Chiefs Would Love To Have Josh Freeman

October 7th, 2012

Look, Joe’s a huge NFL fan, and while there’s a heck of a slate of games on tap this afternoon, Joe is dialed in to the Ravens at Chiefs at 1 p.m. The Bucs have Kansas City next Sunday at home, and Joe wants to study this Chiefs team.

Kansas City leads the NFL in turnovers with 15, which is absolutely horrendous, and the team is in shambles in many ways. Though they have a punishing running game behind Jamaal Charles and have put up points.

Joe talked all things Chiefs with 31-year Kansas City beat writer Bob Gretz on the 98.7 FM airwaves Friday night. Gretz made it clear that Matt Cassell is on a serious hot seat and a move to Brady Quinn is possible soon but “emperor” Scott Pioli doesn’t want to lose “his boy” Cassell. But Gretz also said that there’s no reason to believe that Quinn is the better quarterback.

Interestingly, Gretz, without direct prompting from Joe, said that Chiefs fans would love to have hometown guy Josh Freeman wearing red. Before the 2011 season, Joe wondered whether Freeman would want to play for Kansas City after he made comments about how being a Chiefs QB was a boyhood dream. If Freeman continues to be inconsistent, and the Chiefs don’t get settled at quarterback, it’s not outlandish to think the Bucs and Chiefs could make that happen for 2013.

The full interview with Gretz is below. A Hall of Fame voter, Gretz talks about Warren Sapp and John Lynch, in addition to going deep on the Chiefs.

“Opposite Approach” Better For Freeman

October 6th, 2012

One of only three quarterbacks to lead the Bucs to the NFC Championship game, Shaun King, would handle fourth-year veteran Josh Freeman very differently than the New Schiano Order does.

If fact, King thinks the Bucs should do an about-face with their plan for Freeman in the Bucs offense.

“I’d use the opposite approach to what Tampa’s doing now,” King said on WDAE-AM 620 this week. “You know right now they really have Josh almost being a game manager. You know they’re trying to run the football and pick their spots, which I can understand that. But I’d have to see if Josh can be elite. I can go get a game manager. I can go find Kyle Orton and get a guy and tell him, ‘Just don’t turn the football over. You know, throw the ball away if nothing is there.’

“I gotta see, can Josh Freeman be elite? So I’d give him everything we had. I’d give him the opportunity to change plays. I’d give him the opportunity to go into the two-minute [offense], speed the offense, the pace, the tempo up, if he saw fit. I mean I’d throw everything at him so I can really see what it is that I have.”

King also repeated his assertion that Freeman would benefit from a sports psychologist. King said Freeman isn’t always understanding down and distance or momentum in a game, in addition to poor decision-making with the football.

Interestingly, this week Greg Schiano made it clear that it’s important the Bucs “don’t get too nervous” and “stick to the plan.”

So it seems that King will have to wait a while to see an “opposite approach” with Freeman.

Da’Quan Bowers And A Playoff Run

October 6th, 2012

A lot of people point to the season-ending injury suffered by Davin Joseph to be a crippling setback to the Bucs’ running game and it sure looks like that’s the case. The right side of the Bucs’ offensive line is a mess without him.

But another, sort of under-the-radar injury (under the radar meaning it happened in the offseason) was defensive end Da’Quan Bowers’ Achilles tear. And with the loss of fellow defensive end Adrian Clayborn to a nasty knee injury, it just may have ripple effects.

What Joe is getting at is, Joe has a hunch the Bucs may try to rush back Bowers, who is eligible to come off the injured list in a matter of weeks, to try to help patch the hole left in Clayborn’s absence.

Pat Yasinskas of ESPN briefly touched upon this issue in a recent NFC South chat.

Nathan (Orange County)

What’s the latest on Bowers. Dominik expressed some optimism about his return this season but that was weeks ago.

Pat Yasinskas

Think there’s still optimism. We’ll find out soon.

If all things are equal, Joe would just wish Bowers would wait until next year. An Achilles injury is nasty and there’s no reason to perhaps endanger a career for the sake of a handful of games.

Whether Bowers will be able to return is still very much up in the air, and Joe believes the next few weeks will determine Bowers’ status.

