Archive for the ‘Recent Posts’ Category

“He’s A Freak. There’s No Other Way To Put It.”

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

Even the most casual Bucs fan can see Kellen Winslow stand out on the field, displaying extreme athleticism and focus on the ball.

It’s even obvious during practice. He’s exciting with mad skills.

Sadly, Winslow only has 11 catches this season, way off his 2009 pace, and he’s a tad behind his NFC South brethren, Jeremy Shockey and Tony Gonzalez.

Joe expects some breakout games from Winslow, and the Bucs will need that, if they are to compete against solid teams this season.

While Winslow was pretty quiet on Sunday, he did turn in a phenomenal one-hand grab on a tipped ball thrown by Josh Freeman early in the game. On a scale of 1-1o, the difficulty there was 11.

Raheem Morris was asked about that play and Winslow’s impact during his news conference yesterday. Raheem is smitten with his tight end soldier

“He’s a freak. There’s no other way to put it. He makes plays that I don’t coach. He makes plays that he just has that inate ability to make a play,” Morris said. “But he’s awesome. He’s a freak, man. He brings energy to our football team like no one else.

You know, we all joke about him a little bit. I see Geno [Hayes] out there doing the Kellen routes today because we missed him on the practice field. He brings us a different type of energy and a different type of flow, and a different type of playmaking ability.”

With all that ability, Joe would like to see the Bucs get him more involved. There is no reason to save or baby Winslow. He’s in his prime. He’s got limited life left on his knees. Let him loose all over the field.

Don’t Get Depressed, Bucs Fans

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

raheem morris 093010Allow Joe to offer Bucs fans a virtual dose of Zoloft.

Ross Tucker, speaking on Sirius NFL Radio this morning, as he co-hosted “The Opening Drive” with Bob Papa, suggested the Bucs may not be a bad team at all.

Despite the fact the Bucs are 2-1, many Bucs fans are licking their wounds after the beatdown administered by the Steelers last week.

Tucker wonders whether such thought is valid. He pointed out that of the three Steelers opponents this year, they are all 2-1, that the only loss the three teams that played the Steelers suffered were to the Steelers.

That’s right, the Falcons, Titans and Bucs are all 2-1, each becoming roadkill for the Steelers.

So, in a manner of speaking, the Bucs, in Tucker’s eyes, are no worse than the Falcons or Titans.

Win A Caddy Jersey; Drawing On Friday

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

JoeBucsFan.com has teamed up with his good friends at Ed Morse Cadillac Tampa to put some Cadillac Williams jerseys in your hands.

This is simple.

Sign into your personal Facebook account and then head over to the Facebook page for Ed Morse Cadillac Tampa. Click on the “Like” button at the top of the page and you are automatically registered to win a Reebok replica Cadillac Williams jersey (retail value $79). 

Two winners will be announced on the Ed Morse Cadillac Tampa Facebook page on October 1., 2010

Winner selected at random from Facebook entrants/followers. Ed Morse employees are not eligible.  Must be 21 years old to win with a valid driver’s license. Cadillac Williams Jersey offer expires September 30, 2010. Winner will be announced via Ed Morse Cadillac Tampa Facebook page.

“The Browns Are Like Tylenol”

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

The Commish, Justin Pawlowski, of WDAE-AM 620, turns in another one of his comical yet very serious Fantasy Football updates. A true NFL draft and fantasy football guru, The Commish offers up his tips and takes, including the pickup of the week.

THE OPTIMIST: Stat Sheet Tells Its Own Story

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

You’ve all read THE PESSIMIST, who spews his Bucs-related anger like no other. But Joe also wants you to know THE OPTIMIST

THE OPTIMIST is Nick Houllis, a Bucs fan and an accomplished writer whose steadfast allegiance to the team goes back to the 1970s. Houllis is the founder, creator and guru of BucStop.com, a place Joe goes to get lost in time via Houllis’ stunning video collection.

THE OPTIMIST will shine that positive light in your eyes. Some will love it. Some won’t.

Caution: Objects in mirror closer than score indicates.

Before you pronounce the Tampa Bay Buccaneers D.O.A. following that unpleasantly aromatic display against the Pittsburgh Steelers, I feel it my duty as “The Optimist” to remind everyone exactly what that loss was on Sunday.

One non-divisional, non-conference loss.

Nothing more, nothing less. The Buccaneers clearly were outmatched and handled on the scoreboard. But truth be told, only the scoreboard reflects the difference between the talent level on the Steelers and the Bucs.

