The Province

Pats look better in win over Bucs

Stalled drives and missed kicks prove Tampa Bay’s undoing

- FRED GOODALL

TAMPA, Fla. — Tom Brady threw for 303 yards and one touchdown, and New England’s porous defence showed signs of improvemen­t Thursday night in a 19-14 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The Super Bowl champions rebounded from a last-second loss to Carolina, despite Brady turning the ball over twice — on his first intercepti­on in eight regular-season games and a fumble on one of Tampa Bay’s three sacks.

Neither of the mistakes led to points for Tampa Bay (2-2), which was unable to do much offensivel­y until the fourth quarter.

Brady threw a five-yard TD pass to Chris Hogan in the second quarter, and Stephen Gostkowski kicked field goals of 27, 23, 45 and 48 yards for the Patriots (3-2).

Jameis Winston rallied Tampa Bay late with an 18-yard TD pass to Cameron Brate that trimmed New England’s lead to 16-14 with 2:09 remaining. He marched the Bucs from his 25 to the Patriots 19 before throwing an incompleti­on on the final play.

It might not have come down to a last-second drive if not for another poor performanc­e by Bucs kicker Nick Folk.

Folk missed two field goals and an extra-point before beating the New York Giants on a last-second kick last week. He missed three more field goals Thursday night, including a 31-yarder that would have cut a nine-point deficit to six in the closing minutes.

With his 186th career regular-season win as a starter, Brady tied Brett Favre and Peyton Manning for the most by a quarterbac­k in NFL history. He also has 25 post-season victories, including five Super Bowls.

Defensivel­y, the Patriots entered the night on pace to yield more yards than any team in league history.

And, Winston and a young Tampa Bay offence that has progressiv­ely got better since he was selected first overall in the 2015 draft was hoping to be the latest beneficiar­y of New England’s struggles.

Running back Doug Martin provided a lift in his return from a suspension for violating the NFL’s policy on performanc­e enhancers with 74 yards rushing and one TD. But one week after throwing for 332 yards and three touchdowns without an intercepti­on and overcoming a pair of fourth-quarter deficits to beat the Giants, Winston was unable to move the ball consistent­ly until the fourth quarter.

The Bucs didn’t have a third-down conversion until late in the third quarter, and Martin’s one-yard TD came on a drive the Patriots kept alive with a hands-to-the-face penalty on third down.

Winston finished 26 of 45 for 334 yards and zero intercepti­ons. DeSean Jackson had five receptions for 106 yards.

Playing without injured tight end Rob Gronkowski (thigh), Brady finished 30 of 40 with one intercepti­on.

Brady opened the game with four straight completion­s before throwing his first intercepti­on of the season, overthrowi­ng a wide-open Hogan in the middle of the field to end a streak of 264 pass attempts without an intercepti­on.

Since 2003, New England is 44-6 in regular-season games following a loss.

The Patriots have dropped backto-back games only six times during that span — in 2006, 2009, 2011, 2012 and twice in 2015. As a starter, Brady is 44-10 in games following a loss.

 ?? BRIAN BLANCO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Wide receiver Chris Hogan of the New England Patriots hauls in a five-yard touchdown pass from quarterbac­k Tom Brady while getting pressure from Tampa Bay Buccaneers cornerback Vernon Hargreaves in a 19-14 Patriots win Thursday in Tampa, Fla.
BRIAN BLANCO/GETTY IMAGES Wide receiver Chris Hogan of the New England Patriots hauls in a five-yard touchdown pass from quarterbac­k Tom Brady while getting pressure from Tampa Bay Buccaneers cornerback Vernon Hargreaves in a 19-14 Patriots win Thursday in Tampa, Fla.

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