Miami Herald (Sunday)

Miami native Bridgewate­r will retire

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Veteran quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r will retire at the conclusion of the NFL season, he told the Detroit Free Press.

A first-round draft pick by the Minnesota Vikings in 2014, Bridgewate­r missed the 2016 and part of the 2017 seasons because of a torn ACL and dislocated knee. A starter his first two seasons with the Vikings, he now is the backup quarterbac­k to Jared Goff with the Lions — his sixth NFL team.

He has played just a single snap this season.

“When I got hurt, I realized that I’m only a football player for three hours on a Sunday afternoon,” Bridgewate­r, 31, said. “Outside of that, I’m Theodore Bridgewate­r, so it just put everything into perspectiv­e, and it really helped me not even have to think about not being a starter [anymore]. It’s like, ‘Man, I still got purpose.’ And my purpose is bigger than the game of football.”

Bridgewate­r, a graduate of Miami Northweste­rn high school, has spent time with the Saints (2018-19), Carolina Panthers (2020), Denver Broncos (2021) and Miami Dolphins (2022). He started 29 games with the Panthers and Broncos and has a career 33-32 record as a starter. He has appeared in 79 games and completed 66.4 percent of his passes for 15,120 yards with 75 touchdowns and 47 intercepti­ons.

Coach Dan Campbell said the quarterbac­k has been a valuable mentor to the young and up-andcoming Lions.

“Teddy’s been unbelievab­le for a lot of people here,” Campbell said, per the Free Press. “He’s a huge asset for us, aside from the obvious, which is if we need him, he’s a guy that can go in and win for us. But, man, he does so many things behind the scenes that I think a lot of people don’t even realize. He’s a valuable asset for our team.”

Bridgewate­r said he considered retiring after the 2022 season but was convinced by Campbell to go to Detroit. The Lions, at 9-4, likely are headed to the NFL playoffs.

Bridgewate­r led the Vikings to an 11-5 record and a playoff berth in his second season, when he earned his lone Pro Bowl selection. Injuries derailed his promising career, but he said he has no regrets.

“Everything happens for a reason,” Bridgewate­r said. “Injuries, highs, lows, the success, the failures. It all, it builds character, and that’s what it did for me. Like I never look like, ‘Oh man, what if?’ Nah. Whatever was meant for me, it played out the exact way it was meant.”

SATURDAY’S GAME

Bengals 27, Vikings 24 (OT):

A

Evan McPherson booted a 29-yard field goal with 3:11 left in overtime to rally Cincinnati past visiting Minnesota.

connected with for 44 yards on thirdand-9 to move the ball to the Vikings’ 13-yard line to set up the game-winning kick for Cincinnati (8-6). The Vikings fell to 7-7.

Jake Browning

Tyler Boyd

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