For those who wish to downplay Charlie Batch, I offer up this tidbit of history; He is now 5-2 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers having gone 4-2 with the Lions beating Tampa Bay four in a row from 98-2000. Batch has thrown over 50 Touchdowns in his career; he is an NFL backup Quarterback. It does not matter if he is second string, or third string or fourth; that is a matter of politics.

He is a quality backup, and capable of beating any other team in the NFL. Everywhere else, the Steelers outmatched our Bucs, and their level of development compared to ours should come as no surprise.

When we last played Pittsburgh, we were a 2006 falling-apart franchise that should have started the rebuilding process right then and there. Pittsburgh was a veteran group only a year away from Super Bowl status. Today, they’re still a Super Bowl contending team; we are still a growing baby by comparison. The score showed it.

But while the scoreboard was capable of measuring the difference between the Black/Gold and White/White on the field, the stat sheets were not. That is because this young Bucs team was for the most part able to play with their older cousins for quite sometime they got punched in the mouth. First Downs: 18-17 Bucs. Total yards: 387-303 Steelers. 3rd down efficiency: 44%-43% Pittsburgh. Passing yards 228-186 Bucs.

So I ask, which Buc/Morris/Dominik/Glazer hater would not point out a Bucs disparity on the stat sheet if they beat a team 17-14 but gave up 340 yards of offense? Then be fair on the other side, and realize that two fluke touchdowns by the Steelers had a big effect on the course of the game and the outcome on the scoreboard.

Would the Bucs have had a chance to win if Cody Grim and Aqib Talib made the plays in the endzone instead of being goats? Of course, there’s little chance it have made a difference. Pittsburgh is an elite team, even without Big Ben, because Big Ben is NOT the player the Steelers revolve around.

So does a 38-13 pasting kill off what was a promising season? What kind of Bucs team is this?

The Bucs have shown it can and will beat the lesser teams in the NFL, teams similar to what the Bucs were last season. They are a Bucs team that is not mature or developed enough to compete against the elite in the NFL, but probably will compete against the average to above average teams, depending on when and where they play them.

Even the best Bucs teams got shellacked at some time during their season.

The 1999 Bucs reached the NFC Championship game, but suffered the worst loss in franchise history 45-0 to the Raiders.

Even the defensive 1979 Bucs team that also managed to reach the NFC Championship game played to a 0-0 tie at halftime against an Archie Manning-led New Orleans Saints. Final score? 42-14 Saints!

In 1997, the turnaround season that started Pewter Power, gave us a 31-0 loss to the NY Jets at the Meadowlands.

So even the better Tampa Bay teams have suffered blowout losses, and unlike the NY Giants or NY Jets from last year, the Bucs were not played out of the stadium. Tampa Bay was not even competitive in those games last season, but against Pittsburgh, the Bucs were able to move the ball and play competitively except for a handful of plays that went the way of the Steelers. Does this mean the game was completely even except for a few plays? No, Pittsburgh outrushed the Bucs 201 to 75.

The Bucs used to make plays on defense and make plays on Offense. So until they are good enough to do so again, they should expect scores and results like this possible when you take on a team that much better than you. 

But this schedule is not full of Pittsburghs, it’s full of teams that the Bucs CAN beat, and that is why this season is FAR from a disaster, even though the last game was.

“Such A Nasty Feeling Watching That On Tape”

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

Rookie defensive tackle Gerald McCoy took some pointed questions from fans on The Gerald McCoy Show on WDAE-AM 620 on Tuesday.

One caller wanted him to assess the pass rush and his performance against Pittsburgh. McCoy didn’t hold back.

“Honestly, that was addressed in meetings. That the pressure needed to go up and it wasn’t as strong as it needed to be. And also, that was one of those things where I say we grade ourselves critically,” McCoy said. “It was such a nasty feeling watching that on tape because our defense is better than that. We’re better than that up front.

“You know, I went home after the game and knew I didn’t play my best. And if you really care about how you play, and not just playing this game for what you can get from it, not use it as a job but play the sport that you love with a lot of passion and all your of heart, after something like that it’s going to bother you.

“Just fix it. You can’t sit on it, dwell on it. It’s Week 3. People lose games. Honestly, what are we tied for first in our division? Who expected us to be there in Week 3. You gotta take all the positive from everything you see. Going through Week 3, I’ve done everything I could to help my team.”

Joe’s glad to hear McCoy sounded ill while thinking of watching the Steelers game on tape.

McCoy went on to say that Raheem Morris made it clear to the defensive line as a group that it was not up to par.

“Raheem addressed us [Tuesday] and let us know that wasn’t good enough,” said McCoy, who went on to say Morris told the group he hasn’t lost faith in them because he saw their success in the first two games.

