Another Tough One For The Kick Return Game

October 23rd, 2012

Maybe Arrelious Benn got antsy after a touchback Sunday? Maybe his coaches encouraged him to try and make something happen out of the endzone? Maybe the lead blocker in front of him gave him the go signal?

But with the Bucs leading 21-14 Sunday, Benn fielded a kickoff eight yards deep in the end zone and returned it to the Bucs’ 8 yard line.

Huh? Not a good idea with a lead, plus there was no apparent opening anywhere, and Benn didn’t try anything out of the ordinary.

Damn that south end zone wasn’t kind to the Bucs against the Saints.

Last week Greg Schiano candidly said he was displeased with his kick return game but Benn’s role in it would not be affected.

The Bucs only got to return one kickoff Sunday. And it was that mess to the 8 yard line.

There’s little time this week to work on the details of kickoff return, but somehow the Bucs need to find a way to straighten it out.

Can’t-Miss Bucs Watch Party On Thursday

October 23rd, 2012

It’s time to get a little loud and bond with your fellow Bucs fans while watching the New Schiano Order Bucs in Minnesota on Thursday night at Tilted Kilt in Clearwater.

This is going to be the place to be for this game. The Bucs on Thursday Night Football!!

Tilted Kilt has it all, indoor and outdoor seating, great food, the sizzling Kilt girls, a classy layout, and great viewing. The game audio will be heard everywhere, and Joe’s got lots of jerseys and hats to giveaway. There’s nothing better than the energy of a great sports bar scene rocking for the home team. Be there!

Bucs Football On Wednesday And Thursday

October 23rd, 2012

Of course, you’re already gearing up to come to Joe’s big Bucs-Vikings watch party at Tilted Kilt on Thursday.

But now you’ll also be able to watch the Bucs on TV on Wednesday, too.

NFL Network is replaying the fancy, condensed version of the Bucs-Saints game at 9 p.m. Wednesday. These replays are very cool, with loads of commercials and breaks chopped out and fancy NFL Films views sprinkled in.

Joe’s already watched the game a second time, and Joe can attest that it was fun but no less painful.

Tampa Bay Is Team TFL

October 23rd, 2012

Dive deep into the Bucs’ defensive statistics and it’s downright amazing how highly the Bucs rank in various areas of run defense. The “swarm” Greg Schiano preaches is buzzing loudly.

Not counting kneel-downs, the Bucs defense leads the NFL in forcing negative yardage plays (8.7-per-game average), which is even more stunning considering the Bucs only have a flimsy eight sacks through six games.

Those “TFLs” (tackles for loss) Schiano often references? The Bucs lead the NFL in forcing negative runs (28), and Tampa Bay has played one less game than many clubs.

Bucs leaders in tackles for loss (TFLs)
LB Lavonte David                     9
LB Mason Foster                       8
DE Michael Bennett                  5
DT Gerald McCoy                      5

All those numbers represent an amazing overhaul of the Bucs run defense after Tampa Bay repeatedly got gutted and gashed since the December 2008 collapse began in Carolina through the entire Raheem Morris era.

Nobody runs on the Bucs anymore — unless it’s receivers frolicking through the secondary.

Tampa Bay allows 3.1 yards per carry, best in the NFL. Against New Orleans Sunday, the Saints literally could have ended the game in the fourth quarter when they ran Darren Sproles on 3rd-and-3 from their own 39 yard line. There were two minutes left and the Bucs were out of timeouts. A first down there gets the Saints to the kneel-downs. No dice. Sproles got one yard.

As for the Bucs secondary, well, Joe doesn’t want to look at those numbers. Hopefully, up-and-down Christian Ponder will be just what the doctor ordered on Thursday in Minnesota.

“The Tackle”

October 23rd, 2012

Not sure how many people were irresponsible yesterday and didn’t do their due diligence as football fans to browse through the must-read weekly Monday Morning Quarterback typed by smartphone-censoring, scone-loathing, cricket-watching, popcorn-munching, Marriott-sleeping Peter King of SI.com.

King broke down in great detail the tackle that will live long in Bucs fans memories when Vincent Jackson, who had a fantastic game for the Bucs, was caught from behind, prevented from scoring on a 95-yard touchdown reception by Saints’ Malcolm Jenkins.

The tackle on Jackson, and the subsequent four plays from hell, kept the Bucs from adding a score in what turned out to be a one-touchdown win by the Saints.

By King’s measurement, Jackson had a good 30-yard lead on Jenkins, who closed the gap in Secretariat-like speed.

I’ve looked up the dimensions of the NFL field, and ran the play over and over about 20 times on NFL Game Rewinds in the wee hours of this morning. This is what Jenkins faced as he turned from covering his man to look at Jackson catching the ball: He was at the far right hashmark on the other side of the field, precisely 27 yards across the field and three yards behind where Jackson was in full gallop. It looked impossible, but Jenkins said he didn’t think of that. “Just, ‘Go as fast you can.’ ”

Right away, you could see he might have a chance. Jackson, who’d been limited all week in practice because of a calf strain, was running at tight end speed. Jenkins, who runs about a 4.47-second 40-yard dash, took a very good angle, from watching the replay over and over. It looked like he aimed to go on a straight line from where he began, at about the Bucs’ 23, to the Saints’ 20. Running at a bad angle here would have ruined him. If he aimed to catch Jackson near the goal line, he wouldn’t be able to contact him in time.

