
Without adding a quality body to the offensive line, the Bucs will be in dire shape if backup guard/center Ted Larsen goes down.
In between watching coverage of the Republican National Convention and waiting for the college football season to kick off (South Carolina at Vanderbilt was a pretty good game last night), Joe decided to watch some of the Bucs-Redskins game on replay on the NFL Network.
No, Joe was sober. Had Joe not had work to do later, he would have emptied his bottle of Bushmills it was so unnerving.
It was late in the first half and the Bucs offensive line had shamed matadors throughout the region. Bucs backup quarterback Brett Ratliff was sacked five times in the first half — FIVE! — and helped the ground game amass a grand total of three yards rushing (which would have made Greg Olson green with envy).
It was so awful that former Redskins quarterback Joe Theisman, analyst for the Redskins broadcast, was simply appalled.
“Either the Redskins backups on the defensive line are Supermen or the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ offensive line simply doesn’t know how to block,” Theismann said, channeling the pain that Ratliff was enduring.
Theismann was especially rough on Jamon Meredith, who was trying to secure a position as possibly starting right guard, and failing miserably. Theismann said of Meredith, “All you have to do is get in front of someone!”
This is a frightening concept for the Bucs. The team wants to run the ball, smashmouth style, and Joe is good with that. But without injured Davin Joseph at right guard, the Bucs are thinner than wet toilet paper on the line and cannot risk another injury up front.
Just what NFL team does not have an offensive lineman banged up at least once during the regular season?
If the Bucs are going to try to be smashmouth, and if they want to keep quarterback Josh Freeman in one piece, Bucs rock star general manager Mark Dominik is likely going to have to go shopping, if for nothing else than to add some depth to the offensive line.