Joe really can’t quibble with McCoy at this point. It was just one game, and the defense surely was stout in the first two. Fans and the Bucs will learn an awful lot about the team in the next two games against the Bengals and Saints.

Ed Bouchette Talks To Joe

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

ed bouchetteThere are few more repsected NFL writers in the country than Ed Bouchette of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Nearing 30 years covering the Steelers, Joe caught up with Bouchette — a great guy — prior to the Steelers-Bucs game Sunday. Joe wanted to get an NFL perspective on the Bucs and there are few better football sources to tap into than Bouchette.

Joe: Was the Bucs 2-0 start a fluke?

Ed Bouchette: No, there’s no flukes in the NFL! Were the Cardinals a fluke when they made it to the Super Bowl two years ago? So, no. I like what Mike Tomlin says, “You are what you put on tape.” That’s what the Bucs have done. Have they been opportunistic? Yes, just like the team they are going to play today. The Bucs have [forced] six turnovers to two. The Steelers have [forced] eight turnovers to two. The Bucs are being outrushed and they are being outpassed but they are winning the turnovers. So, no, I don’t think they are a fluke at all. They’re a good young team.

Joe: What about this team do you like?

Ed: Without Tanard Jackson today, with Cody Grimm in there, Russ Grimm’s kid, it’s going to be hard. You know, I don’t like their running game. I’m not sold on their offense. I think they have a good, sound, young defense with a good inside linebacker, Ruud. They are a reflection of their coach: Energetic, young. I don’t know that they are going to make the playoffs. But hey, 2-0, they only won three last year, they’re off to a good start.

Joe: What do you make of their running game? There’s a lot of debate about that down here. Some say it’s the offensive line. Joe is inclined to say it’s the running backs.

Ed: Well, Cadillac has been hurt. He’s not the same as he was. That’s tough to come back from [two knee surgeries]. I think that’s going to be their problem [lack of a running game] and I’m not sure that is something they can overcome this year. That puts pressure on the young quarterback, Freeman. I don’t know if they have the passing game like the Steelers had last year to overcome a [sluggish] running game. I would be surprised if they do a whole lot on offense this year.

Joe: So, do you think that next year, this might be a team that the NFL should look out for?

Ed: Oh, definitely. When you are young and you have a good young quarterback — I know the jury is still out on Josh, it’s only his second season though he looks like he is  on the right track. If he can progress… we found that out in Pittsburgh that if you have a quarterback, you can do just about anything. You can overcome a lot of other issues if your quarterback is good. That’s what the Steelers did last year. They were 9-7 and right in it. Their defense wasn’t playing well and their running game wasn’t very good and their offensive line wasn’t very good. But because of Ben Roethlisberger they were able to stay in the playoff hunt.

Joe: Kellen Winslow said this last year, he called Freeman a black Ben Roethlisberger. Guys on Sirius NFL Radio also compare him to Roethlisberger because of his size, his escapablity and his arm. Do you see any similarities?

Ed: I haven’t seen much of Josh. Obviously, they are not on TV much when I’m not covering the Steelers. I just don’t see the Bucs on Monday Night Football. But everything I have heard — he’s 6-6, 250 already scrambled for 77 yards this year, he has an amazing passer rating. In fact, this morning I was on a TV show in Pittsburgh and [a co-host] called him “Little Ben” I said, ‘It’s hard to call a guy 6-6 little.’ He’s an inch taller than Roethlisberger. Everything I hear, he’s like Roethlisberger.

Blame It On Pete Mangurian?

Thursday, September 30th, 2010
Woody Cummings of the Tampa Tribune believes Bucs offensive line coach Pete Mangurian is not coaching up his troops well enough.

Woody Cummings of the Tampa Tribune believes Bucs offensive line coach Pete Mangurian is not coaching up his troops well enough.

Many Bucs fans wring their hands at night wondering just what has happened to the Bucs’ running game (or lack thereof).

Joe points to Father Time and simply physics: Earnest Graham is an old man by NFL running back standards and Cadillac Williams is not Steve Austin. and two knee surgeries do not make an NFL running back bigger, stronger, faster.

Woody Cummings has a different foil. A Bucs beat writer for the Tampa Tribune, Cummings believes there should be heat brought upon offensive line coach Pete Mangurian, as Cummings writes in the latest TBO Bucs question-and-answer feature.

Q: Do you believe that the offensive line is not as good as advertised? Or is the coaching to blame for the lack of a running game this year?

Theodore Arbolante, Bakersfield, Calif.

A: I’m really starting to wonder about the O-line. There is talent there. I think Jeff Faine is as good a center as there is in the league. I think Davin Joseph is as good a right guard as there is in the league. I think Donald Penn is a very good left tackle. But the sum of the parts isn’t that good. This was a rising bunch three years ago. Now it seems like an area of weakness. I have to blame the coaching, because I believe the talent is there.

