The speculation of a trade between the Minnesota Vikings and Los Angeles Chargers for quarterback Justin Herbert gained momentum last week, but it would be costly for the purple.
SKOR North’s Judd Zulgad explored the financial issues surrounding such a trade. Herbert has 17.223 yards passing for 114 TDs versus 42 interceptions in his first four seasons.
“For [2024], Herbert’s cap hit is $19.3 million and then … in [2025] it spikes up drastically to $37.3 [million]. That’s a lot,” Zulgad said on April 5. “Now, I do consider him to be a top-10, easily, if not top-five quarterback in this league. And if you go back to the game he played here, I mean, there’s a lot to like. And I think in [Kevin] O’Connell’s system, it would be a great fit.”
“But let’s go back to the financial implications. And if Justin Jefferson is going to get the bag — and until he’s traded, I think he is — and if you look at where this team is from a financial standpoint, I think the team’s personal choice would be to try to trade up,” Zulgad added.
“But if you find that that’s going to be impossible, would I completely dismiss this? Seen the Vikings do crazy things and some of them have worked out. So no, I would not dismiss this as a possibility,” Zulgad continued. “Would it be my first choice financially? No. Am I intrigued, though, by Justin Herbert the player? Damn right I am.”
Why Vikings Could Justify an Enormously Expensive Tandem
A Justin-to-Justin passing combination would truly break the bank in Minnesota, but they would have an elite duo. Jefferson could cost the Vikings up to $29.4 million annually based on Spotrac’s numbers, and that means the Vikings could spend $66.7 million on that duo alone in 2025.
Herbert, 6-foot-6, 236 pounds, has been one of the most dynamic passers in the league over the past four years amid three seasons of 4,300 or more years. He completes 66.6% of his passes, and he had a 95.7 passer rating.
Winning hasn’t come along with that amid just one winning season, but the Chargers haven’t one of the better teams for years. Los Angeles hasn’t won a playoff game since 2019 after a 12-win season, and the Chargers had won nine or fewer games annually for all but two of the past 14 seasons.
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