Sure, the Bucs are 1-3 and a wild card berth appears a long shot, but crazier things have happened. If the Bucs go on a winning streak to enter the playoff race, Joe believes the chances of Bowers returning this season will increase.

If the Bucs continue to struggle and a playoff hope dims, the less likely Bowers will suit up this season.

When Stats Mislead

October 6th, 2012

Joe learned long ago that anyone wishing to prove any point can concoct statistics to back it up. This is one reason Joe is wary of judging play by stats alone, and another reason Joe has grown weary of how baseball has been hijacked by the spreadsheet warriors (who often moonlight as Trekkies), some of whom will actually try to convince innocents that Karlos Pena is a productive hitter, if you can imagine.

Take an element by eye-RAH! Kaufman of The Tampa Tribune. In a recent notes column, Kaufman offered a nugget that touts the Bucs as having a stingy third-down defense.

The Bucs rank fourth in the league in third-down defense, limiting opponents to a 28 percent success rate which would set a franchise record.

Sounds cool, doesn’t it? Well, let’s start peeling the onion skins off of this one.

This stat would suggest the Bucs have one helluva defense. After all, isn’t the moniker of every coach to “get off the field on third down?”

Yet when the Bucs needed that defense, it was nowhere to be found. In the fourth quarter of the ghastly loss to the Giants, Big Blue and Eli Manning converted two of the three third downs the Giants faced, including an 80-yard touchdown bomb to Victor Cruz.

Now in another loss, a gut-puncher to the Redskins where Robert Griffin III led the Redskins on a game-winning drive, the Redskins did not convert one third down in two chances in the fourth quarter (one of the third downs, Griffin completed a nine-yard pass, but not for a first down).

In looking at the play-by-play breakdown, the Redskins didn’t often face a third down late in the game because they were converting first downs early in the series of downs.

And while the Bucs may be on a pace to set a franchise mark for third-down defense, does anyone really believe this Bucs defense is as good as the glory years with Warren Sapp, Simeon Rice, Derrick Brooks, John Lynch and a then-young Ronde Barber?

One could argue this year’s Bucs defense, while much improved over last year, isn’t yet on the same level as the defense that carried the Bucs to an NFL title game in 1979, led by Lee Roy Selmon and Batman Wood.

So when people throw out numbers, it’s always better to break out a notepad and pen and actually go behind the numbers to get to the real story.

And that, friends, is the won-loss record.

Stylez Reflects, Rips Raheem

October 6th, 2012

Lots of juicy nuggets in this fun interview below with former Bucs defensive end Stylez White on 98.7 FM this morning.

Joe manned the 98.7 FM air chair in the wee hours and White was kind enough to join Joe to talk all things Bucs and life after playing last night for the Virginia Destroyers of the UFL.

Among the highlights, White talks about disliking Raheem Morris. His “respect for the game wasn’t really there,” White said.

Also, White explained his frustration with the Bucs frowning on his use of social media to interact with fans. And White talked about Donald Penn’s weight and Jon Gruden repeatedly showering him with “I love you,” and more.

Click below to listen or download.

Booger Divides Freeman Blame

October 5th, 2012

It seems everybody has a take on what might be wrong with Josh Freeman — and Joe will bring you many interesting takes on Freeman through the weekend — and that includes former Bucs defensive tackle Anthony “Booger” McFarland.

Speaking on the Rich and Booger Show this week on 98.7 FM, Booger said he assigns 30 percent of the blame for Freeman’s 2012 performance to the Bucs’ coaching staff and the “shackles” they’ve placed on the No. 5.

The other “70 percent” was given to Freeman himself. “If they would allow him to play football, then I think Josh Freeman can play,” Booger said.

The question of “shackles,” as Booger called them, is really the greatest mystery surrounding Freeman.

Joe suspects some of these alleged shackles are in Freeman’s head and how he interpreted coaching and let said coaching affect his natural instincts and confidence. Hopefully, extra time in the bye week will lead Mike Sullivan, Greg Schiano and Freeman to gel. If not, then it’s going to get ugly. Clearly, the Bucs need Freeman to return to 2010 form in order to win games.

Before this season, rockstar general manager Mark Dominik and Schiano talked about Freeman hitting “the reset button” and clearing his head and getting back to 2010 form.

It hasn’t happened, and Joe concurs with Booger in that it’s not all on the quarterback.