— Woody Cummings

Do the math: Since Bill Muir lost his gig with the Chucky purge on that Black Friday and the Bucs tried to force feed zone blocking into the Bucs’ offensive line — which was on the cusp of being great — a scheme the line was not built for, the Bucs’ front five hasn’t been the same.

You know, round hole, square peg?

Still, Joe has seen enough holes not utilized or recognized by Bucs running backs to reinforce his premise about the running game. The blocking has been better than last year. So maybe Mangurian is getting the job done?

Q: Do you believe that the offensive line is not as good as advertised? Or is the coaching to blame for the lack of a running game this year?
Theodore Arbolante, Bakersfield, Calif.
A: I’m really starting to wonder about the O-line. There is talent there. I think Jeff Faine is as good a center as there is in the league. I think Davin Joseph is as good a right guard as there is in the league. I think Donald Penn is a very good left tackle. But the sum of the parts isn’t that good. This was a rising bunch three years ago. Now it seems like an area of weakness. I have to blame the coaching, because I believe the talent is there.
— Woody Cummings

Steve White Says Sapp Is No Fan Of McCoy Plan

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

"These old timers are dogging me"

If it’s possible to lob a grenade from a blog post, then former Bucs defensive end Steve White just tossed one in the direction of One Buc Place.

White is no fan of Raheem Morris’ explanation of why he’s OK with stunting Gerald McCoy’s development at undertackle.

And White not only details why he’s at odds on this issue with Raheem, he mentions that his longtime Bucs teammate, undertackle for the ages Warren Sapp, feels the same way.

Here’s a snippet, but Joe recommends you read the entire long take on White’s blog.

But McCoy will either take longer or never develop into a good to great undertackle if he is also trying to be a decent defensive end on either side as well as part time nose tackle as well. It’s just not going to happen.

And the reason why I’m being so vocal about this is because it reminds me so much of the way Gaines Adams was mishandled may he rest in peace. I don’t care who I piss off I’m going to keep talking about it either until it changes or the season ends. I may end up looking like Ahab screaming at the sea but I really don’t care. I know what kind of undertackle Gerald McCoy can be. I watched him in college, I saw him in the preseason and I saw glimpses in the first game against Cleveland. Its not selfish to want to see more of that, its smart. You don’t draft a guy number 3 to be a utility man, you draft a guy that high to be a dominant force AT ONE POSITION.

Maybe in 3 years when McCoy has established himself and has some game experience under his belt he will be able to dabble a little more at end keep his productivity up at undertackle but I don’t see it happening as a rookie. And the thing of it is the defense doesn’t “need” him to move around. That’s just not true. We have enough talent on our defense to not have to use gimmicks and trickem dickem stuff. That defense can line up and whup people’s ass if they are put in a position to do so. Last year I could understand trying to fool people to victory but not now. Not with the talent we have on this defense.

White dropping the line about Sapp agreeing with him is earlier in his post. Again, you’ll have to read it all on White’s blog.

Raheem said moving around McCoy along the D-line is critical to the Bucs being successful now, so therefore Joe has no issue with the move, even if it has negative long term effects. If Morris thinks he needs to do this to win and therefore keep his job, despite the possible longterm effects on McCoy, then so be it. The coach has to play to win.

Raheem is from the Chucky coaching tree, and as Chucky might say, “Hey, man, it’s all about this year. If I need McCoy bouncin’ around or playing #$%^’n hopscotch, then you better #$%^’n believe he’s going to do it.”

Given Raheem has admitted using McCoy in various positions is affecting the speed of McCoy’s development, then for Joe that’s a sign Raheem is feeling a lot of pressure to win with his young team. Otherwise, why not play the guy exclusively in the 3-technique where he and Mark Dominik raved about him locally and nationally for months?

Raheem OK With Stunting McCoy At Undertackle

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Essentially, Raheem Morris said at his news conference today that Gerald McCoy can not only handle bouncing around the defensive line during games, he has to do it for the best interest of the defense.

It’s necessary, even if it slows McCoy’s development at undertackle, Raheem explained following a question about the subject.

“If I was thinking selfishly for McCoy, I probably would say, ‘Yes.’ But thinking selfishly for at defensive standpoint, that makes us better,” Morris said. “Our defense needs him to move around to be productive, and be smart, and be sharp, and be wise beyond his years so to speak. And he has been. …During the season, you’ve got to do what’s best for the football team.”

Joe’s glad to hear Raheem concerned about winning over everything else. No surprise. After all, he is from Chucky’s win-now coaching tree, and Raheem’s got to know that he’ll very much be judged on how many Ws he chalks up this season.

