Archive for the ‘Recent Posts’ Category

Rookies May Get Leg Up On Some Vets

Tuesday, July 24th, 2012

Yes, there is a New Schiano Order in town. That could likely mean bad things for many Bucs vets who were part of a tailspining team the previous season.

Read between the lines if you wish, but Joe thought it was interesting to hear from new Bucs coach Greg Schiano that because of the week-long head start the rookies have had in training camp, he expects the rookies to be up to speed on his new system and perhaps be a step ahead when the veterans take the field at One Buc Palace Friday.

“I just think another opportunity to expose them. Every time you are able to install something and go out —- even if you are not doing it full group —- but walk through it, jog through it whatever it is techniques. It will probably even prove to be even more important going forward a year from now when the rest of the organization has done it for a year. Now this is really a chance for those rookies to get caught up. You wish you could do it with the whole team.”

If players didn’t know Schiano is a no-nonsense guy before, they will surely grasp this concept very shortly.

Schiano is not a man who wastes a minute. For him and his staff to be putting in all this extra work for the rookies, he will expect the rookies to absorb everything the past week and be as nuanced with the new gameplans as a veteran would be.

Donald Penn And The Rubber Shirt

Tuesday, July 24th, 2012

Tampa Bay Times Bucs beat writer Rick Stroud says Donald Penn doesn’t play well when he’s too fat.

Per Stroud, “not coincidentally” Penn had a bad December last year because he wasn’t required to weigh-in for team officials during that month.

How Stroud is sure that scale anxiety and fear of a small fine is enough to screw Penn up on Sundays is a mystery. Perhaps Stroud has a medical degree?

Here’s what Stroud penned the other day:

Once the games start, [Penn] has to be no more than 330 pounds to receive his money.

Coaches say he ballooned to 360 pounds at times last season, his sixth in the league. Mindful of an upcoming weigh-in, he would wear a rubber shirt under his jersey during practice. Some claimed the routine made him irritable and dehydrated and likely affected his performance on Sunday.

It’s unclear if or how many times he failed to reach his weight limit. By agreement, he doesn’t have to step on a scale the final month of the season. Not coincidentally, that’s when he played his worst football in 2011.

Against Jacksonville Dec. 11, he allowed a first-half sack to Jaguars defensive end Jeremy Mincey that resulted in a Josh Freeman fumble, which was recovered for a touchdown in a 41-14 loss. Freeman was harassed all day, sacked three times, and threw two interceptions as the Bucs turned the ball over seven times.

Sorry, but this all doesn’t make sense to Joe. If Penn has to weigh in at 330 to avoid a fine, then what the hell good is a rubber shirt going to do for him if he weighs 360? 

And if we’re to believe Penn was cranky and dehydrated during, say, a Wednesday padded practice with his rubber shirt on, was that somehow going to affect him all the way to Sunday? That’s ridiculous.

Penn has made 76 consecutive starts. He’s durable. He’s done great things on the field. He’s fat. So what.

Joe really doesn’t buy that Penn’s weight is an issue in his performance. Though it might hurt his durability long term if he can’t get it under control.

Freeman 9-For-34 On Long Balls

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

How unexplosive have the Bucs been over the past three seasons? In 40 career starts, Josh Freeman has only completed nine throws more than 20 yards, per a Mike Lombardi analysis on NFL.com.

The Greg Olson-Raheem Morris Bucs didn’t commit to the run, and they didn’t stretch the field. Lombardi writes that those nine completions came on just 34 attempts.

Greg Schiano seems committed to a 1970s style running attack, but even the Dolphins that perfected the pound the ball and take deep shots style connected on and attempted plenty of bombs to Paul Warfield and others.

With Vincent Jackson and a stacked offensive line, Bucs fans should finally find out whether Freeman can be a legitimate deep threat.

Bucs Can Contend In The NFC South

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

Can the leader of the New Schiano Order get the Bucs in contention for an NFC South run?

The acid reflux Joe gets from remembering last season, particularly the grotesque 10-game losing streak to end the season, is enough to render him prone on a leather couch groping a bottle of Bushmills.

To think how horrid the team played in the final weeks of the season, it seems a playoff run is seasons away.

But hold up, writes Woody Cummings of the Tampa Tribune. Given the topsy-turvy history of the NFC South, don’t take anything for granted, so Cummings explained in a TBO Bucs Q&A.

