Archive for the ‘Recent Posts’ Category

Pointing A Finger At Mark Dominik

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

Yesterday in his monologue discussing the Bucs’ depressing loss to the Saints, Shaun King, who co-hosts the “too-Jewish” sounding King David Show along with Toby David, heard on WQYK-AM 1010, laid the blame for the loss at the feet of two individuals.

King, who is only one of three quarterbacks to lead the Bucs to an NFC title game, said Bucs quarterback Josh Freeman was to blame for the loss, as well as Bucs rock star general manager Mark Dominik.

Being a former NFL quarterback, he had some very interesting observations on what ails Freeman. But King saved most of his wrath for Dominik, who King believes has failed to stock the Bucs roster with requisite talent to win in the NFL, and lashed out at the third-year Bucs general manager.

Dominik expects Morris “to make lemonade but he doesn’t have any lemons or sugar,” King railed about Dominik.

The entire monologue can be heard by clicking on the little button below.

Audio courtesy of WQYK-AM 1010. [Tip O’the hat to Justin]

[audio: ShaunKingonSaints.mp3]

“Pop Warner” Fundamentals Doomed McCoy

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

Raheem Morris implied that technique, or lack thereof, had a lot to do with Gerald McCoy’s latest torn bicep against the Saints. That comment came at Raheem’s Monday afternoon news conference.

But during The Raheem Morris Show on WDAE-AM 620 last night, the head coach was asked to elaborate and made it clear that McCoy’s season-ending injury was the result of sloppy fundamentals.

“It goes back to Pop Warner. All your Pop Warner coaches tell you, ‘Don’t arm tackle.’ And that’s exactly why,” Raheem said. “You gotta put your chest on people. You gotta have your eyes up. Sky your eyes and do the right thing all the time, or it’s going to happen in football. You’re going to get hurt.”

McCoy is a painful loss for the Bucs. Though the Bucs have won games — this season and last — with Frank Okam starting, McCoy was improved this year and a key piece of the puzzle.

And it’s even more painful to lose McCoy to a “Pop Warner” mistake when he’s earning Hall of Fame money.

Raheem Morris’ Opt-Out Clause

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

Now before Joe gets rolling here, let Joe be crystal clear: Joe is not advocating in any way for a coaching change for the Bucs. To do so now is absurd; the Bucs are 4-4.

But if anything has taught Joe to never predict the future, it has been this week with Joe Paterno of all people, a true icon with a half-century of untarnished, pristine, stellar work on his resume, is now suddenly embroiled in the most sordid of ugly scandals that has rocked the American sports landscape to its very core.

It is with that background that Joe brings word of an interesting piece by good guy Charlie Campbell, a former Bucs beat reporter for Pewter Report.

Campbell now writes for WalterFootball.com and his main gig is monitoring the NFL draft, but he also writes about the NFL in general.

In a column he penned called “Non-Obvious Hotseats,” Campbell has four NFL coaches listed who could be out of work come the end of the season.

The fourth coach Campbell lists is Bucs coach Raheem Morris.

The Buccaneers could exercise an opt-out option in Morris contract to not have him return next season. One of the draws to Morris has been how cheap he has been for Tampa Bay. They have gotten their defensive coordinator and head coach for $2 million or less the past three seasons. Under former head coach Jon Gruden they were paying between $6-7 million for Gruden and coordinator Monte Kiffin. Next year is the first in which the Bucs owners, the Glazers, won’t be paying Gruden $4 million. Between that $4 million and the $2 million they would save from cutting Morris loose, they could sign a big-name head coach. Morris is well liked by the players, but the Glazers and general manager Mark Dominik may want a coach who evokes more disciplined and professional behavior on and off the field from himself and his players. Twice the Glazers have fired the franchise’s all-time winningest head coach in Gruden and Tony Dungy.

