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One More Time

Monday, August 13th, 2012

For you folks that can’t get enough Bucs football, the Man Channel (aka NFL Network) is replaying the Bucs-Dolphins game at 1 p.m today.

In past broadcasts, each team’s broadcast feed is used for a half. Joe isn’t sure which half will be the WTSP broadcast.

Shaun King Adjusts Tune On Blount

Monday, August 13th, 2012

Much like how the New Schiano Order gave players a clean slate when the regime began this winter, it seems former Bucs quarterback and current NBC Sports Network analyst Shaun King has a new attitude toward LeGarrette Blount.

In December, King predicted Blount would not be on the 2012 Bucs roster because of his deficiencies on third down, work ethic and he was “one offseason from getting fat.” Now King seems to be a cheerleader in Blount’s corner.

“I think I’m on the other side of the coin when it comes to LeGarrette Blount. I think he’s a lot more talented than people give him credit for,” King said. “And I think this year Buc Nation’s going to get an opportunity to see his abilities. You look at last year, when given the opportunity he was outstanding.”

King, one of only three quarterbacks to lead the Bucs to the NFC Championship game, went on to do defend Blount’s deficiencies in short yardage, despite his size and strength. “I think that’s something that you develop as a runner. You think he came from a spread-type system in Oregon where they never really were in a heavy three-tight end, fullback, tailback” set, King said, adding that the entire team’s short-yardage mindset will change under Greg Schiano’s commitment to being physical.

Catch the entire WDAE-AM 620 interview with King below. King delivers many takes on all things Bucs.

“Giddy” About Power Football

Monday, August 13th, 2012

Former Bucs DE Steve White talks about the Bucs’ offensive identity

One reason Joe has some hope for the 2012 season is the departure of Greg Olson. The guy couldn’t figure out how to play to the Bucs’ strengths or was just too damn stubborn to do it, especially after he led the Bucs offense to an impressive second half of the 2010 season.

Think about it. The Bucs opened last season eliminating slant passes to Mike Williams and barely handed off to LeGarrette Blount, hallmarks of the 2010 success.

Former Bucs DE Steve White, one of the most through Bucs analysts on the planet was a fierce Olson critic, as well. That led to White having moments of pure joy watching the Bucs offense play smashmouth football Friday.

“We start off the game with a Power-O and Iso-Weak. I can’t even tell you how happy I am. I was giddy. I was like, “Wow.” This is what we need,” White said on WDAE-AM 620 yesterday.

“And not only that, now we’re double-teaming guys instead of trying to do that crazy zone blocking that we weren’t built for. So now that’s why you’re seeing all that push up front. We’re getting guys off the ball on the front line, and then ‘hey linebacker, you go ahead and try to tackle this huge manchild we got in the backfield in LeGarrette Blount, or you try to tackle this little mighty might we got back there in Doug Martin.” But you know who’s not going to make a play, defensive linemen who are getting double-teamed.”

Now White cautions everyone about getting too exciting or down about anything in a first preseason game, but an identity can at least be legitimately identified. This is not Greg Olson’s offense. That’s worth a raising an ice cold beer.

Versatile Jamon Meredith

Monday, August 13th, 2012

Hardly a celebrated offseason signing, Bucs tackle Jamon Meredith is now with his sixth team in four years (Packers, Lions, Giants, Bills, Steelers, Bucs.) That’s not a great sign, but it’s also not easy to accomplish.

People keep seeing something in this guy.

Joe is taking note of Meredith, 26, because he came in to play left guard for Carl Nicks on Friday and was on the field in between Demar Dotson and Jeremy Zuttah. The tape shows Meredith made a key, powerful block on Doug Martin’s second-quarter touchdown run. Joe also saw him turn in other solid play.

Meredith was listed as a tackle when he came to the Bucs and was widely projected as a third-round tackle out of South Carolina in 2009, but he was picked in the fifth round by Green Bay and cut before that season.

If he’s now taking quality reps at guard, then he’s probably a lock to make the Bucs roster since he can play tackle as well and has been running through most of training camp as Jeremy Trueblood’s backup.