Q: Being a 20-year Bucs fan I’m never too excited about a new year until after Week 4 and we see what they really have. Having said that, can they possibly compete for a division crown with two legit contenders and the up and coming Panthers in a tough NFC south?

Greg Minnick, Daytona Beach, FL

A: Of course they can. In my mind, the Bucs were never quite as bad as their 4-12 record and 10-game losing streak indicated last year and never quite as good as the 10-6 record in 2010 indicated. To me they are somewhere in the middle, which mean they’re about a seven-win team. Give or take a couple of wins and they could push for nine wins and a playoff spot. This is a far more talented team than it was a year ago at this time. If Greg Schiano can get them to play up to their potential and eliminated stupid mistakes, they have a chance to surprise some people.

— Woody Cummings

The key for Schiano will be getting the defense to play sound, fundamental football. Last year, in particular the final two months of the season, the Bucs defense played anything but fundamentally sound.

To contend for a playoff spot, the Bucs realistically would have to leapfrog at least two NFC South foes. Joe’s not confident that can happen, unless the Saints totally free fall amid their bounty mess, and Cam Newton comes back down to earth for the Panthers in his second NFL season.

Bucs Single Game Tickets On Sale Friday

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

The Bucs announced this morning that individual tickets for all home Bucs games will be put on sale Friday at 10 a.m. with some tickets for as low as $30.

Current season ticket holders can actually buy single game tickets now. “Digital fans” will get a head start on the general population too, per a press release issued by the Bucs:

Season Pass, Stadium Club and Luxury Suite Members will have the advantage of a presale, which will start today, Monday, July 23, at 10 a.m. This presale is part of an ongoing effort to provide exclusive membership benefits.

Digital Buc Nation, those fans who follow the official Buccaneers Twitter feed or “like” the team’s official Facebook page, will enjoy a 24-hour presale, starting at 10 a.m. on Thursday, July 26.

The Buccaneers kick off the 2012 regular season with a home opener against the Carolina Panthers on September 9, where the club will celebrate the NFL’s Back to Football initiative and also honor CB Ronde Barber for the achievement of his 200th consecutive start. As part of the event, fans will be treated to half-priced food and non-alcoholic drinks, free parking in select lots, and a commemorative Barber giveaway.

For Bucs fans in a fetal position because of home game blackouts, the key to ending the blackouts will be how well single-game tickets go.

If single-game ticket sales are sluggish, Joe’s belief is the new 85 percent sell out rule to avoid a blackout won’t make that much of a difference.

Watching Quincy Black

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

Yesterday Joe had the pleasure of being a guest on “The Rock Pile,” hosted by all-around cool guy and fellow beer-swilling sports raconteur Rock Riley on WDAE-AM 620. There, Riley asked Joe what he would watch for when training camp opens up Friday.

Simply put, Joe will have his eyes on the linebackers.

Joe has been over this before, but the Bucs linebacker unit was the worst in the NFL last year. One reason was the play of Quincy Black, who has yet to live up to the massive new contract he received prior to last season.

(One could argue Black didn’t live up to his original contract pay.)

It seems Woody Cummings of the Tampa Tribune is of the same mind. Writing about five players who need to flash this year, Cummings includes Black.

Black is a confounding figure. He looks as good as any player in the league in his uniform and pads but he has a tendency to look out of place once the ball is snapped. Last year, for example, he was among the league’s leaders in missed tackles, with a missed-tackle percentage of 17.2 according to FootballOutsiders.com. As his 3.6-percent missed tackle mark of 2010 indicates, Black is not lacking in skill. He has the ability to be a game changer, but like so many of his teammates, he has to find a way to be more consistent. This camp will offer him that chance. If he takes advantage, he’ll retain his starting job. If not, he could find himself on the bench.

Or, Black could find himself out of a job.

Look, new Bucs coach Greg Schiano has zero ties to Black. He didn’t draft him and he didn’t sign him to (thus far) an unwarranted contract upgrade.

Joe’s of the belief if Black can’t cut it, he won’t have to just worry about starting, he may have to worry about what moving service to hire.

Bucs Have Scaled Back iPad Usage

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

“Thank you, Mr. Glazer. I’ll need 106 eight-inch binders and four copy machines.”

