December 30, 2024

The Bucs’ long road ahead begins without Tom Brady

Tom Brady #TomBrady

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbacks Blaine Gabbert, Kyle Trask and Ryan Griffin engage in drills during training camp at AdventHealth Training Center on Friday, July 29, 2022. © Dirk Shadd/Tampa Bay Times/TNS Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbacks Blaine Gabbert, Kyle Trask and Ryan Griffin engage in drills during training camp at AdventHealth Training Center on Friday, July 29, 2022.

TAMPA, Fla. — There never will be another Tom Brady. The Bucs knew their time with the future Hall of Famer would be short, and it proved sweeter than anyone could have hoped.

A Super Bowl 55 championship, three straight playoff appearances and two NFC South titles later, they can only hope all that winning created a culture that will continue long past Brady’s retirement.

Perhaps coach Todd Bowles was prescient the day after the Bucs lost 31-14 in the wild-card round to the Cowboys.

Addressing his 2022 team for the final time, Bowles sounded as if he feared players might choose comfort over commitment.

“Those who come back, we’ve got to create new culture, new chemistry and new camaraderie,” he said. “We’ll have new people coming in, if you’re lucky enough to come back or privileged enough to come back, be ready to work.”

No one worked harder than Brady, even at age 45. But he leaves an enormous vacuum that must be filled, not just at quarterback, but in terms of leadership.

“One of the things that strikes you is what his teammates say about (Brady) from every place he’s ever been, from high school to the Bucs,” former quarterbacks coach Clyde Christensen said. “They saw a work ethic and humility and bar that was set the highest for himself and pretty darn high for everyone around him. He chased winning and had a joy about it. There’s not that many guys who are so driven and do it with the joy he had about his job.”

The challenge will be to continue what Brady’s biggest contribution has always been: winning.

The Bucs aren’t eager to return to their losing ways post-Brady.

“You can’t get another Tom Brady — anywhere,” outside linebacker Shaquil Barrett said after the Bucs’ 2022 season ended. “No matter how hard you try. No matter how many years, I don’t think anybody will ever do what Tom did.”

Prior to Brady’s arrival, the Bucs did not qualify for the playoffs for 12 consecutive years and only enjoyed two winning seasons. Fewer than two-dozen players remain on the 53-man roster that won Super Bowl 55 with Brady, and there stands to be even fewer next season.

“Nobody likes this feeling, from the top on down,” Barrett said following the wild-card loss. “So we’re going to fix it and do whatever it takes so we can easily make the playoffs next year and make some noise in the playoffs, instead of barely making it in.”

Those are ambitious goals, especially when you consider how many changes the Bucs are about to undergo as a result of borrowing from the future to enjoy the Brady years.

Tampa Bay is $55 million over the $224.8 million salary cap for 2023 despite having 24 players set to become unrestricted free agents in March.

Brady’s retirement actually could help alleviate some of that strain. He counts $35 million against the salary cap next season in “dead money” even though his career apparently has ended, the result of adding voidable years to help sign other free agents.

The Bucs can now utilize a process that will spread that deficit over the next two seasons, with Brady costing $11 million on the salary cap in 2023 and $24 million in 2024.

The Bucs had the oldest team in the NFL, with more than half of the starts on defense coming from players who are free agents.

They also have a number of issues to solve before they get to training camp in July.

Chief among them: Who is the quarterback now?

Kyle Trask is the only quarterback under contract for 2023. That certainly will change and the Bucs could opt to re-sign free agent Blaine Gabbert and let them battle it out.

Trask, the former Florida Gators star who was taken with the last pick in the second round in 2021, has only appeared in one game. That was mop-up duty at Atlanta in the regular-season finale. He completed 3 of 9 passes for only 23 yards.

Trask has worked hard for two seasons and likely picked up some pointers sitting in the quarterbacks meeting room with Brady. Although he has only been active for two regular-season games, he was routinely the first player on and the last player off the practice field.

He earned plenty of praise from Bowles for his work ethic and mental toughness.

“Since he’s been here, every time I look out my window, he’s out there working on his own,” Bowles said of Trask a few weeks ago. “…When his time comes, he’s going to be ready because I see him working at it every day. He has inner toughness, he has inner strength, and he has the drive and the will to win. If you put that together, given the opportunity, I think he’s going to take advantage of it.”

The Bucs also have the option of trying to acquire another quarterback. Baker Mayfield, Jimmy Garoppolo, Sam Darnold and Jacoby Brissett are all free agents.

And now that Brady’s future is no longer in limbo, perhaps a new offensive coordinator is hired more quickly.

Just days after losing to the Cowboys, Bowles fired offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich along with five other assistant coaches, most of them on offense. Three other assistants, including Christensen, retired.

The Bucs have interviewed seven assistant coaches for the offensive coordinator position, including Georgia’s Todd Monken. He was the Bucs offensive coordinator from 2016-18 under Dirk Koetter but only called plays his final season in Tampa Bay.

Monken is the highest-paid college assistant at $2.01 million per year. He worked one season at Cleveland under head coach Freddie Kitchens as offensive coordinator but didn’t call plays. He did, however, take a special liking to Mayfield.

Other strong candidates include Giants quarterbacks coach Shea Tierney, who is credited with helping Daniel Jones lead his team back to the playoffs and a win at Minnesota in the wild-card round.

Jaguars passing game coordinator Jim Bob Cooter had plenty of success last season helping develop quarterback Trey Lance and was successful coaching Matthew Stafford in Detroit. Broncos quarterback coach Klint Kubiak, the son of former Texans and Broncos head coach Gary Kubiak, has the pedigree if not the production with Russell Wilson last season.

©2023 Tampa Bay Times. Visit tampabay.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Leave a Reply