Freeman Says Fumble Was On Him

November 5th, 2012

Did LeGarrette Blount fumble yesterday?

TV replays seem to show Josh Freeman fumbling the ball as he stuck it a little high on Blount’s chest during the fourth-quarter handoff that hit the turf and was recovered by Oakland.

Per Freeman, that’s what happened and he took “complete credit for that” almost disastrous miscue. Freeman said in his postgame news conference that the ball was “slick” and he thought he secured it.

Freeman went on to praise Blount for almost recovering the fumble.

Hopefully, Blount’s confidence is in tact. The Bucs will need him going forward.

Lavonte David = Derrick Brooks?

November 5th, 2012

As Deion Sanders would say, “Slow your roll, Joe. Slow your roll.”

Joe agrees. It is almost heresy to suggest that Bucs rookie outside linebacker Lavonte David is the new Derrick Brooks. There may never been another Derrick Brooks, he was such a stud.

But, man, David is really putting on a show in his first NFL season. Consider David racked up 14 tackles Sunday — 14! Two of those were tackles behind the line of scrimmage, tackles for loss. Those came in the first half for David and the Bucs.

Davis leads the Bucs in tackles for loss with 11, an extraordinary number for a rookie through eight games.

David, as Joe wrote about last December, is the personification of a sideline-to-sideline player, just like old No. 55.

And consider what Ronde Barber said about David last week.

“I look at Lavonte David and I see a young Derrick Brooks, not necessarily how he plays, but just like his instincts and just his knack for football,” Barber said. “That was one thing Derrick really had, just kind of a knack for the game. Lavonte’s absolutely shown that in the first part of his career. ”

Is David the next Brooks? Probably not. But he may well be the best Bucs linebacker drafted since Brooks. That’s a fair statement in Joe’s eyes.

Great Food Deals With The Hooters Calendar

November 5th, 2012

Click here or below to find your nearest Original Hooters location. The 2013 calendar is extraordinary on its own, let alone with all the great food offers included.

Secondary Schemes Need To Be Reassessed

November 5th, 2012

Not so lost in the glorious win over the Raiders was how the Bucs’ pass defense damn near coughed up yet another fourth-quarter lead.

This is an ugly pattern the Bucs really need to address. Yes, Bucs coach Greg Schiano noted that when the Bucs needed to make a play, they did so. True, but the game was hanging in the balance and it should not have been.

Changing personnel is not the answer. E.J. Biggers haters will just have to find a way to come to grips that he will be a starting cornerback, likely through the end of the season. Joe is still of the mind Biggers did not get “burned” much. Getting burned, in Joe’s mind, is the type of half-arsed defense that Myron Lewis manufactures where a receiver leaves Lewis in the dust and all he can do is turn around and watch a zebra throw his hands in the air signaling “touchdown.”

There were two damned good plays made on Biggers, one where Palmer threw a perfect pass on decent coverage, and another where Darrius Heyward-Bey, arguably the fastest receiver in the NFL, hauled in a one-handed freak catch.

Besides, it was Biggers who made the game-saving pick.

Even Stephen Holder of the Tampa Bay Times types that the current starters for the Bucs at cornerback aren’t going to change, sans Eric Wright’s pending suspension.

And with former first-round pick Aqib Talib now property of the Patriots after Thursday’s trade, it’s a lineup the Bucs are going to have to make the best of.

“There is no excuse,” Biggers said. “We have to play until the clock says zero, no matter how many times we have to cover. They’re going to make plays. But we have to do our jobs and deny our man the ball. They made some plays. They have a great quarterback and some great players at receiver.”

The only personnel move Joe could suggest is the jettisoning of Myron Lewis. You cannot tell Joe there isn’t someone walking the streets who can’t play pitiful defense like Lewis.

Lewis is this year’s Sabby the Goat. Whenever Sabby the Goat was sent in, you just knew he was going to get grilled for six, you just knew it. So too did opposing offensive coordinators, who wasted little time in targeting him.

Lewis has now sunk to that level. Like with Sabby the Goat, Bucs rock star general manager Mark Dominik finally had his fill and handed Sabby the Goat a pink slip to close that chapter and move on. Joe hopes Dominik has (finally) come to the same realization about Lewis. Just what makes anyone think he will improve after countless chances to do so?

