The Tampa Bay Buccaneers (sometimes abbreviated as the Bucs) are a professional American football team based in Tampa, Florida. They are currently members of the Southern Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL). The team, along with the Seattle Seahawks, joined the NFL as 1976 expansion teams. The club is currently owned by Malcolm Glazer and coached by head coach Jon Gruden.
Historically known as a chronic loser, the Bucs lost their first 26 games in franchise history. After a brief winning era in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the team suffered through 14 straight losing seasons. However, they have been a contender for most of the last decade, and won Super Bowl XXXVII at the end of the 2002 season.
The Tampa Bay expansion franchise was originally awarded to Ted McCloskey, a construction company owner from Philadelphia. It soon became apparent that McCloskey had financial problems, so the NFL found a replacement in Hugh Culverhouse, a wealthy tax attorney from Jacksonville. A name-the-team contest resulted in the nickname "Buccaneers," in honor of the yearly Gasparilla Pirate Festival in Tampa. The team's first home was Tampa Stadium, which had recently been expanded to seat just over 72,000 fans.
Longtime USC coach John McKay was recruited as the team's first head coach. He stressed a five-year building plan that relied on veteran players, quality draft picks, and patience. However, the expansion draft prior to the entrance of the Bucs and Seahawks into the league was not as generous as it would become for later NFL expansion teams, so the Buccaneers were saddled with aging veterans and castoffs from other teams. Despite McKay's coaching, the Bucs often appeared incompetent, with missed tackles, fumbled snaps, and a frustrating inability to score, and the patience of fans and local media soon wore thin. McKay was also criticized for relying too much on the USC playbook--for example, the "student body right" rushing play--not to mention choosing running back Ricky Bell over future NFL Hall of Famer Tony Dorsett in the 1977 NFL Draft.
This frustration, and even anger, that Buccaneer fans targeted at McKay--which prompted the brief popularity of bumper stickers that proclaimed "Throw McKay in the Bay"--stemmed from the team's notorious 26-game regular season losing streak, an NFL record which still stands to this day. The Bucs lost every game in their inaugural season, and lost their first 12 games the following year. The team became the butt of many jokes, especially from Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show, but also from the fans themselves, who late into the 1977 season, wore bags on their heads and encouraged the team to "go for 0," as in zero wins. After a particularly dismal effort during the streak, coach McKay gave perhaps the quintessential comment on the team's plight. In a post-game press conference, Tampa Tribune sports editor Tom McEwen asked McKay about the execution of his team's offensive line. McKay responded, "I'm in favor of it." Another choice quote that summed up his frustration at the time: "We can't win at home, we can't win on the road, and quite frankly, I don't know where else to play."
Just before the end of their sophomore season, the Bucs did finally manage to win their first game—on the road, defeating the New Orleans Saints, 33-14. The win was highlighted by three interceptions returned for touchdowns, an NFL record at the time. (The team would later equal this feat 25 years later when they defeated the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl XXXVII.) After being greeted by 8000 cheering fans when the team arrived back in Tampa late that evening after the game, the Bucs followed up the victory with a win at home over the St. Louis Cardinals during the final week of the season.
The 1978 season was another losing campaign, but it was highlighted by the presence of rookie quarterback Doug Williams, the first black starting QB for any NFL team. Despite a season-ending injury in which his jaw had to be wired shut, he showed enough potential to give Bucs fans hope for the future. His leadership and often electrifying play would transform the team much sooner than anyone expected.
The Tampa Bay area went ecstatic. Buccaneers flags flew from car radio antennas, and the phrases "Go Bucs!" and "From Worst to First" found their way onto billboards and commercial signs for seemingly every restaurant and local business. What the Tampa Tribune described as "Buc Fever" was at its highest pitch when the playoffs arrived, and in an upset, the Bucs defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 24-17 in the divisional round of the playoffs. * Due to the Los Angeles Rams' surprising last-minute win over the Dallas Cowboys in the other divisional playoff game, the Bucs hosted the NFC Championship Game the following week in Tampa, where they lost to the Rams 9-0, thanks to an anemic offense after QB Williams went down with an injury. Still, in only their fourth season, the Bucs seemed on the verge of fulfilling McKay's five-year plan.