Last year’s cutting edge innovation to put Bucs playbooks on iPads, an idea hatched in the gray matter of Raheem Morris, has gained fast popularity across the NFL but has been somewhat phased out at One Buc Palace.

Last week, JoeBucsFan.com asked rookie fifth-round pick Najee Goode about using iPad technology this offseason. “I haven’t been around it yet,” said Goode, who said he’s only been using an old fashioned playbook.

Goode’s comment came the same day Greg Schiano emphasized that he could recognize rookies that did their homework before their first training camp practice on July 19. “Some guys I can tell went home and studied their tails off,” Schiano said.

Internet Was A Distraction

Scaling back on iPad usage is a good thing, says former Bucs running back Earnest Graham, who was no fan of the iPad realities during the Bucs’ first season using them. Graham’s feelings run counter to Mark Dominik telling CNN last year that iPads were a “smashing success for our players.”

“I think the concept of the iPads was excellent but at times a bit too much for players and coaches alike,” Graham told JoeBucsFan.com. “The problem was that at times guys would forget to charge them overnight or to update them when they came into the building because everything needed to download before meetings. That would cause problems. Also the fact that it’s an unnecessary distraction with being able to access the Internet, games, and so on.

“I thought the idea was great but it was definitely more negatives than positives with a young team. I enjoyed being able to access the opposing teams’ cut-ups and video of that day’s practice, but in my opinion most guys did not use them. If you keep it simple and do your installations using your [paper] playbooks, you don’t have to guess whether a guy is on Facebook or not. Based on that experience I would never use them if I went into coaching.

Joe’s been intrigued by the potential drawbacks to phasing in iPad technology since the Bucs first rolled them out.

Forgetting about the distractions of the Internet, if a guy has access to game film on an iPad, isn’t the player more likely to not watch film at the team facility with a coach or teammate, and on a giant HD screen where he can get the best perspective and detail?

As for putting the playbook on the iPad, Joe surely can see the value, but that doesn’t mean it’s a more effective and efficient learning tool.

Perhaps learning from the Bucs’ experience in 2011, last month the Dolphins announced fines for players who visit unauthorized websites on team iPads. The Dolphins ditched all paper playbooks in June, per the Sun-Sentinel. It’s unclear whether the Bucs had a similar penalty policy in place in 2011.

Godfather Raheem

Putting playbooks on iPads is a booming NFL trend first concepted by Raheem Morris and launched by the Bucs. But Greg Schiano is going more old school.

During a rare radio interview last September, Bucs owner Bryan Glazer talked about the genesis of the iPad innovation and why he was quick to write a check to outfit the team.

“I was sitting in my office one afternoon and [Raheem Morris] came in and he said to sit down and that he had an idea for me. He brought up the idea of putting the playbooks on these iPads. And it took me about two seconds to accept it and think it was a great idea,” Glazer said during a WDAE-AM 620 interview with Steve Duemig.

“You know most of these players are very technologically savvy. You’re dealing with these heavy playbooks. Why not put it all on a thin device? These guys know how to use all that stuff. They could scroll through and look at all the plays. We could update it with video constantly. And if they ever get lost, this is a device that you could just press a button and wipe it clean from a distance. So there’s no harm no foul there.”

About a dozen teams are now either using iPads for all playbooks and film study or are in some stage of using or exploring iPad technology, per Jeff Darlington’s recent feature on NFL.com. (This makes Raheem the Godfather of the NFL iPad. Perhaps that could get him in the Hall of Fame?)

But it’s no surprise that Schiano has scaled back on iPad usage, at least for now. As a guy obsessed with details, Schiano is no doubt more comfortable with what he knows works, versus an iPad system whose flaws are still being flushed out.

Another Hatchet Job On LeGarrette Blount

Sunday, July 22nd, 2012

Joe’s often amazed by his brethren in the media. Some of their judgment calls are real stunners.

One example: Joe’s still not sure why every outlet that was so quick to write about Aqib Talib’s mother’s felony arrest in Texas couldn’t find a little space to write about how charges against her were dropped. For Joe, doing so seemed like common decency, but the media doesn’t always roll that way. Jermaine Phillips got similar treatment.

But now Joe reads Tampa Bay Times beat writer Rick Stroud’s Greg Olson inspired anonymous source attack piece on LeGarrette Blount today, and Joe is shaking his head. Wasn’t the last Times assault on Blount enough? 

Today Stroud ran with the many-months-old gossip of Blount’s tardiness issues.

