It’s time for the Buccaneers to get their offense on the right track

Can the Buccaneers fix their dormant offense in time for Monday night’s playoff game against the Cowboys? Laurie Fitzpatrick has a few ideas.

For the third consecutive season, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers are in the playoffs But this is the first year of that three-year stretch in which it didn’t feel completely… deserved. It doesn’t feel the same at 8-9. Even with Tom Brady leading the league in completions and attempts, their run game is sitting dead last in the NFL. So, their offense hasn’t really clicked. Injuries are a big part of that, too. Especially on their offensive line. Because of this, they have been unable to establish that run game, which in turn has affected their passing game, more specifically the play action the pass.

Their offense has been flat.

But even though the Buccaneers only have eight wins, they are still in the playoffs, and that’s all Brady ever needs — a game, a quarter, a drive, or just one chance.

Brady has turned it up over these last few games and their offense made a slight improvement despite losing to the Atlanta Falcons week 18.

Let’s look into the Buccaneers’ offense and see what they have to do to make it past the Dallas Cowboys in their wild-card matchup.

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How Washington stunned the Buccaneers with the upset of the week

In a 29-19 upset over the Buccaneers, the Washington Football Team outfought and outthought the defending Super Bowl champs.

The Washington Football Team snapped their four-game losing streak in spectacular fashion as they put together their best performance of the season against the defending Super Bowl champions, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers; winning 29-19.

Taylor Heinicke completed 26 of 32 passes for 256 yards, one touchdown, and a 110.4 pass rating. Unfortunately, despite the win, Washington lost their top defensive player, defensive end, Chase Young, as he left the game in the second quarter with a potential season-ending knee injury.

Washington’s defense came out on fire forcing a three-and-out on the Buccaneers’ first drive and going up early with a field goal. The first quarter was a shocking one as Tom Brady had interceptions on back-to-back drives.

Right as the Buccaneers needed an answer, safety Bobby McCain stepped up to pick off the overthrown ball by Brady.

As the game marched on, Brady bounced back in the second half throwing two touchdowns. A short touchdown pass to tight end Cameron Brate, and a 40-yard touchdown to Mike Evans.

After the Buccaneers cut the deficit to 23-19, Washington got the ball back, and the one thing you never want to do is give it back to Brady to win the game.

So they didn’t.

Washington marched down the field with a 19 play, 80-yard drive that lasted over ten minutes. Washington converted five third-downs on this last drive.

Then to put the game out of reach, Washington scored a touchdown putting them up by ten with only 30 seconds left on the clock; preventing Brady from a comeback win.

Washington had a fantastic game plan for Brady and that was to prevent anything from going over the top. Mike Evans was only targeted three times and the Buccaneers were held to a 40% third-down conversion percentage, only getting 4 out of 10 attempts. Washington’s usually vulnerable defense stepped up when it was necessary.

“They did a really good job playing two-high defense,” Evans said after the game. “We had a really good week of practice. We were prepared, we know what to do and we knew what to expect. We just didn’t make enough plays today. I tell the guys it’s just one game; it doesn’t define our season. We’ve got to come with it if we want to get where we want to go.”

What hurt the Buccaneers the most was the six penalties for 43 yards and the two turnovers that happened early, while only taking the ball away from Washington one time.

“It’s baffling to me after the week of practice I watched these guys have that we could play that poorly,” Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians concluded. “We’ve got to show up on Sundays. We’re doing a heck of a job on Monday through Friday, but we’re not showing up on Sundays.”

Too cute by half: A story about the Buccaneers’ offense

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers offense is struggling. One sequence in their loss to the Kansas City Chiefs illustrates some of the flaws.

“Too cute by half” is one of those colloquialisms that has made its way to the modern era. Other various of the phrase include “too clever by half,” and even “too much by halfe [sic]” which dates back to the 16th century. William Shakespeare even used a variation of it in Love’s Labor’s Lost, writing “…the letter is too long by halfe a mile.” The phrase generally stands for the proposition that someone is being too clever about something for it to be effective.

Throwing out of heavier personnel packages has become one of the core tenets for a few different offensive systems. For example, this year the Green Bay Packers have used 21 offensive personnel (two running backs, one tight end, one wide receiver) on 22% of their plays. On those plays they have thrown the ball over half the time, with Aaron Rodgers posting a 112.5 NFL passer rating and a TD/INT ratio of 7 to 1. The Cleveland Browns have used 12 offensive personnel (one running back, two tight ends, two wide receivers) on 23% of their plays, but when using that package Baker Mayfield has completed 47 of 73 passes for an NFL passer rating of 102.1, and a TD/INT ratio of 4 to 1.

