Keionte Scott May Be Better Than You Think

May 1st, 2026

So Matt Miller of BSPN thinks out of the top 46 players drafted, based on convoluted criteria he hatched, the Bucs had three of the best picks, steals and fits in last week’s draft.

The highest on Miller’s board, as you can see here, was Bucs nickel corner Keionte Scott, who Miller was a big fan of entering the draft.

23. Keionte Scott, S/CB, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Pick 4-116)
My final overall ranking:
No. 46

Scott somehow fell to Round 4 despite being ranked as a top-50 player on my board. But Tampa Bay picked up the best blitzing cornerback in the draft and a player with starting safety or nickel cornerback traits. Scott’s initial position will be settled in camp, but the Buccaneers announced the selection with him listed at safety. If that’s where he plays, he will likely align opposite Tykee Smith while allowing Antoine Winfield Jr. to be a bit of a rover. There is also an option where Scott replaces Jamel Dean at outside cornerback — something he did at Auburn before finding success in a hybrid nickel role after transferring to Miami.

Stop it! Scott was a mediocre corner at Auburn. Maybe. He’s a nickel corner. Not outside corner, but nickel corner.

And from there, Bucs coach Todd Bowles will use Scott to blitz heavily and to wrap up ballcarriers in the middle of the field.

Scott really does have a nose for ball behind the line of scrimmage. Last year, he had 13 tackles for loss at The U.

@thenevinshapiroshow Keionte Scott is teaming up with a familiar face in Tampa Him and Rueben Bain on the same defense is not a site that other teams want to see They did it in college and they’re prepared to do it again in the NFL Is Tampa gonna be a problem for teams next year? What will the Buccaneers record be? Comment above👆🏻♬ original sound – The Nevin Shapiro Show

24 Responses to “Keionte Scott May Be Better Than You Think”

  1. Jwg813 Says:

    Hes a dawg and a ball hawk. Please use him accordingly

  2. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    When you play in the 4-2-5 as much as we do, having a nickel that can tackle, cover the first 2 levels of the defense, plays with physicality and bring pressure as a blitzer in the box, you have a player like Scott that is as valuable as a 3rd ILB.

    Can’t wait to see how he gets used in-scheme and I’m thinking Scott is going to play that gray area like Whitehead and what we thought we’d get out of Keanu Neal in ’22 or Deone Bucannon back in ’19. The latter made a name for himself after being drafted by the Cardinals and going from safety to playing LB in a hybridized role. Prowling the box, covering the flats, and erasing YAC opportunities on screens.

  3. Lakeland Says:

    Keionte Scott will be a 25 year old rookie

    He’s not as raw as a young guy like Josiah Trotter
    Scott is well traveled, dude been around
    He knows the game of football, he’s not a spring chick
    He will be able to step in day one

  4. 813bucboi Says:

    just put him in position to do what he does best!!!!

    i think he’ll be used like SMB…but Scott is more physical…he’ll cover the slot wr and blitz from the nickel

    GO BUCS!!!!

  5. Truth be Told Says:

    This guy is Really going to get a chance to have a Big Impact on improving that Putrid Pass Defense. There are going to be what 7 New players on D? Can do nothing but Help. Love the Miami guys attitudes addition to this lifeless Defense. Go Bucs!!

  6. DS Says:

    Bowles is the DB whisperer

  7. football 1 Says:

    This guy looks to be the real deal. He is sorely needed in th Bucs secondary, I know that. I hope he can start at nickel. That means Parrish will move to one of the outside corner positions. I don’t believe either McColumn or Morrison are starting caliber corners. I still think we need to get one more corner that can start. Yes I hope Scott is the real deal!!

  8. Ash Says:

    Scott will be the nickle there is no denying that but you stop it joe he absolutely could develop into an outside corner just like your crush parish is looking to do.

  9. Defense Rules Says:

    Warren Brooks Lynch … ‘When you play in the 4-2-5 as much as we do …’

    Do we really play a 4-2-5 or do we play a 2-4-5 WBL? I guess it comes down to ‘Is an OLB a DE or is he a LB?’ Personally I think that’s been our problem: Bowles has been putting only 2 DLinemen on the field far too often. And then we wonder why our pass rush sucks. And oh ya, why our Run Defense gave up 4.3 YPC last season, far too many explosive runs, and why our RedZone TD Percentage Allowed ballooned to 69.8%.