His lack of commitment was startling to coaches from the day he was claimed off waivers from the Titans an undrafted rookie in 2010. For the first two weeks after being acquired by Tampa Bay, Blount, who was suspended at Oregon for punching a Boise State player, never made it to work on time and compiled fines of more than $15,000. Exasperated, then-coach Raheem Morris and general manager Mark Dominik ordered him to hire a car service with a driver to wake him up in the morning and transport him less than 3 miles from his apartment to One Buc Place. After a few weeks, they canceled the car service for one day. And Blount was late. He continued to need a driver to get to work in 2011. But his poor preparation habits also spread to the meeting room, where coaches said he would sometimes fall asleep. …

This “lack of commitment” Stroud writes about is really amusing to Joe. Funny how nobody complained about commitment when Blount got the rock in 2010, and when he finished with record numbers for an undrafted rookie back. If the guy needs a wake-up call and to be picked up in an executive SUV, who the hell cares if he’s racking up 1,000 yards and consistently tops in the league in yards after contact for RBs.

Funny how Blount’s alleged “lack of commitment” let him rehab and return quickly from a midseason MCL tear last year.

Also, the “sometimes fall asleep” line in meetings amuses Joe. Obviously, the room temperature was too high. But in all seriousness, Raheem Morris and Greg Olson, and to a lesser extent rockstar general Mark Dominik, had ample opportunity to suspend Blount for his bad acts, if they were as bad as Stroud leads us to believe.

Where was the suspension? Olson only ran the guy five times in the season opener. Surely that was a good game to suspend/sit Blount if he deserved it. Geno Hayes lost game time from multiple alarm-clock issues, so the precedent was there.

As Joe has written previously many times, if Blount was so bad — on the field, or off the field with alleged playbook issues — the Bucs could have punished him in numerous ways or cut him outright.

If Blount was such a villian, Joe’s quite confident Earnest Graham wouldn’t be sticking up for him.

Joe finds the timing of Stroud’s unsourced piece feels a little sinister, given that this particular gossip has been out there for months.

“Don’t Create No Problems”

Sunday, July 22nd, 2012

In the WDAE-AM 620 audio below, Bucs icon Derrick Brooks talks about rookies dealing with life in the NFL and how he met with members of draft classes and free agents, “I kind of went through the whole gamut of, ‘Hey this is what to expect with certain players and certain things. You explain the Buccaneer Way. I wanted them to hear it from me.’

Brooks, in response to the Brian Price-Mark Barron altercation, Musical Chairs Gone Wild, went on to say he advised rookies to not fight against many generations of football locker room dynamics. “Don’t create no problems,” Brooks said.

Joe wonders whether the Bucs have a Brooks-like leader that will emerge when the team reunites this week.

Don’t Pigeonhole Michael Smith

Saturday, July 21st, 2012

With a first round draft pick of a running back joining the roster with a proven veteran of a running back, it’s easy to see why Bucs fans would want to pit Doug Martin against LeGarrette Blount for time at running back, if not have the two split snaps.

Sure, the Bucs have lightning-fast scatback Michael Smith on the roster, but he’s just a change-of-pace kinda guy, right?

Well…

It seems Smith has other plans, so he told Scott Smith (?) of Buccaneers.com.

Smith would happily take every third-down snap the Buccaneers would like to give him this fall, after he takes care of the initial task of making the regular-season roster. Smith, in fact, will take on any task the team chooses to give him, from returning kickoffs to covering punts to running between the tackles. The point he is seeking to prove, the point that can get lost if you pigeonhole him as a ‘third-down back,’ is that he can do all those things. In the NFL. Right now.

“I can do that, I can do anything the team wants me to do,” said Smith of the third-down role that conjures images of a Darren Sproles-like scatback with speed and good hands. “I’m here for the team. I’m trying to be a Buccaneer all the way. I’m 100 percent in, so whatever they expect me to do – kick return, punt return, special teams, anything – I’m out there just working hard and trying to participate in everything. I’m getting involved in everything they want me to do, full-speed.”