Campbell makes a point that Joe has made previously: Team Glazer sent community activist and fan favorite Father Dungy packing because he couldn’t get past the Eagles in the postseason, and because his concept of an offense made Woody Hayes roll in his grave.

Then Chucky came to town and won a Super Bowl. But, like Father Dungy, Chucky couldn’t develop a quarterback and found winning a playoff game dicey and he too was jettisoned.

Father Dungy and Chucky have far, far, far more pelts on the wall than Morris has.

Does Joe expect Team Glazer to exercise that opt-out clause? No.

Would it shock Joe if Team Glazer exercised that opt-out clause?

Absolutely not.

So tuck this little nugget away in the back of your cranium come January. As Joe shockingly found out over the weekend, if the saintly Paterno can be fingered for having a child predator roaming amid his football offices, any NFL team making a coaching change wouldn’t cause a ripple of surprise by comparison.

Clarification: Joe recognizes it was widely reported that the Bucs picked up the option on Raheem’s contract through 2012. However, this opt-out clause referenced by Campbell is something brand new. Joe can’t vouch for its accuracy, other than to say Campbell has excellent sources.

Teetering Between Good And Bad

Monday, November 7th, 2011

The Bucs are stuck in the middle. Really.

After watching the depressing loss to the Saints yesterday, the Bucs are teetering between a good team and a bad team, but not enough in either direction, so writes the Tampa Bay voice of reason, Joe Henderson of the Tampa Tribune.

The Bucs are not quite good enough to make the playoffs and not quite bad enough to get in a decent draft position.

In other words, the Bucs are stuck.

Coach Raheem Morris seems to understand the problems that helped put his team in this precarious position, which is good. His solutions, however, have failed to provide a remedy, so that’s bad.

If this keeps up, the Bucs could hang around on the fringes of the wild-card race, but raise your hand if you believe they’re good enough to actually crash the postseason party.

They hang their hat on being physical, yet the Saints out-hit them Sunday. They pride themselves on defense, but the Saints controlled the ball. They are young, which can mean exuberant. But they can’t control that exuberance, which leads to an absurdly large number of penalties. They had nine more for 80 yards against the Saints.

To have a realistic prayer of making the playoffs, the Bucs must win six of their next eight games. Even if the Bucs win 10 games, as we found out last year, that may not be enough. The Bucs still have to play the Packers, still have to play Houston, still have to play the Dixie Chicks again and two games against a dangerous Panthers team.

The way the Bucs have played the past couple of weeks, with issues such as penalties and impotent starting showing zero signs of evaporating, it may be too big of a hill for the Bucs to climb.

Dotson Takes Blame On 4th-And-1 Miss

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Joe must confess. With a scoreless game in the first quarter and the Bucs in field goal range, Joe was so certain Raheem Morris would kick a field goal on a 4th-and-1 from the Saints 28 yard line that Joe put down his notepad and headed to the fridge.

At the time, Joe couldn’t fathom Raheem not letting one of the surest kickers in the NFL, Connor Barth, give him a lead, so Joe opted to grab more guacamole and a fresh cold one.

But Raheem went for it instead, and LeGarrette Blount got stuffed. Raheem explained what went wrong on The Raheem Morris Show on WDAE-AM 620 tonight. He said Demar Dotson allowed too much spacing that gave Saints penetration and “caused LeGarrette Blount to stop-stutter his feet in the backfield.”

“We created too much space. We had some movement right there before the snap by a young football player,” Raheem said. “It’s got to be tight spacing. It has to be double blocked, double-team blocks driving people off the ball. That little bit of space, that little bit of movement at the end [caused] us to not execute that play effectively.”

Raheem also talked about the move to bring in Josh Johnson to convert what appeard to be an option call on 3rd-and-4, a move that perplexed Bucs fans but not the Saints defense. The head coach defended the call with vigor and said it was simply ineffective blocking that doomed the play..

Discussing Bucs-Saints Game

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Cris Carter and Alex Loeb break down the Bucs loss to the Saints in this BSPN video.