Since personnel, sans perhaps Lewis, isn’t going to change, the schemes the Bucs are using need to be reevaluated.

Surely, putting heat on quarterbacks in the fourth quarter could help out a beleaguered secondary.

Parrish Fulfills Schiano’s Prophecy

November 5th, 2012

After the Vikings-Bucs game, Joe blasted The Roscoe Parrish Experience. It wasn’t pretty and had been getting progressively worse.

But Greg Schiano stood tall last week and gave 30-year-old Parrish a massive vote of confidence.

Well, kudos to Parrish and Schiano, as Parrish was the real deal in Oakland busting out two strong returns, including one of 26 yards that helped set up the Bucs to take a 21-10 lead. 

It would be quite a boost for the already powerful Bucs offense if Parrish can get on a roll.

Peter King Bows To Greg Schiano

November 5th, 2012

Popcorn-munchingcoffee-slurpingfried-chicken-eatingoatmeal-lovingcircle-jerkingbeer-chugging Peter King, of Sports Illustrated and NBC Sports fame, has bestowed one of his highest honors to Greg Schiano, via King’s famous Monday Morning Quarterback column.

King lauds for Schiano for his work on and off the field over the past few days and beyond

Coach of the Week

Greg Schiano, head coach, Tampa Bay. At 1-3 in the first quarter of the season, and then having Aqib Talib, his best cover corner, suspended on the eve of the Bucs’ fifth game, Schiano faced the prospect of an embarrassing first season as he tried to transform a soft team into a competitive one. But in the next four weeks, Schiano, with an assist from GM Mark Dominik, continued to remake the team, dumping Talib and a seventh-round pick on New England for a fourth-rounder in 2013 and winning three of four games.

The 42-32 victory in Oakland continued to show that Schiano’s way on offense can work. He’s determined to be able to run the ball for big chunks in a league where offense seems to be increasingly measured by how gaudy their passing numbers can be. After half a season, Schiano has made his mark in a way the Bucs could have only dreamed of when they made him their surprising hire to replace Raheem Morris last winter.

Interesting thought by King that Schiano has reached or exceeded (to date) the dreams the Bucs had for him when they hired him, but Joe wouldn’t go that far.

Joe suspects Team Glazer has gotten just what it expected when it hired Schiano: a competitive play-for-60-minutes team on the rise.

Time To Applaud Bob Bostad

November 5th, 2012

Joe can just guess when readers noticed the headline, a few asked themselves, possibly out loud, “Who?”

Bob Bostad would be your Bucs offensive line coach and it’s time to start giving him props. Let’s look at what the Bucs offensive line has gone through since August.

1) Right guard David Joseph goes down with a knee injury ending his season.

2) Right tackle Jeremy Trueblood gets hurt and is Wally Pipped, losing his starting gig to Demar Dotson.

3) Ted Larsen, who started at right guard after Joseph went down, is benched and replaced by Jamon Meredith.

4) Left guard Carl Nicks does down for the season with an ugly toe injury, and is replaced by Jeremy Zuttah, who moves from starting center to left guard.

5) With a center position open, Larsen, who played some center at North Carolina State, moves in to fill the void left by Zuttah at center.

This is just nuts and normally, just Joseph’s injury could collapse an offensive line. The other elements would normally cripple any other line.

But somehow, some way, Bostad has found a way to get the Bucs to play effectively up front, enough to have Doug Martin go all Gayle Sayers on the Raiders yesterday, a defensive front with some damn tough hombres.

Now college football geeks like Joe know that traditionally, Wisconsin year in and year out had one of the nation’s top offensive lines, and produced studs like Browns left tackle Joe Thomas and Bears right tackle Gabe Carimi.

It’s no coincidence that Wisconsin, to be polite, has struggled with their offensive line in the first year after Bostad left, and already fired Bostad’s immediate successor.

Right now if someone can inform Joe of an NFL offensive line coach who is doing a better job than Bostad under the worst of possible conditions, Joe is all ears.

Who Is Going Next Sunday?

November 5th, 2012

In his weekly take on the Bucs, veteran columnist Gary Shelton confesses he is actually looking forward to the Chargers game next week, a far cry from last year, when all people looked forward to was the end of the season  to stop the weekly misery. Share your thoughts on Shelton’s words by watching this Tampa Bay Times video.

