
The injury to right guard Davin Joseph has really set forth an ugly chain of events
To paraphrase Joe Theismann, unless the Washington Redskins’ backup defensive linemen are Supermen, the Bucs’ reserve unit on the offensive line is a shambles.
The Bucs’ backup unit couldn’t pass block and couldn’t run block Wednesday, Joe isn’t entirely sure they could block someone from stealing their beer.
Naturally, with a smashmouth run game and wanting to keep Josh Freeman’s jersey clean, if there is another injury to the starting unit of the Bucs offensive line, it could result in dire consequences.
So it is clear Bucs rock star general manager Mark Dominik will be surfing the waiver wire hoping to find someone, anyone, who can stop a cool breeze when used in a pinch.
Not so fast my friends (thank you, Lee Corso). It’s not as if the Bucs are the lone NFL team scraping the barrel for offensive line help. Like the Bucs, both the Packers and the Steelers have had injuries to the front line (for the Steelers, this is a rite of summer).
So if you are X-offensive lineman who just got cut by Y-team, who exactly would you want to play for, a team that has a realistic goal of a Super Bowl within its sights, or a team that is just hoping to get to .500?
Sure the Bucs — depending on what day and what source one checks on salary cap space; a subject Joe loathes more than the thought of a nude Rosie O’Donnell — could overspend to get a backup lineman, but what general manager in his right mind is going to overpay for a guy who may never play?
UPDATE: It seems the Bucs braintrust, like Joe, was revolted by what passed as an offensive line Wednesday night and is cleaning house of its backup offensive linemen.
Again, per workhorse Woody Cummings of the Tampa Tribune, Jamarcus Hardrick and (Hey) Moe Petrus are now unemployed.
Joe is happy for the time being. Why? You don’t know how hard it is to work in a Curly Howard line in a football story, do you?