Archive for the ‘Recent Posts’ Category

Bucs Make Martin Move To No. 1 Back Official

Monday, August 27th, 2012

Hmmm, there was one significant change to the depth chart released tonight.

Joe’s not naive enough to believe that the New Schiano Order makes uncalculated moves.

Every detail has a meaning.

So it’s worth noting that the new depth chart released by the Bucs this evening in advance of Wednesday’s Bucs-Redskins game shows Doug Martin as the starting running back. The three previous depth charts issued by the Bucs all had LeGarrette Blount as the No. 1 RB.

Joe sees no other significant changes to the depth chart other than those that reflect players waived today and Ted Larsen stepping up for injured Davin Joseph.

Of course, the cut-and-paste job at running back could be a Schiano move to confuse the Carolina Panthers or send a message to Blount. Regardless, Joe expects Blount will get his chance to run over Luke Kuechly on opening day.

Bucs Make Cuts

Monday, August 27th, 2012

Bad news came for 10 Buccaneers this afternoon as Tampa Bay made its first round of preseason cuts. The following names are now former Bucs:

WR Ed Gant
P Eric Guthrie
T Mike Ingersoll
LB Brian Smith
S Tramain Thomas
CB Marquese Wheaton
RB De’Anthony Curtis
LS Andrew DePaola
WR Greg Ellingson
TE Collin Franklin

Also, Davin Joseph was placed on injured reserve and Da’Quan Bowers is on reserve/PUP.

Do Your Job!

Monday, August 27th, 2012

One of the great things about having the NFL Network from its inception is the tremendous content from NFL Films. It truly is artwork what the Sabols do.

(Out House customers: How does it feel now to know that your satanic cable outfit has you in shackles after Time Warner last week became the lone top 10 cable distributor refusing to allow sports fans to enjoy one of the most popular networks, holding football fans hostage while shoving channels down your throat like NY1, LOGO, countless shopping channels which is a gigantic waste of natural resources, and that nonsense yenta news channel that rebroadcasts tripe like a lost rabbit in Westchase 12 times a day?)

Last year, in its series, “A Football Life,” a particular episode was devoted to Bill Belicheat. An NFL Films crew shadowed Belicheat for a full year and it was really cool insight. During one game, Belicheat implored his team over and over to “just do your job!”

Apparently, that cry has been heard by Bucs defenders after being echoed by one of Belicheat’s disciples, Greg Schiano.

The Bucs defense played lights out against the Tom Bradys Friday. Better than any Bucs defense has played in some time in Joe’s eyes. Yes, it was preseason, but that was against the Patriots’ No. 1 offense.

What, you think Belicheat wanted Brady to get punished the way he did Friday?

What amazed Joe was that the Bucs shut down Brady and Company with several backup players filling critical holes.

Mason Foster was nursing a tender hamstring and didn’t suit up. Gerald McCoy was the victim of a borderline dirty hit to the knee and logged just four plays. Adrian Clayborn had the rare but dreaded elbow/scrotum injury.

And still the Bucs defense smothered the Pats.

Why? Michael Bennett told Joe it was simply a matter of players just doing their jobs.

“Coaches are doing a great job of coaching us and guys are buying in every single week,” Bennett said. “Guys are buying in more and more. The defense is working.

“Guys are out there doing their job. It’s good to see guys doing exactly what they are coached to do. I think that is exactly what happened. We can’t go with many highs and lows. I just want to be consistent each week. I try not to let the highs and lows of plays get to me.”

Guys are doing what they are instructed to do. Imagine.

Joe knows one reason why Geno Hayes was benched last year and is no longer with the team is that he tended to do a little too much freelancing.

There is no such thing as freelancing in the New Schiano Order. And just look at the results.

Sean Jones Cut

Monday, August 27th, 2012

Joe likes to keep tabs on select former Buccaneers, and Joe finds it noteworthy that serial loafer Sean Jones is back on the free agent market after being cut today from the Lions.

With Cody Grimm teetering on the Bucs’ roster bubble, that means the Bucs’ starting safeties  from 2011 — aka The Wolfs — are battling to stay in the league. Though Joe has no doubt Grimm will latch on somewhere if he were cut from the Bucs.

Keeping with the same theme, Luke McCown was axed from the Saints, sackless Kyle Moore survived today’s first wave of cuts in Buffalo, and Kellen Winslow and Dezmon Briscoe caught touchdown passes this weekend. Briscoe has drawn great reviews up in Washington.