Donald Penn Giddy Over Doug Martin

November 4th, 2012

Joe is going to touch on this a bit more first thing in the morning, but it is mind-boggling how Doug Martin is getting better and better when, from a rational, objective viewpoint, the offensive line is getting worse.

Earlier in the year, All-Pro guard Carl Nicks confessed to Joe that all the lineup juggling on the right side of the line was indirectly affecting the left side of the line because the line as a whole had to play on one page, had to be cohesive.

Well, since, Doug Martin has gotten better and better every week and saved his best for today when the offensive line was in a complete shambles after losing Nicks for the season.

No problem for Martin who went all Gayle Sayers on the Raiders today.

Bucs left tackle Donald Penn, the lone member of the Bucs’ offensive line to be starting at his normal position, was and is blown away by Martin’s skills, as he detailed on the Bucs radio network.

“We must be doing something right; that’s two weeks in a row. We started out rusty but finished the game,” Penn said. “I think that dude is getting better and better every week. He is getting a better feel for our blocks and we are getting a better feel for him. Only a running back like Doug Martin can do that. He is pushing this offense for us and making Josh’s job easy.

“We have to keep building, can’t get complacent, keep building, keep working. We are at .500 now but we have to keep working.”

Another One For Mike Bennett’s Wallet

November 4th, 2012

Pass rushers get paid handsomely in the NFL.

Pass rushers who play the run well get paid even better.

And 27-year-old pass rushers who enter free agency with double-digit sacks in a contract year hit the jackpot.

Michael Bennett, with a sack today and six sacks at the halfway point of the season, continues to look like the total package. Joe’s not a big fan of the various stats-tracking geeks on the Internet, such as Pro Football Focus, but these guys also repeatedly say Bennett tracks as a stud.

Sure, Bennett is prone to getting dinged up and there’s half a season to go. But with the interior of the Bucs defensive line playing well and very little slowing Bennett down, it seems he’s on the way to a massive payday. Bennett turns 27 next week.

A waiver wire theft by rockstar general manager Mark Dominik three years ago, it’ll be interesting to see if the Bucs make a move on extending Bennett’s contract in the coming weeks. Joe can’t think of a reason Tampa Bay would want to risk exposing Bennett in free agency, especially with Adrian Clayborn on the shelf with a serious knee injury.

Joe firmly believes the risk of signing Bennett now is well worth it.

Greg Schiano Speaks

November 4th, 2012

Bucs coach Greg Schiano spoke on the Bucs radio network following the game and Joe decided to transcribe his thoughts.

“I think our team showed a lot of character. We were a step behind early in the game and not characteristic of who we can become and needed to just slow it down and man, did we erupt.

“Defensively, we had balls thrown on us that we have to get better at but the big thing is with the game on the line the defense found a way to make a play. That’s what you have to do in this league

“I think Doug, it was a big day for him. He had a big outing in Minnesota and then come out and play the way he did today and the line really stepped up. [Jeremy] Zuttah unselfishly moves to left guard and we don’t miss a beat and I am really proud of these guys.

On preparing for the Chargers next week at home:

“We will feel good on the flight home but as we watch film we will get aggravated. We have to get ready for a good San Diego team who is in the same position we are.”

Passing Game Opens Up Run Game For Martin

November 4th, 2012

Now Joe was always of the mind that a solid running game opens up a passing game.

This came true for the Bucs two years ago when LeGarrette Blount was wilding against defenses and all of a sudden, Bucs quarterback Josh Freeman blew up.

So Joe was of the mind that the past three weeks when Doug Martin began running so much better, the passing game followed.

But to hear Bucs offensive lineman Jeremy Zuttah talk on the Bucs radio network, it is the Bucs passing game that has allowed Martin to begin to run wild on defenses.

“We have two tremendous weapons on the outside [in Vincent Jackson and Mike Williams] so it keeps a seven-man box and allows us to do what we do,” Zuttah said.

Very interesting but it makes sense. Defenses are not going to put eight men (or more) in the box because Jackson and Williams will torch defenses one-on-one.

Zuttah, who started at left guard last year but started 2012 at center, moved back to left guard to replace injured Carl Nicks for a laudable goal.

