Too Much Made Of Freeman’s Weight Loss
May 15th, 2012
Two months ago, Joe was the first in the media to acknowledge Josh Freeman’s significant weight loss.
Joe thought it was a great, noteworthy sign that Freeman was stepping up his dedication. Though Joe surely didn’t think dropping 20 pounds would make Freeman a more effective quarterback.
But that seems to be a prevailing take among national media types and fans. Rich Gannon, on Sirius NFL Radio, referenced “big things” happening in the division yesterday during a discussion about Drew Brees and cited Freeman’s weight loss as one of them. Daniel Jeremiah’s division-by-division quarterbacks breakdown on NFL.com also zeroes in on Freeman’s weight loss.
Did Joe miss something? How exactly is Freeman’s weight loss going to make him a better player?
Mark Dominik said Freeman initiated the weight-loss regimen to gain flexibility in his torso. That’s great, but flexibility, or supposed lack thereof, is hardly a critical factor. Look what Freeman did in 2010 at a higher weight. And it’s not like he’s ever been fat.
Joe just wants it clear that he doesn’t think much of this weight loss, nor would Joe raise an eybrow if Freeman puts on weight between now and training camp, or gains weight during the season, when it likely will be harder to maintain whatever conditioning regimen he has in place now.
Joe’s far more concerned about Mike Sullivan’s playcalling ability and Freeman’s weapons staying healthy.




When Gerald McCoy joined the Bucs as the No. 3 overall pick in 2010, Raheem Morris quickly had him bouncing all around the defensive line, playing inside and outside.
Joe had a warm and fuzzy feeling this afternoon listening to Movin’ the Chains, hosted Pat Kirwan and Tim Ryan on SiriusXM NFL Radio.
One of the little-discussed byproducts of the Buccaneers’ draft was Mason Foster clearly being gifted the starting middle linebacker gig for 2012.


Joe definitely was a fan of “
The buzz out of New York Giants rookie minicamp today interestingly centers around former Rutgers running back and fullback Joe Martinek. The guy was Greg Schiano’s bell cow as a sophomore, racking up 206 carries for 967 yards.






