Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Buccaneers working to solve prime-time woes against Rams

- By Fred Goodall

TAMPA — Bruce Arians doesn’t mince words or offer excuses when he talks about Tampa Bay’s struggles in prime-time games this season.

“It’s just bad football,” the 68-year-old coach said. “Bad football and not being ready to play.”

The Buccaneers (7-3) are off to their best start in a decade in their first season with TomBrady. But they have lost two of three night games and frankly were fortunate to win the one they did.

The team hopes to buck the trend Monday night when they host the Los Angeles Rams(6-3), whoare coming off an impressive victory over Russell Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks.

Arians tinkered with his usual practice routine, working at night instead of the afternoon, and intends to make changes on game day in hopes of avoiding slow starts that contribute­d to a Thursday night loss at Chicago and a 38-3 Sunday night debacle against New Orleans at home two weeks ago.

Tight end Rob Gronkowski said there are no valid reasons for not performing well under the lights. He and Brady were fixtures in prime-time games while they were together with the New England Patriots.

rady improved to 18-7 in 25 starts on “Monday Night Football” three weeks ago, with the Bucs overcoming a slow start before holding off the Giants 25-23 when Daniel Jones’ potential game-tying 2-point conversion pass was broken up in the end zone.

“It’s just another footballga­me, andthat’s how we’ve got to treat it. You can’t let it get to your head that it’s a prime-time game, that you’ve got to do this, you’ve got to do that,” Gronkowski said.

“No, it’s just another football game. It’s just at night this time,” the 10th-year pro said. “We’ve got to show up and do what we’ve been doing all year, no matter what time the game is. There’s no excuses.”

The Rams, coming off a 23-16 victory over the Seahawks in which they forced three turnovers and sacked Wilson six times while holding the Seattle quarterbac­k without a touchdown pass, have been dealing with a bit of a schedule quirk of their own.

Monday night will be the fifth time in nine games the NFC West contenders have played on the East Coast. The Rams are 2-2 in those, with losses to Buffalo and Miami and wins over Philadelph­ia and Washington.

Jared G off rebounded from a poor performanc­e against the Dolphins to outplay Wilson, and the Rams’ defense limited the Seahawks to 333 yards lastweek.

Now the Rams take aim at Brady and a talented group of Tampa Bay playmakers that includes Gronkwoski, Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, Antonio Brown, Ronald Jones and Leonard Fournette.

“I think this is the best collection of skill group players that we’ve faced,” Rams defensive coordinato­r Brandon Staley said.

Staley was a quarterbac­k at the University of Dayton when Brady was breaking into the NFL with the Patriots.

The task of preparing a defense to face Wilson and Brady in consecutiv­e weeks is challengin­g.

“What you have to do is treat each week like it has a life of its own. That Seahawks week has no bearing on how we’re going to game-plan and prepare for Tom Brady,” Staley said.

“You have to start over every week and you have to build fromthe ground up literally every week,” Staley added. “You don’t ever assume this is going to carry over to the nextweek.”

ALL-BLACK-CREW: Monday’s game will be the first in NFL history worked by an all-Black officiatin­g crew.

Referee Jerome Boger will lead the crew, also featuring umpire Barry Anderson, down judge Julian Mapp, line judge Carl Johnson, side judge Dale Shaw, field judge Anthony Jeffrie sand back judge Greg Steed.

“Way too long coming. I know a lot of those guys, and they’re great officials,” Arians said. “Jerome Boger, we’ve had that crew twice this year—he and Barry Anderson. They’ re great officials. It’s a historic night, and I think it’s fantastic.”

BIG LEFT TURN: he Rams’ offense will be in Tampa without its cornerston­e. Left tackle Andrew Whitworth is sidelined for at least six weeks with a knee injury, and third-year pro Joe Noteboom is taking over. W hit worth had played every snap this seasonand9­9% of last season’s snaps before he got hurt lastweek against Seattle.

The 38-year-old veteran also has been graded as one of the NFL’s most effective left tackles this season, both in run-blocking and in protecting Goff’s blind side. Whitworth has been the foundation of the Rams’ offense since he arrived with coach Sean McVay before the 2017 season, and his absence could affect everything from McVay’s play-calling to Goff’s ability to handle pocket pressure, which already wasn’t particular­ly strong.

AARON DONALD VS. TOM BRADY: Aaron Donald has caused misery for plenty of quarterbac­ks over his seven NFL seasons, but the Rams’ All-Pro defensive tackle would love to finally get his hands on Tom Brady. The most successful quarterbac­k in NFL history has never lost to the league’s most dominant current defensive lineman, although the Rams only faced Brady’ s Patriots twice after Donald entered the league.

Donald had one quarterbac­k hit and no sacks when the 2016 Rams lost in Foxborough to Brady, who became the NFL’s career leader in quarterbac­k victories with that win. Donald also had just one quarterbac­k hit and no sacks when the Patriots beat the Rams 13-3 two seasons ago in the lowest-scoring game in Super Bowl history. Brady would be the 43rd quarterbac­k Donald has sacked in his career if he gets to him.

 ?? BRIANWESTE­RHOLT/AP ?? Tampa Bay quarterbac­kTomBrady (12) and theBucs areworking to improve theirprime-time gameperfor­mances.
BRIANWESTE­RHOLT/AP Tampa Bay quarterbac­kTomBrady (12) and theBucs areworking to improve theirprime-time gameperfor­mances.

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