South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Brady’s still not too old to ignore

Despite 43-year-old’s recent struggles, defending champion Chiefs are still plenty wary of him

- By Fred Goodall

TAMPA — The Kansas City Chiefs aren’t buying all the talk about Tom Brady’s struggles. They insist he’s still playing at a high level and will have to be at their best to beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The reigning Super Bowl champions (9-1) visit the Bucs (7-4) on Sunday, with Patrick Mahomes facing Brady for the fourth time in his young career and Brady looking to shrug off a couple of subpar performanc­es against playoff contenders.

“You can’t take anything away from Tom Brady,” Chiefs safety Tyrann Mathieu said.

“He’s still very smart, he’s still trying to throw the ball downfield, he still has the weapons. We’ll have our hands full.

“He’s played against our system a number of times, even going back to New England. He’s familiar with us. Now we have to get familiar with him and the weapons he has.”

Brady won two of the previous three matchups against Mahomes, including an overtime thriller in the AFC championsh­ip game two seasons ago.

The six-time Super Bowl champion played poorly in home losses to New Orleans and the Los Angeles Rams two of the past three weeks. Still, Kansas City coach Andy Reid cautioned against anyone writing off the 43-year-old quarterbac­k.

Despite Brady’s recent struggles, particular­ly on deep passes, the Bucs already have matched their victory total from all of last season and remain in prime position to end a 12-year playoff drought that’s the second-longest in the NFL.

“He’s unbelievab­le,” Reid said. “He’s a great player, a Hall of Fame player. We’re lucky enough to have a chance to be in this era where we get to play him.

“He’s old, and it’s hard to tell he’s old. And that’s a tribute to how he takes care of himself, and the care and living he does all the way around, from diet to workout to everything.”

The Chiefs have won five straight, the eighth consecutiv­e year they’ve had a streak at least that long.

They avenged their lone loss last week with a 35-31 victory at Las Vegas, with Mahomes throwing for

348 yards and two TDs. Mahomes, who’s thrown for just over 312 yards per game with 14 TDs and one intercepti­on during Kansas City’s winning streak, was as surprised as anyone that Brady left the Patriots to sign with Tampa Bay in free agency last March.

“But he’s in a great spot. They’ve got a lot of weapons there,” Mahomes said, looking ahead to another head-to-head meeting.

“I don’t think it’s going to feel very much different. It’s still a very good football team that’s playing really good football and winning a lot of games. I know it’s going to be a really big challenge for us.”

Brady threw a pair of costly intercepti­ons and was 0-for-6 on passes traveling at least 20 yards in last week’s 27-24 loss to the Rams. He’s

0-for-19 on such throws over the past three games, which includes a

38-3 loss to the Saints.

The struggles have raised questions about whether the offense Brady is being asked to run following a historic 20-year stint with the Patriots is suited to what he does best.

Bucs coach Bruce Arians concedes the offense has been inconsiste­nt but attributes that to a lack of continuity caused in part by teams not having a usual offseason due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and injuries that have forced lineup changes and limited practice time for some players.

“He can do anything, so it’s not like he can’t do it,” Arians said, responding to critics who suggest the problem is the offensive scheme, which stresses pushing the ball downfield.

“We’ve had the guys open. We’ve just missed them. Each and every week is so different, but when they’re there, we need to hit them.

“We can’t have them going off our fingertips, and we can’t overthrow them.”

Brady has lots of good things to say about Mahomes and the Chiefs, who lead the league in scoring at 32.1 points per game.

“He’s a terrific player, obviously. ... They’ve got their offense rolling,” Brady said. “I feel continuity is probably the most critical aspect of consistent performanc­e . ... They’ve been in that system for a while.

“Coach Reid’s been there for a while. He’s a great coach . ... They’ve been tough to beat for a lot of years now.”

Wide receiver room

The Chiefs should be welcoming back wide receiver Sammy Watkins from a hamstring injury that has sidelined him since Week 5 just in time.

They lost Byron Pringle, who had been one of the bright spots in their wideout corps this season, to an ankle injury last week that landed him on injured reserve. Their only other healthy wide receivers on the 53-man roster are Tyreek Hill, Demarcus Robinson and Mecole Hardman.

Feeling defensive

The Chiefs have won the past two weeks despite allowing 31 points each to Carolina and Las Vegas.

The Panthers threw for 331 yards while running for 104 during their game at Arrowhead Stadium before the bye week, and Derek Carr led the Raiders to 364 yards of total offense — and if not for a touchdown in the closing seconds, a win — last Sunday.

“Every football game won’t be a blowout. Every football game won’t be a dominant defensive performanc­e,” Mathieu said. “But what our fans should see is us playing hard, sticking together, no matter what, whether we’re up by 50 or down by 50.

“It’s about us staying together.”

 ?? MARK LOMOGLIO | AP ?? The Kansas City Chiefs expect a strong effort from from Tom Brady and the Bucs despite their recent struggles.
MARK LOMOGLIO | AP The Kansas City Chiefs expect a strong effort from from Tom Brady and the Bucs despite their recent struggles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States