Dominik-Schiano Poring Over Personnel

Monday, August 27th, 2012

Joe knows many Bucs fans assume that Bucs rockstar general manager Mark Dominik is nothing more than a figurehead under the New Schiano Order.

Hell, Stephen Holder of the Tampa Bay Times advised readers that Schiano is more powerful than Tom Coughlin, Mike McCarthy and Norv Turner.

Dominik, however, painted a different picture Friday, and surely a more accurate one during an interview with Gene Deckerhoff on the Buccaneers Radio Network.

Deckerhoff asked Dominik about crafting the roster with Greg Schiano.

“We have sat down almost every day for multiple hours,” Dominik said. “We meet everyday on it, Gene.”

Joe realizes cynical Bucs fans likely believe Dominik is only running the overhead projector and managing the established room temperature in these meetings, but Joe’s quite confident Dominik retains significant power and influence, if not a tiebreaking say.

Dominik went on to tell Deckerhoff how prepared the Bucs are for the waiver wire and “that second draft,” when roughly 1,500 players are cut around the league this week.

Will Joseph Ever Play For The Bucs Again?

Monday, August 27th, 2012

Davin Joseph’s contract presents an interesting reality: He might never play another snap for the Bucs.

Per Rotoworld.com, part of the NBC Sports family, Joseph’s seven-year, $52.5 million deal signed before the 2011 season only included two guaranteed contracts, $9.5 million for the 2011 and 2012 seasons. After that the Bucs could cut ties with Joseph, who turns 30 next season, without cash ramifications.

Joseph’s patellar tendon injury is serious. That’s what screwed up Cadillac Williams — twice — and other NFL players have struggled to even return from it. Can Joseph even get back to training camp in 10 months?

Joe’s a big Joseph fan, and his injury is a huge loss. But the Bucs are forced to move on for 2012. If the new guard is solid, Joe doubts Joseph will put his hand on the ground for the Bucs again.

Coach Of The Week

Monday, August 27th, 2012

Friday night, Joe walked away impressed with the new defense led by Bucs coach Greg Schiano. The Bucs defense seemed to rise from the dead and stonewalled one of the most potent offenses in the NFL.

It seems the Bucs defense caught the eye of scone-loathing, cricket-watching, Marriott-hopping Peter King of Sports Illustrated. In his must-read Monday Morning Quarterback column today, King lauds Schiano for his work transforming a horrid lot into what is starting to look like a formidable squad.

Coach of the Week
Tampa Bay coach Greg Schiano.
In the span of a month, without top pass rusher Da’Quan Bowers, Schiano and defensive coordinator Bill Sheridan have put a tough stamp on their defense. On Friday night, Tom Brady and one of the NFL’s three best offenses had the ball nine times. Five times Brady went three-and-out; once four-and-out. He had two long touchdown drives. By the time Ryan Mallett came in to replace Brady, the Bucs led 30-14.

Well, Joe thinks King left out some salient information that makes what the Bucs defense did Friday even more impressive.

The Bucs did not have the services of starting middle linebacker Mason Foster, who sat out the game with a tender hamstring. Then, defensive tackle Gerald McCoy went out early in the game on a borderline dirty hit. Then, defensive end Adrian Clayborn.

Three of the Bucs’ top defensive players in the front seven played sparingly, and they still put the hurt on Tom Brady and company.

Joe will have a story a bit later today with a little nugget on just how the Bucs defense has changed under the New Schiano Order.

The Slander Of LeGarrette Blount

Monday, August 27th, 2012

As reports out of One Buc Palace over the past few days indicate, it looks like rookie running back Doug Martin will be the Bucs No. 1 running back come Sept. 9 when the Bucs open the season against the stinking Panthers.

And Joe is OK with that because it appears the running back race was won fair and square. As Joe told Toby David of WHFS-FM after the game Friday night, that just means Martin will be No. 1A and LeGarrette Blount will be No. 1B, as Bucs coach Greg Schiano has stated he will have a two-headed monster of a running back attack.

One person who isn’t ready to shovel sand in Blount’s face is Alan Dell of the Bradenton Herald. Dell rages in a column about how Blount has been demonized for reasons unknown and simply cannot understand why so many would be so quick to release a guy who two years ago averaged five yards a carry. It was “as if there were a Pulitzer at stake,” Dell writes.

Blount dismisses criticism that he can’t understand blocking schemes well enough to be on the field on third down and that his hands are made of stone. He says he can be an effective receiver out of the backfield, particularly with his size.