Tampa-2 Nearly “Obsolete”

Monday, August 13th, 2012

When Monte Kiffin ran the Bucs defense, what was termed a “Cover-2” by the way the safeties played, the Bucs defense was so suffocating for so long the type of defense became known as the “Tampa-2” because no team excelled at it for as long and as well as the Bucs.

However, writing an excerpt for Cheerios-loving Peter King in his must-read “Monday Morning Quarterback” on SI.com, NFL scribe Alex Marvez notes that information he has culled from former NFL general manager Bill Polian and from longtime Bucs safety Ronde Barber, the Tampa-2 is going the way of the Dodo bird thanks to NFL rules changes geared toward player safety.

The cover-two defense as we know it could be on the road to becoming obsolete. Polian got into a fascinating exchange with Tampa Bay free safety Ronde Barber about this topic. Barber is entering his 15th NFL season playing in the acclaimed “Tampa-2,” a scheme predicated upon the strong safety disrupting receivers who are funneled toward the middle of the field by cornerbacks playing zone coverage on the outside. Many of the bone-jarring safety hits once allowed are now banned as the NFL has instituted rules to better protect pass catchers. That has Polian, whose Colts used that system from 2002 through 2011 after Tony Dungy was hired as head coach, questioning whether it can be used effectively in today’s NFL. Said Barber: “Our theory was all these guys got to the ball and intimidation was a physical act. It was, ‘Get guys to run through zones. We’ll shoot our guns and separate them from the ball.’ The rules will definitely affect it … I know we don’t play cover-two now the way we used to.”

This is sort of sad to Joe as it is an end of an era, but this is not surprising. Barber has hinted that under former defensive coordinator/head coach Raheem Morris that the Bucs were not playing a Tampa-2, but instead what Barber referred to as a “Tampa-2.2.”

Clearly the Bucs were not playing a Tampa-2 during the heinous Jim Bates Experiment.

The NFL evolves. Quickly in fact. About the only defense that has lasted through the years — decades to be accurate — has been the 44 defense which was developed by Tom Landry when he was the defensive coordinator of the New York Giants in the 1950s.

Squeezing The “Butt Cheeks”

Monday, August 13th, 2012

The New Schiano Order may be a cold slap in the face to some Bucs players (it sure was to Kellen Winslow), but the amount of detail new Bucs coach Greg Schiano puts into drills is so detailed, it is as if the Bucs are being taught the game of football from scratch.

This news of the New Schiano Order led Chris Brown, proprietor of the outstanding SmartFootball.com, to browse through his files and he came up with a gem of a transcription of Schiano.

Apparently, as a Rutgers coach, Schiano spoke at a coaching clinic about recovering fumbles, and his minute attention to detail was on full display when he explained what he tells his players who are in a scrum for a loose ball to expect when opponents get a little too handsy in a desperate attempt to get the loose pigskin.

“We also have our players perform the recover drill. In this drill, we stress three aspects: covering the points by surrounding the football; covering the ball in a fetal position so none of the brown part of the football shows; and, when they recover a fumble, we also ask our players to close their eyes, close their mouths, and squeeze their buttock cheeks.

“What happens at the bottom of the pile on a fumble? One thing that may occur is that the opponents may stick a finger in the eye of the man with the ball. What do you do when someone sticks a finger in your eye? In all likelihood, you may take one hand off the ball. The second thing the opponents do is fishhook you with a finger in your mouth, and then rip your mouth with that finger. Again, this action may lead you to take one hand off the ball.

“Another thing the opponents might do is to grab you in the testicular area. At this point, you may have no hands on the football, which is why we tell our players who recover a fumble to close their eyes and mouths, and to squeeze their butt cheeks.”

Now Joe has noticed the Bucs running drills on recovering the football but Joe has not noticed — nor was Joe looking — to see what certain players are doing with their free hands in a pileup.

Joe can just imagine what goes on in a pileup for a loose ball in the NFL, but it’s not something one really wants to see or dwell on.

But if curiosity has the best of you, in the link Joe provided above, Brown has graphic video of a game between Nebraska and Texas A&M of the acts of a desperate defender, trying to gain possession of a fumble.

“I Kind Of Forgot Last Year”

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

Joe is not trying to read too much into a first half of a first preseason game, but damn, how cool was it to see the Bucs actually run the damned football? Run it in the red zone? Scoring a touchdown?

