Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Fitzpatric­k and the Bucs stun New Orleans

- By Brett Martel

NEW ORLEANS » Ryan Fitzpatric­k backpedale­d giddily for about 20 yards as he watched DeSean Jackson come down with a 36-yard touchdown pass over the middle. The journeyman quarterbac­k then turned toward the Tampa Bay Buccaneers sideline and triumphant­ly thrust his arm in an upward arc.

Time will tell if the Bucs are on a similar trajectory this season, but there’s no denying they’re off to an encouragin­g start.

Fitzpatric­k highlighte­d a 417-yard, four-touchdown performanc­e with two scoring strikes of more than 50 yards, and the Buccaneers stunned the Saints 48-40 on Sunday.

“I’m happy to announce: FitzMagic is alive and well,” Tampa Bay coach Dirk Koetter said of his 35-year-old reserve quarterbac­k, who was starting for suspended 2015 first-overall draft choice Jameis Winston. “Quite a start, huh?”

Fitzpatric­k completed 21 of 28 passes without an intercepti­on and also ran for a short touchdown, bowling over free safety Marcus Williams on his way into the end zone.

“I hope somebody had him in fantasy because he went crazy today,” Bucs receiver Mike Evans said of Fitzpatric­k. “And he was running the ball — phenomenal game. One of the most complete games I’ve seen.”

Coming off a playoff appearance and hosting a team that won only five games last season, the Saints were among the more heavily favored teams in Week 1. But some of the Saints’ defensive players who were instrument­al in New Orleans’ success a season earlier had a miserable start to 2018.

Saints cornerback Marshon Lattimore, the 2017 defensive rookie of the year, had trouble covering Evans, who caught seven passes for

147 yards, including a 50yard touchdown that put the Bucs up 41-24 late in the third quarter.

“It isn’t going to get me down. Everybody gets beat,” Lattimore said. “We needed to get slapped in our face one good time to see we’re not on a level we think we’re on.”

A season ago, Evans was so frustrated with coverage by Lattimore that he hit him after the whistle and wound up being suspended a game for it. After this latest meeting, Evans said, “I like my odds against anybody, not just him.”

Jackson caught scoring passes of 58 and 36 yards to highlight his five-catch,

146-yard day before leaving with a concussion.

Fitzpatric­k also threw a

9-yard touchdown pass to Chris Godwin.

“The talent level in that huddle, with guys that can go up and make plays, it’s a pretty special group,” Fitzpatric­k said. “I’m glad we showed it today, but now it’s about consistenc­y.”

COMEBACK BID

The Saints put together a frantic offensive flurry in the fourth quarter, scoring twice on touchdowns by Alvin Kamara — the first a

1-yard run and the second a

7-yard catch, both followed by 2-point conversion­s. That cut the Saints’ deficit to eight points with 3:31 to go.

On third-and-11, Fitzpatric­k needed to make one more play — and did. He scrambled to his left for 12 yards at the two-minute warning. With New Orleans out of timeouts, Fitzpatric­k was able to run out the clock.

“That’s the type of game we’ve played in year’s past as a .500 team,” Saints coach Sean Payton said, alluding to three straight 7-9 seasons from 2014-16 before the Saints returned to the playoffs with 11 wins in 2017. “Nothing carries over from last year. I’ve said it a millions times.”

 ?? BILL FEIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Ryan Fitzpatric­k (14) throws a pass in the first half against the New Orleans Saints in New Orleans, Sunday.
BILL FEIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Ryan Fitzpatric­k (14) throws a pass in the first half against the New Orleans Saints in New Orleans, Sunday.

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