Schiano “Likes And Respects Josh Freeman”

August 13th, 2013

Longtime NFL personnel guru Scott Pioli has joined the NBC Sports Network crew and was at One Buc Palace yesterday to examine all things Bucs. In this video, Pioli gives his view of the Josh Freeman-Greg Schiano relationship and a potential Freeman free agency.

Nicks Alarm Bells Ringing

August 13th, 2013

“Carl, if it makes your toe feel better, I’ll allow half-inch-in-diameter rigatoni during Wednesday lunches, and I’ll approve a cream sauce.”

It’s a conversation Bucs fans across the Bay area are having this morning; the unsettling state of Carl Nick’s surgically-repaired yet painful toe could take him from Pro Bowler to benchwarmer.

Yes, the Myron Lewis euphoria has worn off. Today on The Sports Page, on WDAE-AM 620, hosts Tom Jones and Ronnie Lane debate the issue and woven into the discussion is audio of Nicks talking about his injury in solemn tones. Lane sums up the fear well at the end, “What are we payin’ for playa?” (Click below to listen.)

Vincent Jackson Not A Mirage

August 13th, 2013

vincent jackson 0814

The past 10 days or so of the Bucs training camp, Vincent Jackson sure seemed like a man playing with boys. Sure, it helped that Freeman found his accuracy and on occasions, was throwing the pigskin as if Drew Brees himself was wearing the No. 5 of pewter and red.

Of course, cynics could argue Jackson was mostly going up against NFL neophytes in Bucs practices. Darrelle Revis, outside of walk-throughs, did not guard Jackson as Revis has not been cleared for full drills, yet. So Jackson was going up against a pair of rookies (Johnthan Banks and Rashaan Melvin) and second-year man Leonard Johnson.

The way Doug Kyed of NESN describes Jackson’s work against the Patriots’ secondary, the Bucs All-Pro wideout is in regular season form.

The 6-foot-5, 230-pound receiver may make the Patriots’ secondary look foolish at times, but it’s good practice for bigger, more physical receivers the team will have to face during the season. The ball was thrown Jackson’s way 13 times during Tuesday’s practice, and Patriots’ defensive backs only “beat” Jackson three times.

Kyle Arrington beat Jackson once during one-on-ones, while Jackson beat Devin McCourty and Arrington in later reps. Steve Gregory picked off Josh Freeman on a throw intended for Jackson in 11-on-11s. Justin Green also got the better of Jackson on one rep. The rest of the time, Jackson was beating guys like Arrington and Aqib Talib. Talib appreciated the practice, though.

“That’s good work man, leading into the season,” Talib said. “One week you get DeSean Jackson, change up the look you get V-Jack, Young Mike [Williams]. Man, it’s definitely good practice.”

Just by what Joe has seen with hsi own eyes (even with binoculars) and what Joe has read from both local and Boston papers/websites/sports networks, the Bucs, led by Jackson, could be scary good on offense this season.

As always, the catalyst will be No. 5.

Schiano: Practice Vs. Pats = Half The Risk

August 13th, 2013

greg schiano 0803The Bucs will practice with the Patriots in New England today under cloudy skies. The temperature will be in the upper 60s.

Taking the Bucs to cool weather is not the only way that Greg Schiano is going easy on his team.

Practicing against the Patriots for two days means lessened risk to his players, Schiano told SiriusXM NFL Radio on Saturday.

“You cut your risk in half, because you’re not hitting each other. So, you know, it’s a lot of good,” Schiano said. “And quite frankly, I don’t mind getting up there and out of this heat a little bit. I mean, I like it. But in training camp to get them feeling a little bit better about their bodies, hopefully that’ll happen as well.”

Of course, Schiano makes sense here. But it’s interesting to Joe that Bill Belicheat and Schiano, guys who are viewed as tough guy, taskmaster coaches, are into the joint practice thing that cuts players reps in a big way. The Patriots and Eagles practiced with each other last week before their preseason game.

