Has The Bucs’ Defense Really Changed?

July 15th, 2025

Changes?

Now if the data guys have the correct numbers, this may be why the Bucs’ pass defense has been the fourth-worst in the NFL two years running, and why the pass defense, aside from one season, has ranked in the 20s since Todd Bowles arrived in 2019.

Bowles has mentioned he has to change his defense up every two or three years. Otherwise, he said, offenses will catch up.

That’s very true and very savvy of Bowles. But NFL humorist/numbers guy Mike Tanier, typing for the Aaron Schatz’s FTN Football Almanac, suggested the way Bowles is using defenders is pretty damn close to the same way he was using them in the Super Bowl-winning season in 2020.

Tanier studied player usage, via Sports Info Solutions (SIS), and noticed the defense last year was the same ol’ Bucs defense.

Head coach Todd Bowles was the defensive coordinator for the 2020 Super Bowl run. His Buccaneers blitzed on 39.0% of passing plays that year, the fifth-highest rate in the NFL. Last year, Bowles’ defense blitzed 34.2% of the time, the third highest figure in the league.

Bowles’ scheme has changed so little that some defenders are playing almost the exact same roles they played five years ago. [Jamel] Dean, for example, lines up almost exclusively at right cornerback. By the end of 2020, his second NFL season, he lined up almost exclusively at right cornerback. [Antoine] Winfield, per Sports Info Solutions, blitzed 48 times in 2020. He blitzed 52 times in 2023 and 38 times last season. [Lavonte] David dropped into coverage 597 times and blitzed 83 times in 2020. He dropped into coverage 546 times and blitzed 135 times last year. Same guys, same roles.

And you know what else has been the same? With the exception of 2022, the Bucs’ pass defense has ranked in the 20s every year Bowles has been here.

Coincidence? Joe doesn’t believe in coincidences when it comes to the NFL.

Now, maybe Bowles is doing differently things up front. And maybe the changes Bowles professes to have made are much more nuanced than what SIS has picked up on. But what Tanier discovered sure has Joe’s antennae up.

43 Responses to “Has The Bucs’ Defense Really Changed?”

  1. DiamondAces Says:

    Those numbers seem to mean a whole lot of nothing. Our best coverage linebacker drops into coverage a lot? Our safety that’s good on the blitz blitzes a lot? The thing I’d want to be investigating to see if the scheme changed is what the guys outside the core stars are up to or what kind of blitz/cover we’re running.

  2. ATRAIN Says:

    This can’t be true

    Bowles is a defensive Guru

    Must players or other coaches or possibly the weather

    Bowles is the Best Coach the Bucs have ever had

    (Just helping out the Bowles’ Buddies) 😜

  3. Defense Rules Says:

    Tanier … ‘[Antoine] Winfield, per Sports Info Solutions, blitzed 48 times in 2020. He blitzed 52 times in 2023 and 38 times last season.’

    I’d love to know where Sports Info Solutions got their stats Joe.

    According to Pro-Football-Reference (PFR), using their ‘Advanced Defense’ stats for Winfield, he blitzed 45 times in 2020, only 30 times in 2023, and only 24 times in 2024. BIG disparity IMO.

    And Joe, y’all keep focusing on Bowles’ pass defense being the ‘fourth-worst in the NFL two years running’. And by exclusively using ‘Passing Yards Allowed’ as the sole criteria for that assessment, you’re correct. But as a number of us have said before, there are other criteria which are obviously far more important to Todd Bowles … the most significant being POINTS ALLOWED. And that criteria tells a much different story about our defense’s effectiveness over the 2020-2024 period than PASSING YARDS ALLOWED does.

    o 2020: Passing Yards Allowed: #21 … Points Allowed: #8
    o 2021: Passing Yards Allowed: #21 … Points Allowed: #5
    o 2022: Passing Yards Allowed: #9 … Points Allowed: #13
    o 2023: Passing Yards Allowed: #29 … Points Allowed: #7
    o 2024: Passing Yards Allowed: #29 … Points Allowed: #16

    So in our 3 best years (2020, 2021 & 2023) Todd’s defense averaged a #7 ranking in Points Allowed but only a #24 ranking in Passing Yards Allowed. Of course in those same 3 years our Running Yards Allowed averaged a #3 ranking, giving an indication of where our defense’s priorities were (and BTW that correlates much closer to our overall Points Allowed average ranking of #7 in those 3 years).

