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Saints, Bucs hope to turn around woeful seasons

“Hope is not a strategy, so you’ve got to go out there and you’ve got to earn it,” said Bucs QB Tom Brady. “You’ve got to do it.”

TAMPA, Fla. — Tom Brady only knows one way the Tampa Bay Buccaneers can pull out of a season-long funk on offense and realize their potential.

“Hope is not a strategy, so you’ve got to go out there and you’ve got to earn it,” the seven-time Super Bowl champion said. “You’ve got to do it.”

Brady entered Week 13 ranked fourth in the NFL in passing, behind Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen and Joe Burrow, with 3,051 yards.

Still, the 45-year-old quarterback and a group of talented offensive playmakers around him have not performed anywhere near the consistency of the past two seasons when the Bucs were one of the NFL’s highest-scoring teams.

Tampa Bay (5-6) heads into Monday night’s game against the New Orleans Saints (4-8), a NFC South rival that’s given Brady fits since he moved from New England to Tampa Bay in 2020. The Bucs are averaging just 18.2 points per game — down from more than 30 the last two years.

Only five teams are scoring fewer points per game than the Bucs, who despite having a losing record remain in a good position to repeat as division champions. They could host a home game in the playoffs, where no player has been as successful as Brady.

“We’ve got six games and everything will be determined by what we do going forward, and I think that’s important for all of us to realize,” the league’s career-passing leader said.

“Everyone, every team faces different adversities and we’ve faced quite a few in different ways. ... We’ve had some really great wins, we’ve had some really tough losses,” Brady added. “No one likes the fact that we’re 5-6, believe me. We’re not celebrating any of that. We have not played the way we’re capable of playing. I think the thing we can do about it is this week we can try to go out and play the way we’re capable of playing.”

The last-place Saints trail the Bucs by only 1½ games in a tight division race in which no team has a winning record.

New Orleans has won four of five regular-season meetings between the teams since Brady joined the Bucs, although Tampa Bay did win a playoff matchup on the way to capturing the quarterback’s seventh Super Bowl title.

“We’re going against a team that’s a very good team, and they’re not going to let us off the hook,” Brady said. “They’re not going to give us touchdowns and give us easy runs and give us easy throws. They’re going to challenge us. That’s what they always do.”

New Orleans expects to catch Brady and the Bucs at their best, too.

Some of Tampa Bay’s problems on offense are linked to having the NFL’s 32nd-ranked rushing attack.

But Saints defensive end Cameron Jordan, who has 17 sacks and 18 tackles for loss in 23 career games against the Bucs, emphasized New Orleans understands previous success against Brady means nothing.

“You have a guy who knows how to win. You have a guy who wakes up in the morning and he just believes he’s going to win, right? So that’s our biggest opponent,” Jordan said.

“Whether they’re running the ball well, not running the ball well, at the end of the day,” the New Orleans star noted the Bucs still have a big, strong running back in Leonard Fournette and a formidable collections of receivers led by Mike Evans, Chris Godwin and Julio Jones.

Brady pointed to turnovers as the difference in the series.

The Bucs intercepted Jameis Winston three times and had five takeaways overall in a 20-10 victory at New Orleans in Week 2, a game that was tied 3-3 entering the fourth quarter.

The Saints have won four straight in Tampa, including 38-3 in 2020 and 9-0 last year.

“We’re going to have to take care of the ball, we’re going to have to make the plays when they’re there,” Brady said. “We’re not winning scoring zero points. We’re certainly not winning, probably, scoring three points. So we’re going to have to do a good job and hit the ones that are there.”

Jordan stressed if the Saints are going to improve their plight, they need to do whatever necessary to win Monday night.

“I have no idea in terms of analytics ... but to us, every game is of the utmost importance. It’s dire to win this game,” Jordan said.

“It doesn’t matter the opponent. Right now, we have to win or we’re going to be sitting the same place we were at the end of last year — outside of the playoffs. And that’s not where we want to be,” Jordan added, “We have a chance. We have to be able to capitalize upon that.”

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