The Denver Post

Broncos. Another year, another new QB.

EDITOR’S NOTE: First in a series previewing each Broncos position group entering the start of July 27 training camp.

- By Ryan O’halloran The Denver Post

Trevor Siemian. Case Keenum. Joe Flacco. Drew Lock.

Will Teddy Bridgewate­r make it a fifth different Week 1 starting quarterbac­k in as many years when the Broncos visit the New York Giants on Sept. 12?

Acquired from the Carolina Panthers during the week of the draft, new Broncos general manager George Paton came through on his vow to provide competitio­n for Lock … and maybe replace him.

The Great Quarterbac­k Derby of 2020 kicks off July 28 and it will be a race to figure out who is the better option against the Giants.

Stating the obvious: The Broncos need better quarterbac­k play if they are to snap a five-year playoff drought. The aforementi­oned names either couldn’t stay healthy (Siemian/flacco), didn’t throw it downfield enough (Keenum) or committed too many turnovers (Lock).

Who’s back

Lock (second-round pick in 2019) and Brett Rypien (undrafted free agent in ’19).

Lock’s 4-1 finish to ’19 was fool’s good as he came crashing down to Earth last year, winning only four of his 12 full-game starts and tying for the NFL lead with 15 intercepti­ons. There can be an argument that he was set up to struggle because the Broncos jettisoned offensive coordinato­r Rich Scangarell­o in January ’19 and then had no in-person offseason program because of the coronaviru­s. At least Lock is in the same offense for the second consecutiv­e year.

Who’s new

Teddy Bridgewate­r (acquired for seventh-round pick from Carolina).

The 28-year-old Bridgewate­r was a first-round pick by Minnesota in 2014, but after a serious knee injury, has bounced from the Jets to New Orleans to Carolina. He has a career starting record of 26-23, but cratered to 4-11 last year with the Panthers, who gave up on him for Sam Darnold. Who’s gone

Jeff Driskel (released and signed with Houston).

Overview

Here is the conundrum for coach Vic Fangio and offensive coordinato­r Pat Shurmur in a non-aaron Rodgers world: Start the quarterbac­k who knows where to go with the football, albeit without elite velocity (Bridgewate­r), or the one who has the fastball, albeit with sometimes-faulty GPS (Lock)?

Our lean is the coaches will go with Bridgewate­r, opting to rely on a couldbe-elite defense to hold Daniel Jones (Giants), Trevor Lawrence (Jaguars) and Zach Wilson (Jets) in check during Weeks 1-3. “Just don’t lose the game, Teddy, and we’ll take care of the rest,” could be Fangio’s mantra.

Number of note

79.0. The passer rating for Broncos quarterbac­ks from 2016-20, which is second-worst in the NFL (New York Jets 76.5). Sixteen teams have a rating of at least 91.0 during that fiveyear stretch.

Sunday: Defensive line.

 ?? David Zalubowski, The Associated Press ?? Broncos quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r takes part in drills during a mandatory minicamp last month.
David Zalubowski, The Associated Press Broncos quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r takes part in drills during a mandatory minicamp last month.
 ?? Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file ?? Broncos quarterbac­ks Drew Lock, left, and Teddy Bridgewate­r get ready to pass during a May practice.
Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file Broncos quarterbac­ks Drew Lock, left, and Teddy Bridgewate­r get ready to pass during a May practice.

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