    The same holds true for the other 2 years (2022 & 2024). Our Pass Defense overall ranked higher (#19 average), but our Points Allowed average ranking was far worse (average #15 ranking). Interestingly though, our Running Yards Allowed ranking averaged #10, significantly higher than in those 2020, 2021 & 2023 years.

  4. Defense Rules Says:

    BTW Joe, just came across a PFF article posted only 23 hours ago titled ‘NFL Position Rankings: Grading All 32 NFL Teams at Every Unit’. They definitely don’t think much of Tampa’s defense.

    o DLine: #27 ranking (obviously don’t think much of the NFC South since they have the Panthers at #28, Falcons at #30 & Saints at #32).

    o LB unit: #25 ranking (Saints ranked at #8, Falcons at #17 & Panthers at #30).

    o Secondary unit: #22 ranking (Falcons ranked at #17, Saints at #20 & Panthers at #30).

    Obviously PFF doesn’t think much of the Bucs’ defense.

  5. Ron Mexico Says:

    I don’t think those stats say much about if changes were made to the scheme.

  6. Kenton Smith Says:

    Thanks Defense Rules.

  7. ModHairKen Says:

    It is hard to watch CBs line up 10 yards off the WR and then have the pass completed anyhow. It was frustrating to watch JTS stick to OL like Velcro. It seemed like the Bucs gave up a lot of 3rd and longs. Being unable to stop a team on 3rd down has to be demoralizing to the Offense.

    But the points allowed is the only stat that matters on Defense, and as Defense Rules points out, the Bucs have been Top 10 several times and Top Half every year.

  8. Jeff Says:

    lol! No. Betcha Todd has learned nothing. We’ll still see endless zone coverages and DB’s 15 yards off the ball.

  9. Truth be Told Says:

    It is the Putrid Pass Defense that will make or break this team this year. The Offense is a Top 5. We must get a Pass Rush that can get us off the field on 3rd down or we will be watching the Super Bowl instead of playing in it again this year. It is all up to Todd and the D this year. Go BUCS!!

  10. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    Wait a minute, so he points at Dean & David basically doing what they’ve been doing since Bowles got here in 2019 and saying “aha, nothing has changed”, except for all the personnel around them do to them:

    -No longer playing football
    -No longer being with the Bucs
    -Being injured whilst on the roster

    And you’re trying to convince me “nothing has changed” with your examples being 5 years apart? Choosing the 2 of the 3 most tenured player on the defense doing their jobs as a sign of “things not changing” is hilarious to me.

  11. Hodad Says:

    Bowles being to loyal to his coaches. Ross, and Rapone should’ve been replaced before last season, certainly before this season. They have been the one constant through all these secondary woes.

  12. Bucnjim Says:

    Going to have to agree with Defense rules. He’s the voice of reason most of the time. The tweaking that needs to be done is getting off the field on third and fourth down. Seems like Bowles main goal has been stopping the run and not give up the big play. If teams aren’t able to run or throw deep, they’ll have to dink and dunk down the field, which increases yardage against the secondary.

  13. Bojim Says:

    TB played DB. He also coached DB’s. Then DC. Then HC. I like Todd a lot but the backfield sucks.

  14. Erik with Pilot and Driver™ Says:

    This year will be the telling year.

    Bowles said he/they did some hardcore self-scouting this offseason, and he figured out what the ‘problem’ was and he knows how to ‘fix it’.