“Vincent Jackson, he’s not slow,” Jenkins said. “I think what affected the play is we were in a regular Cover 2, and they quick-snapped the ball. Roman Harper went for the ball against Jackson, but they completed it, and then nobody’s around. So the first thing is to just run and see what happens.” When Jackson got to midfield, Jenkins was 10 yards to the side and six yards behind. “I saw him start to slow down a bit,” Jenkins said.

Joe was chatting with local scribes right before the game Sunday morning, and all agreed the Saints game was a crossroads game. The Bucs trying to win on the road Thursday is a monster obstacle, as it is for all NFL road teams on Thursdays, thus there is a very real possibility the Bucs could be staring at a 2-5 mark.

Chances of playing in January after losing five of your first seven games are not good at all.

And Bucs fans will look back to those five plays — the Jackson tackle, the three ill-fated LeGarrette Blount plunges up the gut, and Josh Freeman’s naked bootleg to nowhere — as the crossroads of a crossroads game.

Where Was The Stiff-Arm?

October 22nd, 2012

Yes, Joe’s obsessing about Saints DB Malcolm Jenkins making up about 30 yards on Vincent Jackson to tackle the Bucs’ No. 1 receiver after his Bucs-record-breaking catch and run for 95 yards yesterday– one yard from the end zone.

Joe’s stunned disbelief that Jackson was out-willed on the play is no reflection on anything else Jackson does or has done. Like any dramatic play or action in sports, it’s only one play, and Joe’s simply judging the moment.

Yeah, Joe realizes many fans say, “how dare you” question Jackson’s will on the play, Joe? Joe’s response is that there’s no other way to describe what happened. If the tables were flipped and Jenkins was, say, Mark Barron, every Bucs fan today would be lauding Barron for “wanting it” more than his opponent.

Take this video clip from Bucs history in 2008 (2:47 of the video), when Jermaine Phillips simply wanted the ball more than the Falcons tight end wanted a touchdown. It was a huge play in that big game. Just an amazing show of will by Phillips. Yesterday, Jenkins gave the Saints that kind of extreme desire.

Chris Webber’s famous timeout that his Michigan basketball team didn’t have left for him to call, or Bucs running back’s coach Earnest Byner’s fumble that shocked the NFL and people of Cleveland, or Bill Buckner’s World Series gaffe, these were miscues that were magnified by the circumstances. 

Jackson’s failure was magnified by the Bucs’ inability to score on first-and-goal from the 1 yard line, and Jackson getting caught has flummoxed many an observer. And while it’s hardly of the magnitude of the famous ones mentioned above, it’s still a mind-blower being talked about today.

Joe ran into a couple of random Bucs fans at Publix — and talked to a Saints fan on the phone — and that’s the first thing they wanted to chat about this afternoon. 

One can speculate all day long that Jackson was somewhat hobbled by a calf strain, though that’s rather illogical considering his production and watching him run routes yesterday before and after that 95-yard play.

Perhaps the bigger mystery is why Jackson, after turning his head back three times during the run, to presumably see Jenkins, didn’t switch the ball into his left hand and try and fight off Jenkins, or make a dive for the pylon.

It’s one thing to run out of gas; it’s another thing to run out of gas and out of fight. Buccaneers Radio Network analyst and former tight end Dave Moore had no explanation during an appearance with the Ron and Ian Show this morning.

“I’m not really sure because we’ve seen him run,” Moore said of what happened to Jackson. “We’ve seen him run by defenders. Once that ball was tipped and then he caught it, he was never really in the fifth gear to slow down to third gear. He just never really, I guess he’s been bothered by a calf or something. I mean, you know, whether he was tired when he caught the ball to run, or either way, we can analyze it anyway we want. If he puts the ball in the left hand throws a stiff-arm, he can probably drag the guy for another two yards. But there are plenty of opportunities to second guess it.”

Jackon did nothing to end any speculation after the game and he discovered his stiff-arm move for prying reporters.

Joe’s still a big fan of Jackson, but he fell a small notch in Joe’s eyes for that play.

Bucs Busted For “Words,” Not Shift

October 22nd, 2012

The NFL claims Bucs linebacker Mason Foster said something to try to get the Saints to jump offsides during a field goal attempt, which is an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. What Foster said is still a mystery.

The servers in the NFL Manhattan offices must have overheated this morning as a result of the mysterious unsportsmanlike penalty call on the Bucs, which negated a Saints field goal attempt and instead set up a Saints touchdown.

Oh, and the Saints won by a touchdown Sunday.

The NFL has “clarified,” in the words of Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times, what happened on the play in question.