Joe remains hopeful, however. While many fans already are preparing to run Freeman out of town if he doesn’t turn into Matt Ryan this month, Joe believes there’s plenty of time to right the offense and get the most out of Freeman. It’s still just four games into a new playbook and playcaller.

Inside The Lost Sack

October 5th, 2012

RGIII drops back to pass and gets sacked at the six-inch line for a seven-yard loss by George Johnson and Mason Foster. Not so fast. Roger Goodell’s stat gremlins have stepped in to deliver their twisted brand of reality.

Scott Smith, on the fancy pants new blog on Buccaneers.com, explains why the NFL has stripped Foster and Johnson their sack.

On the play, Griffin takes a shotgun snap and is pretty quickly overwhelmed by Foster, Johnson and LB Lavonte David near the goal line.  At the time, it seemed pretty clear that the play was a sack.  However, Elias’ review of the play noted that all three receivers on the field immediately started blocking on the play, and that Griffin appeared to pause for just a moment before starting to run up the middle of the field.  RB Alfred Morris, who is lined up behind Griffin at the snap, rushes up the middle of the field and tries to throw a block on Foster but misses.

All of the evidence added up, in the eyes of the Elias statisticians to a designed running play, and it’s possible that the Washington coaching staff verified that opinion earlier this week.  As such, the stop of Griffin – since it wasn’t a passing play – is not officially considered a sack.  Instead, both Johnson and Foster get a tackle for loss.

As a result, the Buccaneers’ defense has eight sacks through four games, not nine.  The ruling did marginally help Tampa Bay’s already good rushing defense numbers, as that play is now scored as a run for a loss of seven.

It sickens Joe how the NFL invests so much energy getting the stats right but refuses to use technology to review a play like Mark Barron’s clean tackle of RGIII that senselessly drew a personal foul.

“Don’t Get Too Nervous”

October 5th, 2012

“I really think that after four weeks I can see how, you know, this thing can really, really take off. And we just have to make sure we stick to the plan. And, you know, tweak it here and there but don’t get too nervous because you look at at, and certainly we’re 1-3 and you are what your record says you are, but, you know, a play or two or a call or two and you know, we’re 3-1 or 4-0 and everybody is singing your praises. Neither one would be correct, singin’ praises or saying, ‘What the heck is going on?’ It’s game by game, you’ve got to find a way to win them. That’s really what we’re trying to do this week, set ourselves up for here for the next little group of games that one at a time we find a way to get over the hump.” — Greg Schiano on the state of the Buccaneers, speaking yesterday to Steve Duemig on WDAE-AM 620.

The leader of the New Schiano Order is marching on.

The plan is on target, so he explained above.

Joe’s not nervous — but Joe will be if the Bucs lose their next two games, home against Kansas City and New Orleans.

Ball Security Not Equating To Wins

October 5th, 2012

The Bucs have a strong +3 turnover ratio with a losing record. That’s a rare combination.

All that “biting” of the football in training camp seems to be paying off for the Bucs.

The Bucs are one of only four teams in the NFL that have yet to have a running back fumble, and two of those clubs (Tampa Bay and Chicago) have chalked up 100+ carries. Every other NFL team has coughed up balls in their running game.

The Bucs’ +3 turnover ratio ranks tied for ninth best in the NFL, but sadly, Tampa Bay is the only team that protects the ball that well and still has a losing record. 

Usually, good turnover stats equate to wins — in any era, for any team. So hopefully, that’s a sign good things are on the horizon for the Bucs.

So who is is the worst team in the NFL at protecting the football? That would be the Bucs’ next opponent, the Chiefs. Kansas City sports a heinous -13 turnover ratio.

Matt Cassell alone has seven interceptions and three lost fumbles, and the Chiefs are 1-3, just like the Bucs.

Getting Doug Martin Loose

October 5th, 2012

Joe’s not sure it is fair to judge a running back by just four games. Thus far, Bucs fans are waiting for the Doug Martin, he of the running back the Bucs traded up for in the draft, to arrive.

Martin has been the proverbial bellcow for Greg Schiano’s run-first, run-second offense, but only a scant few times has Martin been able to break runs of double-digits.

Sure, a lot of it is because the right side of the Bucs’ offensive line is a mess with the loss of injured Davin Joseph and the benching of incumbent starter Jeremy Trueblood.