    So, let’s see.

    I suspect it was way too much Zone Coverage and not enough Press Man Coverage.

  15. Defense Rules Says:

    Tanier … ‘David dropped into coverage 597 times and blitzed 83 times in 2020. He dropped into coverage 546 times and blitzed 135 times last year. Same guys, same roles.’

    I admittedly don’t have access to SIS (where Tanier got his stats) because it’s rather costly, but Pro-Football-Reference (PFR) keeps similar stats (although the results seem to be quite different). PFR doesn’t keep track of how many times a player drops into coverage however like SIS apparently does, but it does keep track of blitzes.

    According to PFR, LVD blitzed 65 times in 2020, and 80 times in 2024. But instead of looking at JUST LVD though, look at the combination of our TWO ILB positions … LVD & White/Minter in 2020, and LVD & Britt/SVD/Russell in 2024 when it comes to blitzing (to see if Todd Bowles changed anything regarding the ILB position group) involvement in blitzes.

    o 2020: LVD – 65 blitzes … White – 91 blitzes … Minter – 8 blitzes … Total for the 3 ILB: 164 blitzes in 2020

    o 2024: LVD – 80 blitzes … Britt – 23 blitzes … SVD – 12 blitzes … Russell – 9 blitzes … Total for the 4 ILB: 124 blitzes in 2024

    So Todd had his ILBs blitz an average of 10.3 times per game in 2020, while he had them blitz an average of only 7.3 times per game in 2024. That’s roughly 30% LESS, which would seem significant in terms of a ‘change’. I think the reason is because he had better blitzers in 2020 (Devin White?) as opposed to 2024 (KJ Britt?).

    Leads me to question Tanier’s conclusion though that ‘the way Bowles is using defenders is pretty damn close to the same way he was using them in the Super Bowl-winning season in 2020.’ Personally I think that Bowles adjusts his defensive philosophy based on the TALENT that he can put on the field. And our 2020 Super Bowl defense was far more TALENTED IMO than what we put on the field last year (and a lot more injury-free too).

  16. Defense Rules Says:

    Bucnjim … ‘If teams aren’t able to run or throw deep, they’ll have to dink and dunk down the field, which increases yardage against the secondary.’

    Hmmm, offenses adjusting to what a defense is giving them. Whodathunkit? Nice analysis.

  17. stpetebucsfan Says:

    HC’s get too much credit and too much blame in all sports. QB’s are in the same boat in the NFL. Don’t know Soccer but I suspect Goalies are under the gun as well..just guessing.

    Todd Bowles is a SB winning Player, a SB winning DC, and now looking for the trifecta of SB winning HC.

    He is far from perfect. And while I give respect to the “importance” of coaching the players PLAY and the coaches Coach!

    Todd got VERY lucky that Baker saved the Bucs bacon and secured two guys HC jobs in the NFL. He GOT unlucky that his SB winning D was devasted by retirements, age, and cap restraints forcing Jason to choose…start with the Offense where the Bucs lost virtually EVERYBODY except for the two star receivers.

    So Jason constructed a new OL, found not one but two good RB’s, and of course BAKER!!! No Baker and this is an entirely different conversation.

    Hindsight is supposed to be 20/20, but not here at JBF that’s for sure.

    I’ve seen guys post Todd inherited a SB defense and failed with it. Seriously?

  18. Eric Says:

    I’m pretty sure he likes stopping the run 1st because it keeps time of possession in our favor. Can’t say I’ve loved watching his soft zone defense but being objective we didn’t really have the safety, coverage ILB, or Edge horses to be PD dominant so Todd has made it work surprisingly well considering points allowed had typically been top 10 which is solid.

  19. stpetebucsfan Says:

    D.R.

    Obviously agree with Kenton and appreciate your efforts which produced some clarifying results and also exposed the dangers of interpreting STATISTICS.