Shaun King Questions Dominik’s Drafts

Monday, November 7th, 2011

In addition to calling out the Bucs' drafts under Mark Dominik, Shaun King says "Josh Freeman stinks right now."

Rockstar general manager Mark Dominik isn’t a rockstar GM, so says former Bucs quarterback Shaun King.

In a passionate segment today on The King David Show on WQYK-AM 1010, co-host King read the name of every player in the 2009, 2010 and 2011 Bucs drafts in an attempt to reveal a list that doesn’t make the grade, and King said the Bucs’ picks have to be held to a higher scrutiny because of the Bucs’ build-through-the-draft philosophy.

King also commented that “Josh Freeman stinks right now” in many facets of the game.

“If you’re going to tell you’re fan base you’re going to build through the draft, then you have to have more names doing something,” King said. “And it has to happen quick or it’s going to come down on Raheem.”

King went on to say he can tell Freeman is being affected by the negative media coming his way, and King told a caller angry at Greg Olson to point a finger at Freeman for missing “wide open” Kregg Lumpkin and Erik Lorig on “wheel routes” that “should have been touchdowns.”

King said Freeman isn’t playing aggressively and wonders whether he can deal with criticism.

After yesterday’s game, Joe’s as angry and disappointed as the next fan, but Joe’s hardly ready to criticize Dominik’s three drafts. It’s too early to grade them completely and so far they stack up well against the league. Again, as Joe wrote earlier, the Bucs had enough talent to win 10 games last year and beat the Saints and Falcons this year.

It’s up to the coaches to figure out how to get the most out of the players on the roster. That’s the essence of coaching, and the coaches aren’t getting it done in 2011. 

“We Got Flat Out Outphysicaled”

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Raheem confirmed Gerald McCoy is done for the season with a torn bicep.

There was no lack of effort or drive from the Bucs’ defensive line yesterday, says Raheem Morris. It was just a matter of the Saints’ Pro Bowl guards dominating and the Bucs losing the battles in the trenches at defensive tackle and defensive end.

Morris shared his thoughts at his news conference today after getting a chance to watch the Bucs-Saints mess.

“We got flat out outphysicaled,” Raheem said of the DT and DE positions.

Raheem went on to say the ineffectiveness along the defensive line was not youth or inexperience. But he cited a great loss of Gerald McCoy in the run defense and confirmed that McCoy will go on injured reserve with a torn bicep (not the one he tore last year).

Raheem said he’s hopeful of a speedy return of Frank Okam, who missed yesterday’s game with a calf injury. As for adding help inside, Raheem said Da’Quan Bowers is not comfortable playing tackle and the Bucs would look to sign a player and have DE’s George Johnson and Michael Bennett available to play tackle.

“You Need To Give The Money Back”

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Former Bucs guard Ian Beckles (1990-1996) didn’t hold back his disgust with the Buccaneers this morning on the WDAE-AM 620 airwaves.

In no particular order:

*Beckles went off on the Bucs running a “counter” play on 4th-and-1 in the first quarter, in disbelief that the Bucs are inept in short yardage.

*Quincy Black is a “terrible football player,” Beckles said, calling Black worse than former Beckles punching bag Barrett Ruud. Black is worse, per Beckles, because “Ruud tackled.” Beckles implored Black to void his $11 million guaranteed contract he scored in the offseason. “You need to give the money back. You suck.”

*Beckles blasted the Bucs heirarchy saying, “We’re just saving money. That’s all we’re doing.”

*The Bucs don’t fly to the ball at all, evident on Saints successful screens.

*Beckles struggled to define yungry. “200 yards [allowed on the ground. That’s not yungry,” Beckles said. “Punching someone in the face on a dead ball. I guess that’s yungry.”

*LeGarrette Blount running out of bounds to finish a long run with a defensive back to beat left Beckles in disbelief.

