NFL backup quarterback market is starting to take shape

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The NFL draft is over, rosters are settling, and teams are working to fill roster holes so their season doesn’t collapse because of a tweaked hammy. This part of roster building isn’t glamorous, but it tells you which teams are serious, which teams are nervous, and which teams are lying about how they feel about their QB room.

The market is forming around one basic principle – teams want a backup who can run an NFL offense cleanly. That’s it. Not upside, not potential, and not a science project. Just competence.


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Tyrod Taylor​


Green Bay signing Tyrod Taylor is the first and best example. Jordan Love has missed time, and the Packers clearly decided that QB2 should be “playable” is where it’s at, rather than the QB2 should be “affordable” approach. Taylor is a veteran stability, and stability is what contenders buy when they don’t want their season to end because they lack a viable contingency.

Mitchell Trubisky​

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Jan 4, 2026; Orchard Park, New York, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Mitchell Trubisky (11) looks on after the game against the New York Jets at Highmark Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark Konezny-Imagn Images

Mitchell Trubisky signing with the Titans is functional insurance. He’s not exciting, not scary, but capable of running the structure. Tennessee adding him is a clear signal that they want competence behind Cam, so the season can stay on track if things get bumpy early.

Kirk Cousins​


Kirk Cousins is somewhat of an anomaly. The expectation is he’s QB1 W1, but if Fernando Mendoza is the Week 1 guy, then Las Vegas may have the best backup plan in the league. Either way, they’ve built a weekly safety net with a room that can actually run the offense if there is turbulence.

Remaining Options​


The remaining options are where it gets interesting, because the market is thin on true palatable veterans. The best fits are teams that need a functional QB2 and don’t want to develop one on the fly. The point is this – the teams that wait too long end up choosing from the bottom tier, and the bottom tier is how seasons get (insert expletive).

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Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Kirk Cousins speaks at a press conference. Mandatory Credit: Candice Ward-Imagn Images

What’s Next?​


So what’s next? More signings are coming. It happens every year, friends. You can book it. The backup QB market is shaping up, and it’s clearly about competence. And the teams making moves now acknowledge that quarterback depth isn’t optional. At. All.


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