Sterling Shepard And His Impact With Quarterbacks

August 23rd, 2025

Increased responsibility.

Until Jalen McMillan got hurt, for fans fortunate enough to go to training camp practices, veteran receiver Sterling Shepard logged most of his time catching passes with the second team offense.

And he was targeted a lot. And he caught a lot of balls.

Joe often uses where a guy plays (first or second team) and how often he gets touches as a barometer as to how far up the food chain a player may be.

If a guy is with the third team offense (bouncers, substitute history teachers and insurance claims adjusters), his job is in danger. If a guy is on the third team and rarely gets touches (like Rakim Jarrett), that is a very bad position to be in.

If a player is on the second team but doesn’t often get touches, he’s on the bubble. If a guy is logging plays with the first team, even part of the time, that means he’s in the mix to make the roster.

That’s sort of the pecking order Joe has noticed over the years.

Shepard gets targets whether he is taking snaps with the first team or the second team. He’s in a secure place, especially after McMillan’s injury.

(Joe thought about this driving to record an edition of the “Ira Kaufman Podcast” Friday morning: That camp meat cornerback with the Steelers, Daryl Porter, the man who undercut McMillan: That was a classic camp-meat-trying-to-make-a-splash-play-to-get-noticed kind of stunt. Joe’s not saying Porter deliberately wanted to hurt McMillan, but put a guy on the field who knows he’s making the Steelers’ 53-man roster, Joe doesn’t think McMillan is undercut like that.)

Joe thought entering training camp that Shepard was pretty much safe unless he blew chunks out on the practice fields of One Buc Palace. Shepard is a reliable veteran and he just happens to be very tight with Baker Mayfield.

Sometimes, it’s not what you know, but who you know.

The way Bucs coach Todd Bowles spoke about Shepard this week, Joe is going to guess Shepard, short of an injury, is secure when the Bucs shave the roster down to 53 on Tuesday.

Bowles praised Shepard for often working with quarterbacks in a give-and-take on the field to help catch passes, move the chains and score points.

“Well, he’s performed well because he [confers with quarterbacks] on the field, not because he hangs with the quarterbacks,” Bowles said. “But he’s very smart and he has opinions and advice just like Mike [Evans] and Chris [Godwin] do.

“He’s a veteran receiver, so quarterbacks understand him and they give him little nuances to work with. He’s very good that way. We’re getting everybody on the same page.”

Now yes, Shepard, for a veteran, made too many boneheaded plays last year. He cuts down on those; he’s an effective receiver.

Shepard is going to get snaps. Right now he’s the No. 3 receiver until Chris Godwin or McMillan return, whenever that may be.

Joe hopes McMillan’s return is on the short side of Thanksgiving and Godwin returns well before Halloween.

2 Responses to “Sterling Shepard And His Impact With Quarterbacks”

  1. Aqualung Says:

    After Shep it’s RYAN Miller. He catches everything.

    Then, I’d like to see Garrett Greene. Smart fast and versatile, and isn’t afraid to stick his face in the fan. Considering Godwin is active, there’s your WR roster. Everyone’s favorite dwarf is destined for the practice squad.

  2. dmatt Says:

    Garrett Green’s catching n running style reminds me of former Patriots receiver,Danny Amadola. He has good vision n field awareness n not afraid to grind it out. I’d take him over Ryan Miller, Rakim Jarrett, n Trey Palmer. I believe had he played wr in college he would’ve been drafted early third round.

 

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