*As usual, Beckles was flummoxed figuring out why the Bucs don’t run more.

Why Can’t The Coaches Fix Slow Starts?

Monday, November 7th, 2011

It’s a broken record. Yeah, Joe admits it. But it’s a glaring issue and trying to look the other way is irresponsible.

Now getting off to a slow start against the Saints doesn’t sting as much as doing the same against the Bears or the woebegone Dolts. Yet it is still an irritant.

This has gone from a nuisance to a menace for Raheem Morris and his coaching staff, as documented by eye-RAH! Kaufman of the Tampa Tribune, Twittering on the TBO Bucs Twitter feed yesterday.

The Bucs are halfway home. Through 8 games, they have not scored an offensive TD in the opening quarter. … That also makes it 62 consecutive games that the Bucs offense has scored 7 points or less in the first quarter.

Now Joe is aware that 62 games dates back to when Chucky was coach. Morris has been the Bucs coach for 40 games now.

But guess what, Chucky isn’t here any longer.

Joe has stated this before and will state it again: Morris is both defensive coordinator and head coach. That’s a helluva lot of responsibilities for one guy; that’s not just a full plate, that’s having vittles falling off the sides of the dish like a Thanksgiving buffet.

What would be the harm in hiring a consultant, say Brian Billick or Bill Cowher or Jimmy Johnson — hell, even George Siefert — to come in for two weeks and have access to every nook and cranny of football coaching elements at One Buc Palace and have them give their two cents worth as to what may be the root cause of this slow start malady?

Joe doesn’t think it’s out of bounds to suggest that there is some fly in the ointment of weekly preparation. Steady slow starts through 40 games, what else could it be?

NFL teams often hire outside consultants. At this point, what’s there to lose in trying this route to resolve this issue?

Joe doesn’t think it’s unreasonable to suggest that when Morris sits down with Bucs executives after the season, this will be issue No. 1.

Geno’s Last Days?

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Geno Hayes may have been immune to the effects of a good ol’ fashioned tasering, but the realities of the NFL struck him down yesterday.

He got benched, off a bye week no less. Quincy Black played for Hayes and Adam Hayward started at strong side linebacker. TampaBay.com beat writer Stephen Holder confirmed Hayes was sat down for performance reasons.

“We needed some better play out of the (weak-side) linebacker position,” Morris said.

Hayes conceded, “I just have to be more consistent. Got to keep it moving.”

This surely doesn’t bode well for Hayes’ future with the Bucs. He’s only 24, but a fourth-year veteran that will be an unrestricted free agent after the season. The benching, combined with Hayes’ past off-field incidents and rockstar general manager Mark Dominik professing a love of big physical players, sure makes it seem like Hayes has a foot out the door.

Remember, Raheem Morris said he expected “absolute dominance” from Hayes this season.

Blount Returns With A Punch

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Lost a bit in the Bucs’ third clunker in four games yesterday was the return of LeGarrette Blount.

He didn’t look at all like a guy coming off a knee injury. He was fresh. He was punishing. He even took the air like only he can. The grand unveiling of Blount as a busy third-down back never happened, something Joe can’t explain. (The Bucs of very old found ways to throw Mike Alstott the ball with some real estate ahead of him. Somebody needs to pull up that mid-90s film.)

Regardless, the Bucs even seemed willing to pound Blount at times, handing off to him three times to open their second series of the game, a sequence that saw Blount run for two first downs and 31 yards. On the next series he disappeard as the Bucs hung themselves with a 12-men-on-the-field penatly and pass interference calls on Arrellious Benn and Kellen Winslow.

Yeah, Joe knows Blount ran up the gut early in the third quarter and got up and slugged a Saints player in the helmet, prompting a personal foul and John Lynch to bring up Blount’s infamous college punch that kept him undrafted.

But Joe didn’t pay much attention to that. Given the endless stream of Bucs with stupid penalties, that 15-yard loss sort of fit right in to the Bucs’ course of play.

