Arizona’s threat to release Kyler Murray signals a full teardown, and four quarterback-desperate franchises are already lining up to pounce on the cheapest path to a franchise QB.
Why the Cardinals are ready to bail
The front office’s calculus is brutal but simple: Murray still carries the third-largest QB cap hit in the league despite playing only 35 snaps in 2025 and finishing two straight seasons on injured reserve. Releasing him before March 15 would clear $37 million in cash and $29 million in 2026 cap space—money Arizona needs to fund a rookie contract and multiple defensive upgrades while it sits on the third overall pick.
History of heartbreak
Murray arrived as the No. 1 overall pick in 2019 and earned two Pro Bowl nods, but durability has haunted him:
- 2022: torn ACL, 11 games
- 2023: lingering hamstring, 14 games
- 2024: missed two starts with heel strain
- 2025: Lisfranc fracture in Week 3, season over
Only once in five seasons has he taken every regular-season snap, a red flag for a franchise that just hired an offensive-minded head coach in Mike LaFleur.
Market reaction: a feeding frenzy in real time
NFL Network identifies four clubs already circling:
- Vikings: J.J. McCarthy rehabbing from December shoulder surgery; team wants insurance against a slow ramp-up.
- Jets: Aaron Rodgers turns 42 in December and flirted with retirement last winter.
- Falcons: Michael Penix Jr. showed flashes, but front office didn’t draft him to sit forever.
- Steelers: Russell Wilson’s deal voids in 2027; Pittsburgh lacks a long-term answer.
All four clubs project top-12 defenses in 2026, the perfect cradle for a mobile quarterback who no longer has to carry an offense alone.
How a trade beats free-agency chaos
Any team that trades a late Day-3 pick before the league year starts inherits Murray’s current contract—three years, $119 million non-guaranteed—then can restructure the deal into a two-year, $52 million prove-it package heavy on per-game roster bonuses. That structure protects the new club if Murray’s foot flares up again while giving Murray one more shot at the megacontract he still believes awaits.
Fallback plan in the desert
If no one bites, Arizona’s depth chart falls to journeyman Jacoby Brissett, who posted a 95.4 rating and 7-5 record after Murray went down but turns 34 in December. The Cardinals could still package the third pick with extra cap space to move up and draft Shedeur Sanders or Cam Ward, or stay put and select USC edge rusher Matayo Uiagalelei while eyeing 2027 quarterback capital.
Instant ripple effects
- Oddsmakers will shorten the Super Bowl futures for whichever club lands Murray inside 24 hours.
- Free-agent receivers—Calvin Ridley, Tee Higgins, Michael Pittman—will angle to sign with that same team before April.
- Cardinals ticket prices will dip 10-12 percent if Brissett is announced as the 2026 starter, per secondary-market data from SeatGeek.
Bottom line for fans
Arizona is signaling a hard reset. Murray’s next snap won’t be in cardinal red unless another GM ponies up a late-round sweetener before March 15. If that call doesn’t come, expect contract numbers to leak within minutes of his release and the NFL news cycle to detonate as four contenders race to add the most electric quarterback suddenly available.
Stay locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, clearest analysis the moment the deal—or the cut—drops.