“Coach just told us this is the best chance for us to win,” Zuttah said. “We just have to keep getting better and pick it up for the guys who aren’t here.”

Zuttah just raved about the play of Martin.

“Dang, you just give him a little daylight and he can find the crease, it’s amazing,” Zuttah said. “He’s so much fun to watch.”

As far as being in a wild card race with a 4-4 record at the halfway point of the season, Zuttah said the team can still grow.

“We are a team that is learning how to win together so we will keep at it.”

King Muscle Hamster

November 4th, 2012

Wow. Joe doesn’t know what to write about Doug Martin, known nationally as “The Muscle Hamster.”

Right now he should be known as King Muscle Hamster.

Martin blew up today. Blew up! Destroyed the Raiders. It looked like Martin was playing against a two-bit high school team. It looked almost too easy.

How big of a day did Martin have? Consider Cadillac Williams’ rookie season, he racked up 290 carries and 1,178 yards for a 4.1 yards-per-carry average and six touchdowns.

Martin has 794 yards through eight games with a 5.2 yards per carry average and seven touchdowns.

Ray Rice only wishes he had these kind of numbers.

Martin took time to discuss his record-setting day on the Bucs radio network after the game.

“It was a good team effort, four quarters of football,” Martin said. “We wanted to come out swinging and we did.

“I’ve got to give a lot of credit to the line with Carl [Nicks] gone.

“I was told to ‘Keep your head up’ and if you keep your head up, the body will follow and I did that and I was on the third level [of the defense].

“The line man, I cannot describe how they were able to step in. [Ted] Larsen hasn’t played center in a while. They did an awesome job today.”

Joe just couldn’t believe his eyes the way Martin was attacking the Oakland defense, behind a line that was pretty much put together with duct tape and baling wire, against a pretty solid defensive front of the Raiders no less.

Joe believes we are on the cusp of seeing something really, really, really special with Martin.

Bucs Now 3-1 Without Talib

November 4th, 2012

Does anyone still miss helmet-wielding, cabbie-slugging, Adderrall-popping, coach-cussing, referee-charging, pistol-friendly, granny-hassling Aqib Talib?

Probably, given today’s Myron Lewis sighting and other cornerback troubles. But Joe sure doesn’t miss Talib.

Last Sunday, Joe was on the 98.7 FM airwaves saying he definitely would dump Talib if the Bucs won in Oakland. Joe’s rationale was simple: if the Bucs could go 3-1 without Talib, then the benefits of Talib returning to the roster would be outweighed by the potential hit to team chemistry from the arrival of post-suspension Talib.

The Bucs never had to make that choice, as rockstar general manager Mark Dominik fleeced the Patriots and sent them Talib and a seventh-round pick for the Patriots fourth-rounder in 2013.

Yeah, the playoff-hunting Bucs might miss Talib if, say, they head to the SuperDome with a 7-6 record in December. But Joe’s still on board with the trade, even with the Bucs’ thin secondary. The Bucs still have damage-control options. Ronde Barber returning to cornerback with Ahmad Black at safety remains on the table, if necessary.

It’s Still All About No. 5

November 4th, 2012

Joe’s as fired up as the next fan by Doug Martin, the Bucs’ front seven, legitimate stud wide receivers and the New Schiano Order.

But Joe hasn’t lost sight of the resurrection of Josh Freeman and how the team really is all about No. 5, as Raheem  Morris used to say.

Freeman hits the season’s halfway mark  with 16 touchdowns and five interceptions, a far cry from the disaster of 2011, and pretty damn good in its own right. Today in Oakland, Freeman was scrambling smart and he made his share of flawless throws.

No, Freeman is far from perfect. He’s not yet elite. His completion percentage still hovers around 56 percent. But the progression is there, and he seems to be in better hands than in past years.

The sky is the limit for Freeman, and Bucs fans should be damn happy he’s ascending into higher altitudes.

The Swarm Claims More Victims

November 4th, 2012

The stifling, punishing Bucs run defense was at it again today, knocking out running backs Darren McFadden and Mike Goodson, and holding the Raiders to a flimsy 22 yards on the ground.