Ronde Barber Calls Bucs “Average.”

Monday, November 7th, 2011

To quote the immortal Herm Edwards, “you play to win the game.” At the end of the season, you hope either you have enough wins to make the playoffs or, this season, you have enough losses to qualify for Suck for Luck and draft Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck in next spring’s draft.

This season, it appears the Bucs will be in neither category. Veteran Bucs cornerback Ronde Barber went so far as to call the Bucs “average” while trying to explain how the team has found itself in it’s current predicament, per quotes obtained via the Bucs media relations staff.

When speaking of the perpetual slow starts, Barber hinted he doesn’t see the Bucs breaking out of this habit any time soon.

“It’s not a problem you correct in two weeks,” Barber said. “That has to be a mentality. We know what our issues are. They affect the outcome of the game, and they did today. It’s not like we don’t know what they are. We know what they are. We just have to get better at it.”

“[The Bucs] play kind of average to start the game and try to get back in it late. You can’t start slow versus good teams. We know that. We are 4-4. It’s an average record. We played average at times today. It is probably where we should be. You generally get what you deserve in this game. We don’t deserve to be top of the division right now, we aren’t playing like it.”

Props to Barber for keeping it real and not searching for the now tired cliches of how the team is “youngry” or that the coaches will go “back to the lab” and correct everything.

It’s high time for specific players that Joe doesn’t have to name, specifically on defense, to look in the mirror and ask themselves what they need to do in order to help their teammates out.

Why The Saints Won

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Mike Triplett and James Varney break down why the Bucs lost in this New Orleans Times-Picayune video.

Bucs Allowing 4.9 Yards Per Carry

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

Back during the heinous Jim Bates Experiment, the Bucs’ run defense was sliced and gashed repeatedly up the gut.

Nothing worked. And Joe trashed numerous remote control devices.

The Bucs then sent Bates packing and went with Raheem Morris’ vision of the Tampa-2 defense. Still nothing worked against the run, with the likes of Ryan Torain, Maurice Morris, Jason Snelling and other future Hall of Famers having career days against the Bucs.

The Bucs showed real flashes of stopping the run this year, but Tampa Bay is now allowing a whopping 4.9 yards per carry in 2011, up from 4.7 yards per carry last year and 4.8 yards in 2009.

For some perspective, over the past 20 years, the worst the Bucs allowed per carry before the Raheem era was 4.3 yards in 1996 and 2008.

During a recent interview, Derrick Brooks talked about the defense needing a mentality of fighting for every last blade of grass. With the lousy tackling the Bucs have shown of late, it’s pretty obvious the Bucs are light years from the good ol’ days to which Brooks was referring.

Bobby Fenton Is Fed Up

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

Joe’s good friend Bobby Fenton of WDAE-AM 620 is frustrated and has had it with the Bucs making excuses for poor play.

Fenton, who hosts a postgame call-in show on Sunday evenings, went off on a mini-tirade and scoffed at Bucs officials, if not players, for making excuses for awful play. He detailed his thoughts in the show’s monologue this evening.

“I’m tired of hearing how they battled, I don’t want to hear that any longer,” Fenton said. “Every team battles. You don’t see players lying down.

“I’m tired of hearing how they rallied. That’s garbage. Did you feel a tinge of excitement when they scored their last touchdown?

“I’m tired of hearing how they came back from this and battled back. Wah, wah, wah. And yet again they started off crappy. I don’t want to hear it. I don’t want to hear about the good things because there were not that many.

“OK, Josh Freeman didn’t throw a pick. He didn’t completely melt down. But I don’t think he played well at all. He missed a lot of big throws. I’m not just blaming him.

“The passing game… the hopelessness of anyone making a big play. As a whole, this receiving corps is very mediocre. [The Bucs] have no downfield passing game. They lack explosiveness.”

