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Winless Bucs hoping for turnaround against Patriots in London

LONDON -- The winless Tampa Bay Buccaneers are in London and hoping the change of scenery will finally help them get their season back on track.

Unfortunately, they'll have to beat the New England Patriots (4-2) on Sunday at Wembley Stadium to turn things around.

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"I'm sure we're a major underdog. They've got the great Tom Brady, Randy Moss," Buccaneers running back Cadillac Williams said Saturday. "(But) anytime you step out there on Sunday you give yourself a chance."

The Bucs (0-6) have lost 10 straight games and face a team that beat the Tennessee Titans 59-0 last week.

Buccaneers coach Raheem Morris said the Patriots have many assets, including "their head coach, their quarterback, their receiving corps, their defense."

"Everything about the New England Patriots is a great model to follow," Morris added. "It's a great team that you want to be like."

The Patriots arrived in the British capital on Friday morning and were able to get in a light practice in the afternoon, but the Buccaneers landed late that same day. And because of rain Saturday, neither team was able to complete a walkthrough at Wembley.

"It kind of feels like a high school game almost, where you don't maybe prepare as much as you do normally during the week," Buccaneers linebacker Barrett Ruud said. "There is a little bit of a shortage on preparation."

Last year, the New Orleans Saints and San Diego Chargers spent about a week in London to get acclimated. The New York Giants and Miami Dolphins only arrived a few days before their game two years ago, when the NFL played a regular-season game in Europe for the first time.

The Buccaneers are the "home" team this time, and quarterback Josh Johnson will be looking for the advantage when the game kicks off.

"It all starts here," Johnson said. "We maybe lost one game where a team physically beat us. We've been in games. We have cost ourselves."

Cornerback Ronde Barber tried to stay realistic about facing a team that scored 59 points last week.

"We understand where we are this season. We're not naive to that fact," Barber said. "But at the same time, we're professionals, they're professionals. We're not going to lay down for them, that's for sure."

Patriots coach Bill Belichick has said he is concerned about Tampa's running game, but Morris isn't worried about what others think.

"I appreciate coach Belichick for giving us compliments, but he's just trying to lull us to sleep," Morris said.

The trip to London is a first for many of the players, but for some there is no time to sample what the city has to offer.

"If you ask if I'm enjoying London, no," Morris said. "I got Bill Belichick waiting for me tomorrow. I won't be able to enjoy London until the offseason."

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press