The Lions’ quietest training camp fight might end up producing one of the loudest roster decisions.
Detroit has a backup quarterback battle brewing, and it’s the kind that usually flies under the radar until cut-down day starts forcing hard choices. Teddy Bridgewater is back in the mix for the third time in his career, but he’s not walking into a comfortable handoff. The veteran is now trying to hold off undrafted rookie Luke Altmyer, a player who showed enough in college to earn a draftable grade from the Lions even though his name wasn’t called in April.
Bridgewater arrives with the obvious advantages. He knows the system, he has history with the organization, and he’s already built some chemistry with a handful of receivers.
But that familiar footing comes with a catch: this isn’t the same group he worked with at the end of the 2024 season. Only Amon-Ra St.
Brown, Jameson Williams, and practice squad receiver Tom Kennedy remain from that stretch.
There are also some familiar faces in the coaching room. Bridgewater has reunited with Drew Petzing, who overlapped with him in Minnesota when Bridgewater first entered the league, and Mark Brunell is still coaching quarterbacks in Detroit.
Even so, Bridgewater’s path back into the job isn’t as smooth as it might look on paper. His relationship with the NFL has been stop-and-start in recent years. During the 2024 season, he stepped away to coach, then resigned from that coaching role in early August last year to join Tampa Bay.
The experience edge still belongs to Bridgewater, no question. But the recent-game reps are not exactly overwhelming.
His 15 passes in 2025 were his first in-game throws since 2022. Altmyer, meanwhile, has not thrown a pass in an NFL game yet, so the rookie is still starting from zero in that department.
Where Altmyer can make this interesting is the part every backup quarterback has to master: keeping the offense afloat without giving the game away. That’s where the rookie’s profile starts to pop.
Bridgewater has shown he can play the position at a high level, but he’s also thrown 22 interceptions in his last 38 played games, a 2.2% interception rate. Altmyer stayed under 2.0% in each of his last two seasons at Illinois.
And those Illinois seasons weren’t empty calories. Altmyer helped lead the Illini to their first back-to-back eight-win seasons in nearly 40 years.
It would be a real surprise if Altmyer came in and won the job outright in his first camp, but it’s not impossible. Detroit’s staff will have to weigh the veteran’s resume against the rookie’s development and mistake-free style. There’s also another path on the table: the Lions could keep three quarterbacks on the 53-man roster, just as they did while trying to develop Hendon Hooker.
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