Panthers trade QB Bridgewater to Broncos
The Carolina Panthers have traded quarterback Teddy Bridgewater to the Denver Broncos in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick….
The Carolina Panthers have traded quarterback Teddy Bridgewater to the Denver Broncos in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick, it was announced Wednesday.
The Panthers will pay $7 million to Bridgewater, while the Broncos will pay him $3 million, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
“Acquiring Teddy Bridgewater adds competition, experience and a strong veteran presence to our quarterback room,” Broncos general manager George Paton said in a statement. “He’s a talented player and leader who’s had success in this league in a number of different situations.”
The trade will not take the Broncos, who have the No. 9 overall pick, out of the market for a quarterback in Thursday’s NFL draft, a source told ESPN.
Paton saw several of the top prospects in person at each of their pro days in recent weeks and the Broncos had representatives at the second pro days for North Dakota State’s Trey Lance and Ohio State’s Justin Fields as well.
Broncos quarterback Drew Lock had his best game of the 2020 season in a 32-27 win over the Panthers on Dec. 13 in Bank of America Stadium, completing 21 of 27 passes for 280 yards and four touchdowns without an interception.
Since he was hired in January, Paton has consistently said the team likes Lock’s potential and he has praised the quarterback’s work this offseason. Lock, who is 8-10 in his two seasons as starter, had 15 interceptions in 13 starts for the Broncos last season.
Bridgewater, who signed a three-year, $63 million deal with the Panthers prior to last season, threw for 3,733 yards in 2020, with 15 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. By renegotiating the final two years of Bridgewater’s deal, the Panthers will save $6 million in 2021 and $26 million in 2022, a source told ESPN’s David Newton.
The financial concessions by the Panthers for the 2021 season were key to the deal. The Broncos largely sat out the quarterback derby during free agency, with Paton saying he didn’t want to “force it and bring a guy in or overpay a guy to come in and he’s not as good as the guy we have and maybe he’s not good enough to compete.”
Paton, the former assistant GM in Minnesota, has a lot of familiarity with Bridgewater. The Vikings moved back into the first round in 2014 to take Bridgewater with the 32nd overall pick. Bridgewater was 17-11 in Minnesota, including leading the Vikings to division title in 2015 with 11-5 record.
“Being familiar with Teddy from Minnesota, he’s going to compete and do everything he can to help us win,” Paton said.
The sixth-round pick going to the Panthers in the trade is No. 191 overall.
Carolina had traded for former New York Jets starting quarterback Sam Darnold earlier this month, making this the second time in his career that Bridgewater was traded after a team acquired Darnold — Bridgewater signed with Jets in free agency and then was traded before the season after the Jets drafted Darnold.
Bridgewater had plenty of opportunity last season to establish himself as the Panthers’ starter moving forward, but instead he saw his numbers go steadily down as the season concluded, and neither coach Matt Rhule nor GM Scott Fitterer would commit to him as the starter for the 2021 season.
Bridgewater had only one touchdown pass in the fourth quarter all season and was 0-8 in games in which the Panthers had a chance to win or tie on their last possession.
The Panthers had offered Bridgewater to the Detroit Lions earlier this offseason as part of a trade package for Matthew Stafford, who was eventually dealt to the Los Angeles Rams.
Carolina still has four quarterbacks — Darnold, Will Grier, P.J. Walker and Tommy Stevens – on its roster.
ESPN’s David Newton and Jeff Legwold contributed to this report.