A day after Mike Wallace apparently blasted former Vikings teammate Teddy Bridgewater, CBS analyst Rich Gannon called the receiver’s comments “laughable” and said he needs to take a look at himself.

Wallace, released by the Vikings last week after an unproductive season, signed Tuesday with the Baltimore Ravens and then took an apparent shot at Bridgewater, the Vikings’ second-year quarterback. Wallace said he needs “a good quarterback … that is proven and can get things done,” and said Baltimore’s Joe Flacco fits that bill.

“I would classify them as laughable,” Gannon said of Wallace’s comments.

“I think you have to consider the source,” Gannon, a Vikings quarterback from 1987-92 and the NFL MVP with Oakland in 2002, said Wednesday. “He’s a disgruntled player that’s bounced around. I think it’s pretty small as a player (to say that).

“The first thing Mike Wallace needs to do is take a look at himself in the mirror. If I were him, I’d say, ‘Why have teams basically moved on so quickly (from him).’ Basically, he’s been a one-hit wonder.”

Playing for Pittsburgh from 2009-12, the speedy Wallace made a Pro Bowl, had two 1,000-yard seasons and secured a five-year, $60 million contract in 2013 with Miami. But Wallace struggled in two seasons with the Dolphins and then had his worst season in 2015 with the Vikings, catching 39 passes for 473 yards and a 12.1-yard average.

The Vikings traded for Wallace last March to serve as a deep threat for Bridgewater, but released him a year later when he would not take a significant cut from the $11.5 million he was due for 2016. Wallace signed a two-year, $11.5 million deal with the Ravens.

“He’s been an inconsistent route runner, a guy that does a handful of things well, one of them being straight-line speed, but a guy that has had a difficult time putting it all together,” Gannon said. “And now he’s going to go somewhere and think all of sudden a change of uniform is going to change that?

“Just because you run fast doesn’t make you a great football player. Maybe it’s not the quarterback. Maybe it’s the guy who is running the routes.”

Wallace didn’t mention Bridgewater by name. He claimed in a text message to USA Today on Wednesday his comments had nothing to do with Bridgewater and that he had “already talked to Teddy (and they) are A1.”

Wallace on Tuesday lauded Flacco’s ability to throw deep, and said he needs a quarterback “that can really sling the ball.” Wallace, who averaged 21 yards per catch for Pittsburgh in 2010, didn’t have a reception longer than 34 yards in 2015.

“It’s never one thing,” Gannon said of Bridgewater and Wallace not getting on the same page. “There’s examples of Teddy not pulling the trigger, sure, but there are examples of a guy not being in the right place or not getting the right depth or not making the right adjustment based on coverage.”

Gannon said Bridgewater, entering his third season, is “getting better” at throwing the deep ball.

“When I came into the league, that wasn’t one of my strengths,” said Gannon, who played from 1987-2004 and made four Pro Bowls. “It’s just getting comfortable with the system and getting comfortable with the personnel. It’s a point of emphasis in the offseason, and I think he’ll continue to improve as he gets better … But for this guy who just walked out the door and he’s got to slam the quarterback, I’d just say, ‘Good luck to him.’ “