Orlando Sentinel

Bucs get blocked

Punt goes bad, lead vanishes as Saints clinch NFC South

- By Fred Goodall

TAMPA — The New Orleans Saints are a long way from where they want to be.

For now, though, repeating as NFC South champions for the first time in franchise history feels pretty good.

“Goal No. 1 was to win the division again and we were able to do that,” Drew Brees said Sunday after throwing for one touchdown and running for another to help the Saints rally from an 11-point halftime deficit to beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 28-14.

“I like the way we won this game. We didn’t play well in the first half and [faced] a big deficit,” Brees added. “We were able to come together with all sides making plays in that second half. I think that was the epitome of a great team win.”

Music blared in the winning locker room.

There’s still a lot of work ahead for the Saints (10-2), however clinching any division title — much less with three weeks remaining in the regular season — is an accomplish­ment worth celebratin­g.

“This is what guys look forward to. This is fun,” said Brees, who shrugged off a pair of turnovers to throw a 1-yard TD pass to Zach Line, then scored on a 1-yard sneak as the Saints avenged a season-opening loss to the Bucs (5-8) and also rebounded from a defeat the previous week at Dallas.

“This is the stuff you remember, especially road games — you know, road locker rooms, bus rides, back on the plane. Those moments together,” Brees added. “It’s hard to win in this league; it’s hard to win on the road. We’re going to enjoy these moments and continue to build on ’em.”

New Orleans’ defense did its part after allowing two first-half TDs, too, sacking Jameis Winston four times and limiting the NFL’s No. 1-ranked offense to 81 yards in the second half — most of that on the final drive of the game

“We got dominated in the second half,” said Bucs coach Dirk Koetter, whose team won a high-scoring shootout 48-40 at New Orleans in Week 1. “We haven’t been shut down like that in a long time.”

Brees completed 24 of 31 passes for 201 yards with one intercepti­on. Michael Thomas had 11 receptions for 98 yards.

A week after being held to a season-low 176 yards total offense in a 13-10 loss to Dallas that ended a 10-game winning streak, the Saints started slowly again.

Winston threw a pair of TD passes to Cameron Brate, the latter a 1-yarder set up by Adarius Taylor’s intercepti­on to put the Bucs up 14-3 at halftime. The fourth-year pro also threw an 11-yarder to Brate on the opening drive of the game.

The game turned in the third quarter when Brees weathered losing a fumble at his own 27 and later took advantage of the Saints blocking a punt to set up his TD pass to Line that along with Alvin Kamara’s 2-point conversion trimmed Tampa Bay’s lead to 14-11.

In addition to missing a 40-yard field goal after Carl Nassib sacked Brees, forcing a fumble Jason PierrePaul recovered early in the third quarter, Cairo Santos also had a 46-yard attempt deflect off the right upright in the first half for Tampa Bay, which finished with 279 yards — more than 160 below its league-leading season average.

“Going into the second half I thought that we had an opportunit­y to put a fork into them, but they got a boost of confidence from a missed field goal, a punt blocked,” Bucs tackle Demar Dotson said.

“We couldn’t get anything going on offense,” Koetter added. “Fourteen points isn’t going to do it against the Saints.”

Brees’ TD run put the Saints ahead early in the fourth quarter. Mark Ingram scored on a 17-yard run to make it 25-14. Will Lutz tacked on a 36-yard field goal in the closing minutes.

Pressured relentless­ly in the second half while the Saints were taking control of the game, Winston finished 18 of 38 for 213 yards with two touchdowns and one intercepti­on — an endzone throw picked off by Marshon Lattimore with 1 second remaining.

The Bucs had 32 yards in the second half until Winston completed passes of 16, 12 and 21 to march into Saints territory on the final drive.

And penalties hurt Tampa Bay all day long, including an unnecessar­yroughness penalty on Bucs center Ryan Jensen late in the second quarter.

At one point, a frustrated Winston was seen arguing on the sideline with Jensen.

“Brothers have disagreeme­nts,” Winston said of the exchange. “It wasn’t that much.”

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