Perhaps the biggest benefit to squaring off against New England in practice is Josh Freeman getting different defensive looks. The Patriots defense is very different from the one Freeman sees daily. If these next two days lead to Freeman building more confidence, then the Bucs will have really benefited. On that note, Joe hopes Aqib Talib is matched up against Vincent Jackson.

Davin Joseph Trying To Be Patient

August 13th, 2013

One of the coolest cats on the Bucs roster is guard Davin Joseph. With his menacing dreads and his big size, he is not the kind of dude you would want to face in a dark alley.

Joseph, however, is the direct opposite of his intimidating look. Polite, kind, intelligent, Joseph is always willing to talk to Joe and it’s hard for Joseph to wipe that seemingly perpetual smile off of his face.

Joseph, like Revis, has been limited in training camp practices, often relegated to the Tour de Schiano, a row of stationary bikes near the practice fields. Also like Revis, Joseph is chomping at the bit to drill a defensive tackle, but he’s on a specific rehab plan.

“I understand why we’re doing what we are doing, I understand that,” Joseph said. “Football is football. It’s not safe, and it’s a very physical sport. I take the advice of the trainers and the strength and conditioning staff about my plan as far as easing back into football and getting used to everything. Right now, I feel like we’re in the right place. With the other guys, they look really good, so I’m pretty confident that we’ll be ready whenever it counts.”

That may change for Joseph after the Bucs return from New England. If all goes well, Joseph’s rehab could be accelerated.

“I think we got to revise at the end of this week and see how we’re doing from there,” Joseph said. “Going off the last five days or so, there’s a high chance that I’ll get back to working real soon.”

Not many players would be agitated about missing preseason but Joseph is one of them. He noted that preseason is vital for a team to gel and for players to improve, and he realizes he has missed out.

“I value preseason,” Joseph said. “I think I need it, so we’ll see. We’ll see. Knock off some the rust, get used to having the adrenaline flowing, also going at the game pace and hitting somebody other than our team, and all that stuff. I think I need it, but like I said, I think we’ll revisit that at the end of the week.”

Listen To The Bucs

August 13th, 2013

training camp 0812

Joe’s good friends at WDAE-AM 620 have loads of audio of various Bucs players following the final practice of training camp 2013. Among the players are guard Carl Nicks, guard Davin Joseph, linebacker Jonathan Casillas, cornerback Leonard Johnson and safety Cody Grimm.

And of course, there is Bucs coach Greg Schiano in his daily press conference.

All audio from Joe’s good friends at WDAE-AM 620.

Josh Freeman: Mentor-In-Chief

August 12th, 2013

Greg Schiano said he’s seen “a ton” of development in Mike Glennon and plenty of credit goes to No. 5.

Here’s one that will have the Mike Glennon Mob pouring champagne.

The leader of the New Schiano Order hopped on NBC Sports Network this evening and raved about his up-and-coming rookie QB, all while praising Josh Freeman for his role in Glennon’s maturation. And Greg Schiano even evoked the word “competition,” a motto the Mob lives by.

“I’ve seen a ton, a ton of development [in Mike Glennon]. And the best part of this whole deal, Josh Freeman is one of the guys that’s helping him most to develop,” Schiano said. “You know that’s the kind of, I think the kind of thing we got going right now is that there’s guys helping each other out. I mean we all know the reality of this league. It’s pure competition and its purest sense. But it’s been pretty cool to watch.”

Yes, Joe knows Freeman is the No. 1 quarterback.

It’s not only great news to hear such a strong evaluation of Glennon, it’s also early insight into how long or short of a leash the regime might have for Freeman, if he falters significantly this season.

Highlights, Interviews & More

August 12th, 2013

Tampa Bay electronic media czar J.P. Peterson was out with his video camera at Bucs practice today producing the day’s news for the 620wdae.com video blog. (Peterson also lives at TampaBaySportsCentral.com.) Fans will see Davin Joseph and Carl Nicks moving well, as well as interviews and quality walking by Darrelle Revis.