It’s also good to see the MSM is doing its daily reading of JoeBucsFan.com and/or former Buccaneer defensive end Steve White’s blog. Here’s a post about White’s concern with McCoy’s development posted yesterday here.

Don’t Point A Finger At Cody Grimm

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Perhaps it’s “The Professor,” John Clayton’s Pittsburgh bias, but in this BSPN video, Clayton believes Cody Grimm has become a scapegoat for some in the Bucs’ loss to the Steelers Sunday.

Raheem Pondering Ronde Barber At Safety

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

barber and rahRaheem Morris has said multiple times that rookie free safety Cody Grimm played well Sunday except for his ugly miscue that led to the Steelers’ first touchdown Sunday.

Confidence in Grimm aside, the Bucs defensive mastermind/head coach said he is wrestling with moving Ronde Barber into the free safety position.

Speaking on The Raheem Morris Show on WDAE-AM 620 Monday, Morris said Barber, after 13+ seasons at cornerback, is a great fit at free safety but his great play this season at CB is a major hindrance to making the move.

“There’s not doubt in my mind, as Ronde plays out the twilight of his career here, that he can definitely move into safety and do some of those things for us that we get from our athletic safeties. We definitely think about it all the time,” Morris said. “Myself and Ronde have these discussions numerous amount of times.

“What was lost in the shuffle [Sunday] was Ronde’s game. It was lost in the confusion. How fast, how hard and how he played [Sunday] was unbelievable. He had eight tackles, one assist, two tackles for loss, and his effort on every single play was unbelievable.

“It’s so hard to move a guy that’s playing that high of a level at that position you do have him in. Because potentially you open up two problems. Now you’ve got a new safety and you got a new corner in, rather than having one new position. That’s always the fight I have with myself.”

Now, to give credit where it’s due, those who read former Bucs defensive end Steve White’s blog know that he’s been lobbying for Barber to move to safety since the day Tanard Jackson was suspended, so kudos to coach White.

Joe can’t argue with Raheem’s logic. Barber’s having a strong season. Don’t mess with what’s working. Not yet.

The QB Blasts: Play Johnson & Freeman Together

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Former Bucs QB Jeff Carlson

By JEFF CARLSON
JoeBucsFan.com analyst

Former Bucs quarterback Jeff Carlson (1990 & 1991) writes The QB Blast column here at JoeBucsFan.com. Joe is ecstatic to have him firing away. Carlson is often seen as a color analyst on Bright House Sports Network, and he trains quarterbacks of all ages locally via his company, America’s Best Quarterback.

The Buccaneers ran into a better team on Sunday. They were beaten soundly by a team playing without its best quarterback directing the offense.

If the Bucs and Steelers played 10 more times, no one would be surprised if the Steelers won all 10, even though beating a team twice in a row is quite difficult. Luckily for all of us, they don’t have to see Pittsburgh again, but they will have to see New Orleans and Atlanta twice, as well as the Ravens. Playing other teams that don’t have it quite all together (Rams, Cardinals, Lions, 49ers) give us hope that there are a few more wins to be had this year.

 But, what to do about competing with the better teams in the league? Pound the rock more?

I read and hear that message from some and always think to myself it sounds good, but how many times can you pound yourself into the same wall and leave yourself in long third-down situations before you realize something must change?

I can’t imagine many people making the argument that Cadillac Williams is better than the defenders coming at him. Titans running back Chris Johnson is better than his defenders. Johnson can create space and yards on his own. Cadillac needs help. The Bucs’ offensive line needs help to create gaps in the defensive front seven defenders. That happens through effective play-calling and deceptive play design.

Currently, the Bucs aren’t incorporating much deception into their running game. Thus their personnel isn’t good enough to line up and run downhill effectively enough to give Josh Freeman and his youthful receivers short third-down-or-less situations — or fewer third-downs altogether by actually running for a first down once in a while and giving the play-caller more flexibility on first and second downs for good play-action passing.

What is needed is Josh Johnson to be incorporated into this offense to bring some jazz and pizzazz.

And even if it doesn’t work, at least it will be more entertaining than the status quo. I brought up this subject in the past and obviously haven’t been listened to, but the Bucs messed around with Johnson in some “Wildcat” situations in training camp and were successful against the Bucs’ defense, which I would suppose might give them hope that it could work against others, as well.

Again, I am not advocating taking Josh Freeman out of the game or out of the QB position. The Jets are taking their star QB out and using Brad Smith (former Missouri quarterback with qualities very similar to Johnson) very successfully and the Philadelphia Eagles are reaping the benefits of using Michael Vick’s elusiveness to create massive holes in the defense and a whole heck of a lot of excitement for Eagles’ fans. I am specifically talking about using Johnson in motion from a receiver position.

