Tom Brady and Marshon Lattimore talk things over during game between the Buccaneers and Saints.
Tom Brady and Marshon Lattimore talk things over during game between the Buccaneers and Saints.Chris Graythen/Getty Images

Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Evans was suspended for one game after he pushed Saints cornerback Marshon Lattimore to the ground.

Evans pushed Lattimore in defense of Tampa Bay teammates Leonard Fournette and Tom Brady.
On his podcast, Brady called Evans’ suspension “ridiculous” and assured his teammate he had his back.

Tensions boiled over briefly during Sunday’s game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and New Orleans Saints, resulting in two ejections.

With the game still tied 3-3 early in the fourth quarter, Saints cornerback Marshon Lattimore had some words for Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady. Running back Leonard Fournette stepped up to defend Brady, exchanged shoves with Lattimore, and a small brawl broke out.

Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Evans, who has a history with Lattimore, rushed in to defend his teammates. When the dust settled, both Evans and Lattimore were ejected.


As the two sides were separated, Evans could be seen speaking with one of the officials. Reading his lips, he appeared to say, “That’s Tom Brady. What do you want me to do?”

Valid point, Mike.

Still, Evans would leave the game, and afterwards receive a one-game suspension from the NFL.

On his podcast “Let’s Go!” Brady thanked his teammate for having his back, and chided the NFL for suspending Evans.

“Mike and Marshon, they’ve had their own battles over the years. I think sometimes our emotions get the best of us,” Brady said.

“I love Mike and the fact that Mike would come out there to defend me means everything in the world to me as a teammate and a friend. Mike knows how I feel about him.

“In the end emotions are a part of sports. Sometimes they boil over, obviously they did yesterday,” Brady continued. “It’s an unfortunate circumstance. I don’t think it deserved any type of suspension. I think that’s ridiculous. Hopefully we can move past it, get to a better place. In the end, I appreciate Mike having my back. I know he’ll learn from it. And he knows that we all have his back.”

Brady argued that the fracas was the result of a series of events throughout the game, and it was unfair to pin the harshest punishment on Evans.

“I think that there’s a lot of things over the course of a game that become emotional,” Brady said. “If I didn’t run down there to argue a call, that could not have happened. If things weren’t said back and forth between both teams, it could have been avoided. If someone from the Saints didn’t do this, it could have been avoided. If Mike didn’t do that, it could have been avoided. There’s a lot of things that go into it, there’s a lot of things at fault. So I don’t think Mike should be the one to be blamed and singled out. Unfortunately he has been, and that’s just the reality of life in the NFL.”

Evans appealed his suspension to the NFL on Wednesday, with the league upholding the punishment in a decision on Thursday.

With Evans out, the Buccaneers are severely short-handed at receiver for next week’s game against the Packers, as Russell Gage, Julio Jones and Breshad Perriman all entered last Sunday’s game as questionable.

The Buccaneers appear to have already started on their contingency plan, signing veteran receiver Cole Beasley earlier this week.