‘Far from perfect’: Buccaneers escape shootout with Cowboys on Tom Brady’s drive
By
Greg Auman 7h ago
TAMPA, Fla. — Season openers come around just once a year, and what would be the fun in an easy, zero-drama win to start things off?
The defending champion
Buccaneers, returning to the site of their Super Bowl win, went toe to toe with
Dak Prescott and the pesky
Cowboys before eking out a wild 31-29 victory on Thursday night.
But it was far from a comprehensive win for the home side. In fact, it required a game-winning drive from Tampa Bay and its fearless leader after Dallas took the lead on a field goal with 1:24 left.
Tom Brady got the ball at his 25 with only one timeout, only to have coach Bruce Arians burn that timeout to avoid a 10-second runoff when they were still at their own 32. But a 20-yard pass to
Rob Gronkowski — who had his best game with the Bucs — set up a 24-yard sideline throw to
Chris Godwin, who got to redeem himself after a huge fumble at the Cowboys’ 2-yard line set up their go-ahead kick.
And kicker
Ryan Succop, who had struggled for much of training camp and just spent a week on the reserve/COVID-19 list, calmly stepped in and nailed a 36-yard field goal with two seconds left for the winning margin.
This year’s Buccaneers have already accomplished something last year’s never did. The latest lead change in a Bucs win last season was with 6:19 left, an eternity compared to Thursday’s finish.
“I learned a long time ago that you don’t learn anything more from losing than you do from almost losing,” Arians said following the win. “We have a lot to learn.”
Consider this trifecta of self-inflicted adversity: The Bucs were minus-3 in turnover margin, committed more than 100 yards in penalties and had a time of possession under 26 minutes. In 50 years since the NFL-AFL merger, only three other teams have won while doing all three of those things.
No team before Thursday had ever won when finishing minus-3 in turnover margin, committing more than 100 yards in penalties and allowing 450-plus yards of total offense.
But none had Brady, who in his first start at age 44 threw for four touchdowns, earned his 40th career fourth-quarter comeback and notched his 49th career game-winning drive. He threw two scores to Gronkowski — much like the Super Bowl — and one each to Godwin and
Antonio Brown, helping the Bucs hold off a pass-happy Prescott, who threw for 403 yards and three touchdowns in returning from last year’s season-ending ankle injury.
“I think it will allow us to know that we’ve got to get better,” said Brown, who had a team-best 121 yards, including a 47-yard touchdown. “We don’t want to be in a lot of situations like that, but any time your quarterback is (Brady), you know you’ve got an opportunity to come back.”
The night started with two huge Lombardi Trophy replicas on the field as the team celebrated its Super Bowl LV championship, putting one season to bed and starting anew. At no point was it easy Thursday, the Bucs leading 21-16 at the half but only after Cowboys kicker
Greg Zuerlein missed two field goals and an extra point.
Midway through the fourth quarter, it looked like the Bucs were ready to put away a hard-fought victory. Clinging to a two-point lead, they had burned six minutes of clock, and at the Dallas 13, Brady threw to Godwin, who twisted through Cowboys defenders to get to the 2-yard line, then fumbled. Instead of a two-score lead, the Bucs saw the Cowboys with the ball, needing just a field goal to take the lead.
Prescott — who would match his career high with 58 pass attempts — found receiver
CeeDee Lamb for a 31-yard gain to the Bucs’ 34-yard line with 1:51 left. But the Bucs defense held them there, used two timeouts to stop the clock and saw Zuerlein connect on a 48-yard field goal for a 29-28 lead with 1:24 to play.
The Cowboys had helped the Bucs just a little — an incompletion had stopped the clock with 1:48 left, and
Ezekiel Elliott ran out of bounds two plays later to stop the clock again with 1:37 left.
Brady had three fourth-quarter comebacks last season with Tampa Bay, but they were fairly early in the final quarter, nothing close to the dramatic finish Thursday night. Tampa Bay was a touchdown favorite at home against the Cowboys, so this could have been a much simpler victory, but it arguably would not have been as rewarding in its end-game execution.
“It was not a perfect game,” said Brady, who threw for 379 yards, his 50 pass attempts his most in a game since 2016. “There is obviously a lot to kind of unpack from this one, but (that’s) a good football team … We obviously have a lot to clean up.”
Tampa Bay’s defense, which lost corner Sean Murphy-Bunting early to a dislocated elbow, struggled to contain Prescott’s quick, short passes all night. But the Bucs had some level of bend-but-don’t-break, allowing just one touchdown in four Dallas trips into the red zone.
In addition to Godwin’s fumble, running back Ronald Jones lost one in the second quarter, setting the Cowboys up at Tampa Bay’s 27-yard line for a short field and a touchdown. Jones would not touch the ball the rest of the night. On the Bucs’ next offensive play, a Brady pass went off the hands of
Leonard Fournette for another turnover, setting up a field goal and the Cowboys’ first lead.
Brady threw another interception on a Hail Mary on the final play before halftime, after the Cowboys had tried and missed a 60-yard field goal. A year ago, Brady had two interceptions in the opener, and it stung much more, with one being returned for an interception as the
Saints handed him a 34-23 loss in his Bucs debut.
“Last year sucked after the first game, let me say that,” Brady said. “We’ve come a long way from 365 days ago. That was a pretty lonely feeling after the game there in the Superdome. But again, we won. It’s great. We know it was far from perfect and we’ve got to get back to work and clean a lot of stuff up.”
The Bucs also have three extra days to prepare for their next game, at home against the
Falcons. Players get a mini-bye, with basically four days off before they return to practice Tuesday.
Succop, whose family lives in Nashville, had asked Arians early this week if it would be OK if he flew back after the game Friday so he could be home for his son Cooper’s sixth birthday party. Arians, always wanting his players and coaches to prioritize their families, said Succop was welcome to go, even if it meant missing a team meeting Friday.
“He was great about it: ‘Go to the birthday party, have fun,'” Succop said. “It was kind of neat because tonight, I kind of honestly thought he forgot about it. As soon as we made the kick, I came off the field and he gave me a big hug and said, ‘It’s going to be a heck of a birthday party tomorrow.’ That was pretty cool for me.”
Cooper is having a Buccaneers-themed birthday party, and Succop will be able to see him play a flag football game Saturday as well. If there was one regret in the Succop household after Thursday’s win, it’s that it was a school night, so they’d put Cooper to bed at halftime, and he missed out on seeing his father’s game-winner.
“He was petitioning my wife all week, and he’s got school at 7:30 tomorrow, so we let him stay up until halftime,” Succop said. “Literally the first text I got after the game, I saw my wife had texted me: ‘I’m so bummed I made him go to bed at halftime. He’s going to be so mad when he wakes up.'”
For these Bucs, a victory, however sloppy, is like a birthday: something you have to celebrate any time you can get one.