The Telegram (St. John's)

Uncertain futures

Brees, Bradford start expiring deals in Saints-vikes opener

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

Drew Brees has reached the home stretch of his extraordin­ary career, preferring to play out the final year of his contract with New Orleans while trying to bring the Saints back to the playoffs.

Then he will figure out what’s next.

Sam Bradford is coming off a career-best season for Minnesota; he also is playing 2017 on an expiring deal. What the Vikings decide to do next year about his position, with 2014 first-round draft pick Teddy Bridgewate­r still in rehabilita­tion mode for his left knee, remains unclear.

When the Saints visit the Vikings in their opener tonight, Brees and Bradford will formally begin a season that has put each player in a relatively awkward position: the rare establishe­d NFL quarterbac­k on a path toward free agency. They’re at different stages with dissimilar track records, but here they are, both coming off remarkably accurate performanc­es in 2016 for teams that didn’t match their excellence.

Brees had another ho-hum, league-leading 5,208 yards passing, a record seventh time he’s topped the NFL. He completed exactly 70 per cent of his passes, while the Saints went a so-so 7-9 for a third straight year.

“He has incredible body quickness. He is such a football master. He understand­s defences. He has great recognitio­n. He can make all the throws. He’s a Hall of Famer,” said ESPN analyst Jon Gruden, the former Oakland and Tampa Bay head coach. “There’s nothing that man can’t do.”

Bradford set the all-time record for completion percentage (71.6) and threw for a career most 3,877 yards in 15 games after Bridgewate­r’s injury forced an emergency trade with Philadelph­ia right before the regular season. Bradford had a mere 10 turnovers despite a leaky offensive line that helped shape the context for a sharp fade to an 8-8 finish following a 5-0 start.

“Bradford, he should get a medal. He might be one of the toughest guys we’ve got playing. Forget about the 70 per cent completion percentage. He got pummeled last year. He showed up, had to learn an offence, very short notice. He won some games for the Vikings. He took a lot of shots, major shots, and I commend him for getting up and keeping the Vikings alive until deep in the season,” Gruden said, adding: “He needs to be protected better for him to flourish like Drew Brees has. He just hasn’t had that.”

No matter what happens this year, barring injury, Brees ($19 million) and Bradford ($18 million) will count a lot more than that in 2018 against their team’s salary cap. True to their form as the classy leader, neither player has come close to publicly expressing disenchant­ment with his deal.

“My sense of urgency is in making myself and my team better and putting ourselves in the best position to go out this year and have success,” said Brees, a 10-time Pro Bowl pick who will turn 39 in January. “I know that that stuff takes care of itself. It takes care of itself when it’s supposed to. And that just shouldn’t be the priority right now.”

Even if Brees produces another vintage season, he insisted, the contract ramificati­on is not on his mind.

“Well, I expect to anyway,” Brees said. “That mindset is the same every year.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this Aug. 26 file photo, New Orleans Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees drops back to pass in the first half of a preseason NFL game against the Houston Texans in New Orleans.
AP PHOTO In this Aug. 26 file photo, New Orleans Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees drops back to pass in the first half of a preseason NFL game against the Houston Texans in New Orleans.

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