Traveling Without The Leader

August 12th, 2013

While Joe will allow that he could be reading too far between the lines on this, Joe was surprised to learn today that Davin Joseph is not making the trip with the Bucs to New England, where they’ll practice with the Patriots tomorrow and Wednesday, and then play a preseason game on Friday.

Greg Schiano said Joseph will stay behind in Tampa for “strengthening,” presumably of his surgically-repaired knee. What, they don’t have weight rooms and trainers in New England? Surely the Bucs will have medical and conditioning staff with them.

Schiano also said a key part of the New England trip is about building “chemistry.” And since Schiano has stated numerous times that Joseph is a high-ranking leader of the Buccaneers, Joe finds it a little odd that Joseph, one of last year’s captains, isn’t traveling with the club on a bonding getaway.

Is it a red flag on Joseph’s health? Joe sure hopes not, but it’s hard to imagine otherwise. The other three Bucs studs coming off major injuries and surgery, Carl Nicks, Darrelle Revis and Adrian Clayborn, are all heading north.

Notes From Final 2013 Training Camp Practice

August 12th, 2013

Bucs training camp for 2013 is over. Here’s what Joe witnessed in a rather nondescript, pads-free practice.

* Steamy day for practice.

* Has Joe Twittered before how accurate Josh Freeman has been the past week or so?

* JF5 is having another Brees-like practice. Sick accuracy. Won’t be redundant this morning on that subject.

* VJax on a bomb, catches over-the-shoulder pass for TD down right sideline.

* Darrelle Revis now participating in red-zone practice. Live, not walkthroughs. Granted, Bucs are not in pads today.

* After a beautiful JF5 pass in a two-minute drill, Schiano got all fired up and ran with the offense down the field.

* (Promised not to be redundant.)

* Fake crowd noise!

* Bucs moving ball like clockwork.

* Pressure on JF5, WRs covered, JF5 throws ball away sailing it way up into the bleachers as kids scramble for cover, then scramble to retrieve the ball.

* Jonathan Casillas picks Mike Glennon over the middle.

* And with that, Bucs training camp 2013 has concluded. Thank you this time for your time so until next time, so long from the practice fields and temporary bleachers of One Buc Palace.

Schiano Identifies Eric Page As Top Punt Returner

August 12th, 2013

A couple of clean punt returns and a kick return Thursday night have made wide receiver Eric Page the lead dog in the Bucs’ race to find their next Clifton Smith.

Joe asked Schiano whether the returner situation has cleared up at all, and Schiano identified Page this morning.

“I’m not sure it’s cleared up yet. Page is probably the leader right now. We’ll see,” Schiano said. “[Michael] Smith did some good things. You know, Chris Owusu put it on the ground. That doesn’t mean it’s the end of the road. Right. We’ll have our missteps. We’ll just keeping working through it.”

Did you mean Page is the leader for both jobs, coach?

“The punt [job] really,” Schiano said. “The kickoff, I got a lot of guys out there who can do kickoff returns. I don’t mean to minimize the job. But it comes end-over-end. There’s a lot of time. It’s going to hit you when you catch it. The other one, it’s a spiral sometimes, it’s a knuckleball other times, it’s an flip-flop kick other times. And people are going to hit you a lot of times the minute you touch it. It’s a totally different skill set. So kick returner, we’ll figure that out. It’s the punt returner that I have my antennae up on.”

Still just 21 years old, Page was an undrafted player rockstar general manager Mark Dominik and Schiano admitted they were chasing last offseason but lost out to the Broncos, where Page blew out his ACL in training champ. He’s a year and a week out of surgery.

Hopefully, punt returner will be a much more critical position for the Bucs. That should be the case if the Darrelle Revis, Dashon Goldson and the pass rush come to play.

The emergence of Page again reminds Joe that the Bucs keptseven receivers on the 53-man roster out of the 2010 training camp. Joe could see the Bucs leaning that way, especially if Page keeps thriving at punt returner and injuries to Kevin Ogletree and Chris Owusu linger.

In his final season at the University of Toledo (2011), Page returned 18 punts with one touchdown and an average return of 10.9 yards.