This is raising concerns with Alan Dell. The Bradenton Herald columnist is of the mind Schiano may want to change his run-first objectives if he wants to have a longer shelf life than his predecessor.

As stubborn as they come, the new Bucs head coach insists he wants a run-first, physical team. He is learning that might not be possible, and if he wants to be around longer than the man he replaced, he might have to change.

The decision to move up in the draft and select running back Doug Martin in the first round has raised legitimate questions.

When Martin was selected, he received rave reviews from those within the organization who wanted him. Now we are hearing stuff like, “have patience” and “he is a hard worker.”

Those who described him as the second coming of Ray Rice have lost their voice.

Well, maybe part of the reason Martin hasn’t yet become a stud NFL runner is the Bucs have relied on him too much. There is nothing wrong changing things up with a guy who has a career average of 4.6 yards a carry. And the more Blount gets carries, the more dangerous he becomes; not just two or three carries a game.

Lastly, Joe’s wondering about the disappearance of Michael Smith.

Schiano Needs To “Better Understand The NFL?”

October 4th, 2012

Sports Illustrated scribe Jim Trotter talked all things NFL today on the Gary and The Commish show on 98.7 FM and went out of his way to back up the recent Yahoo! hit piece on Greg Schiano by Michael Silver.

Trotter said he knew that general managers and coaches were talking about Schiano’s heavy-handed ways long before he was in the mix for the Bucs job.  

And Trotter suggested Schiano might get help next season by possibly hiring new NFL assistants “who can help him better understand the NFL game.” Trotter said Cardinals QB coach John McNulty could be an example. (It was reported early this year that Schiano wanted to pursue McNulty to be his offensive coordinator but was denied by Arizona.)

Overall, it was worthwhile interview. You can check it out below.

“He’s Got Rules For Rules”

October 4th, 2012

Discipline is important.

Does extreme discipline win games? Well, the talented Bucs will find out this season under the New Schiano Order.

Jarrett Bell of USA Today caught up with Bucs icon Ronde Barber recently and asked him to describe his various leaders. The “D” word came up when No. 20 got to Schiano.

Tony Dungy was the humble leader. “You wanted to succeed for him more because you didn’t want to disappoint him,” Barber said.

On Gruden: “The most fiery guy I’ve ever been around. He wanted everyone to be in his image on the football field.”

On Morris: “The most passionate players’ coach I’ve ever been around. He loved his guys. He treated them like they were part of his family.”

Schiano? “Disciplinarian. That’s the best word for him. He’s got rules for rules.”

As Joe’s written many times, Joe’s fine with Schiano’s approach. In fact, Joe’s pretty much good with any approach as long as it translates into victories.

Scab Ref Rips Greg Schiano

October 4th, 2012

A middle school geography teacher in Idaho is no fan of the New Schiano Order.

Zebra Jim Core wasn’t moving up the college football officiating ranks, so he applied to be a replacement referee in the NFL.

In this Showtime interview below, Core is grilled by James Brown and Chris Collinsworth about his experiences. Core is asked who the toughest coach was he had to work with. His answer? “Coach Schiano.”

“He’s college,’’ Core said. “I mean the rest of them acted at a different level. You could just tell working with them, they were at a different level than what I felt like he was.’’

Joe’s not sure what to make of this. Who cares if Schiano wasn’t liked by this scab referee? Is it a shock that an Idaho guy didn’t like a Jersey guy’s delivery? And it’s no surprise that Schiano gave the impression of a college style. Schiano still refers to his actions at Rutgers as “we” on first reference.

Core’s comments come in the six-minute mark in the video.

Arrelious Benn Is “Obsessed With Fashion”

October 4th, 2012

In this CBS Sports video below, Bucs fans get a look inside Arrelious Benn’s personal life. Among other topics, Benn talks about how he is obsessed with fashion.

Barber Says “D” Had Two Bad Quarters All Season

October 4th, 2012

The 2012 Bucs defense has played 16 quarters. And in only two of those the Bucs defense was poor, so said Bucs icon Ronde Barber speaking on WDAE-AM 620 this week.

One might find that to be great news except the Bucs are 1-3 and have two top-10 ranked offenses in the NFL coming at them in their next two games: Kansas City and New Orleans.