But Fenton did not devote his wrath to the offense. He saved few, yet choice words about the Bucs’ impotent defensive play Sunday in New Orleans.

“The defensive front was an absolute joke. Nobody can tackle. It was disgraceful.”

Have Your Say

Sunday, November 6th, 2011


Bucs Got Too Cute At Wrong Time

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

Now Joe has no problem with the Bucs trying something novel once in a while to mix things up and catch defenses snoozing.

No, reaching into the Jeff Bowden playbook and calling for an end-around by Arrelious Benn every game is not being creative. It. Does. Not. Work.

Earlier this year against the Dolts, the Bucs brought in backup quarterback Josh Johnson to run an option, which Joe thought was cool. It was very different; had not been seen before and got a first down.

With the Bucs offense trying to swim upstream and down 14-3, the Bucs were deep in Saints territory and had a very makeable third-and-four on the Saints-23 just inside the two-minute warning.

With LeGarrette Blount starting to warm up, with receivers finally getting open, the Bucs brought in Johnson on third down.

WHAT??? Look, even people walking with white canes could see this would be a running play, a run to his right. It’s not like the Saints never saw this play before.

Of course the Saints held him to a one-yard gain, forcing a field goal.

FOX analyst John Lynch immediately said, “I hate to be critical but I don’t know about that play. You take your best player off the field to run a gimmick on a makeable third down.”

Lynch was right. Using Johnson on an option on second down, Joe’s OK with that. But not on a critical third down when you are trailing on the road to the Saints when field goals won’t get the job done.

Wrong place, wrong time for trying to outsmart the Saints.

Benn An Afterthought Again

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

In what was billed as the deepest draft in the history the modern NFL, the Bucs selected Arrellious Benn early in the second round last year.

Benn has proven he’s dangerous. Mark Dominik said two weeks ago the Bucs need to use Benn more. Last week Raheem Morris said he wants Benn more involved. Is anyone getting these messages to Greg Olson? Somebody send Olson two scantily clad cheerleaders each holding a sign — one that reads “Use,” the other “Benn.”

Benn was thrown to twice today and caught both balls. He runs strong after the catch. What the hell’s going on? If he’s not open, then dial up plays that get him the ball. And the not the stupid end-around that never works.

Crosstrain the guy to be a third down back if you have to. Benn’s been a beast on special teams, and Joe suspects he can block and do more with the checkdown than Kregg Lumpkin. (Of course, Joe’s reaching for effect with that one.)

The Bucs offense isn’t good enough to let a talent like Benn go unused repeatedly.

After the Saints-Bucs game on the Buccaneers Radio Network today, Benn blamed himself and his teammates.
“We were out there playing fast [when the offense was clicking],” Benn said. “We weren’t executing and that is all on us. The saints did everything we have seen. We knew what we were doing, just simply didn’t execute. 
 
Asked what Raheem said to the team after the game, Benn was speechless. “I don’t even want to answer that question,” Benn said.
 
In a game where the Bucs were forced to play catch up and throw the ball more than they hoped, Joe’s just not getting how the ball’s only heading Benn’s way twice. Either Freeman or Olson has no confidence in him.

Gerald McCoy Out For The Year

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

The ugly loss to the Saints just got worse.

Far, far worse.

Per Rick Stroud of the St. Petersburg Times, he has Twittered that the Bucs’ disruptive defensive tackle is lost for the year.

@NFLSTROUD: Bucs DT Gerald McCoy is out for the year with a right arm injury, players say.

This is the second year in a row that GMC has been lost for the season. This being GMC’s second season, it appeared he was going to be a force for the Bucs and did make an impact on the opponents’ rushing attack when he was in the game.

This is just terrible news, and the way the Saints gutted the Bucs on the ground, in particular freight-training Quincy Black more than once, imagine what Adrian Foster will do?

UPDATE: Per Stephen Holder of the St. Petersburg Times, GMC has torn biceps in his right arm.

