USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Leading OFF

Bucs, Brady need encore from defense to repeat as champs

- Jarrett Bell Columnist USA TODAY

TAMPA, Florida – If there was one play from the blowout that epitomized the state of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as they intensify the quest to repeat as Super Bowl champions, it came courtesy of Shaquil Barrett in the middle of the third quarter on Jan. 16.

On a fourth down, Barrett feigned a blitz, then dropped into coverage. Jalen Hurts, the young Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k locked on his target, tried to loft a pass over the linebacker’s head. No go. Barrett took to the sky to deflect the pass – to himself – for an openfield intercepti­on. Then he zipped and dashed 17 yards with the return.

“That was the play of the year!” Bucs receiver Mike Evans declared after Tampa Bay put away Philadelph­ia by a 31-15 count to advance to the NFC divisional playoffs.

Evans, who blistered Philly’s heavy man coverage for nine catches and 117 yards, had a rather impressive feat himself on the first snap following Barrett’s tip-pick. He turned upfield after catching a pass off a corner route, shrugging off a defender, tiptoeing the sideline and finishing off a 36-yard touchdown with a back flip.

Yet the big-play wideout seemed genuinely excited by Barrett’s feat, which began with some crafty Football IQ and ended with some remarkable athleticis­m.

Then there was the symbolism. Barrett showed that he was back in form after missing the previous two games with a knee injury.

“He looked healthy as hell when he was running, didn’t he?” Bucs coach Bruce Arians marveled of Barrett’s return.

That constitute­s some serious good news for the defending champs (14-4), who have spent

this season trying to beat injury attrition as much as they have the opponents. Barrett was one of three key starters who returned to the Todd Bowlescoor­dinated defense after missing multiple games. Linebacker Lavonte David came off injured reserve, where he rehabbed from a foot injury and missed three games. Linebacker Jason Pierre-Paul missed the previous three games while battling through a torn rotator cuff that he had called the worst football injury of his career.

Also, starting cornerback­s Carlton Davis (back) and Sean Murphy-Bunting (hamstring) were considered “iffy” all week. Davis made it back; MurphyBunt­ing didn’t in a game-day decision.

And it’s no better on the other side of the football. The Bucs were without their top two running backs, Leonard Fournette and Ronald Jones. Fournette has missed three games with a hamstring injury; Jones is nursing a twisted ankle. Yet Ke’Shawn Vaughn and Giovani Bernard stepped in to rush for a

combined 97 yards, then added 48 yards on seven receptions.

It was tough to guarantee that Bernard, a crafty vet for sure, would be so effective after coming off IR, sidelined four games with hip and knee injuries. He had 83 yards from scrimmage.

“Band-Aids and duct tape,” Arians said. “He played his ass off.”

Arians knows. For the Bucs to legitimate­ly defend their crown, they will have to live up to the NFL’s ubiquitous “next man up” mantra. No two seasons are alike in the NFL, and the Bucs – who returned all 22 starters from the offense and defense of the Super Bowl unit – can vouch for that.

While their mettle was tested last season with the manner in which they overcame early and midseason struggles to get hot and click down the stretch, this season the challenges have come so hard and often with the health challenges.

Sure, Tom Brady is as much of a glue as he’s always been. Playing with a depleted receiving

corps – star wideout Chris Godwin went down a few weeks ago with a season-ending torn ACL, and now fill-in Cyril Grayson is sidelined by a hamstring injury – Brady still managed to slice up the Eagles defense with cold efficiency. When in trouble, he often looked for Evans and longtime security blanket Rob Gronkowski (five catches, 31 yards, TD). But with the production at running back, Brady was able to execute a balanced attack – even if the task was made tougher (four sacks) by another injury, to freshly minted All-Pro right tackle Tristin Wirfs, who suffered an ankle injury.

Yet Brady sure could use a boost, too, from the Bucs defense that was so essential during the stretch run to winning the last Super Bowl.

That’s why Barrett’s big play represente­d another dimension. Brady may have seven rings, but defense wins championsh­ips, right?

Let’s just say Brady can’t do it again without a stiff defense. You know, complement­ary football.

During the last postseason run, the Bucs won at New Orleans by collecting four turnovers. They upset the Packers in the NFC title game with five sacks of Aaron Rodgers and two turnovers. They crushed the Chiefs in the Super Bowl by pummeling Patrick Mahomes in an effort that included three sacks and two picks.

For much of this season, though, the Bucs defense has been inconsiste­nt and sometimes undeniably shaky. No one feels sorry for the rash of injuries that hampered the Bucs defense. It’s the NFL. Injuries come with the territory. Yet it’s also the perfect time for the Bucs to perhaps field a defense that might be as healthy as it has been all season.

“I thought we would have our starting defense for the first time since the first game, and then Sean (Murphy-Bunting) couldn’t go at the last second,” Arians said. “Hopefully, we’ll have them all back out there next week.”

It certainly matters immensely. With Barrett and Pierre-Paul rotating on a “pitch count,” and with David roaming sideline to sideline again, the Bucs defense looked like its old self in bottling up Hurts (39 rushing yards) and containing the passing game. In short, if the front seven is fortified, the back end suddenly gets a lot better.

“It felt like having your big brother back out there with you,” cornerback Jamel Dean said. “So, I know what they are going to bring to the table.”

No, it wasn’t perfect. Tampa Bay gave up the shutout in the fourth quarter. Yet there’s the potential of the unit hitting its stride in the nick of time.

“I feel like everything is slowly coming back together,” Dean added. “I feel like the energy was there that we have been missing for the second half of the season. … It felt like we were getting our swag back.”

Which could go a long way toward the next play of the year.

 ?? MARK LOMOGLIO/AP ?? Shaquil Barrett made a crucial intercepti­on in the wild-card win vs. the Eagles.
MARK LOMOGLIO/AP Shaquil Barrett made a crucial intercepti­on in the wild-card win vs. the Eagles.
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