The Bucs made the playoffs again by winning their division in the 1981 season and entering the first round during the strike-shortened 1982 season. The 1981 campaign came down to a thrilling final game at the Detroit Lions in which the winner would take the division crown and the loser would be out of the playoffs, and the atmopshere was also charged by the fact that the Lions had not lost a home contest all season. Although the Bucs trailed early, an 84-yard touchdown bomb from QB Williams to WR Kevin House and a fumble recovery for a touchdown by LB David Logan sealed the shocking win for the Bucs. Unfortunately, the Dallas Cowboys rewarded the Bucs' efforts with a 38-0 blowout in the divisional round of the playoffs. The 1982 season started just as poorly for the Bucs, as they went 0-3 before a player's strike shut down the NFL for seven weeks. When the league resumed play, the Bucs were nicknamed the "Cardiac Kids" for winning five of their next six games all in the final moments to go 5-4 and qualify for the expanded playoff slate. In the first round, the Bucs once again faced the Cowboys at home in Dallas, but the Bucs put up a much better fight, actually leading the game at the half. Unfortunately, they lost 30-17, in a game in which replays have shown that poor officiating cost the Bucs 17 points. Ultimately, it didn't matter, since the Bucs would never have another winning season, let alone make the playoffs, under Culverhouse's ownership.
Without Williams, the Bucs appeared to be a rudderless team, as evidenced when their offense bogged down in the 1979 NFC Championship. They started the next season by losing their first nine games, knocking them out of playoff contention. They finished with a 2-14 record, the first of an NFL-record 12 straight seasons with 10 or more losses. Many Bucs fans blamed Williams' departure for this seemingly endless streak of futility, and the fact that Williams later returned to the NFL and led the Washington Redskins to victory in Super Bowl XXII only deepened the frustration among Bucs fans.
It can be argued that the team's lengthy woes were primarily due to how Culverhouse ran the organization. Two young executives, Rich McKay (John's son) and Jerry Angelo, managed the front office for fourteen years with unclear lines of authority and overlapping responsibilities. This led to mistakes that trickled down throughout the organization. Culverhouse kept the team's payroll among the lowest in the league, which prompted few quality players to sign with the team. The ones who did rarely stayed long. Selmon, the Bucs' first draft pick in 1976 and the only Hall of Famer to have earned his credentials primarily in Tampa Bay, was the only real star who had a long tenure with the team.
The Bucs also made several missteps in the NFL Draft. Besides passing on Dorsett, they traded away draft picks that turned into Hall of Famers Irving Fryar and Dan Hampton, selected Bo Jackson when he openly stated he would never play for them, and gave up a first-round pick to the Cincinnati Bengals in 1984 for QB Jack Thompson, who was a bust. They also frequently traded or gave up on quality players who went on to greater success on other teams. The most notable examples are all quarterbacks: Williams; Steve Young, who was traded to the San Francisco 49ers after only 19 games as a Buc, only to become a Super Bowl MVP and Hall of Famer with San Francisco; and Vinny Testaverde, the first overall pick of the 1987 draft whom the Bucs let walk to the Cleveland Browns via free agency in 1992.
The front-office woes affected the team regardless of who was brought in to coach. McKay stepped down at the end of the 1984 season, and Leeman Bennett, who had coached the Atlanta Falcons to their first-ever playoff win, proved a miserable follow-up. After two disastrous 2-14 seasons, he was fired. In 1987, former New York Giants head coach Ray Perkins brought back much-needed discipline and "three-a-day" practices, but it proved too much of a good thing. The team was so physically drained by game day that the losses continued to pile up, and Perkins was fired before the end of the 1990 season. Richard Williamson was elevated to head coach, and after his brief success in the final remaining games, he retained his head coaching position for the following year. The momentum didn't last, however, and was fired after the 1991 season.