Smith was out there on the field Thursday with the rest of the Buccaneers’ rookies and first-year players, getting a week-long head start on training camp, which opens for the veterans next Thursday. But he wasn’t alone. Two-thirds of Tampa Bay’s six-person field of tailbacks heading into camp are rookies, including first-round pick Doug Martin. The other two are Mossis Madu, who has nine games of NFL experience, and incumbent starter LeGarrette Blount, who is going into just his third NFL season. The Buccaneers have reworked their backfield with youth and, they believe, talent, and there is going to be stiff competition for the football over the next six weeks. Blount and Martin are understandably considered the top candidates to get that ball, but Smith simply wants the chance to prove he belongs in the battle. On all downs, not just third.

That’s the attitude Joe loves to read about: Just put me in, coach. If there is any player that may surprise Bucs fans, Joe believes it will be Smith.

Although Joe is quoting a baseball Hall of Famer, Joe loves the line former Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog used to spout when asked about seemingly loading his roster with track stars.

“Speed kills.”

Smith has that.

Bucs Not Looking For Another RB?

Saturday, July 21st, 2012

Forget the order, the Bucs’ depth chart at running back includes Mossis Madu, LeGarrette Blount and rookies Doug Martin and Michael Smith, plus some guys that are apparent camp bodies.

That’s not a lot of experience, especially for a team that seems to want to pound the ball like it was 1972, and for a team that has little experience at fullback. Joe can’t remember the last time the Bucs had such young blood in the backfield.

Should they go get a veteran to compete and study up close?

ESPN NFC South blogger Pat Yasinskas says it’s not happening, so he wrote in a live chat in response to a reader longing for Cedric Benson yesterday.

Sajid [via mobile]: Why dont the bucs sign cedric benson one year contract great fit with big O line teach blunt something could be a steal just like thomas jones back with the gruden era

Pat Yasinskas: They just invested two draft picks on RBs. Don’t think they’re looking for more right now.

Joe’s written many times that Ryan Grant would be a sweet insurance policy, if he were to be on the roster when training camp opened. He finished on a high note last season and certainly the Bucs have the cap room to afford such a luxury — even if they have to cut him.

Joe’s as excited as the next guy about what speedster seventh-rounder Michael Smith might bring to the table, but he’s still a longshot to become a solid player in the NFL.

NFL Network recently reported that 10 of 32 starting running backs were lost for the season in 2011. Joe doesn’t like those odds without a veteran back in the stable. Hopefully, the Bucs won’t need one.

Mark Barron Reportedly Inks Contract

Friday, July 20th, 2012

Leave it to the long NFL tentacles of the creator, curator and overall guru of ProFootballTalk.com, Mike Florio, to learn of Bucs first round draft pick Mark Barron agreeing to terms with the Bucs.

NFL Network also is confirming Florio’s report.

Per a league source with knowledge of the situation, the Buccaneers and Barron have agreed to terms.

The fully-guaranteed, four-year contract includes a signing bonus of $8.961 million and base salaries of $390,000 in 2012, $1.047 million in 2013, $1.705 million in 2014, and $2.362 million in 2014.

Obviously this is good news for Bucs fans and first-year coach Greg Schiano that everyone is in the fold and everyone shy of Da’Quan Bowers will be at training camp.

Now Mark, stay away from the long Popeye arms of Brian Price and all should be good!

Bucs Worse Than In 2011?

Friday, July 20th, 2012

It’s no surprise that predictions for the 2012 Bucs are all over the map. That’s what happens when you have a talented roster that still has holes, combined with no firm read on the quality of coaching and playcalling.

NFL Network guru Mike Mayock fiercely defended his prediction of the Bucs making the playoffs. Warren Sapp says the Bucs won’t “contend.” Mercurial mouthpiece Adam Schein, of NFL Radio, says the Bucs will win nine or 10 games.

And now longtime CBS Sports NFL analyst Pete Prisco says the Bucs will finish 3-13.

Jimminy Christmas! That’s worse than last season’s 4-12 debacle. What man of sound mind could make such a prognostication? Perhaps Prisco thinks the Bucs should have stayed Yungry and retained Raheem Morris?

This reminds Joe of Peter King’s infamous 2-14 season prediction for the 2010 season, when the Bucs won 10 games.

Joe’s not ready to call the 2012 season record, but rest assured it will have the Bucs winning more than three games. If the Bucs actually win only three games, then Joe would have no problem with Team Glazer starting over again.