According to league spokesman Jon Zimmer, “Tampa Bay was penalized yesterday for Unsportsmanlike Conduct for using disconcerting signals, defined as ‘words designed to disconcert an offensive team at the snap,’ in Rule 12, Section 3, Article 1 of the NFL rule book.

And the NFL also specified the words came from Mason Foster, per Stroud.

So there you have it. The shift, which Bucs coach Greg Schiano maintained was legal, was legal, per the NFL.

Just whatever Foster said wasn’t.

Bucs fans can now rest. The issue is over.

“Quite Frankly, It’s A Legal Play.”

October 22nd, 2012

Add me to the list. Quite frankly it’s a legal play.” — Greg Schiano.

Schiano said at his news conference today that he’s among those who don’t understand what went wrong when the Bucs’ defensive shift on a field goal attempt — and the call to shift — drew a key 15-yard penalty Sunday.

Rather than a 51-yard field goal try, the Saints got a first down and drove for a touchdown. Schiano pointed out the Bucs did the “exact same thing” against the Redskins. Seen here.

The leader of the New Schiano Order did not offer specifics but said since game officials flagged the Bucs against the Saints it’s unlikely he will use that field-goal block tactic again.

Saints Tip Off Refs To Illegal Field Goal Defense

October 22nd, 2012

A lot is being made of the Bucs field goal defense yesterday, when the zebras threw a flag, unsportsmanlike conduct, that turned a field goal attempt into a first down and an eventual Pierre Thomas touchdown for New Orleans

It appears the Saints did their homework and helped draw the flag.

The Bucs used a shift against the Redskins that was deemed legal by the zebras — missed. The Saints didn’t think so, and clearly noticed it by studying game film.

So yesterday when the Saints attempted a field goal, per Robert Klemko of USA Today, the Saints alerted the referees to be on the look out for illegal tactics by the Bucs.

“I haven’t seen it in the pros, because it’s against the rules,” said defensive tackle Sedrick Ellis. “You’re allowed to do your shifts but you’re not allowed to yell to try to get the offense to go offsides.”

Saints guard Jahri Evans said game officials were notified of the practice before the play.

“I think that’s just what they’re being taught,” he said. “And that’s what we told the refs — they can’t try to draw us offsides in that situation or in any part of the game. I haven’t seen that in a long time. I played Division II, and they didn’t even do that in DII. It was definitely done to draw us offsides and we all knew it.”

Joe will have a post on this later, but Joe will break down the shift. Ss Joe mentioned this morning, the Bucs players could have yelled “Goodell” and it still would have resulted in a flag.

Tale Of Two Sides In Running Stats

October 22nd, 2012

Doug Martin had a bit of a breakout game yesterday. He looked sharp, quick and like a yungry first-round pick, including a 36-yard touchdown run that was well-blocked and only required Martin to break one tackle.

And it’s no coincidence that run went left.

This season, per the stat geeks at ESPN, Martin is averaging 4.9 yards per carry running left, and only 3.7 yards to the right. Up the middle, he’s at 3.1 yards per carry. Running wide left also shows a big, positive difference than running wide right.

On the left side, the Bucs present beasts Carl Nicks and Donald Penn, who have been nothing short of stellar pass blockers, as well. On the right side, it’s green Jamon Meredith and Demar Dotson, who have a combined 13 career starts. And those guys folded like a tent on the final play of the first half that represented a key shot for the Bucs to get in field goal range.

Joe points this out because it’s all so glaring. The loss of Davin Joseph can not be measured.

“People Are Happy With Being Below Mediocre”

October 22nd, 2012

Ian Beckles is displeased by the mindset of many Bucs fans.

The former Bucs guard (1990-1996) turned radio talking head thinks a reality check is in order. 

“Listening to the talk today, I’m finding that people are happy with being below mediocre. Ok. We have to stop doing that because we lost to a bad football in our house by a touchdown.” Beckles said on WDAE-AM 620. “Just think of it that way. Ok. We lost to a bad football team. Why are they bad? Because they’re porous. Defensively they’re porous all over the place.”

Are Bucs fans “happy?” as Beckles suggests. Joe’s not so sure.

Joe suspects the prevailing vibe is more one of patience and temporary contentment. No ghosts of 2011 have emerged (minus Talib shenanigans) and there are clear signs of progress in so many phases of Bucs football.

Joe expected much of what has been seen from the Bucs through six games. They’ve been competitive yet inconsistent, playing hard and emerging, while still going through brutal new-coach, new-system growing pains.

Joe predicted the Bucs would gel in the second half of the season and finish with six wins. That still feels about right.

Apparently Field Goal Defense Must Shut Mouths

October 22nd, 2012

So now we are getting clarity about the mysterious unsportsmanlike conduct call against the Bucs when the Saints were lining up to attempt a 51-yard field goal.

The Saints, instead of kicking, were gifted a first down and five plays later scored.

In a manner of speaking, the Bucs (and other teams), must, in the immortal words of former Tampa Bay Lightning coach John Tortorella, “shut your yap.”