Joe has a small piece of advice for Page: Don’t fumble.

Carl Nicks Has Lifetime Toe Injury

August 12th, 2013

When Woody Cummings of the Tampa Tribune spied Bucs guard Carl Nicks walking into One Buc Palace on reporting day to start training camp with his injured toe “heavily bandaged,” it sent up red flags and had Bucs fans scrambling to the liquor cabinet.

Well, it seems Bucs fans had good reason to drink. And the following news likely will have Bucs fans doing shots this afternoon, and not in a celebratory mode.

Carl Nicks is hurt. His toe, as Bucs coach Greg Schiano suggested early in training camp, is not completely healed and Nicks will have to fight through the injury all season, provided he can make it through the whole season.

In fact, Nicks told Joe and the assembled Tampa Bay pen and mic club that this injury will be with him for the rest of his days.

“I will have to deal with it my whole life,” Nicks said. “Honestly, it is not 100 percent, yet. I plan on playing some this next preseason game and obviously, the third one. We will see how it goes.”

Nicks has played sparsely in training camp in seven-on-seven drills and scrimmages because of his toe. Nicks noted what Schiano had said is correct; It’s something that he will have to play through in order to stay on the field for the Bucs this season.

“I have all the confidence in the world I will be back to playing,” Nicks said. “I will just have to deal with it my whole life. I would lie if I told you it didn’t affect me at all. It affects the way I walk, the way I stand around. I have to stand a certain kind of way. It is something I just have to deal with. I don’t want to get into taking painkillers and not knowing if it is hurting.”

Nicks’ injury was described last year as a “turf toe,” a malady that aflicts many a football player. But players, after much rehab, generally return and recover. Nicks noted, however, it may not just be turf toe.

“It’s been described as many different things,” Nicks said.

Nicks stated that the more he is on it, the more it hurts. He practiced roughly three-fourths of a practice recently and the toe was barking loudly at him. He also noted that the Bucs may ease up on Nicks’ practices in order for him and his toe to be as close to 100 percent as possible by gametime, not unlike what Raheem Morris did for Sgt. Winslow and his bad knees.

“It absolutely” hinders his stamina, Nicks offered.

Nicks is, obviously, frustrated about his toe. If he is healthy, Nicks said the Bucs’ offensive line could be dominating.

“Oh, it could be something special.”

Ogletree Joins List Of Wounded Buccaneers

August 12th, 2013

Darrelle Revis was covering real-life receivers in 7-on-7 drills today, albeit in shorts and no hitting. But the good news on Revis was tempered by news of more wounded Buccaneers.

Kevin Ogletree got his “feet tangled up” and has an angle injury, per Greg Schiano. There was no word on the extent of it.

Schiano also revealed that Davin Joseph will not make the trip to New England to practice with the Patriots and play against the Pats on Friday night. Schiano said Joseph would stay in Tampa for scheduled “strengthening.”

Gerald McCoy rested a tweaked calf at practice today, but he will head to New England.

Chris Owusu (ankle) and Danny Gorrer, both injured against the Ravens on Thursday, will stay back in Tampa. Adrian Clayborn and Revis will head to New England.

Stick with Joe through the day for much more out of today’s practice at One Buc Palace.

Schein: Freeman Could Be Benched

August 12th, 2013
Adam Schein of SiriusXM believes Bucs backup quarterback Mike Glennon could be the Bucs starter sometime this season.

Adam Schein of SiriusXM believes Bucs backup quarterback Mike Glennon could be a starter sometime this season.

Now before Joe gets rolling here, just because he likes a certain media personality doesn’t mean Joe believes everything he/she says. No one is perfect. The last guy alleged to have been a perfect man was nailed to a tree.

Joe is a big fan of popular sports radio personality Adam Schein. The New York-based footballholic, who can be heard weekdays on Mad Dog Radio, exclusively on SiriusXM, is all worked up about the coming football season as most red-blooded Americans are, and he offered a quick Bucs take Friday.

