Bucs Finalist For Tiki Barber
July 6th, 2011
Tiki Barber to the Bucs just may happen after all.
When Chucky and Bruce Almighty tried to lure Tiki away from a network TV gig that was in the embryonic stages of crash and burn, Tiki took a pass on playing with his twin brother Ronde and the Bucs.
Now, unless Tiki’s agent agent Mark Lepselter is trying to use the Bucs as leverage — and we all know what paragons of virtue agents are — Lepselter told Tom Bedulla of USA Today that the Bucs and the Steelers are the among the final teams on his wish list.
Lepselter’s approach to negotiations — once they can occur — also suggests financial considerations are not foremost.
“We’re not looking to turn this into an auction,” he says. “There are only a handful of coaches he would want to play for.”
Barber notes that the Pittsburgh Steelers and Tampa Bay Bucs are on that short list. He also received an overture from former Giants coach Jim Fassel to join the Las Vegas Locos of the United Football League for a season that begins in mid-August.
Joe has significant mixed feelings on bringing in Tiki Barber. On one hand he hasn’t run through a defense in five years. Joe doesn’t care how much he’s pumping weights, that isn’t football. While the time off from the brutal punishment a running back takes may help Tiki — look how much it helped Ricky Williams who took off a year to smoke dope with the aborigines — the main question is, can Tiki shake off five years’ worth of rust?
Then there is the clubhouse lawyer factor. New York writers claim there wasn’t a back in the Giants locker room Tiki didn’t enjoy stepping on, including those of Eli Manning and Tom Coughlin. The young Bucs don’t need that kind of nonsense in the locker room, to be frank.
If all things are equal, Joe would rather have Cadillac Williams on the roster rather than Tiki. In a perverted way, Joe would love to see Mike Tomlin’s reaction the first time Tiki called out handsy Ben Roethlisberger and/or Tomlin himself.





Former Bucs guard and current vocal critic Ian Beckles said he wants the Bucs to have plenty of quality bodies available on the defensive line when the 2011 season opens so the young guys can play roughly 40 snaps rather than an entire game.
Kellen Winslow has missed six games over the past five NFL seasons but none since joining the Bucs in 2009, yet Pat Kirwan, the former NFL coach and executive turned analyst, skewers Winslow for his lack of durability 
Standing ovation to the Bucs’ multimedia staff on its latest work showcasing Ronde Barber via a classroom Xs and Os film breakdown by secondary coach Jimmy Lake on Buccaneers.com.
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Joe enjoys hearing about bubble players on the Buccaneers doing everything they can to work to succeed in the NFL.





