
Beating up a quarterback from the very beginning and a smothering rush defense is a winning formula in the NFL.
How did the Bucs beat the Dixie Chicks Sunday? Simple: defense.
The Bucs entered the game with the 31st ranked rush defense in the league. They played like the No. 1 ranked.
Consider that Michael Turner only racked up 30 is no less than remarkable.
But following the game, it wasn’t so much the Bucs bragging about stopping Turner — the inference was there — but how the defense didn’t twiddle its collective thumbs for 30 minutes only to realize they were in a regular season game.
No, the defense came out pounding the Dixie Chicks and specifically Matt Ice. Joe is confident the pounding Matty Ice took he will not soon forget.
That is directly because the Bucs took it to the Dixie Chicks from the first play of scrimmage.
“The past two weeks, we came out and started slow,” inside linebacker Mason Foster said. “This time we were ready to go and we were on top of everything, playing hard, fired up for the entire game and I think it showed.”
There was no doubt for Dekoda Watson what the difference in the game was: the quick start by the defense.
“I think we came out pretty strong in the first half and that was the biggest thing,” Watson said. “We came out firing. That is how we should play every week. I feel like the defense was fired up all game and that’s what we need.”
Safety Corey Lynch agreed.
“We were ready to go right from the very beginning,” Lynch said.
Even though he has just three games under his belt, even rookie defensive end Adrian Clayborn knew sleepwalking through the first half of games is playing with fire.
“Coming out [down] 17-0 [like the Bucs did in Minnesota a week ago], that’s not what we want,” Clayborn said. “That will bite us in the butt. We wanted to come out strong and let the defense grow.”
Joe has no clue how an NFL defense can start a game not motivated or ready to rock and roll, especially the season opener. But it’s a good thing Bucs coach Raheem Morris recognized this and has corrected the problem.
Nothing takes the will away from an opponent quicker than getting punched in the mouth on the first snap.