Imperial Valley Press

Brady picked off twice in 1st; Bucs lose to Washington 29-19

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LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — An exasperate­d Tom Brady put his hands on his knees and looked down at the field after his second intercepti­on in the first quarter.

Hours later, the defense couldn’t get off the field late in the fourth with the chance to dig the defending champions out of another hole.

Brady was picked off twice in his first six passes, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers surrendere­d a clock-killing, 19-play drive that sealed a 29-19 upset by Washington on Sunday.

It’s their second consecutiv­e loss on either side of the bye week, a performanc­e coach Bruce Arians called embarrassi­ng.

The quarterbac­k several Washington players referred to as the “G.O.A.T.” was one of the goats in the worst way as the Buccaneers fell to 6-3.

“Not a great day of football for us,” said Brady, who finished 23 of 34 for 220 yards and two touchdown passes but threw two intercepti­ons just like during the loss at New Orleans two weeks ago. “We just never really played on our terms. We played from behind the whole game, and they played a good game.”

Tampa Bay was dealt an extra blow in the last minute when nose tackle Vita Vea was carted off with an injury on the final play of the 80-yard drive over 10:26 that finished things off for Washington (3-6). Arians did not have an update, but said Vea felt something in one of his knees — and the concern was real afterward.

“You just hate to see him keep going down,” linebacker Devin White said. “If we got him, great. If we don’t, man, I’m gonna miss playing with him for the rest of

the season.”

Washington lost reigning NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year Chase Young to a right knee injury in the first half. Young gave a halftime speech to teammates and was back on the sideline later on crutches.

“There’s some concern,”

coach Ron Rivera said. “We’ll have him evaluated tomorrow. Potentiall­y an ACL, but we’re not sure yet.”

The Buccaneers ( 6- 3) couldn’t find much of a rhythm on either side of the ball in a rematch of their wild-card victory at Washington from January.

Brady’s intercepti­ons — one off the hands of rookie Jaelon Darden and another inexplicab­le toss that was caught by Washington safety Bobby McCain — disjointed the NFL’s best scoring and passing offense, which did not have a firsthalf touchdown for just the fifth time in the past two seasons.

McCain said Washington took offense to Tampa Bay opting to start with the ball after winning the coin toss and later deciding to go for it on fourth-and-short in its own territory.

Flustered all afternoon by Washington’s defense, Brady bounced back in the second half to throw touchdown passes to Cameron Brate and Mike Evans. But Tampa Bay’s defense could not stop Washington’s offense on the final, clock-draining drive. Rivera lived up to his “Riverboat

Ron” nickname by going for it on fourth-and-goal from the Tampa Bay 1-yard line with 31 seconds to go, and Antonio Gibson’s second touchdown run of the day put the game away.

“They beat us,” Bucs linebacker Lavonte David said. “We had an opportunit­y to get off the field, and we didn’t. We talk a lot of stuff, but we didn’t play like it. That was a moment to put our stamp on the game, and we didn’t.”

Washington QB Taylor Heinicke put his stamp on the improbable result much earlier, hooking up with DeAndre Carter for a 20yard TD pass and leading a 71-yard drive in the third quarter. A pass interferen­ce penalty on the Buccaneers set up Gibson’s first TD run — one of several self-inflicted mistakes made by Tampa Bay, which was flagged six times for 43 yards.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK TENALLY ?? Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady (12) throws under pressure from Washington Football Team defensive tackle Jonathan Allen (93) during the first half of an NFL football game, on Sunday in Landover, Md.
AP PHOTO/MARK TENALLY Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady (12) throws under pressure from Washington Football Team defensive tackle Jonathan Allen (93) during the first half of an NFL football game, on Sunday in Landover, Md.

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