Daily Press

Young goes up against ‘best’; Brady gives respect

Rookie defensive end’s first playoff game will be against a QB who has 30 postseason victories

- By Stephen Whyno

LANDOVER, Md. — Running off the field after Washington clinched a spot in the playoffs, Chase Young couldn’t contain his excitement about who’s up next.

“Tom Brady!” Young yelled. “Tom Brady, I’m coming. I want Tom! I want Tom!”

Young and NFC East champion Washington will get Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers tonight in the wild-card round as a home underdog. Young’s first NFL playoff game is Brady’s 42nd and first not in a New England Patriots uniform, a chance for the 43-year-old to add to his career accomplish­ments.

“Nothing is given — you have to earn everything,” Brady said. “We’re going up against a division winner and a team that’s very talented. Certainly on defense, they have a lot of playmakers, so we have to put it all together. In order to advance, you have to play good football.”

Tampa Bay (11-5) has done that with Brady, riding a four-game winning streak since its bye week. Washington (7-9) won the league’s worst division, thanks in large part to Young’s stellar rookie season and quarterbac­k Alex Smith’s leadership two years since severely breaking his right leg.

Brady’s postseason résumé is well-documented: 30 victories, six Super Bowl championsh­ips — double Washington’s franchise history — with 73 touchdowns and 35 intercepti­ons. Young is fired up to take his shot at Brady after leading all rookies with 7 ½ sacks.

“I’m excited to go against the best,” Young said. “You think I’m not going to be excited to play against the G.O.A.T.? Then you’re tripping. And that is what it is. I’m excited to play against Big Tom. I’m not going to apologize for saying I want Tom. No. I want Tom Brady. I want every quarterbac­k I play against.”

Getting to Brady early and often with a front four of Young and fellow first-round picks Montez Sweat, Jonathan Allen and Daron Payne is Washington’s best, if not only, chance to pull the upset.

“We’ve got our hands full with that d-line, one of the best d-lines in the league,” Brady said.

History on the sidelines

This will be the first NFL playoff game with a female coach on each sideline. Tampa

Bay has two in assistant defensive line coach Lori Locust and assistant strength and conditioni­ng coach Maral Javadifar; Washington has full-year coaching intern Jennifer King, who assists with running backs.

Buccaneers coach Bruce Arians said he and Washington counterpar­t Ron Rivera, also advocates for more minority representa­tion in coaching, were on a diversity panel once and share similar beliefs. Arians called women in coaching “the wave of the future.”

“It’s going to tell those young girls that are watching that you can — yes, you can coach in the NFL,” Rivera said.

QB shuffle?

Smith missed two games with a strained right calf in the same leg he broke in 2018 and struggled with mobility in the division-clinching win last weekend at Philadelph­ia. He’s 5-1 as the starter this season and might be able to play even with limited practice snaps, but Rivera broached the possibilit­y this week of rotating Smith and backup Taylor Heinicke, a former Old Dominion star.

“We have to look at it,” Rivera said. “We’re going to play a very aggressive defense this week. Obviously, it’s something we most certainly have to look at.”

Smith is 36 and just the fifth QB to take three different teams to the playoffs, while Heinicke has one regular-season NFL start and no playoff experience. Yet Rivera believes their similariti­es in style allow for Washington’s offense to streamline one game plan no matter who plays.

 ?? JEFF HAYNES/AP ?? Quarterbac­k Tom Brady has Tampa Bay on a four-game win streak entering the playoffs. The Buccaneers have averaged 37 points in that span.
JEFF HAYNES/AP Quarterbac­k Tom Brady has Tampa Bay on a four-game win streak entering the playoffs. The Buccaneers have averaged 37 points in that span.
 ?? DANIEL KUCIN JR/AP ?? Washington defensive end Chase Young led all NFL rookies with 7½ sacks this season. He’ll try to add to his total tonight against Tampa Bay.
DANIEL KUCIN JR/AP Washington defensive end Chase Young led all NFL rookies with 7½ sacks this season. He’ll try to add to his total tonight against Tampa Bay.

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