Why does this work? Because the NFL is a matchup league at its core. The benefits of throwing out of heavier personnel packages are myriad, but among them you have a better chance at selling play-action – which is a cheat code – and you also have a better chance at dictating the defensive personnel. When you are in these heavier packages on offense, the odds increase that the defense expects run and responds with a base defensive package. That means more basic coverages, and better matchups with running backs and tight ends working against linebackers in many case.

As Kevin Stefanski, the head coach of the Browns, put it:

I see guys you don’t have to leave in one position. Versatility is the key for us. We will be in 12 personnel (one back, two tight ends) and we’ll be 13 (one back, three tight ends). What we don’t want to do is become predictable. We’ll have different formations out of each personnel group. We’re trying to be difficult to defend … we want (tight end) to be a position of strength for us. I always try to think of it from the defensive coordinator’s perspective, what’s going to make life hard on them, and that would be a guy that you can move around the formation.

But what happens if you, as an offense, create mismatches using heavier personnel, just not in your favor?

What happens if you are “too cute by half?”

That brings us to the 2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers and a sequence in the second half against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Late in the third quarter of Sunday’s loss, the Buccaneers trailed by 17. They took over after a Kansas City punt on their own 32-yard line, and after a nine-yard completion from Tom Brady to Antonio Brown and a 34-yard run from Ronald Jones, they faced a 1st and 10 on the Kansas City 25-yard line. The long run from Jones came with the Buccaneers using an 11 personnel package. The Chiefs were in a 4-1-6 sub package, given the 17-point lead. They had opened the drive with that grouping on the field:

Now facing a 1st and 10 on the Chiefs’ 25-yard line, Tampa Bay huddled with their 11 personnel group still in the game. Kansas City, given the situation, expected the Buccaneers to keep the ball in the air. As such, they stayed with their 4-1-6 defense. On this first down, Brady handed to Jones on an inside zone play to the right side, and the running back picked up a single yard:

Now that brings up a second-and-9 situation.

Again, the Buccaneers are trailing by 17 at this point in the game, and the clock is running down to two minutes left in the third quarter. The Buccaneers huddle again, and make some substitutions.

Kansas City, given the situation, stays with their 4-1-6 defense for the fourth-straight play.

The Buccaneers? They go heavy and switch to a 13 personnel package. One running back, one wide receiver, and three tight ends.

Not only that, but after aligning initially with Brady under center, and Jones in the backfield along with Cameron Brate as an upback, they shift to an empty set with Brady alone in the shotgun:

What is this accomplishing, other than shifting and using heavy personnel for the sake of doing so?

First off, given the situation the Chiefs are going to expect pass and stay in their sub package, as they do on this play. So you are not getting the benefit of throwing against a base defense out of this heavy personnel look. Second, by shifting to an empty set, you are eliminating the run threat and any notion of play-action. Unless you are running Brady on a quarterback draw, in which case people need to be fired immediately.

Now, the Buccaneers did accomplish one minor goal, as the Chiefs check to a Cover 4 coverage on this play. The problem for Tampa Bay? The defense also brings pressure, sending safety Daniel Sorenson who begins the play aligned at a linebacker’s depth. Brady sees that and looks for his hot read in the form of the only wide receiver on the field, Mike Evans:

The throw never gets there as it doinks off the back of a helmet, and the pass floats into the hands of Tyrann Mathieu for the interception.

It is easy to look at the doink shot turnover and dismiss what led up to that moment, but you have to ask yourself what the Buccaneers were trying to do on this play. Given the context and the situation, 13 personnel was not moving the needle for them. If there had been evidence that the Chiefs would switch out their defense, then sure, you can use this. But on 2nd and long, trailing by 17, with a sub defense on the field, this might not have been the move.

Especially when you then shift into an empty set and completely remove the threat of a running play.

In a sense, the Buccaneers did create mismatches by doing this. Just not in their favor.

In some ways, this is just a microcosm of the bigger issues in Tampa Bay. The offense is not working right now, and they might be trying things for the sake of trying them. There is also an issue with hot reads and throws, as this was not the only instance on Sunday afternoon when a hot read was not looking for the football when they should have been. There are a lot of things to fix in Tampa Bay, and time is running short.

Why Tom Brady’s numbers under pressure are huge for the Buccaneers

Tom Brady’s numbers under pressure cratered last year. Why this is huge for Tampa Bay’s success, or lack thereof, in 2020.

They say a picture is worth a thousand words. In the sports world, however, sometimes a number is worth a thousand words. As we start to look forward to the 2020 NFL season, here at Touchdown Wire, we are going to be rolling out some statistics that could be pivotal to a player’s – or a team’s – prospects in the season ahead.

We start this off with of course, Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The NFC South squad was viewed as many as one of the big winners of the 2020 offseason. With good reason. Anytime you add arguably the greatest quarterback of all time to the roster, you’ll be getting some kudos. But the Buccaneers were not done there. They also added offensive tackle Joe Haeg via free agency to add depth up front, and swung a trade (while Brady worked on doing the convincing) to bring Rob Gronkowski out of retirement and to Tampa Bay.