Big-Name Bucs Working Out Hard At Plant High

Friday, July 20th, 2012

Perhaps preparing for the tough conditioning tests coming next week under the New Schiano Order, or perhaps still working out anger over the Bucs’ heinous 10-game losing streak, Mike Williams, Josh Freeman, Dallas Clark, Vincent Jackson, Sammie Stroughter and other Bucs have been training hard over at Plant High School.

How does Joe know they’re putting in hard work? Well, in very amateur vidoes posted yesterday on Williams’ Facebook page (written, directed and shot by Williams), the Bucs’ wide receiver seems to like to pick up the camera when he’s gasping for breath.

“We’re out here getting ready baby. Super Bowl.” Williams said covered in sweat in one take. One can also see Sammie Stroughter clearly recovering from something grueling in another video.

Joe’s pleased to see the dedication, especially Jackson and Freeman getting as much on-field time together as possible. 

“It’s Not Just LeGarrette”

Friday, July 20th, 2012

Since the moment Bucs rock star general manager Mark Dominik traded up at the end of Day 1 of the draft to snooker Tom Coughlin and the Giants and acquire Boise State running back Doug Martin, many Bucs fans have tried to create a “battle” between the two.

As Martin told Joe earlier this year, that simply isn’t the case.

So on Thursday, when Bucs rookies were made available to the local pen and mic club, Smith again had to explain there is no fight on the field between him and Blount. Rather, there is a battle with all the running backs.

“It’s not just LeGarrette,” Martin said. “We’ve got like five running backs in the room and there’s competition between everybody and all that’s going to do is make us better.”

Joe just thinks this is beyond refreshing. Does Martin want the job? Of course. But Martin seems to relish a team-first mentality and above all else, winning. What a novel concept.

While many have tried their best to make Blount and Martin some sort of football enemies, Martin seems to be more concerned about extracurricular elements of training camp than any friction fiction people try to apply to him and Blount.

“I’m curious to see if there’s any hazing going on,” Martin said. “I’m not sure if there is or not so I’m going to be watching my back, definitely.

Being a rookie and being a freshman in college is “definitely different. I feel I have a chance to go here whereas in college I redshirted and had to wait for two guys to get out of there and eventually got the chance to compete for that top spot, so it’s definitely different.”

“A Word Of Caution” For D-Linemen

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

There will be no long leashes for the Bucs held over from the Raheem The Dream regime, so says Pat Kirwan.

The former Jets front office executive, Jets linebackers coach, Bucs scout and current analyst for CBS and NFL Radio wagged a written-word finger of warning to the big-name youngsters on the Bucs defensive line in a recent take for CBSSports.com. Kirwan believes the New Schiano Order will not tolerate anything but heady and hustling play.

The Bucs’ defense will be a 4-3 scheme and it is time for the front four with all those high draft picks to come through. A word of caution to the players, Schiano didn’t draft you and if you don’t play hard and smart every play you will not be in Tampa long. The Bucs have 10 games against top-10 offenses from last year and there is no margin for error.

There could be as many as three rookies starting on defense and that usually means problems with formation recognition, mental errors and just the challenges division quarterbacks Drew Brees, Matt Ryan and Cam Newton present. One very interesting defensive draft pick this past spring was linebacker Lavonte David. He has safety skills as well as linebacker skills and he should give the Bucs a hybrid player who can stay on the field when teams go to three-wide sets or use a flex tight end.

Clearly, Kirwan is not confident in the Bucs’ defense. And it’s hard to blame anyone for that. They’ve got question marks everywhere.

As for Kirwan’s edict to the Bucs’ “big four” linemen, well, that heads-up was fired directly at Gerald McCoy.

It’s All About The Fundamentals

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

New Bucs coach Greg Schiano made it clear from the first day he stepped on the practice fields this spring at One Buc Palace that the Bucs were horribly undisciplined last year and the basics were to be stressed.

Whether it was biting the football or toes on the line, fundamentals were to be stressed, demanded.

After the second day of rookie training camp Thursday afternoon, Bucs linebacker Lavonte David noted that core belief of Schiano has not wavered.

“We’re just going over the basic things, Day 1 fundamentals,” David said.

If Schiano is going over the basics as training camp starts for rookies, Joe wonders if the veterans can expect the same when they start practicing a week from tomorrow, July 27.

Good News On Brian Price, Amobi Okoye?

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

Chatting with media amid the summer swelter on the fields of One Buc Palace today, Greg Schiano said he expects every Buccaneer outside of Da’Quan Bowers to be present and ready for training camp when the full team reports next week.