Make no mistake. The Raiders wanted to run the ball. They couldn’t. Hell, Mark Barron hit McFadden so hard their facemasks became one, like two rams locking horns in the Rocky Mountains.

Many of Lavonte David’s 14 tackles were of the statement variety, and the swarm Greg Schiano covets was in full swing.

The Bucs entered the game with the NFL’s fifth-ranked run defense. It’s no fluke. There are no smoke and mirrors, just physical football.

There Is No Reason To Employ Myron Lewis

November 4th, 2012

At the risk of irritating the wrong people at One Buc Palace, Joe can no longer bite his tongue without losing his credibility.

The time has come to wave goodbye to Myron Lewis.

Myron Lewis, from the moment he signed with the Bucs, has been nothing but an empty uniform, a waste of a roster spot. Sure, early on, there was reason to give him plenty of rope. The guy was a rookie, then a second-year man and he was always hurt.

But when healthy, he couldn’t play; not a lick. Now in his third season, it is painfully obvious that there are guys walking the streets in early November that can play just as well (or more accurately, just as pathetic) as Lewis.

Today was the last straw for Joe. With Leonard Johnson getting dinged up, Lewis came in to replace him (and Joe Twittered that this was going to be an adventure). And sure enough Marcel Reese ran a circle around Lewis, totally schooling Lewis for an 11-yard touchdown.

Typical Myron Lewis.

Joe’s freaking had it with this guy!

Joe knows why Lewis is still on the roster. He was drafted by Bucs rock star general manager Mark Dominik. But not even Kevin Colbert or Ted Thompson are perfect. They make mistakes too.

It’s time for Dominik to admit the mistake of Myron Lewis and for the sake of the team that is now in a wild card race, give Lewis his walking papers! Do the right thing Mark.

Currently, Lewis is worse than Sabby the Goat. And Dominik did the right thing with Sabby the Goat and put Sabby the Goat out to pasture in the middle of the season where he could chew on tin cans to his heart’s content.

And Sabby the Goat was a worse mistake than Lewis. Sabby the Goat was a second-round pick if you can imagine such a thing!

For the sake of the Bucs, Mark, get rid of Lewis. He’s killing this team and may just kill the team’s wild card hopes the way he gets grilled so often. It’s not fair to the rest of the hard-working professionals on this team to keep Lewis on the roster for no good reason.

Come Tuesday, the Bucs should be holding tryouts at One Buc Palace to fill the void left by Lewis’ departure.

Even with Lewis on the roster, there’s a void already there.

There is no logical reason to continue this illogical nightmare.

Myron Lewis should be cut. Now. Time to come to grips that a mistake was made and move on.

Bucs 42, Raiders 32

November 4th, 2012

Feel free to drop the “P” word — as in playoffs. It’s hardly inappropriate chatter anymore!

The New Schiano Order Bucs turned in a complete yet sloppy performance and mauled the Raiders before a hostile Oakland crowd and are now firmly in the hunt for the postseason.

At 4-4 with a complete offense, these Bucs are no joke. Doug Martin is approaching NFL superstar status — 251 yards on 25 carries and four touchdowns — the deep threats are lethal, and the defense is good enough, as was today’s defensive gameplan to cover for the Bucs’ thin secondary.

Major hat tip to the Bucs’ makeshift offensive line, which brought back memories of what the Bucs pulled off in 2010, after Davin Joseph, Jeff Faine and Jeremy Trueblood went down yet the O-line blew open holes for LeGarrette Blount. So much of Martin’s career day today goes to Jeremy Zuttah, Jamon Meredith and Ted Larsen getting it done up the gut. Joe remembers all too well what it looked like when turnstile Sean Mahan filled in at center a few years ago.

Myron Lewis nightmares aside, dare to dream tonight, Bucs fans. You have good reason.

Stick with Joe through the night for so much more out of this game.

Bucs At Raiders, Open Thread

November 4th, 2012

Good afternoon. These 4 p.m. games are sweet, are they not?

Let’s see what happens with the Bucs today? Will they survive in the secondary in this post-Aqib Talib era? Can they survive on offense without Carl Nicks?

Can Josh Freeman continue to light up the sky? Can the Bucs defense put Carson Palmer on the ground, and on the ground hard?

These questions will be answered in the next three or so hours. Have it and have fun.