Orlando Sentinel

Pierre-Paul works to prove he’s more than pass rusher

- By Fred Goodall

TAMPA — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers acquired Jason Pierre-Paul to bolster an anemic pass rush. However, the former New York Giants star wants to be a lot more than a one-dimensiona­l player.

The two-time Pro Bowl end believes he can be part of the solution to a leaky run defense, too, in addition to stalking opposing quarterbac­ks.

“I want everybody to know that I’m still capable of playing the run,” the 29-year-old said. “They already know I can play the pass. But if you can’t stop the run, there is no pass rush.”

The Bucs traded for Pierre-Paul in March after having one of the NFL’s leasteffec­tive defenses a year ago when they went 5-11 and ranked last in passing and total yards allowed as well as sacks with 22.

The team hasn’t had a player with 10 or more sacks in a season since Simeon Rice had 14 in 2005.

The 6-foot-5, 275-pound Pierre-Paul had 581⁄2 sacks in eight seasons with the Giants, including a career-best 161⁄2 in 2001 and 121⁄2 in 2014.

He hasn’t come close to posting double-digit sack totals since suffering a serious hand injury in a Fourth of July fireworks accident three years ago. Still, his numbers have improved each season from one in eight games in 2015 to seven in 2016 and 81⁄2 in 2017.

The Bucs feel Pierre-Paul, who played in college locally at South Florida, is an ideal fit for what they want to do with a revamped defensive line also featuring Pro Bowl tackle Gerald McCoy, offseason acquisitio­ns Beau Allen, Vinny Curry and Mitch Unrein, and firstround draft pick Vita Vea.

Coach Dirk Koetter likes what he’s seen in training camp.

“Just a real impressive veteran player that’s willing to share with the younger guys,” Koetter said. “His ability to work in the heat — sometimes those veteran players don’t want to come out and work as hard as we ask them to in training camp, but he’s been out front all the way.”

Like Pierre-Paul, the coach believes the ninth-year pro is versatile enough to help the Bucs slow opponents on the ground, as well as through the air.

“When we played [the Giants] last year, we probably feared him more in the running game than we did in the pass game,” Koetter said.

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