Blount says Martin’s arrival has not changed the way he approaches the game, that he was going to improve his ball security regardless.

“I am OK with Doug. He is a good player, and they drafted him for a reason. I know they appreciate what I do. If they didn’t I wouldn’t be here,” he says.

Joe thought it was an absolute joke how people claimed Blount couldn’t catch out of the backfield when Joe saw with his own eyes Blount catching passes in practice and last season.

If Blount was so awful, why would Earnest Graham sing his praises so?

Again, Martin ran the ball much better than Blount last week. Sure, Blount may have been dinged up, but that’s what depth at that position is for. And that’s exactly why Martin was drafted.

Blount’s biggest problem last year? Two words: Greg Olson.

Tough Task To Replace Davin Joseph

Sunday, August 26th, 2012

The Bucs’ desire to ram the ball down people’s throats took a nasty blow Friday night when All-Pro right guard Davin Joseph went down with a season-ending patella injury.

If the Bucs are to go with the old Raheem Morris mantra “Next man up,” that would be reserve Ted Larsen. But after being questioned at his day-after press conference Saturday, Bucs coach Greg Schiano didn’t seem to hand the job over to Larsen so quickly, reports Brad Biggs of the NationalFootballPost.com.

“We’re going to try to work a couple of things,” Schiano said. “Right now, I’m not sure. Obviously Larsen has worked there. But some of that has to be competed for I think. I don’t think it’s a knockdown slam dunk who it is there.”

Nor should it be. As Joe has written and spoke about before, there is no such thing as a good time to lose Joseph. But if he had to be hurt and lost for the year, now is the time.

In the coming days, over 1,000 players will hit the open market, cut by other teams. Plus, perhaps rock star general manager Mark Dominik could swing a trade for a potential salary cap casualty in the final year of his contract for a late-round draft pick.

No, Larsen shouldn’t just be handed the job. It should be earned. And Joe’s of the mind the Bucs will bring in a few candidates to push or replace Larsen.

Scouting The Panthers At 8 P.M.

Sunday, August 26th, 2012

Joe didn’t mention this last week, but watching the Panthers’ first-teamers absolutely annihilate the Dolphins’ top defense sent Joe to Walgreens for a six-pack of Tums.

Cam Newton and the running game completely carved up the Dolphins in short order and jumped out to a 17-0 lead. It looked like the varsity against the JV. And it made the Bucs’ success against Miami seem less impressive.

And that brings us to tonight, when the Panthers’ top dogs line up for at least a half against the Jets at 8 p.m. on NBC. It’ll be interesting to see how the Panthers respond against a much better team, before a hostile crowd, and on the national stage.

Joe really wants to see what the Panthers’ ground game looks like. Stopping the run is still the Bucs’ biggest defensive hurdle to overcome.

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Sunday, August 26th, 2012

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Schiano Confirms “Tight End By Committee”

Sunday, August 26th, 2012

Look for the Bucs to spread the tight end work around what likely will be three TEs on the roster.

The challenge, though, will be to avoid tipping off play-calls to defenses based on the tight ends in the game. Frankly, much of this revolves around Dallas Clark’s subpar blocking on a team that craves a punishing running game.

In a funny moment at Greg Schiano’s news conference yesterday, the leader of the New Schiano Order was pressed to explain and acknowledge the “tight end by committee” approach. The question came from Tampa Tribune scribe Woody Cummings and Schiano demanded to know where Cummings got his intelligence, “Who gave you that word?” Schiano asked, referring to “committee.”

Cummings let the head coach know it was revealed on the local TV broadcast of the Pats-Bucs game.

“Stinkin’ production meeting, huh,” Schiano joked with a reddened face. “When I say that ‘by committee,’ I mean, you know, there are certain guys that do different things well, better than the next guy. So I think what we’ll try to do is play to their strengths. You gotta be careful when you do that though, if you totally play to your strengths, then it’s like a blinking light, ‘Ok, here it comes.’ So you gotta be proficient enought at least at the things that aren’t your strengths so you can mix it up. But, yeah, I do think we’ll play several guys, which will be good.”

Hopefully, Luke Stocker can stay healthy. He’s no Dallas Clark, but Joe believes Stocker is far more versatile than many believe.

Also, Joe enjoyed Schiano’s analogy of the “blinking light” in relation to how an offense can’t telegraph what’s coming. That was exactly what the Bucs did repeatedly with LeGarrette Blount last season.

