Zac Robinson Coy On Why His Atlanta Offense Tore Up Todd Bowles’ Defense

January 28th, 2026

Bucs offensive coordinator Zac Robinson.

One way to get back at a division rival (other than your quarterback calling out its coach) is to lift a good assistant from that team.

And that’s what the Bucs just did. And not just an assistant, a guy that had been a major thorn in the side of Bucs coach Todd Bowles in the four games and two seasons Zac Robinson was offensive coordinator in Atlanta.

People at his introductory press conference yesterday at One Buc Palace wanted to know why Robinson’s Dixie Chicks offense had so much success against Bowles’ defense. Atlanta under Robinson simply lit up Bowles’ defenders.

In the four games Robinson faced a Bowles defense, the Dixie Chicks averaged 444 yards of offense.

Robinson was asked about this and he played the ol’ “Aw gee, shucks” routine of how difficult it is to have success against a Bowles defense. He said he lost a lot of sleep preparing to tangle with Bowles.

In a sidebar session after the press conference with the local pen and mic club, Joe wanted to know. What did he do — or what did Bowles’ defense not do — whereby Robinson’s Atlanta offense had wildly successful games. Was it scheme? Was it a mismatch? Was Robinson able to exploit a weakness? What was it?

The following is Robinson’s verbatim, word-for-word answer to Joe’s question.

“I think those games are so challenging and so close and it comes down to a couple of plays here and there that — I mean, there were plays where I was like, ‘Man, they’ve got us right here,'” Robinson said.

“It was a great back and forth, in all those games. Like the first game of the [2025] season. I mean they got after us pretty good. Had to reset and take a look at some things.

“I would say it was players executed really well in those games. They did a great job.

“But there was nothing from a scheme standpoint, it was very difficult to scheme against Coach Bowles. Those games were a good battle. And I’m glad to be on the other side of it now.”

Joe typed the following before, but Joe has to doff his cap to Robinson. He’s got a knack for gliding away from a direct question he would rather not answer.

Joe sure hopes that when Bowles interviewed Robinson for the Bucs’ offensive coordinator position, Bowles asked Robinson straight up what Robinson saw in his defense and how and why did he attack it the way he did, with tremendous success.

It’s known in the football world as “self-scouting.” Joe hopes Bowles did a lot of that with Robinson. Because there is no question based on the last two seasons that Robinson has Bowles’ defense figured out.

33 Responses to “Zac Robinson Coy On Why His Atlanta Offense Tore Up Todd Bowles’ Defense”

  1. Bucsfan Says:

    Yeah OK…. LOL
    I mean he can’t really tell the truth there can he?

  2. Lt. Dan Says:

    “Zac Robinson Coy On Why His Atlanta Offense Tore Up Todd Bowles’ Defense”

    Simple: Everyone’s offense tore up Todd Bowles defense.

  3. Marine Buc Says:

    It’s really not that complicated.

    Good OCs know their own teams/players strengths and weaknesses then they design a game plan that will take advantage of the defenses perceived weaknesses…

  4. Jack Burton Mercer Says:

    EVERYONE has it figured out.

  5. HC Grover Says:

    He saw what we all see. Soft middle, confused players running around, edge rushers dropping back to play safety, pathetic ST kick coverage, a sideline stiff wondering what time it was. All the did was wait for the Bowzo Blunder then go for it.

  6. Todd Says:

    HC Grover, you pretty much summed it up.

  7. Fanofdabucs Says:

    Did the question really need to be asked?

    Maybe you should have asked differently..”you’re offense in a Atl was average against every team in the NFL except Bowles Bucs, why was that?”

    Well at least the Glazer boys have everyone talking offense. Meanwhile nothing has changed eith the head man in charge of the defense. Unless Mr Robinson cant be better than Liam and put up 35 a game, it will be another season of shoulda, woulda, coulda

  8. Aqualung Says:

    Boewls isn’t going to change or fix anything. You have to know that by now. He’s just gonna do the exact same things, harder, with even more wrinkles, options, variants, until at some point all 11 defenders will be so confused they will simply vibrate in place while the opposing offense hits another big play for a touchdown. Heck on opposing first drives, they’re already like that anyway.

  9. Hawk Says:

    The REAL question is whether or not Coach Bowles wil listen to him about how he can improve his defense.

  10. Lt. Dan Says:

    “I mean, there were plays where I was like, ‘Man, they’ve got us right here,’” Robinson said.” Until they didn’t. 3rd and 28. No problem.

  11. Vanessa Anne Says:

    What Marine Buc said.

    In the larger picture, no one should be surprised that Zac isn’t answering the question directly. It’s too soon.

    I’m not a huge fan of Todd as our HC, but the guy isn’t dumb and he has enough self-awareness to realize that yeah, he needs to do a deep dive on that conversation with Zac.

    Joe, the challenge for you and the rest of the media will be to listen carefully to the off-the-cuff comments Todd and Zac make over the next few months, on things totally unrelated to each other, or how Atlanta was able to light our D up.

    If they’re smart, no one at One Buc Place will ever spill the full beans on that because it would tip off everyone else on how to game plan against us.

    But if the media slowly chips away at it over the next few months, eventually the details will come out piece by piece.

    Finally, if I was Jason or Todd, I’d hold off on that conversation for a couple of weeks so Zac doesn’t feel like he’s being ambushed. He seems like he’s a smart guy. He knew walking into the interview that it would come up and be something he’d have to go into detail about if he got the job. Let the guy get settled in.

    Now if we could just hire a DC…

  12. Chuck Says:

    I like the Robinson hire but if this football thing doesn’t work out, he’s got a future in public office. The only reason he would’ve lost sleep over Bowles’ defense would be the excitement of whether he could pass for 400 or even 500 yards on it.