McCoy, the NFL’s No. 3 overall draft pick in 2010, suffered a torn biceps in his left arm last season, but now is said to have torn the right biceps.

“Hey, stuff like that happens, man,” DT Brian Price said. “I feel bad for him because he had the same injury last year, just on the other arm. My heart goes out to him because I know how hard it is being on I.R. I just hope he gets better.

Has The Coaching Regressed?

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

Joe doesn’t want to hear the argument that the Bucs don’t have enough talent. Joe’s far more concerned with what the coaches are doing with the talent they have.

That’s coaching — getting the most out of your roster.

Joe can’t imagine there are any Bucs fans that think the Bucs are playing their best football, or anywhere close to it. This team is not better than last year’s bunch.

Joe sees Greg Olson unable to get any kind of identity on offense and dial up what’s necessary to get his offense in a rhythm to start a game. Joe would love to get a look at that pregame “script.” (If Joe sees that sinful Arrellious Benn end-around one more time, he’s going to punch a wall.) Olson’s offense was ranked 10th in the NFL for the second half of the 2010 season. Where did it go?

Looking at Raheem Morris, the defensive coordinator, Joe sees a guy that simply hasn’t figured out how to consistently craft a pass rush, stop big plays and get the most out of his emerging stars on defense. The stats are so bad they’re not lying. The Bucs are on pace for fewer sacks than they had last year (24 total), and the team is near the cellar in many defensive categories.

Raheem the head coach has a team committing all kinds penalties. And the guy hasn’t found a way to get his team to play with a sense of urgency from the opening whistle, which, to be perfectly honest, is the head coach’s primary job — to get guys to play for him.

Joe’s seeing a team that has regressed on both sides of the ball, and given the youth on the team and the relative continuity on the roster, Joe’s having a hard time not laying blame on the coaching staff.

Waving The White Flag

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

Just about the entire ugly loss to the Saints could be summed up in one decision.

For much of the game, the Bucs could generate little offense. It was early in the fourth quarter and the Bucs trailed by three scores, 24-6.

The Bucs took over at their own 25 and drove down the field before a drive stalled at the New Orleans-7. Fourth-and-goal.

Rather that being bold and going for a touchdown, someone on the Bucs sideline — offensive coordinator Greg Olson or head coach Raheem Morris — decided the game was over. Time to mail it in.

So Connor Barth was sent out to kick a field goal.

If was the football version of waving the white flag and giving up.

“You can’t kick field goals,” Morris said on the Bucs radio network after the game. “That’s what prevents you from winning ballgames.”

If that is the case, why did Morris — or Olson — decide to kick a field goal when the Bucs were knocking on the door? The drive was the best of the game for the Bucs and the coaching staff decided to hoist the white flag. At least it smelled that way to Joe.

Saints 27, Bucs 16

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

The heinous stench of mediocrity (or worse) now hangs over the 4-4 Bucs, which sit in third place in the NFC South.

Not since 2009 has a Raheem Morris team turned out consecutive clunkers. And that’s what happened today.

It would have been one thing go up to New Orleans and play well and lose, but the Bucs looked inept and lost at times on offense. The painfully dumb penalties continued (nine penalties for 80 yards) and the defensive line was dominated — no pass rush and repeatedly carved up the gut (seven yards per carry). All around the tackling was hardly that of the “yungry” team Raheem talks about.

Adam Hayward apparently starting for Geno Hayes didn’t make a darn difference.

Gerald McCoy got hurt very early in the game. And while some might pile on calling him a bust, Joe thinks that tag, if it’s to be used, is better suited to Roy Miller. The Bucs sure missed Frank Okam, who started the last two times the Bucs beat the Saints.

At least Josh Freeman looked better. Is there so little open downfield? Joe sure can’t figure out the Bucs’ playcalling. So much for LeGarrette Blount on third down.

Stick with Joe through the night for more on this head-shaker of a game.