    Winn Dixie gave us the answer: ‘Where’s the beef?’ We weren’t big enough and we weren’t nasty enough. And oh ya, we weren’t numerous enough up-front. Took this coaching staff 4 years to figure out that losing beastly DLinemen like Suh is detrimental. This idea of ‘going light’ (drafting DLinemen like Hall & Kancey instead of true beasts like Suh) doesn’t work IMO unless your DLine has enough beef to compensate. Ours didn’t, and our defense has gone downhill these past 2 years especially.

  10. Teacherman Says:

    He ran a 4.33. He’s an elite athlete.

    Josh Parrish will start at outside CB.

    Scott will get the chance to start at nickle.

    Morrison will backup Zion and Parrish.

    We are still very thin at CB.

    I really hope we find 3 more corners.

  11. Buccaneer Bonzai Says:

    Joe, you forgot to mention his 5 sacks.

  12. Lakeland Says:

    Keionte Scott could be a better SS than Nickel.
    I’m not really sold on Tykee Smith at SS
    He left too many plays on the field last season
    He missed too many tackles

  13. Buccaneer Bonzai Says:

    Honestly…he reminds me of John Lynch a little.

    He’ll have to do more than blitz, otherwise teams will know a blitz is coming when he’s on the field. I can see him playing as a nickle…and as a safety at times.

    He may not be an edge guy, but he is a pass rusher.

    This kid, as he develops, may become one of the best. He has room for growth, so he’s going to need some developmental time, but I agree with Lakeland…Scott wil contribut day one.

  14. Buckit Says:

    The U is all about nassty, and we got two of their top defenders that will show that on the field.

  15. Lakeland Says:

    I agree Defense Rules

    The 4-2-5 was our weakness
    It left us too thin up front with Vita and an undersized DT
    And we had undersized OLB, especially Hassan Reddick
    And undersized ILB, both LVD and Dennis
    Small Safeties, we were too small and weak

    But with our new additions to the defense
    I think a 4-2-5 will be a more efficient defense
    For both, against the run as well as against the pass

  16. Lakeland Says:

    A 4-2-5 defense with Keionte Scott as the ” Rover”
    It’s a versatile defense, capable of showing different looks

  17. Buccaneer Bonzai Says:

    Teacherman Says:
    .”I really hope we find 3 more corners”

    That would be 7 corners, when 6 is normally the number.

    Currently, the projected opening day roster would be something like this:

    Offense (23–24 Players)
    Quarterbacks (2): Baker Mayfield, Jake Browning

    Running Backs (3-4): Bucky Irving, Kenneth Gainwell, Sean Tucker, Josh Williams

    Wide Receivers (6-7): Chris Godwin Jr., Jalen McMillan, Emeka Egbuka, Ted Hurst, Tez Johnson, Kameron Johnson, David Sills

    Tight Ends (4): Cade Otton, Payne Durham, Ko Kieft, Bauer Sharp

    Offensive Linemen (8-9): Tristan Wirfs (T), Ben Bredeson (G), Graham Barton (C), Cody Mauch (G), Luke Goedeke (T), Ben Chukwuma (T), Elijah Klein (G), Dan Feeney (G), Billy Schrauth (G)

    Defense (26–27 Players)
    Defensive Line (5-6): Calijah Kancey, Vita Vea, A’Shawn Robinson, Rakeem Nunez-Roches, Nash Hutmacher, DeMonte Capehart

    Outside Linebackers (5-6): Yaya Diaby, Rueben Bain Jr., Chris Braswell, Anthony Nelson, Mohamed Kamara, David Walker

    Inside Linebackers (4): Josiah Trotter, SirVocea Dennis, Alex Anzalone, Christian Rozeboom

    Cornerbacks (6): Zyon McCollum, Benjamin Morrison, Jacob Parrish, Keionte Scott, Josh Hayes, Chase Lucas

    Safeties (4-5): Antoine Winfield Jr., Tykee Smith, Miles Killebrew, J.J. Roberts

    Specialists (3 Players)Kicker: Chase McLaughlinPunter: Riley DixonLong Snapper: Evan Deckers

    All of this is very subject to change at the moment, of course. For example, if Scott replaces one of the safeties , they could save a 6th CB spot to use on another position if the need to.

