During his coaching days, Bud Grant often said durability was perhaps a player's most important ability, a philosophy that certainly applies to the game's most important position.
That old gunslinger, Brett Favre, was lionized for starting 297 consecutive games. Similar longevity has allowed Peyton Manning, Drew Brees and Tom Brady to make a run at Favre's many passing records. And while talking heads on TV have screamed about whether Eli Manning and Joe Flacco are top quarterbacks, there's no debating they have been elite when it comes to staying on the field.
This brings us to Teddy Bridgewater, the promising Vikings rookie whose Ironman streak was stopped at one — albeit an impressive one — after he sprained his left ankle in his first NFL start. That left Bridgewater to stand on the sideline in a hooded sweatshirt last Thursday night at rainy Lambeau Field, coincidentally the stadium where Favre had never missed a game during his long Green Bay Packers career.
Will Bridgewater out of uniform end up being a rare occurrence? Or was the missed game a sign of more to come? Only time will tell. But Bridgewater is determined to not make this a habit.
"I feel that I want to be at this position and I want to be the guy for 10-plus years," Bridgewater said Thursday. "I want to have longevity in my career. I feel that I don't have to prove anything, but at the same time, I would like to be out there every opportunity that I get."
Fair or not, durability was one of the concerns that draft analysts said teams would have about Bridgewater, who battled ankle and wrist injuries in college and who, at 6-2 and 210 pounds, has a lean frame for a quarterback by the NFL's standards, though that standard has been changing in recent years (see Wilson, Russell).
The Vikings, who picked him 32nd overall in May's NFL draft, say they had no such concerns. After all, Bridgewater didn't miss a game in college after becoming Louisville's starter as a freshman. And in the one game he didn't start, because of another sprained ankle along with a fractured wrist, he entered the game and willed the Cardinals to a victory.
"We didn't see any durability issues," Zimmer said. "His frame is what it is, but he's a pretty elusive, quick athlete. He's pretty smart as well. He knows when to get down."