outside free agent the Vikings have signed so far has been James Pierre, the top PFF coverage-graded cornerback in the league last season with the lowest passer rating and completion percentage when targeted allowed at age 29. The deal was for two-years, $8.5 million total or $4.25 million average annual value (AAV), which is an excellent value signing and unlikely to count against any compensatory picks the Vikings may receive for next season.
And if the Vikings sign Kyler Murray for the veteran minimum ($1.3 million) as is widely expected, that will be another excellent value signing- probably the top value signing in free agency this year- for arguably the best free agent quarterback available.
The Vikings and Brzezinski also let Jalen Nailor go to the Raiders on a 3-year, $35 million deal to be at least WR2 there. There was no way Brzezinski or any Vikings’ GM was going to pay Nailor that much to be WR3 in Minnesota, and Nailor was (rightfully) looking to move up the depth chart one way or another. Brzezinski also passed on extending punter Ryan Wright, who signed a four-year, $14 million deal with the Saints. Wright had a good season last year after struggling more in 2024, but $3.5 million AAV on a four-year deal with $8 million guaranteed was too much to pay and guarantee for Wright. And so Brzezinski moved on.
But Brzezinski did extend some Vikings free agents that were deserving of new deals, most notably linebacker Eric Wilson, who thrived as a blitzer in Brian Flores’ system and also was a leader on special teams. The nominal deal was for 3-years, $22.5 million with $12.5 million guaranteed. Further details haven’t been announced but this looks like more of a two-year, $12.5 million deal for the 31 year-old, with a third-year club option. That is more or less in line with Wilson’s market value as a linebacker and core special teamer. Brzezinski also extended Tavierre Thomas, a backup safety/slot cornerback but primarily a special teams ace. It was a modest 2-year, $4.6 million deal. Beyond that, Brzezinski executed on Exclusive Rights Free Agent (ERFA) and Restricted Free Agent (RFA) deals with Jalen Redmond, Bo Richter, Zavier Scott, and Ivan Pace at league minimum salaries or in Pace’s case as an RFA, $3.5 million if he makes the 53-man roster and no dead cap if he doesn’t.
Overall, Brzezinski is a tough and seasoned negotiator with a lot of respect around the league and among agents. He’s probably not going to win many bidding wars unless it is agreed the player is of paramount importance- that’s not his style- but he can be relied upon to handle the business-end of things professionally and brings a lot of experience in that role.
Will Brzezinski Become the Vikings’ New GM?
Brzezinski has been with the Vikings for nearly 30 years and has been the Vikings’ lead contract negotiator and salary cap guru for most of that time. But he’s never worked as a scout or talent evaluator. So, if he were to become the Vikings’ next GM, he would be leaning on his scouting department and coaching staff to evaluate players/prospects more than some other GMs would. But that may work for the Vikings, at least for this year. Defensive coordinator Brian Flores does have background as a scout and could take the lead in evaluating defensive talent. Kevin O’Connell could do so on the offensive side, while Brzezinski could handle the salary cap, contract negotiations, managing the draft, scouting and football operations staff.
We’ll see how things unfold. Stay tuned.
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