That was just what the Bucs hope to do each week, Mike Williams told Joe after the win over the Dolphins to open the preseason schedule.

“That first drive, 13 plays, that’s good, “Williams said. “That what we wanted to do. We overcame penalties and to do that [and score], it felt good.”

Joe reminded Williams of the previous season where a drive would come to a screeching halt after a penalty. Williams smiled at Joe and said, “I kind of forgot last year.”

Referring to another nasty Bucs habit of last year, Williams added, “It is always great when you score seven instead of three.”

Bill Polian Sees Better Days For Bucs Fans

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

Joe wasn’t the lone person who got a chance to speak with longtime successful NFL front office honcho Bill Polian when he visitied Bucs training camp while co-hosting a show with Alex Marvez heard exclusively on SiriusXM NFL Radio last week.

Even eye-RAH! Kaufman of the Tampa Tribune got a chance to chat with Polian, who believes better days are ahead for Bucs fans, meaning, perhaps, fewer blackouts.

“This state has been hit as hard as any in the nation and the team’s been up-and-down,’’ Polian said. “They haven’t established an identity as compared to the old Bucs. But if they win, people will come back. This is a football town—and it always has been. You have to realize the economy is very tough and this is a relatively small market.’‘

Of course, winning cures all ills. But Joe believes Polian has a point: With Father Dungy, and later Chucky, the Bucs had an identity. It was a bruising defense. With Raheem Morris, the identity was more hapless than intimidating, some suggest worse: quitters.

This will not be the case under the New Schiano Order. Expect a return to a punishing run game and a smart, attacking defense.

Schiano Issues New Dress-Code Edict

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

The various sizes, colors and quaility of sport coats on hangers across the Bucs’ locker room Friday night made the place look more like a Men’s Warehouse clearance sale than a postgame hangout.

It was yet another new detail on display under the New Schiano Order. When you travel on the road, you look like you’re on a serious business trip. Coaches, players, everyone.

For years, Bucs icon Ronde Barber arguably was the sharpest dressed Buccaneer. And Barber now appreciates that he’ll have more company when it comes to off-field style and professionalism.

“Coach Schiano wants us to present ourselves in a first-class manner,” Barber said. “This is it. A lot of guys have done it already, but it’s nice to have solidarity across the team doing it.

“We’re coming to every away game dressing [professionally]. It’s to really come on a mission. So it’s more a business trip than anything else.”

As for home games, Barber said, “I haven’t heard our policy on that yet.”

Davin Joseph laughed when Joe asked him about the fancy threads. This kind of rule wasn’t in place under Raheem Morris.

“It’s a good change,” Joseph said. “It’s a positive change for the entire team. It’s every time we travel. Every time, all the time [we’re out],” Joseph said. “

Do you have to wear the shiny black shoes, Davin?

“No. You can pick your color. Nobody’s gone too extravagant yet, but I’m sure it’s to come,” Joseph said.

A veteran Buccaneer, who requested his name not be published, told Joe he suspects there will be more uniformity to the Bucs’ dress code when the final roster is in place: “It wouldn’t have been fair to tell guys struggling to get their first NFL paycheck to go out and buy a suit, but that’s probably going to change for the regular season.”

You Can’t “Live Soft And Fight Hard”

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

Warren Sapp gushes over the methods of the New Schiano Order

In this Man Channel video (aka NFL Network video), Bucs icon Warren Sapp and Kurt Warner debate the way Greg Schiano is running the Bucs with an iron hand.

But there really is no debate, both future Hall of Famers love the New Schiano Order approach. Sapp gets particularly animated in his support for the Schiano way.

“You can not walk into a football organization and live soft and fight hard,” Sapp says.

Sapp went on to say the lines for the Bucs players are “clearly drawn on the floor. So when they do throw you those bones, they really react to you like, ‘Fellas, hey we going to pull it back today. Oh, coach. Ok, coach with us right now.’ You have to set it stern and then pull it back. Because if you go in soft, it’s over.”

Listening to Sapp, Joe thought back to how the Bucs reacted as if they just won a playoff game after Donald Penn caught a punt during minicamp, a challenge from Greg Schiano. Penn’s reward was the Bucs ending practice early.

