USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Brady looks classic; Bucs need others

- Jarrett Bell

Whatever got into Tom Brady – payback, desperatio­n, a flashback – sure came in the nick of time in Week 17 with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers staring at a complete disaster.

Brady put the Bucs on his back when they needed nothing less to overcome a 14-nothing hole against the Carolina Panthers to clinch another NFC South crown with a 30-24 victory. He beat Father Time again and put up his first 400-yard game of the season, 432 to be exact. For the first time in five games, he didn’t throw an intercepti­on. And he struck gold again with Mike Evans, finally, connecting for three long touchdowns … which goes far in explaining the season-best 127.3 passer rating.

“Tom was just dropping dimes,” gushed Evans, who scored for the first time since Week 4.

Still, given the pattern of inconsiste­ncy we’ve seen all season from the Bucs (8-8), it’s fair to wonder:

Was that a sign of things to come in the NFC playoffs or some sort of curtain call?

The Bucs are in but still need to hit another gear to avoid a one-and-done playoff appearance, having dodged another potential upset to the Panthers a week after escaping an embarrassi­ng loss at Arizona.

Sure, nothing is a given in the wild, wild NFL. If a team gets hot at the right time …

And this is a team with the biggest Super Bowl winner ever in the 45-year-old Brady. Just when you think that you can count him out, Brady has a way of writing another page to his legend. Yet even as Brady keeps showing vitality in his arm and is leading the NFL in pass attempts and completion­s, that is not the formula to be banked on

the deeper it gets into January. It’s going to take a lot more than 400-yard games from TB12 if the Bucs are to beat Dallas (or Philadelph­ia) in the playoff opener and then hit the road as legitimate contenders.

Brady is flanked by a running game that ranks dead-last in the NFL. Huge issue. The Bucs averaged 2.7 yards per carry (25 rushes, 67 yards) against the Panthers. Of course, we’ve seen Leonard Fournette take on an alter ego, “Playoff Lenny,” the past two Januarys. But Fournette revealed recently that he’s been playing with a Lisfranc foot injury. With promising rookie Rashaad White in the mix, Bucs coordinato­r Byron Leftwich might create something of a substitute rushing attack by using the backs as outlets in the short passing game. But that probably doesn’t replace the reliabilit­y that comes with a team being able to run the ball when

they need it.

Then again, the Bucs also know there are worse predicamen­ts than putting the chips on Brady.

Discoverin­g the deep passing game with Evans in Week 17 (10 catches, 207 yards) was so significant. They’ve missed so much during the course of the season to connect with the deep heaves that used to be the hallmark of former coach Bruce Arians’ “no risk-it, no biscuit” philosophy.

“I’ve missed him too many times this year,” Brady told reporters. “So it was nice to connect. Hopefully, we can keep that going.”

Remember the last time they played the Panthers? Evans dropped a deep ball early and it was an omen for a nightmaris­h game that resulted in the Bucs not scoring as much as a touchdown in their worst offensive performanc­e of the season. The

correction fuels hope and confidence, but moving forward, it must be bolstered by consistenc­y. Against better competitio­n.

Brady knows. The Bucs have played with fire too often this season. He lamented some of the challenges by category – in the red zone, on third downs, in long-yardage, on short-yardage.

“Statistica­lly, we have not done a lot of things well,” he said. “Everything needs to be cleaned up. That’s the reality of where it’s at.”

Defense wins championsh­ips? Actually, it’s complement­ary football that wins. And on a day when the Bucs twice wound up inside the Carolina 10-yard line and couldn’t score a touchdown – settling for a field goal and having a field-goal attempt blocked – it helped that Todd Bowles’ defense collected three turnovers.

But the consistenc­y theme applies across the board. Just like Brady’s offense, the sixthranke­d defense hasn’t always lived up to its reputation, especially against the type of competitio­n it will see in the playoffs.

In Tampa Bay’s last two losses, earlier in December, it allowed 34 points to the Bengals and 35 to the 49ers. In winning against the Panthers, the Bucs gave up 400 yards and again exhibited a pattern of allowing too many big plays – including three completion­s of at least 30 yards – to be desired.

Maybe the Bucs are poised to put it all together for another deep playoff run that features the drama of whether Brady can find his way back to another Super Bowl. They have certainly demonstrat­ed resilience, during the season and in games like they encountere­d on New Year’s Day. Or perhaps it’s a mirage and the Bucs are destined for a one-and-done playoff cameo.

 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Bucs’ Tom Brady runs off the field after Week 17’s playoff-clinching win against Carolina.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS The Bucs’ Tom Brady runs off the field after Week 17’s playoff-clinching win against Carolina.
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