Bucs quarterback Baker Mayfield has yet to deal with a pass rush as ferocious and deadly as the 49ers’. Credit: Photo by Kyle Zedaker/Tampa Bay Buccaneers
The Bucs are coming off one of their more impressive wins of the season (I know, itโ€™s a low bar), dominating the Tennessee Titans last Sunday at Raymond James Stadium 20-6.

The San Francisco 49ers took on the Jacksonville Jaguars, arguably one of the better AFC teams, this past Sunday and looked absolutely unstoppable, taking home a 34-3 road victory.

And yet, thatโ€™s not even the 49ersโ€™ best game of the year; SanFran took down the Dallas Cowboys (another team considered to be one of the best in the NFL) 42-10 in a Week 5 matchup in the other Bay area.

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Soโ€ฆ the Bucs might have their work cut out for them when they take on the 49ers in at Levi’s Stadium this Sunday.

Niners defensive lineman Nick Bosa and his newly-acquired linemat Chase Young are dominant forces on the edge, with the rest of the D-line Javon Hargrave and Arik Armstead giving opposing o-lines nightmares on the interior.

Bucs quarterback Baker Mayfield has yet to deal with a pass rush as ferocious and deadly as this group, and the running game will be met with not only the aforementioned defensive line, but All-Pro middle linebacker Fred Warner, the only man in the NFL who has full rights to say heโ€™s better than Tampaโ€™s own Lavonte David.

Add in an offense that has a fearsome foursome of playmakers in receivers Deebo Samuel and Brandon Aiyuk, tight end George Kittle, plus running back Christian McCaffreyโ€”and the Bucs might be out of this game by halftime.

My guess is that the Bucs lose this one 38-17, with the Bucsโ€™ offense putting up some garbage-time TDs to make the score look a little prettier. The Bucs lack the firepower offensively to keep up with San Francisco and the much-aligned secondary struggled so mightily against the Texans a couple weeks ago that itโ€™s hard to have faith theyโ€™ll be able to keep up with this high-powered San Francisco offense.

No reason to use this as cause for concern; the Bucs were not expected to beat the 49ers before the season started, and not much has changed since. Tampa is an average-to-below-average team that can hang in there with other squads in their tier, but probably not with teams above them (see: Eagles, Lions, and Bills games, although the Bills might be scarily closer to being the Bucs than previously thought).

Itโ€™s just continuing to be one of those weird transition seasons. Hopefully this ends up being a trap game for the 49ers and the Bucs come out of this back at .500.

I just wouldnโ€™t put any money on it.

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