Sean Payton loves us. He loves us not.
His stellar game plan led to a 36 – 27 Saints victory over
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
But his clock management put a game in jeopardy, for the
second time this year. Fortunately, it
was Halloween in New Orleans, so a repeat of the Giants debacle was not going
to happen.
The Bucs took a 27-26 lead with 5:44 minutes left. Jameis Winston had exited the game in the first half with what appeared to be a serious knee injury. The Saints were counting on backup Trevor Siemian for a game winning drive. With two minutes remaining, the Bucs were down to one timeout and the Saints had a first down within the 10 yard line. Good clock management would dictate 3 runs and kick a field goal, leaving Brady about 40 seconds and no timeouts. So, of course, Payton, in a strategy reminiscent of the Saints playoff loss to the Rams a few years ago, called 3 pass plays that had no chance. The Saints kicked the field goal to lead 29 – 27, and Brady would get the ball back with 1:41 plus a timeout. It looked like a layup for the GOAT.
But Dennis Allen’s defense bailed Payton out. PJ Williams intercepted Brady and ran it in to the end zone, and a shell-shocked Brady only had two sacks ahead of him. Brady had a three turnover day. I enjoy them when I’m hungry, but not great for a quarterback.
The Saints deserved to win. They had dominated early, scoring 23 straight points to lead 23 – 7. Then Brady orchestrated his comeback, although the failure on a 2 point conversion was key. Winston got hurt when he scrambled out of the pocket and was tackled by the shoulder pad in a tackle that illustrated why horse collar tackles are illegal. At this point Winston had continued to surprise defenses with his running ability, having run for several first downs. Unfortunately, the scrambling did him in.
The Saints stubbornly, and admirably, stuck to running the ball. There wasn’t much yardage there, but their commitment to the run helped the unexpected passer – Siemian. Here’s a scouting report – I always liked him when he was with the Broncos. He doesn’t have a big arm, but he’s smart and accurate, and is close to Brees in tools. Looks like he’s about to get another shot at an NFL starting job.
He ended this game 16-27 for 159 yards.
So the Saints beat the Bucs for the 6th straight time in the regular season. Of course an argument could be made, and Bruce Arians would probably make it, that the Bucs beat themselves with one crucial penalty after another, often extending Saints drives. Sometimes they were even petty. But, the Saints often play the bully roll, and pay for it. In the end, the last Saints drive of the day gave the Saints a lead Brady couldn’t touch.
So the surprising Saints are 5-2 and yet have only played two home games. With 4 of the next 5 at home just imagine if the Saints flex that dome field advantage. It could be like Halloween every night.
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