Shaun King Questions Greg Schiano’s Value
October 4th, 2012
One of three men to lead the Bucs to the NFC Championship game, Shaun King, doesn’t have good grades for the New Schiano Order.
King is down on the on-field results, says Schiano is making rookie mistakes, and King is surprised by the team’s penalities and related lack of discipline.
“If [discipline] is not going to be a positive attribute for this team, then I really don’t think he has any value,” King said of Schiano, during the Ron and Ian Show on WDAE-AM 620 today.
King went on to say the Bucs have yet to establish a positive identity and the playcalling has been poor and the defense has been suspect. King said if Raheem Morris and Greg Olson were coaching the Bucs and got these results with the 2012 roster, then they’d be getting clobbered repeatedly by fans and media.
Joe thinks King is being a bit harsh overall, but Joe respects King’s results-driven line of thinking.
Ultimately, Schiano must get his team to finish and lead the Bucs to wins. There are no third-tier Bowl games or moral victories in the NFL.






Manning the 98.7 FM airwaves last night, Joe checked in with his friend and former Bucs fan favorite Earnest Graham.
The leader of the New Schiano Order doesn’t like to detail injuries more than NFL rules mandate. Joe gets that.
Joe’s doesn’t think there’s an expiration date on information provided to a reporter off the record, but Tampa Bay Times columnist Gary Shelton had different ideas when he shared an intriguing story yesterday that he said was off-the-record information he’d been sitting on for years.






The infamous Benn’d around play, exhibit A why Greg Olson was horrendous in 2011, returned Sunday against the Redskins.
Joe’s never heard of a player in any sport blowing out his knee without the injured leg on the ground, but that’s how rockstar general manager Mark Dominik described Adrian Clayborn’s season-ending knee injury.
Beat out for a starting job by Demar Dotson (who was beaten badly Sunday by Ryan Kerrigan), Bucs veteran right tackle Jeremy Trueblood has an admirer. That would be Greg Schiano.