It wasn't until the hiring of Sam Wyche that Bucs fans had reason for optimism. Wyche had coached the Cincinnati Bengals to a Super Bowl appearance, one which the team could have won if not for a fourth quarter comeback engineered by 49ers QB Joe Montana. Unfortunately, Wyche did not have immediate success in Tampa, and even his bold "five-dash-two" (indicating five wins and two losses) declaration in his final season with the Bucs proved premature. However, Wyche deserves credit for drafting three key players who would later prove to be the core of the team's renewed success on defense--Warren Sapp, Derrick Brooks and John Lynch.
Things only really began to change, however, after Culverhouse died of lung cancer in 1994.
During Dungy's first season in 1996, the team continued to struggle, starting the season 1-8. But in the second half of the season they finished 5-2, primarily due to the performance of a defense ranked seventh in the NFL led by Hardy Nickerson and the maturing of Wyche's draftees Brooks, Lynch and Sapp. Dungy, a devout Christian with an even-tempered personality, quickly brought balance and morale to the team, and his Cover 2 defensive scheme, sharpened to perfection by defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin, became the foundation for Tampa Bay's future success, not to mention a blueprint copied by other teams in the NFL, including the Chicago Bears and the St. Louis Rams.
The 1998 season, the first to be played in the newly-constructed Raymond James Stadium, saw the Bucs lose several close games en route to a disappointing 8-8 record, and the team did not reach the playoffs. The following season, however, saw much better fortunes. On the strength of the NFL's number one overall defense and a surprising performance by rookie QB Shaun King, the Bucs finished the 1999 season with an 11-5 record as champions of the NFC Central Division. They edged the Washington Redskins 14-13 in the Divisional round, before losing to the eventual Super Bowl Champion St. Louis Rams in an unusually low-scoring NFC Championship Game, 11-6. The Bucs' loss was controversial, highlighted by the unusual reversal of a pass from King to WR Bert Emanuel, which ended the Bucs' chances at continuing their last-minute drive for a possible win. In league meetings later that year, NFL later changed the rules regarding what constituted an incomplete pass, which was a backhanded admission that the reversal was incorrect.
Rather than choose from the pool of strong offensive coordinators available at the end of the 2000 campaign including the Redskins' Norv Turner, Dungy decided to elevate his receivers coach Clyde Christiensen to the position. It can be argued that this controversial decision was the final nail in the coffin for Dungy's tenure. Although the team achieved a 9-7 winning record in 2001, they barely made it into the playoffs as the lowest-seeded wild card. To add insult to injury, the Bucs were once again blown out by the Eagles--this time, 31-9.
Frustrated with the team's inability to reach the Super Bowl despite a league-dominating defense, Malcolm Glazer fired Dungy the following day--a decision that created more controversy among devoted players and fans. Despite whatever weaknesses that may have been ascribed to him, Dungy was highly respected around the league as a man of solid character and a coach to whom players were fiercely loyal.
While talks with the Raiders were secretly underway, the Glazers publicly pursued another respected offensive mind, San Francisco 49ers head coach Steve Mariucci. Just when initial reports indicated that Mariucci had agreed to become both the Bucs' head coach and general manager, Raiders owner Al Davis agreed to release Jon Gruden to Tampa Bay. Observers suggested that the Glazers' offer to Mariucci was merely a clever bargaining tactic: since Davis' large ego is well-documented, it was very likely he wouldn't allow such a blockbuster trade to take place so near his turf. If the tactic didn't work, then the Bucs would still get the type of head coach the Glazers desired.
The Glazers' shrewd move eventually paid off in acquiring Gruden, but it cost the team dearly. The team hired Gruden away from the Raiders on February 20, 2002, but the price was four draft picks, including the Bucs' first and second round picks in 2002, their first round pick in 2003, and their second round selection in 2004, along with $8 million in cash. Gruden, who was frustrated by the limitation of his coaching authority by Davis, was more than pleased to return to Tampa Bay, as his parents lived nearby, and he had spent part of his childhood in Tampa in the early 1980s when his father had worked as a Bucs running back coach and director of player personnel.