Joe wonders what will be the next “bone” Schiano will toss his team.

Bucs Missed A Dozen Tackles

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

Cody Grimm had at least two misses last night

Bucs tackling was hardly perfect last night. Is it ever in a preseason game?

Per the analysis of the New Schiano Order, the Bucs had seven tackles for a loss in Miami — that’s darn good — and 12 missed tackles. The dozen is a too-high number and a decent chunk were on the first-team defense.

Three of them can be seen right here on one play, when Gerald McCoy, Cody Grimm and Ronde Barber couldn’t wrap up Reggie Bush.

Today, Greg Schiano talked about how now the Bucs can get back to their fundamental tackling drills, a staple of Schiano practices, and “connect the dots” to better apply their technique. In all, Schiano was not alarmed.

“We missed 12 tackles. So, you now, I’ve had games where we missed 18 to 20 tackles and you also had games where you missed four tackles. So 12’s kinda, eh, not good, not the worst,” Schiano said.

All that matters is whether the Bucs get the sloppy tackling corrected. If the tackling’s not sharp on opening day, then look for the Bucs to get gutted and gashed from the Panthers strong running and scrambling game. The game is still blocking and tackling at its core.

Rough Night For Lewis, Grimm, Asante

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

Joe’s feeling real rosy coming out of the first dance of the New Schiano Order last night in Miami, but there was plenty of ugliness to go around, as well.

On defense, Joe was definitely down on Myron Lewis’ performance. He got beat multiple times, and didn’t look strong or to be playing fast. Dolphins receiver Roberto Wallace muscled him to the ground with the ball in his hands and scampered for a long gain. Lewis was impressive in practice over the past week, but in Joe’s mind, last night Lewis lost the ground he had gained.

Grimm was a surprise starter at safety alongside Ronde Barber, and he, too, had a tackle broken on him and didn’t flash any of his trademark physical play with the first team. At least Grimm was much better positionally than Lewis, and Larry Asante. Without the benefit of coach’s film, Joe’s quite certain Asante’s angles on the football were rather Sabbyesque.

Davin Joseph Talks Protection, Motivation & More

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

The right side of the Bucs’ bookend Pro Bowl guards talked to Joe after the preseason opening victory in Miami last night.

JoeBucsFan.com: Watching from up high in the stadium, it looked like nobody was within two steps of Josh Freeman, how do you think the O-line pass blocked?

Davin Joseph: We did a good job up front protecting the quarterback. Remember ,of course we still got to improve. There’s still a lot of stuff for us to work on technique-wise, recognizing different fronts so we can do that consistently. But so far so good.

Joe: That opening drive running four times after 1st-and-goal, was that music to your ears?

Joseph: Oh, yeah. Exactly. I like it like that. That confidence in the line and the tight ends and the backs to get it in. They put it on our backs and we got it done.

Joe: At 3rd-and-goal and 4th-and-goal, the wide receivers were out. What’s with that all-power set?

Joseph: That’s something we work on of course in practice. The offensive coordinator said run it; we ran it. It worked for us two times in the goal line situation. We’ve done it in the past. But now we’re simplifying the entire plan and focusing on what we’re good at. That’s what made us so efficient this time.

Joe: A few years ago you told Joe how much you loved blocking for Cadillac Williams because he was an inspriational figure. Does it really matter to O-linemen who carries the ball?

Joseph: Oh, yeah. It always matters who has the ball. But you earn that respect and that love for a player through their performance and through practicing their hard work. We have really special backs this year in LeGarrette and Doug. They’ve really been working so hard and you want to see them do well. Just like we were in love with a guy like Cadillac, you know, it’s easy to fall in love with LeGarrette because he’s working so hard, along with Doug. You want to see them have success.

LeGarrette Blount Speaks

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

Blount went over the top for the Bucs’ opening score

Joe chatted with LeGarrette Blount after the Bucs took care of business in Miami last night. Here are Blount’s comments:

On the opening touchdown drive:  Everything went really well that whole drive. Everything was blocked the way we planned it. You gotta have pride, and you gotta have the will and feel like no one can stop you [running] four times in a row. That’s the will that our guys have.

On the Bucs rushing four times inside the 10 yard line: That’s the way we’re going to be. That’s definitely what we’re going to do. We’re going to run the football inside. That was definitely a statement that I guess is going to be known around the league.