Per eye-RAH! Kaufman of the Tampa Tribune, Lavonte David claimed someone on the Bucs yelled to shift, which the defense did (apparently, also illegal), and the zebras heard the foul word(s).

“According to the official, we said something we shouldn’t have,” Bucs rookie LB Lavonte David said. “All we said was, ‘Move,’ and they said we can’t do that. It was a crucial moment for sure.”

Now late Sunday night on WFLA-TV Channel 8 news, Dan Lucas, by way of Woody Cummings of The Tampa Tribune, claimed Roy Miller stated the Bucs yelled “shift,” and that’s why they were flagged.

Saints guard Jahri Evans, per Kaufman, claimed he heard someone on the Bucs yell “Go.”

There is a common denominator here. For all Joe knows, the Bucs could have yelled, “Goodell!” and have been penalized.

To sum it up, shut up when the other teams is attempting a field goal, please.

Saints Ran On 41 Percent Of Plays

October 22nd, 2012

The numbers illustrate just how ugly the Bucs’ pass defense — and pass rush — was.

Greg Schiano played prophet on the Buccaneers Radio Network before the Bucs’ loss to the Saints yesterday.

The leader of the New Schiano Order said he was confident the Saints would emphasize their running game against the Bucs in big way because that’s what gets their offense balanced and humming.  

Sure enough, the Saints ran on 41 percent of their offensive plays, and Drew Brees was hardly scrambling for his life from the Bucs’ pass rush — unfortunately.

That’s not a typical percentage from the pass-happy Saints.

Pierre Thomas, Mark Ingram and Darren Sproles mixed in 25 carries for 80 yards, and Brees added one carry for one yard. The Bucs’ run defense was strong. The Saints’ 3.1 yards-per-carry is what the Bucs have been allowing all season. And that ranks No. 1 in the NFL.

It’s the Bucs’ pass defense and pass rush that are the problems — big problems.

Saints Crowing Over Vincent Jackson Tackle

October 22nd, 2012

Yeah, Joe touched upon this yesterday, the Vincent Jackson tackle after he rolled 95 yards but didn’t score. Malcolm Jenkins made up about 30 yards to catch Jackson from behind.

It was the longest pass completion without a touchdown since the Vikings Ahmad Rashad caught a 98-yard pass without scoring against the Los Angeles Rams in 1972.

And one could point out that cost the Bucs the game since the Bucs tried to shoot off a toe by running LeGarrette Blount up the middle for nothing three straight times, and then Josh Freeman tried a naked bootleg to nowhere.

Now, the Bucs are 2-4 and potentially staring at a 2-5 record after Thursday (road teams on Thursday night games struggle mightly). If that happens, it’s time to start pestering Joe’s good friend Justin Pawlowski about the 2013 draft.

One might say Jenkins’ effort could change an entire season. The Saints sure are.

In talking to Marriott-sleeping, cricket-watching, scone-loathing, popcorn-munching, smartphone-censor Peter King of Sports Illustrated last night, per ProFootballTalk.com creator, curator and overall guru Mike Florio, Jenkins was crowing about just that — that his tackle will reverse the fortunes of the Saints this season.

Was it a season-changing play, King asked? “Defensively, it was,” Jenkins said.

Jenkins said he was on the other side of the field when Jackson made the short reception. Jenkins told himself “take off” and sprinted toward Jackson in the hopes of bringing him down short of the end zone. Though it looked as if Jackson slowed down in anticipation of scoring, Jenkins believed that Jackson was simply “a little bit tired.”

Look, if the Bucs had called some intelligent plays after Jackson was caught, Joe wouldn’t be typing about this very subject, nor would King be calling Jenkins. In fact, he’d be talking to Jackson for racking up a Bucs-record 216 yards.

Joe has a bad feeling that play will be more remembered for what could have or should have been rather than for what it was: a 95-yard catch.

LeGarrette Blount Is Not Mike Alstott

October 22nd, 2012

Before Joe gets rolling here, let Joe be clear for anyone even slightly confused: Joe’s a big LeGarrette Blount guy. Regular readers know this. Joe just wants to be upfront about this fact as you read the following:

Never again should Blount be used as a short-yardage battering ram straight up the gut.

Yesterday, Joe literally did a facepalm when the Bucs, with first-and-goal late in the game at the Saints-1, tried to ram the ball up the middle using Blount.

Granted, Blount had little to no room to run. The Saints defensive front was getting penetration on the Bucs much of the game. First, when has Blount ever demonstrated he can be Mike Alstott, who, even without room, was able to move bodies at the line of scrimmage?

That’s not Blount. It wasn’t Blount as a rookie (remember the Atlanta road game when he couldn’t pick up a yard deep in Dixie Chicks-territory?) and it isn’t happening now, nor in the foreseeable future.

Blount’s specialty is when he gets past the front level, and gets two steps of steam, he is lethal, he needs 10-12 rushes to get heated up, minimum.

Those rushes are not consecutive up the one-hole with no blocking to speak of.

Joe loves Blount, but he is not a power runner, and trying to force him to be three times to no avail cost the Bucs yesterday just as much as the zebras did.