In short, this will get the Mike Glennon Mob panting; Schein firmly believes if Josh Freeman struggles, then he will be benched.

“I think Tampa has a deep and talented offense. Doug Martin is an absolute bolt, a legit feature back. The offensive line, if Carl Nicks is healthy, will be strong. Vincent Jackson is a star. They bring in Darrelle Revis – who knows if Revis is going to be healthy? But certainly if he is healthy that is an upgrade, no question about that. But Josh Freeman is the ‘Yeah, but… ‘ when it comes to the Buccaneers,” Schein said. “And don’t be surprised if Mike Glennon at some point outplays him and plays and/or starts for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. I don’t think Greg Schiano is a fan of Josh Freeman at all. “

Joe does not believe this one iota. Again, Joe loves Schein, but this is just inaccurate. There is a perception out there, fueled in the offseason by unnamed sources via the fingers of prickly Pete Prisco of CBS Sports, that there is angst in the relationship between Schiano and Freeman. That simply is hogwash.

There is no way Freeman, short of him going Trent Dilfer, is benched. It is just not going to happen. Hell, if Freeman puts up Dilfer numbers and the Bucs make the playoffs, he returns next season as the starting quarterback.

The interesting element ot Schein’s take is that midway through the 2012 season, Schein said he trusted Christian Ponder more than Freeman. Sure enough, Freeman vanished in the second half of the season when the Bucs needed him the most, and Ponder, with two key wins over the playoff-bound Texans and the Packers, led the Vikings to the postseason.

Joe knows the Mike Gennon Mob sits in their backyards with pin cushions and voodoo dolls and rabbits feet hoping and praying that Glennon is the starting quarterback soon. That crowd would love nothing more than to dance on Freeman’s grave.

Let it go guys. Joe has a better chance of waking up next to curvy Rachel Watson after a long evening of wrestling between the sheets.

Freeman Says He’ll Be “Far More Accurate”

August 12th, 2013

Josh Freeman has not been among the most accurate quarterbacks during his four years in the NFL. Freeman ranked 33rd in the NFL last season in completion percentage among quarterbacks with at least 100 attempts. During his glory season of 2010, Freeman ranked 19th.

The Bucs seemingly don’t believe that has anything to do with Freeman’s mechanics. In fact, new quarterback coach John McNulty made it very clear to Joe and other media that tweaking/teaching a veteran like Freeman mechanics is virtually worthless.

(Joe finds that to be a very short-sighted mindset and QB mechanics are not a detail that detail-obsessed regime should blow off).

McNulty said he’s focusing on Freeman’s advancement within in the offense so Freeman can be faster with his mind and feet and progress in that way.

The good news is that on Saturday Freeman explained to Zig Fracassi and Booger McFarland of SiriusXM NFL Radio why he should be “far more accurate” this season.

Freeman was asked what will make him better because he’s in Year 2 of the Mike Sullivan offense.

“Terminology overall. When you hear a play you hear it and you see the concept and the protection and you see it all kind of as one picture. Rather than, ‘Alright we’ve got this formation, we’ve got this concept over here, we’ve got this over here, we can work this versus this.'” Freeman said.

“And you just kind of see it [all at once]. And you can get there and shift the protection, drop back and throw the ball where you know you got to go with it. With that, your feet speed up. Your feet get exactly where they need to go, and [you’re] far more accurate.”

Joe has no doubt a second season under Sullivan will help Freeman improve. Clearly, his confidence is far ahead of where it was at this time last year. That can’t hurt. But how Freeman performs under extreme pressure is what’s under the most scrutiny. And much of how he responds is more about Freeman personally than anything else.

It’s The Defense

August 12th, 2013
Led by receiver Vincent Jackson, the Bucs offense is playoff ready, based on a calculation from NFL insider Pat Kirwan.

Led by receiver Vincent Jackson, the Bucs offense is playoff-ready, based on a calculation by NFL insider Pat Kirwan.

Last year as the Bucs’ pass defense created a spike in local pharmaceutical sales for Nexium, Joe was of the opinion that it was Bucs franchise quarterback Josh Freeman’s Six Flags ways that doomed the Bucs in a push for the playoffs.

