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Broncos Quarterback Scoreboard: Teddy Bridgewater’s giveaways turn the tide

Andrew Mason
Andrew Mason
July 31, 2021
Broncos Quarterback Scoreboard: Teddy Bridgewater’s giveaways turn the tide

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Andrew Mason

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TeeSliceinNorCal

TeeSliceinNorCal

August 1, 2021

Good to see lock be mistake free so far

Mrs. Quill

Mrs. Quill

August 3, 2021

Would it be better for the team to go 4-12 and embrace the rebuild, or go 9-8 and narrowly miss the playoffs?

Mrs. Quill Replying to Mrs. Quill
Andrew Mason

Andrew Mason

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August 4, 2021

If they make the right choices after that hypothetical 9-8 season, I would take that outcome as a positive culture-building year. If you could guarantee me that they would react the way Brandon Beane and Sean McDermott did in Buffalo after 2017 — when they didn’t jump on the fool’s gold of Tyrod Taylor, and let him walk to take a viable long-term QB answer in the draft — then I would be fine with it. But my fear — and the rationale for going 4-13 or 5-12 or somehow splitting the difference at 4-12-1 and getting their first tie since 1987 — is that the Broncos go 9-8 with lower-mid-tier QB play and talk themselves into believing, “Well, if we can get just a bit more from [insert QB name here], then we can take the next step,” which puts them in the position of either kicking the long-term decision down the road a year (you don’t want to see my reaction if they pass on Howell or Rattler or Ridder or someone else of that ilk to run it back with Lock if he posts a mid-80s passer rating) or, if they go 9-8 with Teddy, giving him a contract next March that would be galactically unwise. (See the Jaguars’ extension to Blake Bortles after going 10-6 with him in 2017 as an example of what NOT to do.) If the Broncos are going to go punch-for-punch with Mahomes (and potentially Herbert), they need to think boldly. Otherwise, they would run the risk of having the same type of long-term results that the Vikings had in the last decade after Brett Favre’s retirement — only once bad, usually competitive to good, a couple of division titles, one of which came in a year when Aaron Rodgers was hurt — but not a consistent threat to accomplish anything significant. If you want to be a viable, long-term contender, you need to get QB right.

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