Lots Of Fingers To Point

October 22nd, 2012

Yeah, the Mike Williams phantom touchdown stunk. But don’t blame the refs, in a manner of speaking, is what veteran sports columnist Gary Shelton explains. There were a lot of reasons the Bucs lost to the Saints, as Shelton details in this Tampa Bay Times video.

Quotes From Irritating Bucs Loss To Saints

October 21st, 2012

Courtesy of the media relations staffs of both the Bucs and the Saints, here are quotes from key movers and shakers in today’s stinging Bucs loss to the Saints.

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS
HEAD COACH GREG SCHIANO

(On the game)

“It’s a team game. You make one stop or you put the ball in (the end zone). But, look, you score there and kick the PAT, (and) it’s still a tie game; someone has to win. We’re still playing football, there’s no guarantee you win. We did some really good things, but we made enough mistakes today. We made more mistakes today on D than we’ve made (in previous games). I won’t say combined all year, but certainly the most of any game. We have to do a better job of coaching it. We have to do a better job of playing it. Unfortunately, a combination of those things and missed opportunities (cost the team). Our hats are off to New Orleans, they found a way to win.”

(On defensive mistakes)

“Some coverage mistakes, some pass rush things. We just weren’t as precise as we needed to be. Again, hats off to New Orleans: they did some things that stress you a little bit defensively and we didn’t handle it as well as I anticipated. It comes back to coaching. You have to have them ready to do those things. I have to, as the head coach, have our guys ready to adjust to that more quickly.”

(On defensive approach)

“It’s a mix. When you have a guy like Drew Brees, you have to mix it up. One thing you can’t do is just give them a look because they will pick you apart. He may pick you apart anyway, but he will definitely do it if you have one look coming at him.”

(On the final play)

“I was very excited that we scored. Obviously, we’re going for one and I’m thinking about overtime – who going to go do the coin toss and how we are going to go and all that. That quickly left my mind when I saw the one official’s hat off. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out what that equals.”

(On offensive production)

“I’m really pleased. Our quarterback had tremendous output and production. Again, missed opportunities both defensively, offensively, and even in the kicking game. If you make one of those plays, who knows. But we are sitting here at 2-4 and we’re saying this old song and dance. That’s the way it is until we get it changed, until we find a way to change it. Close but no cigar. We have to get it better.”

QB JOSH FREEMAN

(On the final play)

“I thought the offensive line did an amazing job on that play. You know, (on) that play, everyone is working in the end zone. It’s kind of run an initial run and try to get open, and the saints did a good job of covering the initial routes, sitting there and going through. The O-line held up, sort of converging a little bit, but they gave me an opportunity to escape. Mike (Williams) caught (the ball), he was in bounds when he caught it, and you don’t really see anything leading up to that, but it’s such a rush of emotion thinking that you made the play to keep it going. Obviously it didn’t turn out that way.”

(On losing despite the offensive production)

“It’s just win-loss to us. It’s black and white. We go in and prepare as well as we can, and the next week you try to go out and prepare even better. We come out and we give it all we got. This week it just didn’t go our way. The Saints are a heck of a football team. In my mind, they made more plays, scored more points.”

(On New Orleans’ goal-line stand)

“You look at our goal line offense up to this point, we were able to make it but I know they did something different with their front. They shifted a little bit and just made the plays. This is a league that comes down to execution. You can have the best scheme in the world, but if you are unable to execute then it’s all for naught. Down there we just didn’t get it done.”

(On playing against QB Drew Brees)

“Drew is an elite quarterback. He is able to manage his offense, and (the offense) is really hard for people to stop. Just seeing some of the passes and plays he makes, the guy is a tremendous competitor.”

(On WR Tiquan Underwood)

“I think Tiquan brings a lot to the team, just as a player and his personality. The guy is a great guy and teammate to have. You are happy with the way he works. (He’s a) great guy to be around and a lot of fun. He makes plays. You saw it today: there were a number of situations where especially towards the end, the play down the middle, the high ball that he got, and even last week. I’m really proud of Tiquan and the way he works the way he competes and happy to have him as a teammate.”

TE DALLAS CLARK

(On moving forward)

“We are maturing, (we) understand that we can’t hang our heads too long. We got a game in the blink of an eye. We got to learn from this one (and) put it to bed a lot quicker than on a normal week and come back and get ready for Minnesota.”

(On improvements)

“You can pick whatever you want to where we had our chances to win this game and we just didn’t make them. Give all the credit to (New Orleans): they caused the penalty. They’re doing the things, we have to be better.”

(On the New Orleans defense)

“They blitzed a lot more, but I think we were picking it up. Then, when we’re falling short, there’s a guy here, a hit there. Just stuff you can’t do against this team. That’s just put(s) a lot of pressure on you.”

WR TIQUAN UNDERWOOD

(On the passing game)

“The (offensive) line did a good job giving Josh (Freeman) time today. He just hit the open guys. Unfortunately, we didn’t execute as much as we needed to. Hats off to the New Orleans Saints. They played a great game coming back and made the plays needed to be made to win it.”