Then in the draft, the Buccaneers made a number of impressive selections at various points over the three days. They were able to trade up just one spot from 14th to 13th and draft right tackle Tristan Wirfs from Iowa, considered one of the “Big Four” offensive linemen in the class. On the second day of the draft they added Antoine Winfield Jr, one of the best defenders in the entire draft, as well as running back Ke’Shawn Vaughn from Vanderbilt. Day Three saw the Buccaneers add one of the more intriguing wide receivers in the group, Tyler Johnson from Minnesota. Johnson’s athleticism – as well as his pre-draft process – can be questioned, but his route-running cannot.

But there is one number that might tell the tale of their 2020 season: 51.8.

That number? That was Tom Brady’s NFL Passer Rating last season when pressured, as charted by Pro Football Focus. In fact, Pat Thorman, an analyst with Establish the Run, showed Brady’s sharp decline in this statistic recently on Twitter:

It should be noted that Thorman included in his sample passers with a minimum dropbacks percentage of 20%. When you shrink that class a bit, inlcluding just passers with a minimum of 50% of dropbacks, Brady’s numbers look like this:

2015: 91.1 (1st)

2016: 84.9 (5th)

2017: 96.1 (1st)

2018: 71.2 (15th)

2019: 51.8 (26th)

Passers that fared better than Brady in this statistic last season? A venerable list of passers that includes Jacoby Brissett, Baker Mayfield, Josh Allen, Jared Goff, Andy Dalton, Sam Darnold, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Kyle Allen, and Mitchell Trubisky.

You can also measure Brady’s ability to handle pressure by using PFF’s “Adjusted Completion Percentage” metric. Looking at the same period of time, here are the results:

2015: 67.5% (10th)

2016: 68.1% (5th)

2017: 70.2% (2nd)

2018: 62.9% (21st)

2019: 59.5% (21st)

Now yes, the New England Patriots managed to win a Super Bowl during that 2018 season, when Brady was putting up those numbers. But as his numbers took another dip from 2018-2019 to 2019-2020 – including that big drop in NFL passer rating – the Patriots’ Super Bowl chances seemed to crater in tandem.

There are potential explanations for these numbers that Tampa Bay and its fans should keep in mind. This past season the Patriots dealt with changes along their offensive line, due to injuries at both left tackle early in the season, and the center spot as they lost David Andrews to a health issue before the season began.

In addition, after starting the year strong there was a talent drain at both wide receiver and tight end. New England began the year with Josh Gordon, Phillip Dorsett and Julian Edelman as their top three receivers, with Antonio Brown set to join the team in Week 2 and rookie N’Keal Harry waiting in the wings after being picked in the first round.

But down the stretch, Brady was throwing to an injured Edelman, an injured Mohamed Sanu (who was acquired via trade), Harry (who he struggled to get on the same page with), and Jakobi Meyers, a rookie undrafted free agent who started his college career as a quarterback.

Putting that together led to troubles for the New England offense. While Brady has traditionally been effective when pressured, as the numbers from the previous few season illustrate, it did not come together for him as consistently last year.

Now when kept clean, it was a different story for Brady. His NFL Passer Rating of 104.4 when kept clean was ninth-best in the league last year (again, including passers with a dropback minimum of 50%) and his Adjusted Completion Percentage of 81.5 when kept clean tied him with Matthew Stafford for fourth-best in the league.

So the task in front of Tampa Bay is simple: Keep him clean as much as possible. This points to a big reason behind the Wirfs pick, which is to protect Brady so his numbers look more like those “kept clean” numbers as much as possible. In addition, having a consistent receiving corps to throw to – and that he trusts – will be huge for Brady when he does face pressure.

2020 salary cap officially set at $198.2 million per club

The NFL has officially announced the salary cap for the 2020 league year.

The new league year is set to begin next week (as of now), and today, we finally have word of what the official salary cap will be for teams in 2020.

Take a look.

What does this mean for the Buccaneers? Well, the team will have around $80 million in cap room to play with this offseason, which puts them at a huge advantage. Despite the fact the Bucs finished just 7-9 in 2019, their 4-2 finish shows they are trending in the right direction. They may just be a quarterback away from getting back to the playoffs for the first time since 2007.

Tom Brady is, of course, the big fish they are looking to land. The six-time Super Bowl champion has been linked to the Bucs, and if Brady wants to build his legacy further, Tampa Bay offers him a great chance to do just that. As Dianna Russini of ESPN reported last week, Brady has two big wants from any new team looking to sign him — input on the roster and play-calling decisions. The Bucs are apparently willing to do both. Plus, they have plenty of money to offer the Golden Boy.

Stay tuned…

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