Defense sets tone in New Orleans’ victory
NEW ORLEANS — When Teddy Bridgewater talks about his 3-0 record as a fill-in starter for record-setting Saints quarterback Drew Brees, he doesn’t hesitate to share credit with New Orleans’ defense.
New Orleans’ 31-24 triumph over Tampa Bay on Sunday illustrated why. For the second consecutive week, the Saints shut down an opponent that entered the Superdome on a roll.
“I’m glad I was on the Saints and not the Tampa Bay Bucs,” Bridgewater said.
After holding Dallas to a season-low 257 yards while handing the Cowboys their first loss, 12-10, New Orleans limited the Buccaneers to a season-low 252 yards in a game that was not as close at the score indicated. The Bucs scored a touchdown with 13 seconds left after Saints Coach Sean Payton elected not to try a 40-yard field goal on fourth down a little more than a minute earlier.
Tampa Bay was coming off a 55-point outburst against the Los Angeles Rams in which Jameis Winston threw for 385 yards and four touchdowns. This time, he managed 204 yards on 15 of 27 while being sacked six times.
“We affected the quarterback,” Payton said. “We quickened the clock in [Winston’s] head. We went into the game understanding the down-thefield throws were something that could get you beat, and we handled that element really well.”
Other than a pair of 26yard touchdown passes to Chris Godwin — one on the Bucs’ last offensive snap — Winston’s longest completion went for 16 yards. The Saints held receiver Mike Evans without a catch for only the second time in his six-year career.
Cornerback Marshon Lattimore, victimized for several big gains by Evans a year ago, had primary coverage responsibilities on him, but it was a complete defensive performance.
Linemen accounted for all of New Orleans’ sacks, Marcus Davenport getting two and Sheldon Rankins, Malcom Brown, Carl Granderson and Cameron Jordan adding one apiece.
“We’re as talented as anyone in the NFL,” Jordan said. “I’m excited about what we can be if we keep growing.”
After scoring three touchdowns on their first four possessions against the Rams, the Bucs punted away any opportunity to win in New Orleans — and punted, and punted and punted. They picked up one first down through their first three possessions and duplicated that during three series in the second half.
The Saints held Tampa Bay to 94 yards on 22 carries, extending their streak of not allowing a 100-yard rusher to 21 games.
“If you stop the run, you get more opportunities to rush the passer,” said David Onyemata, who led the linemen with four tackles. “We take pride in stopping the run and rushing the passer and playing both sides. We just pay attention to detail, so we know what to expect.”
The unexpected result was Bridgewater’s performance. A game manager in his first two weeks as a starter, he went 26 of 34 for 314 yards as New Orleans (41) improved to 3-0 without Brees, who is expected to miss as many as three more games with a right thumb injury.
“With the weapons we have in the offensive room, we knew we could go out there and put up the numbers that we did yesterday,” said tight end Jared Cook, who caught one of Bridgewater’s four touchdown passes. “It was just [a matter of] going out there and doing it.”