The Bucs’ running game would immediately improve, if they started bringing Johnson behind the formation quickly and either tossing it to him for a run/pass option, putting linebackers and defensive backs in bad positions of having to choose to tackle the elusive Johnson, thus leaving receivers open for big plays or Johnson open to pick up big gains with his legs.

This threat would also help the offensive line create more creases and cutback lanes for Cadillac Williams, as the defensive line has to help stop more wide running plays and tiring as the game goes on when Williams seems to get better. The defensive line would also have to slow its pass rush to deal with the fast east/west movement of the offense, which would see the quarterback moving the pocket around more often.

For a few years now, the NFL has been evolving into a QB dominant league (Colts, Saints, Cardinals, Patriots) and pounding the rock has diminished as teams have found moving the ball a bit easier by design than by brute force.

I don’t see the Bucs being very successful as a brute force kind of offensive line, even though they do have some “nasty” in them at times.

Giving them a little help with a little misdirection now and then sure can’t hurt their rushing average, but it sure would help a lot of things, including keeping the ball out of the other team’s hands and improving defensive statistics, as well.

Now even a defensive head coach could get down with that. Getting Josh Johnson on the field against the Bengals will help take the ball out of Cincinnatti’s receiving dynamic duo and could give the Bucs their own dynamic duo.

Peter King Likes The Bucs

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Peter King fish

Earlier this year, coffee-slurping, oatmeal-loving, popcorn-shoveling Peter King of SI.com incited a near riot among Bucs fans by claiming the Bucs would win but two games this season.

After the Bucs met King’s prediction after two games, the longtime Sports Illustrated scribe began to warm to the team.

While he’s not about to make excuses for the Bucs after they got pounded by the Steelers, King confessed he does “like” the Bucs.

THE BUCS ARE ON THE RIGHT TRACK. “First of all, I just wanted to say thank you for not doing a rip up of the Bucs, but to put down the Bucs would have stolen away the thunder from your BFF Batch and all your favorite players in Pittsburgh. I think Batch is a stand up guy, Troy P is one of the best football players I have ever seen, Hines Ward is dirty, and Ben is a pig, but I digress. My point is: three plays worth 21 points (touchdowns each with the point after), and it’s a different ballgame. Grimm didn’t turn around, Talib should have intercepted the ball that landed in his hands instead of tipping it up, and a very large and slow man running that far for a touchdown after a tipped interception. Tomlin was very smart to start Batch, and it’s why he is a good coach.”
— Frank, Varico, Fla.

Look, when a team’s fourth-string quarterback has the kind of day Charlie Batch had Sunday, it’s not the time to say it was a fluky loss, which it sounds like you’re saying about the Bucs. I like the Bucs, but they’re not in the Steelers’ league yet.

Yeah, the way the Bucs got pounded, it’s a little juvenile to say, “Well, if Player-A made a play and Player-B made a play and Player-C made a play, the Bucs would have only been trailing… “

Good teams don’t resort to that.

Offensive Line Really Isn’t That Bad

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Joe has stated this so often he’s tired of reading his own words: The Bucs’ running backs are at best, mediocre.

Many Bucs fans gasp in outrage whenever Joe writes this as if he’s dropping a load in the middle of Sunday morning Mass. Bucs fans, understandably, think of Earnest Graham and Cadillac Williams like a comfy Teddy Bear. Joe loves both of these guys, too, but sadly, the numbers don’t lie.

The Commissioner, aka Justin Pawlowski of WDAE-AM 620, also is of the belief the lack of a Bucs rushing attack is not the fault of the line. Writing on his blog, Pawlowski came away impressed with the Bucs offensive line against arguably the best defense in the NFL last Sunday.

The offensive line isn’t as bad as most people think. Going against one of, if not, the toughest defenses in the NFL, I actually thought the offensive line played ok.  After seeing the way Blount ran effectively, I’m starting to think that it’s the RB and not the offensive line that’s the problem.  Cadillac’s a good story, but he’s not a good RB.  That’s on the coaching staff to realize that.  As for pass protection against one of the best pass rushing defenses in the NFL, I thought Freeman was getting as much time as he was going to get.  Freeman held onto the ball too long at times which lead to a couple sacks.

Joe believes the running of LeGarrette Blount, a guy who doesn’t even know the playbook, may have finally opened the eyes of Bucs fans.

The holes are there for people to run through. And even if there aren’t holes, as Marshall Faulk has stated recently on the wonderful NFL Network, good running backs can overcome bad offensives lines.