“In retrospect, we’ve really had two bad quarters of football on defense,” Barber said. “You know, we’ve given up some yards, but we’ve played great red zone defense throughout this entire year. I think that’ll be a strength for us; it’s gotta be a strength for us throughout the rest of season.

“But we’ve played two bad quarters, and one was the fourth quarter against the Giants and the other was the second quarter against Washingon. And there’s really no excusing it. I could give plenty of excuses and explanations, but those don’t suit me or you and just kind of adds fuel to the fire. We have to play better. We have to tackle better. I think the sense of urgency coming out of halftime has always been good for us and it was especially good on Sunday. And that was the biggest difference. Guys doing their job.”

Obviously, there have been significant improvements on all three levels of the Bucs’ defense, but tackling breakdowns and unsuccessful blitzes have killed them.

Joe’s hopeful, but things won’t get any easier with Adrian Clayborn gone, depth concerns and more and more film on Greg Schiano’s new-to-the-NFL defense.

Thursday Night Football At Tilted Kilt

October 4th, 2012

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.

Grade Schiano’s Overall Performance

October 4th, 2012


Biggers Returned With A Big Workload

October 4th, 2012

In case you haven’t noticed, the Bucs launched a fancy new “Captain’s Blog” on their official website, much of it written by  team video maestro Scott Smith. Like most NFL clubs, the Bucs are growing their in-house media operation.

Some consider official team media nothing more than Soviet-style propaganda and mind control, but Joe doesn’t fall into that camp. The more the merrier when it comes to coverage of the Bucs.  And Joe believes it won’t be long before  teams in all professional sports wise up and realize they could dominate coverage and perception of their teams if they invested  more in making that happen.

In a recent entry yesterday, Smith wrote about E.J. Biggers’ return to the lineup against the Redskins. Biggers’ foot was all messed up after colliding with Arrelious Benn very early in training camp and he was working his way back in practice before Sunday.

Biggers had a shot at a key late interception against Washington but didn’t snatch it, though he drew strong reviews from secondary coach Ron Cooper.

“It’s really good that he’s healthy,” said Cooper [of Biggers].  “He played well Sunday, did everything we asked.  He went in and played 30, 35 plays, maybe a little bit more than that.  We looked at the film from last year but I’m not judging anything on what they did last year.  It’s a whole different time and we started over.  I expect him to get better.  His first game out there after he missed a couple, he got his feet wet and hopefully he’ll play better in the next one.”

Joe’s glad to see Biggers return. First and foremost, it knocked Myron Lewis to the inactive list, plus Biggers remains a sound talent who was simply asked to do too much as a frontline cornerback last season.

Is The Zone Defense Killing Bucs Pass Defense?

October 4th, 2012

Joe knows many Bucs fans are still stinging from the Redskins loss. The Bucs battled back from the brink and took a (brief) lead late in the game only to see Robert Griffin III go through the Bucs defense the way Joe takes care of a cold beer on a hot summer day.

Could it be the Bucs are not playing zone pass defense well? That’s the suggestion from beat writer eye-RAH! Kaufman of the Tampa Tribune in a TBO.com question-and-answer segment.

Q: Why is it that every time I watch this team play it seems as though the secondary leaves the other team’s receivers wide open for the big play? This happens every game, it’s not like it’s an occassional thing. I watch several games a week and it seems we are the only ones who do this on just about every play. Do we not have a scheme where we actually cover people?

– Sam, Saginaw, Mich.

A: Opposing QBs are completing passes at a 66.5 percent clip against the Bucs, averaging 8.98 yards per attempt. That figure is quite high and the Redskins had open receivers most of the day Sunday. Tampa Bay’s coverage was considerably better against the Cowboys. The Bucs need to tighten up when they play zone because QBs have too big a window to throw into right now.

– eye-RAH!Kaufman

It wasn’t just against the Redskins where the Bucs gave up chunks of yards on a pass play late in the game. While Joe wants to forget the collapse at the Meadowlands, Eli Manning and the Giants carved the Bucs apart to rally for a win. It is a disturbing pattern.

With Matty Ice and Drew Brees (both, twice) yet to face the Bucs, not to mention Michael Vick, Philip Rivers, Peyton Manning and a suddenly hot Christian Ponder, it would behoove the defense to learn to put the clamp down on pass coverage late in games.