(On his involvement with the offense)

“(I’m) just going to work every day (and) trying to work hard on my game; trying to gain the trust of the coaches.”

WR MIKE WILLIAMS

(On the loss)

“All of our losses are tough, but we fought for this one. We came back and tied this game to get into overtime, and I stepped out of bounds.”

(On the performance of QB Josh Freeman)

“That was great man. It (would have) looked good with four touchdown passes and some more yards, but he had a great day. He performed how he did, and, like I tell people, he (is) the truth. He came back and showed that he (is) the truth. If I don’t step out of bounds, we go into overtime and get a chance to win.”

DT ROY MILLER

(On the defense)

“The offense did their thing; (this) is on us today. (The) pass rush wasn’t there. That was our focus, especially on first and second down. We just didn’t do it, didn’t get (New Orleans) uncomfortable. That’s on us, as a team. It works both ways: the secondary and the defensive line have to be on the same page. When you’re not on the same page, and you’re not rushing or you’re not covering, or either one, things like that happen. The whole defense had things here and there that contributed to what happened today. As the defensive line, we always put it on our shoulders, and we just didn’t get there today.”

(On the loss)

“We are just getting sick of being in these tight games, we’re just getting sick of it. If you look back, on all of the games we lost, they were all pretty close, this is just another one that is sickening; we beat ourselves in situations and it’s just frustrating.

CB ERIC WRIGHT

(On defense during the second half)

“It was a little bit of both (execution and adjustments). We made a few adjustments, we just tried to limit those big plays, and some of the things we basically gift wrapped to them.”

(On the short week)

“You can look at it in many different ways. Obviously, as players, we’re excited to get another game as soon as possible. We always do the same thing, regardless of the schedule. We’ll correct some things, build on some things that we did well, and get ready for the next game.”

WR VINCENT JACKSON

(On the loss)

“Tough loss. Obviously we fought hard at the end, tried to come back, but came up a little short. Hats off to the Saints, they played a good game and they finished well.”

(On his 95-yard reception)

“I came out there and did the best I could. I obviously wasn’t 100-percent today, but I went out there to fight and gave it everything I got every play. We tried to get down there in the red zone, try to improve and come away with points. We think we have an offensive line that can move people and get someone to punch it in. But, again, hats off to the Saints, they played tough.”

(On not scoring from the one-yard line)

“I mean we’re going to have to go back and look at the film, you don’t lose a game by one play. There’re some things in all three phases of the game that we can improve on. We will do that, we will make the corrections and we will get better, and we’ll come back and play hard on Thursday.”

DT GERALD MCCOY

(On his thoughts during the game’s final drive)

“It’s not over ‘til it’s over. You just keep the hope. It’s not what we were looking for, but that’s this league. All credit goes to the Saints.”

(On QB Josh Freeman’s performance)

“He came to play. He knew who he was facing. He knew who the other side had. He came out and showed that he could do it, too.”

(On being 2-4 instead of 3-3)

“That’s the NFL. You just have to take it with a grain of salt and move on to the next one. (New Orleans) played well enough to get the ‘W.’ It’s over, we’re moving on to the Vikings.”

DB RONDE BARBER

(On the loss)

“We stayed in it, fought, tried to win. Gave ourselves a chance, which we’ve done in all of our losses, unfortunately or fortunately, no matter how you look at it. Yeah, it’s a tad frustrating. You do enough in some areas, certainly not enough in a lot of others.”

(On QB Drew Brees’ rhythm with the offense)

“Give him all the credit. He’s been working with these guys for a lot of years. If you don’t pressure the guy and he has time to throw, his guys know where to run to the zone, sit down, convert third downs, (and) keep the chains moving. He does it better than anybody in the game.”

(On the defense’s inability to stop the offense)

“We’ve got to do our jobs better. A lot of those plays weren’t him [Drew Brees], they were us. They’re correctable, but in the immediacy of them it’s very disappointing on our part.”

(On the upcoming short week)

“The short work week, it is what it is. We’ve got to come in tomorrow and be done with New Orleans. I think we’ll all be comfortable with that. Getting to play on Thursday, get the chance to go on the national stage, and really show what we’re all about. It can’t be a performance like this. It’s got to be our best ball.”

DE MICHAEL BENNETT

(On the loss)

“Yeah, you [have] got to get over it. It’s the NFL, you [have] got to go to the next game. You have to have that mentality, so we’re going to be ready for the next game and hopefully we come out with a ‘W.’”

(On the defense in the second half)

“We just came out and played a lot better than we did in the first half. (New Orleans) schemed up better in the first half, but, obviously, in the second half, we came back and made a lot of adjustments to what they were doing.”