  18. Lakeland Says:

    The defensive draft picks and the defensive free agents signings
    Are more of a fit for the 4-2-5 defense than a 2-4-5 defense
    Rueben Bain plays better with his hand n the dirt
    Josiah Trotter is a solid 4-3 MIKE, he’s a run stuffing MIKE

    His strength is blitzing the QB, shooting gaps
    Keionte Scott strength is playing close to the LOS (Rover)
    Blitzing the QB, shooting gaps, covering RB and TE

  19. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    “Do we really play a 4-2-5 or do we play a 2-4-5 WBL? I guess it comes down to ‘Is an OLB a DE or is he a LB?”

    It’s lends to the plurality of our defense, DR.

    We get too caught up on the positional designation of the guys on the LOS. That’s why I push back on the “is it a 3-4 or a 4-3” because one or two personnel changes it can be either. Bring a 3rd DLmen on the interior with 5 men on the LOS, it’s our Bear front with an actual 0-tech over the center.

    Our OLBs function as OLBs AND DEs, but technically the player positioned inside of our OLBs play the role of DTs. Vita isn’t lining up over the C on a consistent basis, but positionally is regarded as a nose tackle. Sometimes Vita shades the outside shoulder of a guard to cap control and in pass situations may line up head on with the guard to push the pocket.

    I believe our lapses in our historically sound run defense, is that we haven’t had the juice at LB to help direct traffic partly because we haven’t had 2 interior 2-gappers or “beef” as you refer to it. Let’s be clear, I’ve been agreeing on needing to get bigger on the inside to help, but I think with the addition of guys like Anazlone and especially Trotter, we’ve revitalized our the psychality and athleticism at off-ball ILB.

    The majority of Keionte Scotts’ snaps at Miami where out of a 4-2-5 alignment, which allowed him to see the field on 58%(561 reps) on a Miami defense that played 1,005 snaps.

    The beauty of a 4-2-5 and having a big, physical nickel like Scott is you don’t lose what you’d have in a 3rd off-ball LBer in a tradtional 4-3 in run support and you can get that extra defender that can play support in the box while helping contain any route concept designed to breach the 2nd level.

    Exactly why Bowles told Scott he’d fit in our scheme like a glove, because we’ll be asking him to do exactly what he did at The U out of the same alignment. Kind of helps straighten out w/e learning curve Scott would have transitioning to the pro game. Still, with new teammates and a higher level of compeition as a pro there’ll still be a curve, but in my opinion Scotts’ got the tools to transtion as well as Jacob Parrish did.

    4-2-5 isn’t a “weakness” it’s a reaction to NFL offenses running spread/rpo-style offenses that gained their popularity for the better part of the last 2 decades.

  20. D-Rok Says:

    Of all the additions to our team since the season ended, I’m most excited about seeing Scott play, and Bain is a very close second.

    Scott is selfless and vicious. In his highlight reels, I saw take on multiple blockers, including O-linemen, in order to allow others to make the tackle.

    THAT is a football player!

  21. jcscycles Says:

    Scott is the real deal. Excellent tackler, and he wraps up. So do Bain and Trotter

  22. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    “Of all the additions to our team since the season ended, I’m most excited about seeing Scott play, and Bain is a very close second.”

    Same, loved the Bain pick, but Scotts’ my favorite. It’s like we called up ACME co. and ordered human dynamite

  23. Marine Buc Says:

    I remember when the Bucs drafted T. Smith.

    I felt the same way then as I do now. We got Scott in round #4. That is a steal of a deal my friends.

    I’m a Canes fan and I can’t believe the Bucs got two of my favorite players…

    Awesome.

  24. Lakeland Says:

    Keionte Scott is a (Rover)

    He’s a hybrid SS/SLB/CB, all in one
    He don’t belong 20-25 yards upfield covering a WR
    He belongs close to the Line of Scrimmage
    Blitzing the QB, shooting gaps, covering crossing routes
    That’s where you get his best play, his highest production

    I think Todd Bowles will be running a 4-2-5 defense the majority of the time

 

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