    I’m glad you’re retired and can do this for us it’s always great info presented well.

  20. stpetebucsfan Says:

    Eric

    Kudos!!! An objective look! What a concept. Some guys here post as if Todd had an affair with their wives.

  21. Aaron Says:

    I think Bowles is playing old school 3 down defense…the issue is that more and more teams are going for it on 4th down…(minus the Bucs)

    Go Bucs!

  22. Defense Rules Says:

    StPete .. ‘I’m glad you’re retired and can do this for us’.

    Wait a minute, you mean I’m NOT gonna get paid for this? Obviously I’ve reached that ‘old & senile’ phase early.

  23. AJ Says:

    @ the end of the season when the Bucs are Top 5 in Offense & Defense and have just finished with their greatest regular season win total ! Bowles Haters will still be calling for his head!

  24. Aqualung Says:

    “ Has The Bucs’ Defense Really Changed? “

    Is the pope a woman?

    Performance and results say no. Watch all 8 losses from 2024 and it will be clear to you.

    Todd’s defense makes it so easy on opposing QBs because of the charmin soft, cover no one zones he employs to “avoid getting beaten deep.” It’s why any ferocious pass rush from the edge will be neutered because they’re letting the QB have the checkdown for free regardless of situation.

    And for the “only points matter, yards don’t” mantra, look at statistical correlations. You keep going to that well, the reversion to the mean will happen and it will be ugly. That chicken started really coming home to roost last year and unless significant changes are really made, taught well in practice and executed in games, prepare for another ugly deterioration.

    The truth is, Todd’s pass. defense has been exposed, and it sucks. Either we see a lot more press man and much tighter zones, or better hope Baker flips 40 burgers every week.

  25. Tye Says:

    He is a lack luster HC and quickly becoming a lack luster DC!

    If Grizzard can’t make up for Bowels incompetence, then Bowels will be exposed as one of the leagues worst HC/DC…

  26. Bucs4Ever Says:

    CROWN US!

  27. stpetebucsfan Says:

    D.R.

    You’re not getting paid but you do have the appreciation of all of us here for your efforts and I suspect Joe as well.

    I volunteer at St Anthonys and this past Friday a terrific old dude of 94 tried to give me a $20 bill for showing he and his wife how to get to their appointment.

    Obviously I turned it down but told him the thought meant more to me than the money anyway.

    Hopefully our thoughts and appreciation can equal us all sending you a twenty. LOL

    BTW if you find too much time on your hands…I’m trying to calculate the true value GM’s place on players. Millions of dollars mean NOTHING.

    The stat I’d like to see is the % of CAP invested in each player, position, and position group. Then we’d really know how a team plans strategically. They’re going to spend the money regardless I’d like to know how they prioritize more specifically.

  28. jimmy Says:

    the fact that the bucs didnt get a full time DC and extended bowles is big trouble. this season will be more of the same.

  29. stpetebucsfan Says:

    Jimmy

    I always tend to look for the bright side. In your case you should make a bundle this upcoming season betting against Bowles and the Bucs.

  30. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    You guys that keep griping about not having a DC, what are coach Rogers & coach Footes’ job titles dating back to the offseason of 2022?

  31. Aqualung Says:

    A title means nothing.

    Bowls is the DC. Everyone knows it. Todd knows it. He runs the defense. He designs it. He makes the defensive calls in the games. Ask him, read his interviews. He’ll tell you.

    He sucks at doing both, going back to his Jets days. Performance and results. Period.

  32. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    Wasn’t expecting an answer, just like I don’t expect pizza on the menu at a korean bbq

  33. Defense Rules Says:

    Aqualung … ‘The truth is, Todd’s pass. defense has been exposed, and it sucks.’

    Like Joe, you’re cherry-picking Aqualung. I can prove anything I want based on selective statistics. True analysis IMO is being able to look at pretty much all of it and come to some reasonable conclusions. No cherry-picking needed.

