
Last year if one took a shot for every first down a Bucs opponent had, one would be prone on the living room floor, comatose by halftime.
Yes, it’s preseason. Yes, it’s a glorified practice. Yes, it was against the Dolphins, who appear to be a miserable squad.
But how refreshing was it for a change that the Bucs defense pitched a shutout with the first and second team?
Gerald McCoy and Adrian Clayborn were all smiles after the game in the locker room — why wouldn’t they be? But behind the smiles lurked no false sense of security.
Work still needs to be done.
“It was good to put ourselves in a good situation to put [good play] on film,” Adrian Clayborn said. “It felt good to be able to contain someone, sure. But it’s just a beginning. It’s just a start.
“We are just trying to get better and play smart football and that’s what we put on tape today.”
Play smart football? What a novel concept!
Like Clayborn, GMC wasn’t about to go dancing after Friday’s performance.
“It was great, but honestly, we weren’t going out there to try to prove anything,” GMC said. “We put a lot of work into it back to the spring and this was the first chance to showcase it. I think we did a fairly decent job.
“We still have a long way to go. This is our first go-around, and for our first go-around I think we did fairly well.”
Since it was the Bucs first go-around, there were mistakes made. GMC nor Clayborn wanted to talk specifically about those mistakes but GMC said the errors were nothing to panic over.
“There are a number of different things [the Bucs could do better], but it is not anything that cannot be fixed. Just little stuff. Adjustments.”