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS
HEAD COACH AARON KROMER

(On the overall game)

“That was a good performance by us today. I’m proud of the team. It was a well-fought game. You look at the game and you say to yourself, ‘We’re down 14 points. We’re down 14-0.’ We have the resolve in our locker room that I keep telling you guys about and you’re starting to believe it. This group never gives up and they keep battling. We found a way to score 28 unanswered points and get up in that game and then finish better than we have in the past. So, what we did was we had a strong offense, defense, good complementary special teams, complementary football, team football, that helped us win that game today. I’m proud of the team and I’m proud of the group, because they just keep battling. That’s what we talk about and I continually say that we’re getting better each week and that’s what we’re doing. It’s starting to show on the field.”

(On CB Malcolm Jenkins preventing WR Vincent Jackson’s touchdown)

“You talk about a game-changing play, and a guy that’s not going to give up. He’s going to finish on a play. We talk about winning the fight of each play and Malcolm running [Jackson] down, obviously, and getting that goal line stand was a huge turnaround in that game as far as just not allowing (Tampa Bay) to get that score. It really boosted our confidence and gave our defense the confidence they needed.”

(On the team’s improvement)

“I’m happy for the team. I’m happy we won today. I’m happy we won last week. I’m really happy that we took a team that was not playing well early and we continued to practice, we continued to work, continued to believe and won two games in a row; we’re going for our third.”

(On what he’s learned being a first-time head coach)

“I still believe it’s about the team. It’s about the organization and I’m glad. I’m happy for (Defensive Coordinator) Steve Spagnuolo. I’m happy for (Special Teams Coordinator) Greg McMahon and (Offensive Coordinator) Pete Carmichael. They did a good job today and we won this game. We’re looking forward to Denver.”

(On the play of QB Drew Brees)

“We’ve seen Drew, as the receivers got healthy in the last four games, really up his game. We talk about in town, after practices, that Drew plays best when his players around him are playing well, and that’s what happened today. Marques Colston, Devery Henderson and Lance Moore, obviously, on third down did a wonderful job of converting third downs for us today. Obviously, missing Jimmy Graham, but we were able to overcome it with other guys stepping up.”

QB DREW BREES

(On the impending return of Assistant Head Coach/Linebackers Coach Joe Vitt)

“Obviously he’s a big piece to the puzzle. We all love Joe Vitt. He brings a certain element, a certain intensity. I miss his stories. I miss sitting next to him on the bus ride over to games. I miss just seeing him every day; I think we all do. I’m definitely excited to have him back.”

(On the second consecutive win)

“That’s all we want to do. We want to get on a streak here, but you’ve got to win more than one before you’re on a streak. Now we’ve got two. We want to keep that going.”

(On the significance of the goal-line stand)

“You look at that sequence: all of the sudden (Tampa Bay was) about to tie the game. The (New Orleans) defense has a goal line stand. Now in their mind they are thinking, ‘Hey we went for it on fourth down because now we have them pinned back. We’re just expecting to stop them, and get great field position.’ But we had a different plan in mind. We got a big first down in one play and then all of a sudden we’re going down and making it a two-possession game. That was a huge sequence of events, a huge momentum shifter.”

(On bouncing back from the team’s slow start to the game)

“They came out fast. But what I like is that despite all of a sudden being down 14 points and doing all the things we said we wouldn’t do – which was turn the ball over, give up some big plays and all that – we still remained calm, together, and we were just methodical. To put together the drives that we did, four in a row – defense coming up with some big stops to give us the opportunity to two-minute drive at the end of the half to get more points – that was big.”

(On WR Joseph Morgan)

“Joe Morgan’s young. He’s raw. He’s a talent, but, just like any position, especially the receiver position, you know it takes time. Certainly there’s a rapport with it that I want to build with him. There are a lot of great things that he can do and I just want to continue to take baby steps with him. As you can see he can make some plays when given the opportunity. It’s just a matter of picking and choosing our spots, but certainly we’d love to see an expanded role with him within the framework of what we do.”

(On his thoughts during the game’s final seconds)

“It’s interesting, because if you’re the one out there on the field and you’re in the moment it’s completely different. When you’re on the sideline you try to become a fan and it’s just nerve-racking. But also you’ve got that confidence that the defense is going to make this play and win this game.”

LB JONATHAN VILMA

(On his first game this season)

“It was one of those where I tried to not let my emotions get the best of me. I didn’t want to put myself in a situation where I was going to hurt the team or anything like that, so I tried not to be over-excited. It was really a lot to prepare for, so I’d much rather focus on the preparation going into the game, and then, when I was out, I could let the emotions go.”

(On preparing for the game)

“I thought I did a good job. I didn’t have any mental errors or any mental mistakes. I was able to prepare for the Mike (linebacker) and the Will (linebacker) and the nickel package as well, (but) that part is not the hard part. Being able to block things out, especially during the week, it’s easy. We put in 10 or 12-hour days and it’s easy to get lost in football and the other team and worrying about how to defend them.”

(On the defense’s goal-line stand)

“That was huge. Really, the play before that, Malcolm Jenkins running down Vincent Jackson to put us on the goal line, then the goal line stand, those were about five huge plays right there and it decided the game. We won by seven (points) and that’s what we needed.”

