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The San Francisco 49ers keep getting pulled into Mac Jones trade speculation, and ESPN’s Bill Barnwell just put a detailed Vikings proposal on the board. The catch: ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported earlier this month that the 49ers “have no plans to trade” Jones this offseason and intend to bring him back as Brock Purdy’s backup.
So why does the idea keep coming up? Because Jones is one of the rare “starter-capable” backups on a manageable 2026 number, and quarterback-needy teams don’t love the draft/free agent alternatives once musical chairs starts.
49ers Trade Rumors: SF Moves Mac Jones and Vikings pay a premium (with protection)
Barnwell’s trade construction is straightforward up top and complicated underneath:
Vikings receive: QB Mac Jones, a 2027 third-round pick
49ers receive: a 2026 second-round pick, a 2027 conditional fifth-round pick, and a 2028 conditional third-round pick
Barnwell’s core logic from the 49ers side: San Francisco effectively turns Jones into a 2026 second-rounder now, while sending back a future third, and then adds conditional ammo if Jones actually becomes “the guy” in Minnesota.
The conditions are the interesting part for SF:
The 2027 pick escalates based on Jones’ 2026 starts: if he starts four games, Minnesota sends a fifth; if he starts 12, it upgrades to a third.
The 2028 third-rounder would kick in if Jones re-signs with Minnesota after 2026 and then starts at least one game in 2027.
That structure matters because it protects the 49ers against the nightmare scenario: trading away a high-end backup who turns into a long-term starter elsewhere.
NFL Rumors: Why the 49ers’ “no plans to trade” stance makes sense
Schefter’s report wasn’t subtle: the 49ers fully intend to keep Jones. And when you look at recent context, it’s easy to see why.
First, Purdy missed eight games in 2025 with a toe injury, and Jones’ stretch run kept San Francisco afloat. ESPN’s Nick Wagoner noted Jones started eight games, posted a 62.9 QBR, and the 49ers went 5-3 in those starts. That kind of “win-with-him” backup is exactly what teams usually don’t have when their starter goes down.
Second, the 49ers aren’t just protecting themselves from bad luck; they’ve lived it. Wagoner pointed out Purdy has missed time in multiple seasons (including the 2022 NFC title game elbow injury and missed games in 2024). Depth at QB isn’t a luxury in Santa Clara; it’s a roster requirement.
Third, Jones is under contract one more year, and Wagoner reported his 2026 cap number is $3.07 million. For a proven insurance policy, that’s the type of cost teams happily carry, especially contenders.
The real decision point: draft pick now vs. compensatory pick later
Barnwell also flagged the “wait it out” alternative: if the 49ers keep Jones through 2026 and he leaves in free agency, they could be in line for a compensatory pick, but that depends on how San Francisco spends, and it wouldn’t arrive until the 2028 draft under his framing.
That’s why the Barnwell proposal is compelling: it tries to beat the comp-pick uncertainty by putting a second-rounder on the table now, plus upside if Jones hits.
Still, as of February 8, 2026, the message from Schefter’s reporting is clear: the 49ers are operating like a team that believes it’s better with Jones in the building than with an extra pick in its pocket.
Erik Anderson is an award-winning sports journalist covering the NBA, MLB and NFL for Heavy.com. He also focuses on the trading card market. His work has appeared in nationally-recognized outlets including The New York Times, Associated Press , USA Today, and ESPN. More about Erik Anderson
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