On Doug Martin: “We can definitely be the best duo in the league,” Blount said of himself and Martin. “With the schemes that we’re running and with the offensive line that we have. You know, with the blocking, you know, with the complement he is to me and the complement I am to him, we definitely have the potential to be the best backfield in the league without a doubt.”

On changes to his running and body: I feel faster. I feel a lot quicker. I feel a lot lighter on my feet. … It definitely lets teams know you’re not one-dimensional. It makes you be able to do certain things in other areas. We’re going to be good. I’m definitely going to be the same type of back I’ve been in the league, though. It’s just the drills that Coach [Earnest] Byner has us doing. You know, the lifting and the running throughout practice as our conditioning. That’s what does it all. This is as strong as I’ve felt in my career.

Imposing Your Will

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

Josh Freeman weighs in on red zone strategy

One thing cool about the Bucs of not-so-old was with Mike Alstott and a beat-down defense, the Bucs simply dictated how the game would be played.

That’s exactly what Greg Schiano wants the Bucs to return to: smashmouth, in-your-face offense and a smothering defense.

In the first test of the New Schiano Order, Bucs quarterback Josh Freeman gave the exam a passing grade.

“All day, all day,” Freeman said about how the Bucs wanted to impose their will on the Dolphins. “Coach has talked about how great teams run the ball in the red zone. We definitely did that. It’s good to see us go for it on fourth down and put it on the offensive line and see them and LeGarrette [Blount] get the job done.”

This is the type of team Schiano wants. It’s the type of team Bucs fans have pined for after years of Chucky-and-duck offense and that steaming pile of hot mess from last season.

Schiano Irked By Preston Parker’s Behavior

Saturday, August 11th, 2012

Poor Preston Parker, in addition to his stock dropping from a fumble and a needless dead-ball penalty, things then got worse after the game.

The leader of the New Schiano Order called him out at his news conference.

“The one that sticks out to me is the early one, you know, the personal foul [on Parker,]” Schiano said. “We don’t do that. That’s not Buccaneer football. We had a quick talk, Preston and I, and he understands. You’ve got to put your own personal preferences behind the good of the team. Did a guy shove his hand up into his face? Sure he did. But that’s part of the game. You’ve got to walk away. And Preston knows that. That’s not a problem. I think there were a lot of other opportunities for guys to do that. But to that point nobody did. They walked away, which is important.”

Parker’s going to get to show a lot about his toughness as he tries to shake this night off.

Speedy Roy Miller?

Friday, August 10th, 2012

Roy Miller shares his postgame thoughts

Every game looks different at the stadium. Some things just don’t translate well on television, and vice versa.

For Joe, sitting at whatever the Dolphins’ stadium is called these days, Roy Miller really looked exceptionally quick off the ball and moving laterally. What a surprise! He looked like a different player.

Miller burst in and pursued and tackled RB Daniel Thomas for a three-yard loss on the Dolphins second play of second quarter. Unfortunately, it was called back for a Wallace Gilberry offsides. But it was a heck of a play for Miller.

“I feel like this scheme allows me to play fast,” Miller said after the game. “I’m just excited that everybody is playing fast. It’s kind of early to make any conclusions. I just think we have to work and keep grinding to become consistent.”

What was different in leading up to this preseason game compared to past years, Roy?

“We’re so prepared for the game,” Miller said. “We go out there and everything just comes together. It’s exciting to be a part of it. It’s different from last year. It’s great to see everything come together on the field after the work we’ve put in.”

No, the Bucs’ pass rush didn’t scare anyone, but overall Miller looked strong and quick. He’s certainly already has surprised Joe, who expected little from Miller this season.

Defense Makes A Statement

Friday, August 10th, 2012

Last year if one took a shot for every first down a Bucs opponent had, one would be prone on the living room floor, comatose by halftime.

Yes, it’s preseason. Yes, it’s a glorified practice. Yes, it was against the Dolphins, who appear to be a miserable squad.

But how refreshing was it for a change that the Bucs defense pitched a shutout with the first and second team?

Gerald McCoy and Adrian Clayborn were all smiles after the game in the locker room — why wouldn’t they be? But behind the smiles lurked no false sense of security.