Bucs Haven’t Shown Much In The Running Game

Sunday, August 26th, 2012

While some Bucs fans are concerned by Josh Freeman looking inconsistent and tentative at times this preseason, that doesn’t bother Joe much. Freeman’s learning a new offense, with new coaches and receivers. It will take time, and he’s not turning the ball over, which is a great sign.

But alarming Joe this morning is the Bucs’ relative lack of success in the running game this preseason. The Bucs are supposed to be mauling at the line of scrimmage with their expensive manbeast offensive line and strong pair of running backs.

Through three games, LeGarrette Blount is averaging 2.6 yards per carry, and Doug Martin is averaging 3.6 yards. And these are two guys battling to win a starting nod.

“Run the football” is the identity of the Bucs offense, so Bucs fans were told in the offseason. There have been flashes, but not much more than that.

Now Davin Joseph is down.

In two weeks, the Bucs will need to run the ball against Carolina, a team they had zero success running the ball on last season.

Joe’s as fired up for the regular season as the next guy, but the Bucs have got to get the ground game humming right out of the gate. Without a dominant running attack, Joe’s not seeing how the Bucs avoid going 0-3 to start the season.

Only $3.95 Roundtrip To Raymond James Stadium

Sunday, August 26th, 2012

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Mark Barron Credits Teammates With Pick-Six

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

Bucs rookie safety Mark Barron made his first splash play in the NFL (hopefully, many more to come) when he grabbed a tipped Tom Brady pass and returned it for six points.

To hear Barron speak after the game to Joe about his play, it was a combination of his teammates playing sound fundamental defense, and Barron being a bit fortunate.

“I think it was just a thing where everyone did their job,” Barron said. “I want to thank Ronde. If he didn’t make that tip, I don’t think I would have made that play.

“Everybody did their job. Everyody was in their zones, doing their jobs and breaking on the ball. That is exactly what [Barber] did and he got a hand on it.”

It hasn’t been lost on viewers of training camp practices that Barron has shadowed Barber constantly. That’s because Barron is trying to squeeze every tiny bit of information from Barber as he can.

“For me, [Barber is] a guy who has been in the league for 16 years,” Barron said. “It’s a privilege [to play with him]. He knows how to play the game. He has a feel for pretty much everything. Instincts, he has them. There’s a lot that he knows and a lot of knowledge that he has.”

While Barron joked that he will be able to tell his grandkids some day that his first NFL interception came off the great Tom Brady, he was still distraught about one aspect of the play.

“The only thing I messed up on was that I didn’t keep the ball!”

Surgery For Davin Joseph Monday; Out For Year

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

In his day after review of the Bucs win over the Patriots in the final home preseason game of the year, Bucs coach Greg Schiano announced right guard Davin Joseph is out for the year, which was released by the Bucs official Twitter feed.

@TBBuccaneers: Davin Joseph will have surgery on his left patellar tendon Monday and will be placed on injured reserve. … Coach Schiano says he believes the Bucs have the answer for Davin Joseph’s absence internally, but they will always see what us available.

So there you have it. Not surprising at all, but still depressing.

As Joe told both Toby David last night and Rock Riley this morning, both of WHFS-FM 98.7, there was no good time to lose Joseph to an injury. But if there is such a thing as a timely moment to go down, this is the time.

In the next week, there will be a glut of players hitting the free agent market, cut loose from their teams. Donald Penn was once such a player.

Also, if the Bucs get wind of a guard who will be cut due to a salary cap casuality, perhaps a trading a low-round draft pick for the guy would make sense.

Usually, teams won’t trade for a potential salary cap victim, as why would a team spend a draft pick when they can get the guy free. But not many teams will have a dire need for a guard like the Bucs. So spending a seventh- or sixth-round pick may not be outrageous if Bucs rock star general manager Mark Dominik can land a player that, while may never replace Joseph, will temper the blow.

Numbers Suggest Defense Played Lights Out

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

Two weeks ago the Bucs started their game with Tennessee with three three-and-outs. Last night, the Bucs starting defense was smothering.

How smothering? Consider the stats pumped out by CBSSports.com’s Bucs Rapid Reports Twitter feed.

@CBSSportsNFLTB: Impressive showing for #Bucs D last night: Patriots starting O had 8 drives vs. Bucs’ starters, and only 1 drive went more than 14 yards.