    Bucs’ defense is a good example. There are a LOT of different aspects that go into evaluating a defense … Pass Defense stats (multiple), Run Defense stats (multiple), Takeaways stats (multiple), plus a number of other ‘stats’ (like 3rd & 4th Down Conversions?). The PFF article I referenced earlier titled ‘NFL Position Rankings: Grading All 32 NFL Teams at Every Unit’ ranked each team’s various position groups, but didn’t give a ‘final ranking’ for each team. Based on their rankings of OUR position groups, where would you rank our defense for this year?

    o DLine: #27 ranking
    o ILBs: #25 ranking
    o Secondary: #22 ranking

    Average all those PFF rankings out and you end up with around a #25 predicted ranking for our 2025 defense. I’ll predict that virtually every JBFer would say that’s bullcrap.

    Our major issues last year IMO were injuries and lack of talent (depth). We made some pretty good strides this off-season & draft in fixing our talent issues. Obviously we don’t know what this season’s injury situation will look like. But with better backups (for the most part), we SHOULD surrender fewer points this year than we did last season. How many fewer? Your guess is as good as mine.

    I’ve previously predicted that our defense will end up in the Top-10 for 2025 (and so will our offense). The Dolphins ranked #10 defensively last season, giving up 364 points (21.4 PPG). The Packers ranked #10 in 2023, giving up 350 points (20.6 PPG). Average those 2 most recent years and you’d end up with the #10 ranking allowing 357 points … 21.0 PPG average. Turns out that’s almost exactly what Todd Bowles’ defenses have averaged for the 2020-2024 period. And BTW, our defense’s average ranking for the 2020-2024 period has been 9.8 … pretty danged close to the #10 ranking.

    Now maybe to you that ‘sucks’. To me, that’s a pretty danged good track record. And I sure like that much better than what PFF is trying to pedal.

  34. Mike Johnson Says:

    Time will tell guys. If we have a decent Pass Rush this year? we have changed our Defense. Id not, the secondary will be working extra hard just as they have the last few yers.

  35. Aqualung Says:

    DR – your own analysis shows the defense has declined each Bowles season, 23 vs 22, and 24 vs 23.

    24 saw a significant uptick in points allowed which is consistent with the general statistical correlation between yards allowed and points allowed.

    I want to see better use of pass rushers rushing the passers, beasting up the middle with pressure to better enable the edge, fewer pass rusher drops, lower incidence of blitzing, tighter zones and press man.

    I believe you have supported those hopes, and I agree with your many detailed analyses as to why.

  36. Badbucs Says:

    Todd is the head coach not just the DC. His players lack discipline and consistency. The stats have us scoring about 30 and giving up about 20. We should be much better than 10 and 7. We are not clutch. We find a way for Bucs to beat Bucs. Both sides of the ball and STs are culprits. This has to be on the head coach. You can give Todd a pass for the lack of talent the past couple of years leading to the inconsistent play. He will not have that excuse this year. Winners have to win. You can’t continue to have all the inoppotune penalties, drops and turnovers especially in crunch time. This loser mentality has to be coached out of the guys on the field or get new guys out there. I hope Todd can do it. There is certainly enough talent and the numbers show it. You can’t come out flat every time you play at night or in prime time. BA knew how to coach this. Todd has to learn it quick.

  37. Pickgrin Says:

    Its all about the pass rush…. well – mostly…..

    Bowles runs an ‘aggressive’ defense. Thats just who he is and how his defenses have always been. Todd’s defenses – most every year – are among the top blitzing defenses in the league.

    Aggression involves some degree of risk though. Live by the sword – and sometimes you die by the sword.

    When you blitz frequently you get more sacks, pressures, TFLs and sometimes turnovers – but if every player is not on top of their assignment, you also sometimes get offensive pass catchers running wide ass open leading to some big plays by the offense.

