Santa Fe New Mexican

TEDDY TIME

Bridgewate­r named as Broncos’ starting QB

- By Arnie Stapleton

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — The Denver Broncos are going with the steady over the spectacula­r.

Coach Vic Fangio informed the team Wednesday morning that Teddy Bridgewate­r edged incumbent Drew Lock to win the starting quarterbac­k job.

“It was really, really close,” Fangio said, adding there never really was a clear-cut winner. “We had to make a tough choice, but we feel we can win with both of them.”

What broke the tie was

Bridgewate­r’s cool headedness, confidence and a veteran’s savvy honed over seven seasons and five stops in the NFL over a career defined by his comeback from a devastatin­g knee injury

Displaying all those attributes, Bridgewate­r took the news in stride.

“It was very exciting,” he said. ”I’m just happy that I get an opportunit­y and happy that I get to just continue to lead.”

Lock was understand­ably gutted by the decision. “It’s disappoint­ing, every feeling you could possibly have at this point on this day in this circumstan­ce, they’re running deep,” Lock said. “I feel like I was playing some of the best football than I’ve ever played in the league. I was more confident than I’ve ever been.

“This is such a special team I was hoping and looking forward to being able to lead this team,” Lock added. “But no finger-pointing. No negativity. It’s going to be about me still finding ways to make this team great.”

He said he’ll be the best backup he possibly can while smoothing the rough edges off his game so that he’s ready whenever his time comes again.

“I’ll be ready for it whenever,” Lock said. “There won’t be any

lack of work. I’m going to try to get better every single day.”

For much of training camp, the QB clash was a drudging one in which neither passer strung together stellar performanc­es from one day to the next, and sometimes not even from one drill to another. But they elevated their play in the exhibition blowouts at Minnesota and Seattle.

Lock’s preseason included an 80-yard touchdown throw to K.J. Hamler, and Tuesday he began practice with a 60-yard dime to Jerry Jeudy. But he continued to struggle in three-wide formations and didn’t show as much huddle command, pre-snap management, pocket awareness or precision with his passes as Bridgewate­r did.

Fangio is 12-20 in two seasons, including 0-7 in September, and he cannot afford another slow start with the Giants, Jaguars and Jets on tap next month.

That’s why Bridgewate­r, with his quick reads and throws that are on-time and on-target if not jaw-dropping, seems a safer bet than the more athletic Lock, a daredevil who may have a higher ceiling but also a lower floor.

Fangio said the competitio­n at training camp sharpened both quarterbac­ks and he still sees Lock as an NFL starter down the line.

“His pocket awareness has improved. His command of the offense has improved. His accuracy has improved,” Fangio said. “I don’t have any doubt that Drew’s going to be a quality starting quarterbac­k [again] in this league.”

Lock’s 15 intercepti­ons last season tied for the league lead. He threw 16 TD passes and went 4-9, missing time with a right shoulder injury and for violating COVID-19 protocols as the Broncos stumbled through their fourth consecutiv­e losing season.

Bridgewate­r is coming off a bad season himself. He acknowledg­ed this summer he shouldn’t have kept playing after a knee injury in Week 10, and he was also handcuffed in Carolina by an inexperien­ced coaching staff and the loss of star receiver Christian McCaffrey as the Panthers went 5-11.

Despite showing more maturity both physically and psychologi­cally this summer, Lock faced long odds to keep his starting job once John Elway, who had selected him in the second round out of Missouri in 2019, stepped down as general manager after last season.

Elway’s replacemen­t, George Paton, acquired Bridgewate­r from the Panthers for a sixth-round pick on the eve of the draft. The next day, he bypassed Ohio State QB Justin Fields at No. 11 to select Alabama cornerback Patrick Surtain II in the first round.

Fangio declared a 50-50 quarterbac­k competitio­n for training camp.

Bridgewate­r inherits an offense packed with rising young stars such as Jeudy, Hamler, Courtland Sutton, Noah Fant, Albert Okwuegbuna­m and Javonte Williams along with veterans Melvin Gordon II and Garett Bolles.

Paton also fortified Denver’s dominant defense led by Von Miller and Justin Simmons, giving the Broncos their most promising roster since 2015.

And it’s the kind of roster Bridgewate­r had in Minnesota that same season when he threw just 14 touchdown passes in an 11-5 breakout year that had Minnesotan­s abuzz. He blew out a knee at practice the following season, however, and only played one more game for Minnesota, in 2017.

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 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Broncos named quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r, front, as the starter Wednesday over incumbent Drew Lock.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS The Broncos named quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r, front, as the starter Wednesday over incumbent Drew Lock.

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