The Bucs’ offensive line is not bad.

Tanard Jackson To Enter Rehab Clinic

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

File this under the category of “Too Little/Way Too Late,” suspended Bucs safety Tanard Jackson has decided to enter rehab to try to clean himself up.

Steve Wyche of NFL.com, who was at the Steelers-Bucs game Sunday, reported tonight that Jackson will try to check himself in to an undisclosed rehab clinic.

Tampa Bay safety Tanard Jackson plans to enter a rehabilitation center in the near future as part of a process to keep on the straight and narrow and to get back into the NFL, a team official told me. Jackson was suspended last week for a year after a third violation of the substance abuse policy.

The Buccaneers plan to stand by the talented safety, whose suspension had a drastic effect on their defense. Without Jackson, Pittsburgh attacked rookie safety Cody Grimm (one of five players featured on NFL.com’s On The Fringe series). Wallace started the Steelers’ offensive onslaught by grabbing a 46-yard touchdown from Batch over the seventh-round draft pick, who struggled tracking the ball.

Not to tear off the scab of an unhealed wound, but why the hell did Jackson wait this long to go to rehab? Joe knows why: This is a desperate attempt to save his career.

Jackson, a free agent after the season prior to his third-strike-and-your-out flunk of a banned substance test, was due to hit the jackpot and make millions.

Now, he’s hoping he can just make league minimum, if he can find a team crazy enough to sign him.

Selfish… stupid… both words apply here.

Rays Playoff Games Won’t Clash With Bucs

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

What a night! Joe’s a big Rays fan, like most of his readers, and the Rays are in the playoffs. Tonight’s win was the first of hopefully five celebrations for Rays fans everywhere and especially at the widly popular JoeRaysFan.com.

A look at the 2010 postseason Major League Baseball schedule reveals that no American League playoff games will be played on Sunday, Oct. 17 or Sunday, Oct. 24, when the Bucs have home games against the Saints and Rams, respectively.

This is good news for fans who love the Bucs and the Rays.

Sadly, Joe doubts the scheduling will help the Bucs avoid television blackouts for those two games. And loads of people soon spending fat cash on baseball playoff tickets won’t bode well for the Bucs selling tickets in these challenging economic times.

More Raheem Gushing For Blount

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Joe told you earlier that Raheem Morris is now a huge LeGarrette Blount fan, to the point where he named the rookie running back the Bucs’ No. 1 option in short yardage and goal line situations during The Raheem Morris Show on WDAE-AM on Monday.

Here’s even more detail into the Bucs’ head coach’s mindset when it comes to Blount:

“He made some really good football players miss. I can name a couple. He made [Lawrence] Timmons miss a tackle in the backfield. He made Troy Polamalu miss a tackle in the backfield. And those are really good football players of high quality. We don’t play that quality every week. If he can do that to that defense, on his terms, then hopefully he can get that the rest of the season,” Morris said.

“And that’s why it’s really exciting for me. I know everybody is gloom and doom, and everybody is in the tank, but I still have young players on the cusp and still coming. Arrelious Benn, Legarrette Blount, these young men haven’t even scratched the surface yet. And we’re 2-1. And we have a chance to get these guys ready in the bye week.”

Again, Morris referred to everybody (the media?) being “gloom and doom.” Joe’s just not getting where Morris is feeling a sky-is-falling vibe. Whatever motivates you, coach.

Co-host TJ Rives pressed Morris for more on Blount. “Enlighten us. Is [his knowledge of the playbook] at 25 percent, 50 percent?” Rives asked.

“That’s being generous. You know, the young man’s been here for two weeks. And he’s really been running scout team running back for us,” Morris said. “We go into a game and say, ‘hey, these are the five runs we want him to know. These are the couple of things we want him to be able to do.’ And he’s able to go out there and execute.

“Now you just got to keep adding to that gradually and slowly. He knows probably more than we give him credit for right now, but you’ve got to be smart when you’ve got young players like that, especially with a young football team.”

“Being a head coach and a defensive coordinator, and I’m watching this big young man running through the holes in practice, and I’m going, ‘Coach Olson, we’ve gotta find a role for this guy.'”

Kareem who?

Breakdown Of Bucs’ Ugly Loss To Steelers

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Derek “Old School” Fournier, of WhatTheBuc.net, was so disgusted talking about the Bucs’ loss to the Steelers in this video, he began shutting down his equipment before the video was finished.

Blount Named Short-Yardage, Goal-Line RB

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

You can hear it in Raheem Morris’ voice. He’s got a lot of love and excitement for undrafted rookie running back LeGarrette Blount. 