The offensive retooling worked, and combined with the league's top defense, the 2002 campaign was the Buccaneers' most successful season to date. They won the NFC South title with a 12-4 record--the team's best ever--then defeated the San Francisco 49ers in what became coach Steve Mariucci's last game with that franchise. In a surprising upset, the Bucs won their first NFC championship on the road against the Eagles in the last NFL game ever played at Veterans Stadium. Cornerback Ronde Barber capped off the win by intercepting a Donovan McNabb pass and returning it 92 yards for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter. Philadelphia fans could only watch in stunned silence.
The Bucs went on to rout Gruden's former team, the Oakland Raiders, by a score of 48-21 in Super Bowl XXXVII. Gruden's familiarity with the Raiders' players and playbook paid off, as John Lynch and other Bucs players recognized some of Oakland's formations and plays at crucial points in the game.* The Bucs became the first team to win the Super Bowl without any picks in the first two rounds of the previous spring's NFL Draft, having traded these picks to the Oakland Raiders for the rights to acquire Gruden.
Johnson's unusual deactivation was a definitive sign that Gruden had indeed gained control. In December, the Glazers allowed McKay to leave the Bucs before the end of the regular season, and he promptly joined the Falcons as president and general manager. Thus, McKay watched his first game as a Falcons executive sitting next to owner Arthur Blank in a Raymond James Stadium skybox. The Falcons defeated the Bucs 30-28, another sign of how the season had spiraled downward. Despite opening the season with a Monday night win over the Eagles in Philadelphia's new stadium, Lincoln Financial Field, the Bucs finished the season 7-9. Combined with the Raiders' dismal 4-12 performance, neither Super Bowl team reached the playoffs that year.
Before the 2004 training camp, personnel issues and the salary cap became primary concerns. Gruden successfully lobbied the Glazers to hire his former general manager from Oakland, Bruce Allen. After Allen's arrival in the Bucs' front office, the team announced that it would not resign two of their best defensive players--John Lynch and Warren Sapp--before the regular season even started. Both of their contracts were expiring, and younger players could fill their positions. Lynch was released after medical exams indicated ongoing injury problems. Many Bucs fans were stunned by the move, as Lynch was a very popular player whose aggressive, intelligent play earned him several Pro Bowl appearances. He was also well-regarded for his philanthropic work in the Tampa Bay area. Lynch was quickly signed by the Denver Broncos, where he had consecutive injury-free Pro Bowl seasons. Sapp signed with the Oakland Raiders, where he played in a limited role in 2004, and sat out much of the 2005 season with injuries. Since wide receiver Keenan McCardell refused to play until he was given a better contract or traded, he was sent to the San Diego Chargers for draft compensation.
The distracted Bucs began the 2004 season with a 1-5 record, their worst start since Gruden arrived. The fading accuracy of kicker Martin Gramatica didn't help matters, as the team lost many close games en route to a 5-11 record, making the Bucs the first NFL team to follow up a Super Bowl championship with back-to-back losing seasons. The lone highlights of 2004 were the high-quality play of rookie wide receiver Michael Clayton and the return of Doug Williams, who joined the Bucs front office as a personnel executive.
The Bucs followed up with important wins over their NFC South division rivals, sweeping both the New Orleans Saints and Atlanta Falcons, as well as defeating the Panthers in a rare victory at Carolina. Even with a tough loss against the Chicago Bears and a humilating shutout against the New England Patriots, the Bucs finished 11-5 and won the NFC South by virtue of a tie-breaker over the Panthers. Unfortunately, the Bucs' 30th Anniversary season would end on a sour note, as they lost 17-10 at home to the Redskins in the wild-card round. A late Bucs touchdown could have tied the game, but the play was ruled incomplete when a booth review upheld the referee's decision.
The Bucs sent three veteran players to the 2006 Pro Bowl, including cornerback Ronde Barber and punter Josh Bidwell. Outside linebacker Derrick Brooks was named the Pro Bowl MVP, with a 59-yard interception return for a touchdown.
For the first time in team history the Buccaneers will play in the 2006 Thanksgiving Day Game against the Dallas Cowboys.
After a potential season-ending injury to backup Quarterback Luke McCown, the Bucs signed veteran QB Jay Fiedler to back up Chris Simms on June 29th. The signing maintains the four-deep status of the backup QB position, as Tim Rattay, Jared Allen, and Bruce Gradkowski are still on the roster (as of June 29). Additionally, the team signed two-year veteran Tight End Matt Kranchick to replace T.J. Williams, who was lost for the season due to injury, as noted above.