Pat Kirwan seems to take a different side. The former NFL assistant coach and front office man who, among his many gigs co-hosts one of the best football shows in the free world, “Movin’ the Chains,” with Tim Ryan heard exclusively on SiriusXM NFL Radio, pumped out a take that would seem to suggest Freeman’s vanishing act in the latter part of the season had nothing to do with the Bucs watching the playoffs on their couches last January.

@PatKirwanCBS: The 12 teams in playoffs last yr averaged 27 touchdown passes from offense..can your favorite team do that this yr?

Well, the Bucs — and Freeman did just that. The Bucs had 27 touchdown passes, the average Kirwan cites for a playoff team.

If one is to believe in numbers — which never do tell the whole story — the Bucs should have been in the playoffs.

But if one is to subscribe to Kirwan’s theory, the Bucs offense is playoff-ready as Joe types this, which sort of reinforces what Keyshawn Johnson told the Tampa Bay pen and mic club Saturday when he popped into One Buc Palace.

Johnson talked about how drastically the NFL has changed and that in today’s game, defense is almost an afterthought. He mentioned how the Packers lost but one game in 2011, with an NFL-record worst pass defense. Keyshawn also mentioned that Bill Belicheat doesn’t care if teams score on him because with Tom Brady, the Patriots can score just as easily if not quickly.

Now is Freeman the next Brady or Aaron Rodgers? No. Not yet, but it will be interesting to see how much he has improved with a second year under offensive coordinator Mike Sullivan.

For those who dismiss this, Joe only points to Alex Smith. Nearly run out of football, Smith had nothing but a revolving door of offensive coordinators and head coaches until he found stability with Jim Harbaugh. And what happened? He was a special teams fumble from leading the 49ers to the Super Bowl.

Dominik Was (Is?) Nervous About Losing Sullivan

August 11th, 2013

One ugly reality of the 2013 season is the status of offensive coordinator Mike Sullivan.

A West Point grad, Sullivan attended the Army’s Airborne, Ranger and Air Assault schools before serving as an officer and then embarking on a 20-year career in football coaching. Sullivan’s also got a couple of Super Bowl rings with the Giants, references, and he marshaled the ninth-ranked offense in the NFL last season.

Another season of strong Buccaneers offense, and Sullivan would be a hot head-coaching candidate, and a worthy one. Sullivan jumped at the chance to interview for the open Bears head coaching job last season.

Based on rockstar general manager Mark Dominik’s comments yesterday on SiriusXM NFL Radio, Dominik believed Sullivan was a serious candidate in Chicago.

“I was a little nervous Mike Sullivan was going to be one and done here. You know, he had a chance to get hired, and that was big for us, selfishly,” Dominik said. “Mike Sullivan is a heck of an offensive coordinator.”

Of course, losing Sullivan would be disastrous. Josh Freeman and/or Mike Glennon would not benefit from a new playcaller in 2014. Yes, the Bucs have Greg Schiano’s former Rutgers offensive coordinator on staff now, John McNulty, the new quarterbacks coach. But Joe would like to see the Rugters defense shine in the NFL before Joe starts considering the Rutgers offense.

As for Sullivan, the Bucs can’t stop him from interviewing for head-coaching gigs, but they could try to make his decision more difficult with a fat raise after what is hopefully a successful season.

Another Bowers Red Flag

August 11th, 2013

It was Joe who first brought word to the masses 11 days ago that Da’Quan Bowers was wilting in the Florida sun at practice. Joe had been studying Bowers all over the field and saw him succumb. Bowers also was seen fighting the hot-training-camp demons again another day.

Now, after Bowers has been publicly pushed and challenged by the New Schiano Order, yesterday the defensive end admitted he’s not yet adjusted to the pace of practice.

Huh?

Bowers was asked to assess what he likes and doesn’t like about his 2013 training camp performance.

