The kid definitely can think on his feet. Or while he sits in a small room fidgeting with a golf club at Winter Park.
Teddy Bridgewater, perhaps the oldest 22-year-old NFL player you'll ever meet, had misunderstood the question. This miscommunication caused him to start explaining how he, as second-year quarterback of the Vikings, handles the pessimism surrounding the 2015 team.
"I don't blame people," Bridgewater said. "We haven't done anything yet and …"
No, no, Teddy. We said optimism. As in, "How do you handle the Vikings being such a trendy playoff pick" heading into Monday night's season opener at San Francisco?
"Oh," Bridgewater said. "In that case, we can't buy into what's being said. We're not as good as we think we are. We have a long way to go."
Then he flashed that budding face-of-the-franchise smile. Either way, Teddy Bridgewater knew he was going to complete that answer.
The Vikings, 7-9 a year ago, open what appears to be a more difficult schedule than last year. Monday, they visit a 49ers team that missed the playoffs and parted ways with coach Jim Harbaugh and several key players but will benefit from a partisan Monday night crowd in brand new Levi's Stadium.
Overall, the Vikings have the 12th-most-difficult schedule, facing teams that went a combined 138-118 (.539) a year ago. The rest of the NFC North ranks lower, with Chicago at No. 13 (.531), defending champion Green Bay at No. 14 (.529) and Detroit, a wild-card playoff team last year, at No. 15 (.527).