Adjusting To An Edge Rush

February 23rd, 2026

How skilled is Rueben Bain covering receivers?

Joe read an interesting breakdown of edge rushers. It motivated Joe to try to think outside the box.

Ben Solak of BSPN typed a piece ranking and discussing the best positions to find available help this offseason, combining both free agency and the draft.

When it comes to an edge rush, Solak, without mentioning teams, suggested if a general manager cannot find an edge rusher this offseason, it may be time for change.

But Joe thinks that is irresponsible. Finding a player is half the battle. The other half is for the coaching staff to put the guy in position to make plays and to coach him up.

Since Todd Bowles took over the Bucs, the closest the Bucs have had to an edge rusher is YaYa Diaby, who had 7.5 sacks his rookie year (2023), his high-water mark.

Solak rattled off all sorts of players, in theory, could help the Bucs’ edge rush. What Solak did not address is how well all of those players perform in pass coverage.

Look, Joe’s not going to be a hypocrite and rag on Bowles’ for dropping guys in coverage. Every team does it. But it does seem Bowles is more concerned with edge rushers playing like safeties rather than edge rushers.

Bowles has repeatedly said when the subject of an edge rush comes up — something along the lines of, “We ask them to do other things.”

For example, of the hundreds of draft reports on players we will all read between now and the draft in two months, Joe is willing to bet a cold draft beer that nowhere will you read about Miami edge rusher Rueben Bain’s skillset covering running backs downfield on passing downs.

Of all the edge rushers, free agents and draft prospects Solak cited, how many of those guys could come in, learn Bowles’ system, and not get benched for poor pass defense?

If the Bucs land a talented edge rusher either in free agency or the draft (or both?), Joe just hopes Bowles is willing to adjust and allow the guy to earn what he is being paid to do: get after the quarterback first and foremost.

If you want to drop the guy into coverage every now and then, OK. But focus the guy on the very reason he will be on the Bucs roster.

11 Responses to “Adjusting To An Edge Rush”

  1. Truth be Told Says:

    All we need is One-a guy that can get to the Passer and affect the game when its needed. Is that asking too much? The Shaq days were a long time ago. We need double digit sack guy to return and help our Putrid Pass Defense that is back for another go this year! Get off the Field on 3rd down by any means (players wise) possible.

  2. Todd Says:

    Please sign a proven edge in FA, as you have proven you cannot draft onbe or speculate one on the cheap.

  3. HopetheBucswin Says:

    Why would an edge rusher want to come to a team that reduces his chance of sacks. That’s how they make the big money. Unless he is on his last leg.

  4. rrsrq Says:

    The problem was Shaq Barrett dominating, JPP reaching double-digit sacks. Now Bowles is sold that everybody can do what they did. So he drafts players, eeeerrr Bucs Men, to fit his system, it becomes difficult to sign a free agent pass rusher, who wants to rush the passer. What if there is an incentive for sacks, and in the last game of the season, Bowles has the pass rusher drop back?

  5. OrlandoBucFan Says:

    I love that you mentioned Bain. It would be a misuse of talent to have him drop into coverage, but if you allow him to do what he does best, he’ll radically energize our pass rush. Dude is a Beast!

    Instead of trading for Maxx Crosby, trade up for Bain. Bain has more upside and will cost less in the short-term.

  6. Joe Says:

    Why would an edge rusher want to come to a team that reduces his chance of sacks. That’s how they make the big money. Unless he is on his last leg.

    Ding!

    Instead of trading for Maxx Crosby, trade up for Bain. Bain has more upside and will cost less in the short-term.

    Joe trusts Crosby in this defense more than a rookie. When Bowles develops his first edge rusher, call Joe.

    Ransom would probably be the same.

  7. Ufc Says:

    At what point do they just kick this guy outta the building? The mere basic premise that he cant look past his own ego and admit his defense sucks is a problem. U see it in his coaching decisions and the lack of accountability with letting qb stand there and rip his defense apart all over the field. If I owned this team id point blank look him in the eye and ask are yiu fcking blind or just stupid? Change your defense. Get a pass rush and simplify it before I throw your ass on the streets. Msybe thats the only language this guy understands. Bc judging by what I see now. In one ear. Out the the other.

  8. Dave Ball Says:

    When you run the 3-4 against the 12, you have 2 like YaYa and Hassan on the edge. If they both rush, that’s 5 rushing. That’s a blitz. It’s normal to drop one of them.

  9. Ballwasher61 Says:

    Shaq & JPP regularly got the QB on the ground and won their battles. Since then it’s been an “almost there” defense when it comes to sacks. You have to have a guy that gets there consistently to be able to fool the offense and drop a guy from the line back into coverage and the other rusher has to get home or it’s a busted play. If this team had 1 or 2 guy’s that could be successful sacking the QB I don’t think Bowles runs that as much, it’s a trick play used to try to create a sack or turnover not one to be used constantly. I think he used it more because he didn’t have the horses to get to the QB so he relied on trickery and confusion than straight up muscle to sack the QB.

  10. BucsfaninOregon Says:

    Joe, here’s a hat’s off to you. To day after day trying to bring normalcy to a discussion of edge rushers in the current Buc environment has to be like pushing a big rock up a hill. Tough and totally worthless.

    When those incompetent Glaziers kept this grossly inept HC and GM(?), it turned a fan since 1978 like me into a troll. I can remember back when Detroit had a guy named Les Bingaman. He was the first 300+ player I remember back decades ago. He destroyed the middle of the line for opponents. Don’t recall seeing him drop into coverage.

    Sure teams occasionally have linemen drop into coverage to surprise opponents. Do do it 50% and it no longer surprises anyone. Combined with a GM that keeps a worthless JTS and a “surprising” Braswell as edge rushers and you have a total, out of control dumpster fire of a defense. Good luck trying to sell fans on this club as configured. “Third and 28”, should be discussed in his exit interview.

  11. MelvinJunior Says:

    No matter what you say, Bowles will make a BS excuse and respond with the opposite. Lickt is just like his dumb little puppy dog jumping around and waggin’ his tail. Totally, CLUELESS. They don’t know what the hell they’re doing.

 

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