Teddy Bridgewater's separated left knee opened the door for Sam Bradford's arrival in Minnesota 14 months ago. But on Wednesday, it was Bridgewater taking snaps for the Vikings while Bradford was placed on injured reserve as he recovers from arthroscopic knee surgery.
Activated to the 53-man roster, Bridgewater has taken Bradford's place. Caution has dictated every step along the way for Bridgewater, who tore multiple ligaments and dislocated his knee last summer. His return to the field will be no different.
So he enters Sunday's game in Washington as the backup to starter Case Keenum.
Asked if Bridgewater is ready to play, Vikings coach Mike Zimmer's response was direct: "Yes."
Less certain is the health and long-term outlook of Bradford, who will become a free agent in March. Zimmer said the issue with Bradford's left knee joint is not bone-on-bone, so there were "a lot of good things" learned during Tuesday's procedure by Dr. James Andrews. Still, neither the Vikings nor Bradford know when he'll be healthy enough to play again — or if it will be for the Vikings.
"I don't know," Zimmer said. "I have an outstanding relationship with Sam. He is a great person, heck of a quarterback. We don't know where he's at with his knee. I haven't talked to him about anything next year. We're just thinking about this year."
Bradford has to sit out a minimum of eight weeks and can technically return for the playoffs, but the Vikings are not planning on it. That puts Bridgewater one snap away from playing, just over a year since they sent a 2017 first-round pick and 2018 fourth-round pick to Philadelphia for Bradford. So with a Keenum-Bridgewater pecking order, the Vikings will likely deactivate Kyle Sloter in Washington, says Zimmer.
The Vikings, 5-2 under Keenum and 6-2 overall, aren't yet ready to start Bridgewater.