Now consider how the Bucs accomplished this and just who it was against. Starting middle linebacker Mason Foster was a late scratch due to a slight hamstring. Three plays into the game, starting defensive tackle Gerald McCoy was on the receiving end of a borderline dirty low hit at the knee. He returned, but just briefly. Then, Adrian Clayborn went down with an elbow/scrotum injury.

So the Bucs did this without three key starters.

Then you look at the opposite side of the line of scrimmage and you see a big Patriots offensive line and All-World quarterback Tom Brady.

Impressive, indeed.

Bill Belicheat Irked By Flat Loss To Bucs

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

Even though we are not supposed to worry about preseason wins and losses, New England coach Bill Belicheat was clearly bothered by how the Bucs defense beat down the Pats offense in this Comcast New England video.

Did E.J. Wilson Earn A Job?

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

Gerald McCoy went down last night on the Bucs’ third defensive play, and in came E.J. Wilson to fill his shoes.

E.J. Wilson?

Joe has to watch the game again, but Wilson played pretty darn well.

A Butch Davis defensive end at North Carolina, Wilson was a fourth-round pick of the Seahawks in 2010 but was cut midseason. He was signed by the Bucs before last season and blew out his Achilles during the 2011 preseason.

And now he’s backing up Gerald McCoy. For those who love the bottom-of-the-roster drama, Wilson tossed a fat new wrinkle into the defensive line mix. 

Amobi Okoye is still slowed by his knee issue. Gary Gibson made his preseason debut last night and looked rather plodding. Frank Okam can’t be high on the charts if Wilson played over him, and Wallace Gilberry, who drew strong praise from Schiano after the Miami game is still around.

Given the fragility of Gerald McCoy, Joe can’t imagine the Bucs not keeping five defensive tackles on the final roster, one more than usual. That, of course, the Bucs would force the Bucs to go leaner at another position, which could spell unsuspecting doom for a wide receiver or safety, especially given the sad new question mark on the offensive line.

Barber’s “Little Things” Wow Schiano

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

Ronde Barber was too smart for Tom Brady last night

Mark Barron brought home the glory for his pick-6, first-quarter touchdown against Tom Brady and the Pats last night, but it was Bucs icon Ronde Barber who made the play.

Graybeard Barber read Tom Brady, undercut the route and tipped the pass up into the welcoming arms of Barron. Then Barber led the calvary into the end zone.

That wasn’t the only special play Barber made last night, according to the leader of the New Schiano Order.

“Some little things [Barber] did tonight, I haven’t experienced in a long time,” Schiano said, with tone that expressed awe.

Schiano explained that Barber’s “little things” took him back to special moments of his days as a Bears assistant coach in the 1990s.

Joe loves Barber as much as the next guy, but Joe has serious concerns as to how well Barber can play safety and handle the increased pounding he’ll get at the position.

Barber’s going to have some trouble in coverage with tight ends, but last night was an indication that he’s likely going to make up for that with guile and pure football smarts.

Cashing In On Vincent Jackson

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

It was glorious to get the first real taste of what Vincent Jackson can do in a Bucs uniform last night.

Finally, Josh Freeman fired a pass downfield this preseason. Finally! And it came very early — with zip — to Jackson. It was the second play of the Bucs’ first possession, and Freeman found Jackson in daylight nestled in the Pats’ deep zone for a 25-yard completion.

Then man coverage was no match for Jackson, and he caught two more balls on that opening possession and wrapped up the series and his night with three catches for 49 yards, and a drop.

If the Bucs can simply rip off a Jackson-led drive like that twice a game, Jackson will be in the Pro Bowl and the Bucs likely will be in the playoff hunt.

Jackson makes everything look so easy with his size, speed and route-running. Maybe it can be just that easy?

The Bucs are paying Jackson $11 million+ per season. Hopefully, Mike Sullivan will let Freeman cash in regularly on the high-priced talent.

Bucs-Pats Attendance Falls To 47,440

Saturday, August 25th, 2012

The Bucs’ attendance last night of 47,440 was surely discouraging to those yearing for the community stain of TV blackouts to leave forever.

The Bucs-Pats preseason game last year drew a crowd of 49,313, per ESPN data. Joe’s no math major, but that means last night’s game represented a drop of roughly 2,000 fans, or 4 percent.

One would think the New Schiano Order and last night’s victory, and Cam Newton in town, and honoring Ronde Barber’s 200th start, would generate enough buzz over the next 12 days to avoid a blackout by the league deadline of Thursday, Sept. 6.

Joe sure hopes so, but it’s hardly a given that Bucs fans get the job done.