TAMPA, Fla. — Baker Mayfield used his legs and arm to help the Tampa Bay Buccaneers clinch their fourth straight NFC South title.

Mayfield fired a 32-yard touchdown pass to Jalen McMillan for the go-ahead score and then scrambled 28 yards for a crucial first down on the next drive, leading the Buccaneers to a 27-19 victory over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday.

After Mayfield’s long scramble on third-and-14 from the Tampa Bay 12, the Buccaneers drove to the Saints 11. Mayfield flipped the ball backward to Bucky Irving, who ran 11 yards for a TD that made it 27-19.

Mayfield threw for 212 yards and two TDs and had a career-high 68 yards rushing as the Buccaneers (10-7) rallied from a 10-point halftime deficit and made sure they didn’t need Atlanta to lose to Carolina to win the division.

Spencer Rattler had 240 yards passing and one TD for the Saints (5-12).

The Bucs trailed most of the game and were down 16-6 at halftime. They went ahead when Mayfield connected with McMillan in the fourth. McMillan was penalized 15 yards for an unsportsmanlike penalty after making a 33-yard catch that extended the drive on fourth-and-8. The rookie receiver signaled first down in a gesture that was interpreted as mimicking shooting a gun. That pushed the Buccaneers back from the 9 to the 24.

But McMillan made up for it with a toe-tapping catch in the end zone for his seventh TD in the past five games.

The Saints scored on their first four possessions, including Rattler’s 5-yard touchdown pass to Dante Pettis.