Medicine Hat News

Could defence be the difference?

- BARRY WILNER

Suggesting that defence could decide this Super Bowl might seem like heresy.

With Patrick Mahomes and the explosive Kansas City offence on one side, Tom Brady and Tampa Bay’s resourcefu­l attack on the other, expecting either D to be dominant or dangerous or definitive appears like folly.

Read on, though.

WHEN KC HAS THE BALL Having clearly establishe­d itself as a force whether Mahomes is throwing to All-Pros Travis Kelce and Tyreek Hill, an impressive group of other targets, or handing off to Clyde Edwards-Helaire — not to mention, the quarterbac­k taking off himself — Kansas excels at scoring quickly. And often.

So where would Tampa Bay have any chance of defending the speed demons and shifty targets?

For one, the Bucs have the league’s best linebacker corps: sack master Shaq Barrett, run stuffer Lavonte David, all-around standout Devin White. They are capable of at least giving Kelce, the sport’s best tight end, some trouble.

Tampa showed how strong their pass rush can be in last week’s NFC championsh­ip win over Green Bay. They sacked

Aaron Rodgers five times, bothered him a slew more, while operating against a solid O-line.

Mahomes has similar escapabili­ty to Rodgers, and is far more of a threat to flat out run the ball himself. Keeping him in the pocket and pressured is a key, and the Chiefs will be without starting left tackle Eric Fisher (Achilles tendon). Barrett, edge rusher Jason Pierre-Paul and inside presence Ndamukong Suh must be controlled by Kansas City.

WHEN TB HAS THE BALL If Tampa Bay is on offence in the final minutes in a tight game, it’s time for the Chiefs to worry.

There are only two ways to beat Brady in a Super Bowl. One is to outscore in a shootout, as the Eagles did three years ago. The other is to mount consistent pressure up the middle and from the outside to make him throw before he can get set. Remember, he was intercepte­d on three consecutiv­e series in the NFC championsh­ip.

The onus for protecting him falls on a solid O-line featuring left guard Ali Marpet and rookie right tackle Tristan Wirfs. They must deal with Kansas City DT Chris Jones and DE Frank Clark, plus an assortment of linebacker­s and defensive backs coming after their quarterbac­k on blitzes.

Brady won’t be running around to extend plays the way Mahomes can, but he also will be getting the ball out of his hand quickly and, at times, reading the Chiefs’ coverage before they even show it.

In Mike Evans, Chris Godwin and Scotty Miller, plus tight ends Rob Gronkowski and Cameron Brate, Brady has receivers he is comfortabl­e with. While the Chiefs are exceptiona­l at safety with AllPro Tyrann Mathieu and Daniel Sorensen, cornerback­s Charvarius Ward, L’Jarius Sneed, Bashaud Breeland and Rashad Fenton aren’t at that level.

 ?? AP PHOTO CHARLIE RIEDEL ?? A man is reflected in the Lombardi Trophy at the NFL Experience Thursday, in Tampa, Fla. The city is hosting Sunday’s Super Bowl football game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Kansas City Chiefs.
AP PHOTO CHARLIE RIEDEL A man is reflected in the Lombardi Trophy at the NFL Experience Thursday, in Tampa, Fla. The city is hosting Sunday’s Super Bowl football game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Kansas City Chiefs.

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