On December 31, 2002, the Glazers purchased Tampa Bay Center for $22.8 million. Originally opened in 1975, this defunct shopping mall is conveniently located across the street from Raymond James Stadium on the corner of Martin Luther King Boulevard and Himes Avenue. The Bucs demolished the mall in February 2005 to make room for a state-of-the-art complex that, once complete, will be the largest for any team in the NFL. The new facility will include new offices and meeting rooms, two natural grass practice fields, a theater, an expanded weight training room and a locker room twice the size of the exising one at One Buc Place. In addition, the entrance to the as-yet-unnamed facility will feature a giant five-story football as a key design element. It is scheduled to open in August 2006.
Practices at the new complex will remain closed to the public, although the existing mall parking on the west side of the property will remain available for use on game days.
Long-time Tampa Tribune cartoonist Lamar Sparkman designed the first team logo. Faced with the difficulty of designing a logo that didn't look too much like that of the other "pirates" in the league, the Raiders, Sparkman came up with a pirate in a plumed hat and a cutlass in his mouth. The pirate appeared to be winking. He came to be known as "Buccaneer Bruce" or "Bucco Bruce". Sports writer/commentator Nick Bakay once noted it "struck fear in the hearts of no one."
In 1992, the Bucs introduced orange pants to be worn with the white jerseys. Prior to the team's season finale in 1995 against the Detroit Lions, lame-duck coach Sam Wyche suggested that the Bucs wear the orange pants with their orange jerseys, but the idea was vetoed by, among others, Pro Bowl linebacker Hardy Nickerson. Tampa Bay had no chance regardless of what they wore, as the playoff-bound Lions crushed the Bucs, 37-10.
For the 1997 season, the Glazers worked with the NFL to develop a more marketable and intimidating look. The Bucs changed their team colors to dark red, black, and pewter with white and orange striping. "Bucco Bruce" was replaced by a red flag displaying a white pirate skull and crossed sabres. The flag was mounted on another sabre. The "Buccaneers" team name was written in a new font, romulan falcon, and was either red with shadows of gray, or red and white. Orange was used on the uniform to maintain a visual link to the old logo. The football in the new logo is orange, and orange stripes appear on the pants and numerals. Chris Berman nicknamed them "the pirates in pewter pants," a play on the The Pirates of Penzance.
The team's uniform was also redesigned in 1997 to include a combination of either red or white jerseys, and either pewter or white pants. The team's alternate jersey is black, but has never been used in games. In 2003, the Bucs introduced a practice jersey that featured orange piping. In 2004, a pewter practice jersey was used, with numerals in the romulan falcon font. Since the change in 1997, the Buccaneers have never worn the old uniform again, even during league-sponsored "throwback" weekends. In fact, Glazer has gone so far as to ban NFL Properties from marketing the Bucs' orange color scheme ever again, preferring to keep the team's woeful past in the past.
Like many other NFL teams located in subtropical climates, the Bucs traditionally wear their white jerseys at home during the first half of the season — forcing opponents to wear their dark ones under the hot autumns in Tampa.
The Bucs' 1997 uniform change prompted a 2003 lawsuit by the Raiders, who claimed that the NFL and the Buccaneers had infringed upon key trademark elements of the Raiders' brand, including the Raiders' pirate logo. In the same suit, the Raiders challenged the Carolina Panthers color scheme, which included silver and black. The Raiders wanted the courts to bar the Buccaneers and Panthers from wearing their uniforms while playing in California. However, since the lawsuit was filed in a state California court, the lawsuit was tossed out because federal courts only have jurisdiction on intellectual property issues. * The Raiders have yet to appeal the ruling.
Former coaches
Former executives
Former facilities
Tampa Bay Area | Hillsborough County, Florida | Tampa, Florida | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 1976 establishments | National Football League teams
Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Buccaneers de Tampa Bay | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | טמפה ביי באקנירס | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | タンパベイ・バッカニアーズ | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Tampa Bay Buccaneers
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