That's a great question. I think John Clayton of ESPN said it best that "there will be teams pursuing Drew Bledsoe in the off-season".
Now trying to guess which ones is the fun/hard part. Below is my list of POSSIBLE teams he could be starting for next season:
Texans
Lions
Browns
Raiders
Buccaneers
Packers
Vikings
Ravens (Is Mcnair coming back?? Who knows!)
Bears (The Bears QB situation is far from settled despite their record. Bledsoe could easily step in as the starter for a couple of seasons. With their O-line and defense that could be a huge success.)
There will probably 1 or 2 teams out there that come from no where to enter the picture. Usually always some surprise team. One thing for certain is that there will be a GM (if not several) who will look at Drew Bledsoe who will just turn 35 in February (not 38 like Brad Johnson or 37 like Trent Green) and see that he had almost this entire season off which makes his arm even younger in terms of "games played" and will look at his accomplishments (see a portion below) and say, Let's bring him in as the starter for 2 years while we groom a young QB behind him.
The first order of business will be shoring up the O-line of whatever team that turns out to be. I hope that whoever it is learns from the mistake Parcells made of not providing Drew the kind of talent needed for him to succeed on the O-line.
Bledsoe's weaknesses are as well documented as his strengths. OF course he is a pocket passer with little mobility and is not going anywhere in the pocket. You know where he will be. He's ALWAYS been that style of QB and always will be. That being said, you cannot put and average NFL o-line in front of him and expect to succeed. The GM of his next team BETTER understand this and focus the off-season on putting together a SOLID O-line for Bledsoe. IF that is in place, Bledsoe will thrive and pick apart defenses like he's done his entire career when having protection.
Bledsoe's arm strength, accuracy and leadership have never been argued or in question. se Thoremain his selling points and those points remain the reason that Drew will be starting for a new team in 2007.
Drew Bledsoe:
All time Stats In NFL History:
5th all time in completions in NFL History--(3,389)
5th all time in attempts in NFL History--(6,717)
7th all time in passing yardage in NFL History--(44,611)
13th all time in passing touchdowns in NFL history--(251)
NFL Records:
Most passes thrown in a singe game (70)
Most passes completed in a singe game (45)
Most completed TD passes in overtime (Took Terry Bradshaw's spot)
Youngest player to throw for 10,000 yards in his career (Took Marino's spot)
Youngest QB to ever play in a Pro Bowl
Holds 12 all time franchise passing records for the Buffalo Bills
All time leading passer in New England Patriots History
Assorted accomplishments:
60% winning percentage in the NFL post-season
Undefeated in Championship Games (2-0 in 1996 & 2001 AFC Championship games)
Inducted into the Washington State University Hall Of Fame
Inducted into the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame
Recipient of the NFL Alumni Spirit Award
Recipient of the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award
Recipient of the Ed Block Courage award
Recipient of the Henry P. Iba Citizen Athlete Award
Served as International Chairman of the Children’s Miracle Network
Established the Drew Bledsoe Foundation to assist parents in raising their children through curriculum based programs in schools, prisons, alternative schools, community and youth organizations around the country. Nearly 2 million American families (and counting) have been reached