  13. Stpetematt Says:

    Slow linebackers, that’s why. Let’s make sure we draft fast ones great in pass coverage and pure tackling. There’s lots of excellent LB’ers in this draft!

  14. Ash Says:

    There is no question giving what we saw the stats and rankings that most the NFL world has figured out bowels defense. There is 17 teams he can call to get the answer but if it has gotten down to that for him trying to figure out whats wrong with his own defense then why the f is he still here.

  15. Aqualung Says:

    Fire everyone and everything.

  16. Stpetematt Says:

    Just read an interesting tidbit for all who wonder why the defense played so badly. Sirvocea Dennis went from a 74.3 PFF coverage grade in limited action in 2024 to a 30.5(!!!) in 2025! I’d throw at him on almost every down.

  17. Stpetematt Says:

    Lavonte David dropped from a 68.6 in 2024 to a 45.1(!!!) so yeah- slow linebackers. Throw at them every down and win.

  18. 813bucboi Says:

    bowles defense is nothing special…not hard to figure out…

    just throw to the player thats being covered by a DT lol…

    GO BUCS!!!!

  19. BuxfaninTX Says:

    Didn’t Lovie do the same with Dirk Koetter?

  20. Wayne Kerr Says:

    “J0e typed the following before, but Joe has to doff his cap to Robinson. He’s got a knack for gliding away from a direct question he would rather not answer.”

    ————————————
    Kinda like Joe and his articles and fan sentiment …..

  21. buc4evr Says:

    Kind of funny. What is he going to say? That his new bosses defense stinks to high heaven and the DC is terrible. Seriously the players are so bad on defense any team can score on them. With Bowles defensive scheme it just makes matters worse.

  22. Wayne Kerr Says:

    “Fanofdabucs Says:
    January 28th, 2026 at 8:02 am
    Maybe you should have asked differently..”you’re offense in a Atl was average against every team in the NFL except Bowles Bucs, why was that?””

    Every fan here should ask the question:

    Why wont J@e ask real questions, things we want to know ?

    They are pansies, the media is scared

  23. 813bucboi Says:

    Why wont J@e ask real questions, things we want to know ?

    BINGO!!!!

    Like, what will Zac do to help baker avoid throwing INTs in the 4th quarter!…

    Or how will he adjust his offense once baker gets “injured”…

    those are question fans want to know…

    GO BUCS!!!!

  24. Defense Rules Says:

    Stpetematt … ‘Slow linebackers, that’s why.’

    Yea verily, and that’s a primary reason I still prefer the 4-3 over the 3-4. ILBs with great speed & perfect instincts to provide quality middle pass coverage AND solid run defense for the 3-4 don’t come along all that often. That’s putting a LOT of responsibility on those 2 ILBs.

    Todd’s defense has 2 OLBs on the field virtually every play, as well as a Nickel on over half of the plays. Work the defensive snaps numbers & it looks like we only have 2 ‘big dogs’ (OK, interior DLine) on the field on about 25-30% of our defensive snaps. In the words of Wynn Dixie … ‘Where’s the beef?’

    Last season Todd tried to ‘increase the beef’ by playing Vea more. He ended up getting a career-high 763 def snaps (73%). Based on Vita’s age & weight, I seriously doubt that he can effectively play anything over 60-65% of the def snaps. And when you watch him on the field on some of those long drives especially you could see why.

    Bucs NEED 6 interior DLinemen. Hopefully we’ll sign TWO interior DLine beasts in free agency or the draft. For 2026 I’d keep Vea, Kancey, Roberts & Gaines, but add 2 beasts to fill the other 2 interior DLine needs (filling 1 from each would probably be best). That’d allow us to keep more beef on the field & HOPEFULLY improve the interior pass rush, as well as improve our Run Defense (it actually sucks; the only reason we ranked #5 in Rush Yardage Allowed is because opponents much preferred to pass against us).

    Bucs’ defense allowed 16 rushing TDs (ranked #16) and an abysmal 69.8% Red Zone TD percentage (of which 10 TDs were rushing TDs from inside the Red Zone). We did much better at holding opponents to FGs in years past. Bucs need more beef; we’re too light in the loafers.

  25. ocala Says:

    Joe is right he definitely has some political savvy to him. If he was being forthcoming with his answer, there would be a major problem on the first day of his job.

  26. Bosch Says:

    Nearly every team had their way with Bowels defense. He just did what the rest of the league did.

  27. Joe Says:

    Why wont J@e ask real questions, things we want to know ?

    Such as?

  28. Bucs And Them Says:

    Some here should just start their own blog ‘Joe Bucs Fan Critics.com’ and be done with it. Certainly you’d be rolling in tens of viewers and mouth breathers learnin’ them Joes a lesson on how to do it. Smh…….

  29. Kenton Smith Says:

    813bucboi “those are questions fans want to know”. You are in the wrong forum 813bucboi. You should be looking for the forum “those are questions dipshlts want to know”.

  30. Gipper Says:

    Zak Robinson has to keep the myth alive that somehow Todd B is a “defensive genius.” Zak doing what he can to work with his new HC.

  31. ‘74 Bucs Fan Says:

    Zac: well when our QB has all day to throw due to the lack of edge rush, and the fact that the edge rushers are covering receivers downfield, it makes it pretty easy to put up 500 yards.

    Sound about right?

  32. bucnjim Says:

    Smart move! Never a good idea to throw your boss under the bus. I’m very sure this has been discussed in detail behind closed doors.

  33. BucsFanSince1996 Says:

    Joe Says:

    Such as?
    ——————————————————————————-

    If Bowles gets fired at the end of this upcoming season, are you interested in being the next head coach for the Bucs?

    (just kidding, I know you can’t ask that question) 😉

 

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