(On building off the win)

“We are riding a two-game win streak and that’s the most important thing. As long as we are winning, we can correct the other things, and correct the little things and get better. But the fact that we are doing it and we are winning is great.”

LB CURTIS LOFTON

(On the goal-line stand)

“Any time they get down there, you say you don’t want to give up seven, you want to give up the three, and they wanted to go for it on fourth down. We knew what play it was going to be. We told them, ‘Watch the quarterback, watch the quarterback,’ and Cameron (Jordan) did an awesome job, kept him in the pocket and actually stripped him and, you know, that’s how we play.”

(On what the win means for the team)

“The San Diego game was a springboard; this is just building on that. We are going to build on the next one and keep building and keep building and we can grind this one down, but just staying humble and hungry.”

S ROMAN HARPER

(On the Buccaneers’ final drive)

“It was good that at the end of the game, we got a stop on defense to win the game. You hate it because they got it down there and made it close, but, overall, you’ll take the win just like any other time. We just need to clean up some mistakes – little plays here and there that kept them in the game.”

(On winning the game)

“As long as we win, it’s not even about the [positives and negatives]. To get the win, we fought hard. I think we had almost 20 plays in the red zone. We continued to fight battles and do whatever we had to do to help this team win. We got crooked in the two-minute drill a little bit and gave up some plays. I don’t know what happened, but as long as we stick together, we can always fix that.”

(On improving as the season progresses)

“At the end of the day, I don’t know how much better we got. I know we won the game. That’s always a positive. We were always finding ways to lose a game and now we’re finding ways to win a game. Whether it’s the offense, defense, or the special teams, there are plenty of complements involved with each other, and we’re just trying to do what’s best for this team. You can see that everybody is buying in and I like where our direction is and where this team is headed.”

RB PIERRE THOMAS

(On the development of the team)

“Coming off this bye week, well, right before the bye week, with that victory we had against the Chargers, we wanted to make a stand right there. We wanted to make a tone to set to everybody and ourselves to say ‘Hey, this is where it turns around for us, this is where it starts.’ We got our first victory, you know, let’s keep this feeling going, let’s keep this momentum and this hype that we have going, to keep carrying ourselves throughout the rest of the season. We got to take it game by game. Tampa was a great team (and the) defense is very solid, but we came in with the attitude, ‘Hey, we got to win this; we got to fight, no matter what.’ We are going to take it to each and every one of our opponents, every snap. We came out here and we established that.”

S MALCOLM JENKINS

(On stopping WR Vincent Jackson’s long reception)

“The first (thought) is ‘run.’ You see him catch it and Roman (Harper) almost made a play on the ball (but) just missed it, and there is nobody around, so the first thing is just run to see what happens. As I got down the field, I saw him start to slow down a bit and saw that I was able to catch him. It was a huge break for us to get them down inside the five and just give our team a chance.”

Field Goal Defense Debacle On Coaching Staff

October 21st, 2012

Joe still cannot get a straight answer on what the heck happened on the field goal debacle early in the fourth quarter when the Bucs were flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct.

Instead of attempting a 51-yard field goal, the Saints were gifted a first down. You just don’t do that for Drew Brees. And predictably, he burned the Bucs for a touchdown.

Joe isn’t sure why the unsportsmanlike penalty was called. Dave Moore on the Buccaneers Radio Network claimed it was for an illegal shift. Joe heard a variant version of Moore’s after the game, and two local TV types claim the penalty was for someone barking out signals to intentionally confuse the kicking team.

Mike Pereira, former Vice President of Officiating for the NFL and current FOX talking head, apparently, per the Twittering of Joe Henderson of The Tampa Tribune, claimed it was an illegal shift and said, paraphrasing, Schiano could get away with that at Rutgers but not in the NFL.

Joe received several Twitter messages when the play happened claiming Schiano was the culprit for the penality. Joe somewhat disagrees.

Yeah, the buck stops with Schiano, the Bucs head coach, who refused to discuss details of the play in question after the game. That play, a shift or barking out signals, had to have been worked on in practice. Does anyone really believe Schiano would draw up a special teams play in the
dirt in the middle of a game and run it? Of course not.

So why, when this was practiced, didn’t another member of the Bucs coaching staff say, “Hey, Greg, this is possibly illegal. Let’s check with the league office if we can do this.”

No, the mess created on the field goal defense isn’t on Schiano, at least not directly. There’s a reason a head coach has a staff and Joe believes Schiano’s staff let the head coach down, and the team, on this one.

Savage Bucs Watch Party On Thursday

October 21st, 2012

It’s time to get a little loud and bond with your fellow Bucs fans while watching the New Schiano Order Bucs in Minnesota on Thursday night at Tilted Kilt in Clearwater.

This is going to be the place to be for this game. The Bucs on Thursday Night Football!!

Tilted Kilt has it all, indoor and outdoor seating, great food, the sizzling Kilt girls, a classy layout, and great viewing. The game audio will be heard everywhere, and Joe’s got lots of jerseys and hats to giveaway. There’s nothing better than the energy of a great sports bar scene rocking for the home team. Be there!