Work still needs to be done.

“It was good to put ourselves in a good situation to put [good play] on film,” Adrian Clayborn said. “It felt good to be able to contain someone, sure. But it’s just a beginning. It’s just a start.

“We are just trying to get better and play smart football and that’s what we put on tape today.”

Play smart football? What a novel concept!

Like Clayborn, GMC wasn’t about to go dancing after Friday’s performance.

“It was great, but honestly, we weren’t going out there to try to prove anything,” GMC said. “We put a lot of work into it back to the spring and this was the first chance to showcase it. I think we did a fairly decent job.

“We still have a long way to go. This is our first go-around, and for our first go-around I think we did fairly well.”

Since it was the Bucs first go-around, there were mistakes made. GMC nor Clayborn wanted to talk specifically about those mistakes but GMC said the errors were nothing to panic over.

“There are a number of different things [the Bucs could do better], but it is not anything that cannot be fixed. Just little stuff. Adjustments.”

What? No Slow Start?

Friday, August 10th, 2012

“Now that’s being your best self, Olie.”

The hallmark of the Raheem Morris regime was slow starts.

Even when the Bucs were winning games in 2010, more often than not they were comebacks after sluggish first quarters and porous first-halves for the defense.

There were no solutions for what the previous staff seemed to think was bad luck. Of course, it wasn’t just lousy luck.

But it seems Greg Schianos has found a way to avoid the opening-whistle blues.

The Dolphins under a brand new coach — at home — didn’t bring the same juice as the Bucs tonight to start the game.

Joe’s going to consider the fast start alone as a victory.

Stock Dropping

Friday, August 10th, 2012

Early in training camp Greg Schiano said he’s extraordinarily hands on when it comes to studying turnovers and penalties. That’s the first thing he examines.

Consdering this, it’s pretty darn safe to say Preston Parker’s stock dropped faster than Joe’s jaw would fall if Rachel Watson invited him for a romantic hot tub.

On the Bucs’ opening drive tonight, Preston Parker had a 15-yard, dead-ball penalty.

Later in the first half, Parker badly muffed a punt that led to a turnover.

Throw in that Tiquan Underwood shined like he has all preseason, and Parker had a brutal night. He could find himself on the proverbial bubble by daybreak.

Welcome To Power Football

Friday, August 10th, 2012

Yeah, it’s preseason, but Joe sure appreciates the Bucs’ attitude on their opening drive tonight in Miami.

Let’s work backwards for a minute. At 3rd-and-goal from the Dolphins’ 2 yard line, the Bucs took off their wide receivers and used the opportunity to impose their will on Miami. The next play was a two-yard, LeGarrette Blount run behind Carl Nicks, and the next was a Blount high dive into the end zone.

And this display of man-on-man combat was on the heels of Blount runs on first-and-goal and second-and-goal. 

Blount finished the drive with 30 yards on seven carries — a catch — and a touchdown. Doug Martin had a well-excuted draw on 3rd-and-2.

Freeman, who was not pressured by any shape of form, never threw deep, used Luke Stocker and Zack Pianalto, and Mike Williams flashed his YAC (yards-after-catch) ability for an 18-yard gain.

The leader of the New Schiano Order said the Bucs will be who they are tonight. And Joe loved the no-BS approach on offense.

Michael Smith Turns In His Resume

Friday, August 10th, 2012

One reason the Bucs drafted scatback Michael Smith was a chance to give an anemic offense a change-of-pace guy who can also return kicks, sort of the Bucs’ version of Darren Sproles.

Well, the way Michael Smith played tonight, it had to open some eyes from Bucs coaches and management. Smith used his lightning quick wheels to break through a small hole up the middle on a kickoff for a 34-yard gain. Then, Smith damned near took one to the house on a 74-yard return.

Now Smith didn’t show a whole lot at running back, but part of that perhaps was the future beer truck drivers and bouncers who were blocking for him. Imagine what Smith might do behind the Bucs’ first string offensive line?

With Preston Parker putting the ball on the ground, later getting a stupid personal foul penalty, and the way receiver Tiquan Underwood played and how explosive Smith was on returns, Parker may just play himself out of a gig.

And Smith would be the beneficiary.