“I think I’m still a little winded at times,” Bowers said. “I’m not in the best shape, still getting used to the speed of practice. But other than that, (training camp) has been decent. I wasn’t real happy with my game performance [against the Ravens.] A little banged up, no major injuries. But you know, I’m ready to go. Just got to get better and grind.”

Joe knows players are in a tough spot with the media. Raw honesty like Bowers delivered here isn’t such a good thing to feed the media sharks. However, in Joe’s mind, Bowers still getting used “to the speed of practice” this late in training camp is a true red flag. The guy’s 23 years old. He’s healthy. And Schiano has raved about Bowers’ work ethic and how he re-made his body — in a good way — when he was out part of last season rehabilitating a torn Achilles. Bowers shouldn’t still be adjusting.

You can listen to Bowers below. His quote above is in the final minute of the audio, courtesy of WDAE-AM 620.

Steven Means Making A Push

August 11th, 2013

With Da’Quan Bowers’ play below Bucs coaches’ standards, and Adrian Clayborn missing time with a sore groin, the door has opened for one of the Bucs’ rookie defensive ends to make a name for himself.

It seems Steven Means is, at least he has to Joe. The University of Buffalo product played OK in his NFL debut against the Crows Thursday night and in practice, he is making offensive linemen work, including left tackle Donald Penn.

Saturday, he got heat on Josh Freeman who tried to pass over Means. But Means simply jumped up and plucked the ball out of the air and jogged into the end zone for a pick-six.

“Coach [Bryan] Cox came out here and he told me, ‘Just go today. Just go,'” Means said. “He knows I know my plays, so all I’ve got to do is go out there and play my game. That’s pretty much what I was doing today. It excited the whole defense. A lot of the offensive players even came to me afterward and said, ‘Good job.’ It was a good feeling.”

Means is starting to get comfortable in that the he has adjusted to the speed of the game. Means thanked Bucs coaches for that.

“The fact that these coaches emphasize us coming out here and emphasize us coming out here with high intensity, it really wasn’t that much different from how I practice,” Means said. “Just to get out there and get the feel for it was amazing. I felt right at home. I’m looking forward to playing in a lot more games. The coaches just told me, ‘Get off the ball more. Get around the edge more instead of running down the middle of the man.’ That’s something that I took into consideration and I started applying it today.”

This is a critical time for the Bucs. It appears Means has done enough to earn time on sure-passing downs. Whether he plays more than just passing downs is up to all sorts of factors, including Bowers’ aptitude, Clayborn’s health and Means’ play.

Dominik Explains 2013 Confidence In Freeman

August 11th, 2013

Josh Freeman keeps getting high marks from the Bucs hierarchy.

Rockstar general manager Mark Dominik took to the SiriusXM NFL Radio airwaves yesterday with Zig Fracassi and Booger McFarland and was asked why he believes in Freeman in 2013. Dominik said his confidence comes from practice, and Year 2 of Mike Sullivan.

“I think he’s played smart all preseason long. I think that’s the main thing,” Dominik said of Freeman. “He’s been very good with the football, not turning it over not forcing throws. He did another good practice out there [Saturday], with the two-minute situation, four-minute drills, different ways to make sure that we’re moving the football. I think again, younger quarterbacks, I think they all need it, but, you know, consistency of who the playcaller is, consistency in the system are all important elements of it.”

So, there you have it. Freeman is playing smart and secure ball, and he’s got a comfort level in the offense.

Joe will add that Freeman is loaded with elite talent on his offensive line and at skill positions.

No more excuses.

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August 11th, 2013

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Listen To The Bucs

August 10th, 2013

training camp 0810

Several Bucs were available to speak with the Tampa Bay pen and mic club after the final open practice of training camp 2013 today, including former Bucs Super Bowl-winning wide receiver Keyshaun Johnson.

Among those chatting it up were cornerback Rashaan Melvin, defensive end Da’Quan Bowers, cornerback Johnthan Banks, wide receiver Kevin Ogletree, defensive end Steven Means and Keyshawn.

Also here’s Bucs coach Greg Schiano’s full press conference. All audio from WDAE-AM 620.