Immediately, Joe thought this was a great sign for Brian Price and Amobi Okoye.

Of course, Price’s health has been under a cloud of uncertainty for years, and his state of mind became an issue this year when he was excused from mandatory minicamp after struggling following his sister’s accidental death, landed in the hospital and later had an altercation with Mark Barron. Okoye had a some sort of knee procedure and missed mandatory minicamp.

These two guys coming in healthy is a huge deal. The Bucs can’t afford to enter another season paper thin at defensive tackle.

Get Impressed At Ed Morse Cadillac Tampa

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

You’ll be impressed if you take advantage of the amazing service specials at Ed Morse Cadillac Tampa, and check out their new and pre-owned inventory. It’s a great time to experience a Cadillac, and Ed Morse Cadillac Tampa is the only place you’ll need to go. Joe can’t say enough good things about them.

 

 

Homework Key For Leonard Johnson

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

There is always a player or two that Bucs fans latch onto in training camp and preseason and hope makes the squad. Last year it was wide receiver Ed Gant, who racked up a bunch of yards against guys who are currently driving beer trucks, teaching high school and bouncing drunks out of bars.

If Joe is rooting for any rookie to make the team, it would be Leonard Johnson, for purely selfish reasons.

Joe got to know Johnson when he was the starting quarterback at Largo High School as a freshman. So Joe thinks it would be cool that a local guy who grew up with the Bucs, a guy Joe knew before Johnson could legally drive, could make the squad.

Always a studious guy, Johnson admitted he didn’t have much of a summer vacation. The downtime between the last OTA and today Johnson spent hitting the books, specifically defensive playbooks and when possible, video.

“I did a lot of studying over the break to prepare myself so I can compete with all of the guys,” Johnson said.

It wasn’t just terminology and assignments that Johnson has learned in his short few months with the Bucs, but he has also learned how to be a Bucs player Johnson said.

“The most important thing is to be a professional, both on and off the field, most definetly off the field,” Johnson said. “Just to be professional every where you go. Carry yourself like everyone knows you around town.

“It is good to come back out here and get acclimated to the heat, start learning terminology all over again and to be out there running around with the guys.”

Greg Schiano Wants Mark Barron At Camp

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

Bucs coach Greg Schiano meets the press after this morning’s rookie training camp practice at One Buc Palace.

Bucs coach Greg Schiano doesn’t mess with the Benjamins that dictate much of what goes on in the NFL. When players are supposed to be at practice, Schiano wants those guys on the field, so long as they are healthy.

First round Bucs pick Mark Barron has yet to ink a contract, thus, was absent this morning when the Bucs held the second day of rookie training camp at One Buc Palace.

While Schiano isn’t mad at Barron, it was clear the first-year Bucs coach sure would like to have Barron practicing with his fellow rookies.

“He is missing repetitions and a rookie, especially a rookie who we are counting on… ” Schiano paused to choose his next words carefully and added. “I am hopeful he will be here soon.”

Schiano just before being asked about Barron explained how repititions are so important for rookies, thus why this rookie head start for training camp is important.

“You get some individual attention where maybe a week from now they won’t get that individual attention,” Schiano said. “We will make sure as an organization they to get repetitions [when the veterans arrive] because that is on the only way to get better. [But] when there is more people here, there are less reps.”

Vincent Jackson Is Missed

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

In many circumstances, free agents are players that their previous team had no interest re-signing. Geno “Taze” Hayes would be an example in the case of the Buccanners.

But rockstar general manager Mark Dominik can be pleased to say that his big free agent pickups this offseason, Carl Nicks, Eric Wright and Vincent Jackson, were all desired by the former employers.

Per NFL.com today, Chargers QB Philip Rivers is still feeling the loss of Jackson.

“These questions are always hard to answer. You miss Vincent Jackson, I wish we never had to lose any of the big free agents that we lost,” said Rivers, set to begin his seventh season as starter. “But at the same time, I’m excited about who we gained in return. And getting Eddie Royal, getting Robert Meachem, those are guys that can make plays and do some different things.”

It will be fascinating to see how the chemistry builds between Josh Freeman and Jackson. There’s no question that Jackson was used to catching balls from a truly elite quarterback. Joe hopes the switch to Freeman doesn’t equate to a dropoff in Jackson’s impact.