Mike Zimmer and Leslie Frazier, two men with distinctly different defensive philosophies, collide Sunday in Tampa, Fla., with new teams that are at similar low points best described by Buccaneers coach Lovie Smith.
"It's as simple as this," Smith said. "You have to crawl before you can walk."
Right now, both defenses are doing some crawling and occasionally spitting up on themselves.
Zimmer, who is Frazier's successor as Vikings head coach, has the better defense statistically, ranking 13th in total yards (337.9 per game) and 14th in scoring (22.9), which is 18 spots higher last year's last-place ranking. Yet the sting of last week's defensive collapse came with an all-too-familiar look that was downright routine during the 5-10-1 season that ushered Frazier out of town and into his new job as Smith's defensive coordinator.
Meanwhile, in Tampa, the Bucs had a bye week to get healthy and in sync with Frazier's Tampa 2-based defense, which ranks last in the NFL in total yards (422.8) and points. Tampa Bay's 34 points allowed per game are four more than the Vikings gave up at the bottom of the league in 2013.
Add it all up and, well, you have the NFC's worst record — Tampa Bay's 1-5 — facing a 2-5 Vikings team that's already three games back in the NFC North.
"Everyone would like for everything to be rolling in the right direction and everything working out perfectly initially," Smith said. "But it just doesn't happen that way normally. You have to go through adversity early on, which we've done. But it just makes you stronger."
Defending Tampa 2
Smith and Frazier are two of the staunchest supporters of the Tampa 2 scheme in the NFL today. The no-frills philosophy doesn't offer the popular exotic looks and blitz packages, depending more on a four-man rush with basic but, ideally, well-choreographed zone coverages set behind it. The defense gets its name from the Cover 2 — two deep safeties splitting the field — that former Bucs coach Tony Dungy popularized with Tampa Bay in the 1990s.