    Think back to the time just before Todd Bowles was hired to run the Bucs defense – when for 3 years Mike Smith (also Lovie for 2 years before him) was causing many fans to pull their hair out almost weekly due to the softer than Charmin defensive schemes….

    I much prefer the ‘aggressive’ approach like Todd runs by comparison – because at least that way, you are not allowing the offense to dictate and do basically whatever they want.

    Getting to 3rd down with at least a few yards to go is the goal generally on most series. And thats where the pass rush becomes so important.

    If you can get somewhat consistent pressures, hurries and a few sacks on 3rd downs – you get your defense off the field more often than not – which is the main goal on EVERY defensive series – to get off the field without giving up points!

    If you can get a good pass rush with 4 or 5 guys up front – then you have 6 or 7 players in coverage – which obviously increases the chances of stopping a team from advancing or scoring.

    I’d bet almost anything that coach Bowles himself would tell you he wishes to NOT be in the top 5 for # of blitzes this year – because if that happens – it means we are getting enough pressure on QBs from the 4 or 5 guys up front that there’s no need to blitz so often.

    Reddick, Kancey, Vea and Diaby sounds like a pretty formidable front 4 to me.
    Hopefully these guys along with Hall, Braswell and Walker can provide what this defense has been missing the last 3 years – a solid and consistent pass rush!

  38. Couch Fan Says:

    Its the same thing you see with your eyes. If we arent getting sacks and turnovers are defense is getting torched up and down the field. And since the SB year, our defense has been getting torched relentlessly. The fan boys will name excuse after excuse but oddly its the same excuse every year. Perhaps they are right or perhaps, Super Todd is simply just not so super.

  39. stpetebucsfan Says:

    Couch Fan

    “The fan boys will name excuse after excuse but oddly its the same excuse every year.”

    I’m honestly curious as to what you call “excuses”?

  40. GoneGator Says:

    How many full seasons to we need to go back to see this “statistical correlation” between pass yards allowed and ppg one might ask? I’ve gone back 3 seasons, DR has gone back longer and it still does not seem to matter much.

    PPG is king.
    Turnovers are also key. Even run defense ypg is more important imo and I think the stats show that.

    The ONLY stat, or at least the favorite that some of the critics harp on (pass ypg), is arguably the least important defensive stat for success ie W/L.

    If I (or others who have reached this conclusion) are wrong I’m sure someone can point it out with logical evidence and data….. and not resort to name calling or straw man arguments and misdirection.

  41. Aqualung Says:

    Anyone thinking 3 seasons of data is a statistically significant sample size needs to review basic teachings in statistics.

  42. Defense Rules Says:

    Aqualung … ‘I want to see better use of pass rushers rushing the passers, beasting up the middle with pressure to better enable the edge, fewer pass rusher drops, lower incidence of blitzing, tighter zones and press man.’

    And that’s pretty much exactly what I want to see out of our 2025 defense also. But it all has to go together; can’t pick and choose. Getting more pressure from our Front should mean that we can blitz less and that our outside guys will get better results. Also that we’d be able to get better coverage against short passes and be able to use press man more.

    Takes a BUNCH of talented defensive players though, like we fielded back in 2020 & 2021. Hopefully we stay reasonably healthy this year.

  43. GoneGator Says:

    Aqualung Says:
    July 15th, 2025 at 4:03 pm
    Anyone thinking 3 seasons of data is a statistically significant sample size needs to review basic teachings in statistics.

    I’m definitely not an expert on statistics but I’ve looked at the stats going back to 2019 and it looks the same. Mind you these are league wide stats, not just TB so that’s how many teams x how many games? How long would you say it takes before it becomes “statiscally significant”?

    Joe’s polls that are open for a few hours usually early in the morning claim to be accurate/meaningful but 3 seasons (or 4, or 5) are not enough to draw some conclusions?

    Try to answer the actual questions without mis-direction or name calling.

 

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