NEW ORLEANS – The dance-club hit "Turn Down for What?" boomed over the Mercedes-Benz Superdome sound system, which was certainly not being turned down for anything with a should-have-been-wide-eyed rookie quarterback entering the game.
But Teddy Bridgewater, the 32nd overall pick in May's NFL draft, appeared to be calm and comfortable as he strolled into the Vikings huddle, pulled his 10 offensive teammates close together and barked out his first play call as their quarterback.
"I wasn't nervous at all," Bridgewater later said, smiling slightly at the notion that he, even at age 21, was capable of feeling such an emotion. "I mean, this is where I wanted to be. Unfortunately, the way it happened wasn't the way I expected it to. I was just able to go out there and relax and look at my teammates and have them trust me."
The Bridgewater era began Sunday after starter Matt Cassel broke his left foot in the second quarter of a 20-9 loss to the New Orleans Saints, limped off the field and was carted into the locker room, ending his day.
Bridgewater played with poise after coming off the bench and did not let the loud New Orleans crowd rattle him. He protected the football while completing 12 of his 20 attempts for 150 yards with no interceptions. But he could not steer the Vikings, who haven't scored a touchdown in more than seven quarters, into the end zone.
With several fractured bones in his foot, Cassel is not expected to return to the field any time soon, if at all this season, so Bridgewater, the quarterback of the future, is now the quarterback of the present as the Vikings (1-2) try to right a season that has quickly gone off the rails.
"He will be ready," head coach Mike Zimmer said.
When Bridgewater entered Sunday's game, the Superdome was rocking. The Saints had scored touchdowns on their first two possessions and the Vikings trailed 13-3.