The Tampa Bay Buccaneers won a then-franchise-record 11 games in 1999, riding a smothering defense to a division title, a first-round bye and the team's first conference championship game in 20 years. That NFC title match was in St. Louis, against Kurt Warner and the Rams' "Greatest Show on Turf." Warner and the Rams would end up victorious in the end, 11-6, but Tampa Bay's defense put itself on the map by defanging an attack that had averaged just under 34 points a game in its previous 17 outings.

That game kicked off another three years of defensive dominance in Tampa, culminating in a 2002 championship season that ranks as one of the best defensive performances ever. And one thing the Buccaneers' defense did extremely well in that three-year span was take the football away. Tampa Bay's turnover differential from 2000 through 2002 was nothing short of remarkable. How remarkable? Read on.

Below you will find entries 60 to 41 as we continue our weeklong countdown from 100 to 1, celebrating the NFL's 100th season and highlighting some of the Buccaneers' best moments in their own 43 years. This section of the countdown includes the answer to the question above as well as Ronde Barber's career interception total, a fact about the ring from Super Bowl XXXVII and even a franchise record set just last year.

60. Length, in yards, of the fumble return on which LB Hugh Green scored against Dallas on Jan. 9, 1983, a play that remains the longest touchdown of any kind in Buccaneers playoff history

59. Length, in yards, of the game-clinching touchdown run by Reggie Cobb in a 30-12 win over Detroit on Nov. 10, 1991, in which Cobb became the first player in franchise history to record three rushing touchdowns in a single game

58. Length, in yards, of the field goal made by Kyle Brindza at Houston on Sept. 27, 2015, the longest successful field goal ever in a road game by a Buccaneers kicker

57. Length, in yards, of the fumble return touchdown recorded by wide receiver Keenan McCardell on Oct. 6, 2003 – he recovered a fumble by the Indianapolis Colts' Mike Doss after Doss had intercepted a pass – which, when added to his scoring grabs of 74 and 15 yards made McCardell the only player in franchise history with multiple offensive touchdowns and a defensive touchdown in the same game