Why the Bucs head coach is so fired up he said Blount has earned the role of short-yardage and goal-line back for the remainder of the season. Morris made the revelation on The Raheem Morris Show on WDAE-AM 620 on Monday, archived on 620WDAE.com.

“For me it was a mentality with LeGarrette Blount,” Morris said. “You know, we got the ball down on the 1 yard line. And we’re in a 2-minute mode. And we stopped. And we’re in goal line offense. Our mentality was to run the ball in on the Pittsburgh Steelers. Because I know how much they pride themselves on stopping the run and not allowing people to go in there. So we knew it would be all out pressure up the middle … and we had two downs to get it.

“You know, it was no second guessing what play we were going to call. We wanted to run the ball in the end zone with LeGarrette Blount and make a statement for our young football team and for us that we’re going to get this yard no matter what. Safe to say, in a live situation, in live bullets, that LeGarrette Blount has earned the short yardage and goal line back role from now on.”

Joe is glad Raheem made the point of “making a statement” for his young team by grinding out a critical one-yard TD run on the ground against the Steelers’ defense.

This is exactly why Joe was upset at the play call against the Browns when the Bucs had the ball with 39 seconds left, a 4th-and-1 situation on the Browns 5 yard line leading 17-14. They rolled out Freeman and he threw the ball away. The play there, per Morris’ core beliefs, was to let his young team pound out that one yard to end the game.

Joe’s just glad Morris is back to his core beliefs and buiding confidence through violent play.

McCoy’s Pass Rush Regressed

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Bouncing Gerald McCoy all around the defensive line like the Bucs have been doing may not be doing the rookie any favors.

That’s one point former Bucs defensive end Steve White makes, among many others in his popular Bull Rush column, which now lives over on White’s personal blog.

White breaks down the play off all Bucs D-linemen each week. Here’s his take on McCoy’s Sunday performance:

Gerald McCoy: I had McCoy down for a pressure, that’s all, and I was probably being generous. He didn’t necessarily have a bad game because aside from one play when he got caught with an influence trap he was in his gap most of the day. He also had a pretty good rush with an arm over on that first touchdown pass Charlie Batch threw. He beat the guy off the line of scrimmage but he wasn’t precise with his move and he didn’t dip low enough to be able to turn a tight enough corner with the guard still riding his back to be able to get a hit on Batch. Instead he just made him move a little bit to his left and then he set up again and chunked it down right over Grimm’s head.

McCoy’s pass rush on the whole regressed though in my opinion. He is now getting stuck right down the middle of guards instead of getting on an edge and rushing the guy. It goes back to why I am not a fan of moving him around to end. Hell let the kid learn how to be a dominant undertackle first. Let him learn to set up moves and counter moves from a 3 technique with game reps. Every rep he takes at end is potentially a rep he is losing at undertackle. A rep that could make him better. A rep that could teach him something. In the end we may see another one of those jack of all trades, but master of none if they don’t let him develop at the position they drafted him to play in the first place.

Just my opinion.

As much as Raheem Morris and Mark Dominik raved about McCoy being the prototype “3-technique” since the NFL Draft, Joe is surprised the Bucs’ defensive mastermind/head coach is throwing so much variety at the young man.

McCoy, as White noted, has routinely played all positions along the D-line.

That doesn’t mean McCoy can’t handle it; he had success in multiple spots through the first two games. But there’s a lot to be said for keeping things simple for rookies.

Sabby Counseling, Comforting Grimm

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

If there’s a guy on the Bucs’ roster who knows a thing or two about turning in a goat-like performance, it’s Sabby Piscitelli. His struggles were well documented last year.

In fact, Raheem Morris, before the 2009 season was even complete, even said he had to “fix” Sabby during the offseason.

On Sunday, Sabby took the opportunity to put his experience to work in counseling Cody Grimm in the Bucs locker room, so says eagle eye reporter Tom Balog, of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Grimm was burned badly for the Steelers’ first touchdown in the 38-13 loss.

Sabby Piscitelli, who was bypassed for the free safety job, is not letting his hard feelings for the decision interfere with his role as a good teammate.

The fourth-year veteran put his arm around rookie Cody Grimm and offered words of encouragement in the post-game locker room Sunday afternoon, after the seventh-round draft pick gave up a pair of first-half touchdowns in coverage, that contributed to the Buccaneers’ downward spiral in a 38-13 home loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Classy move by Sabby, though having him in Grimm’s ear might unsettle many Bucs faithful.

But it should be noted that former Bucs blocking icon Michael Clayton took rookie receiver Mike Williams under his wing during this year’s OTAs and training camp, and Williams is one of the bright spots on the team.

Perhaps Sabby is best suited as a coach.