Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Arians comfortabl­e during pandemic

- By Fred Goodall

SG: APP

Aug.

HO

Aug. 30-Sept. 12 - US Open, HO Sept. 6-14 : Generali Open, CO Sept. 11-20 : Mutua Madrid Open, CO Sept. 18-27 : Internazio­nali BNL d'Italia, CO

Sept. 18-27 : St. Petersburg Open, HO Sept. 25-Oct. 3 - Garanti Koza Sofia Open, HO

Sept. 20-Oct. 10 - French Open, CO Oct. 16-25 : European Open, HO

Oct. 16-25 : VTB Kremlin Cup, HO Oct. 16-25 : IF Stockholm Open, HO Oct. 23-Oct. 31 - Swiss Indoors Basel, HO Oct. 23-Oct. 31 - Erste Bank Open 500, HO Oct. 30-Nov. 7 - Tennis Paris Masters, HO Nov. 12-14 : Next Gen ATP Finals, HO Nov. 20-22 : World Tour Finals Singles, HO

July 31-9 : Citi Open, HO

Aug. 1-10 : Palermo Ladies Open, CO Aug. 9-16 : Lexington, The Top Seed, Aug. 7-16 : J&T Banka Prague Open, CO Aug. 19-29 : Western & Southern Open, HO

Aug. 30-Sept. 11 - US Open, HO Sept. 11-20 : Mutua Madrid Open, CO Sept. 19-27 : Internazio­nali BNL d’Italia, CO

Sept. 19-27 CO

Sept. 20-Oct. 10 - French Open, CO Oct. 3-11 : Korea Open, HO

Oct. 9-18 : Ladies Linz presented by Upper Austria, HO

Oct. 16-25 : BGL Open, HO

Oct. 16-25 : Wuhan Open, HO

Oct. 30-Nov. 7 - VTB Kremlin Cup, HO Nov. 8-10 : WTA Finals, HO

TAMPA, Fla. — Bruce Arians didn’t give much thought to the prospect of opting out of trying to help Tom Brady win a Super Bowl with the Buccaneers.

The 67-year-old whose aggressive offensive philosophy is dubbed “no risk it, no biscuit” is one of the oldest head coaches in the NFL, as well as a cancer survivor who once retired because of health concerns.

He’s among millions in a category considered vulnerable to the novel coronaviru­s, yet he’s eager to work through the pandemic. With a goal of helping Brady and a mostly young Buccaneers roster end the league’s secondlong­est playoff drought and hoist the Lombardi Trophy.

At 68, the Seahawks’ Pete Carroll and the Patriots’ Bill Belichick are the only head coaches who are older.

“There was never a doubt I was going to coach, especially once I’d seen the protocols in place,” Arians said Tuesday, adding he plans to wear a mask and shield on the field and “coach like I’ve always coached.”

“Whether it was Tom or whoever the quarterbac­k would be, I’m going to get excited. I really like our ballclub and hope — knock on wood — we can stay healthy and do the things we want to do,” Arians added. “Having Tom adds to the excitement, obviously, but I would have been all in either way.”

The Bucs as an organizati­on have the second-worst winning percentage of any franchise among the four major profession­al sports. They haven’t made the playoffs for 12 consecutiv­e seasons and haven’t won a postseason game since their 2002 Super Bowlwinnin­g run.

With Brady replacing talented but mistake-prone Jameis Winston at quarterbac­k, expectatio­ns are soaring.

There’s a lot of work to be done, especially with teams unable to conduct OTAs and offseason conditioni­ng programs due to the pandemic.

“You would hope we would have had spring practice, so all of them — especially the younger players — could get over the awe of Tom Brady walking into the locker. But we’ll get through that, I think, within a week,” Arians said.

Brady, who turns 43 next Monday, signed a two-year, fully guaranteed $50 million contract in free agency after appearing in nine Super Bowls — winning six — over 20 seasons with the Patriots.

The Buccaneers also added the quarterbac­k’s favorite target, Rob Gronkowski, to an already exceptiona­l group of receivers and tight ends.

The Bucs reinforced a commitment to help Brady be successful by drafting offensive tackle Tristan Wirfs and retaining three key members of an emerging defense.

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