Bucs S Antoine Winfield Jr. was historic as a tackler in 2023

Tampa Bay Buccaneers safety Antoine Winfield Jr. set a franchise record for tackles by a defensive back in a single season last year

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have seen some talented tacklers come through their defensive backfield over the years, but safety Antoine Winfield Jr. put himself at the top of the list with his All-Pro performance last season.

Winfield set a new franchise record in 2023 with 122 tackles, the most ever by a Bucs defensive back in a single season.

Hall of Famers like John Lynch and Rondé Barber have put together some incredible numbers in the tackle column over their legendary careers in Tampa Bay, but Winfield has a chance to put himself in that same echelon if he keeps up his current level of play.

Winfield just got a new four-year contract extension that makes him the highest-paid defensive back in NFL history, so he’ll continue to cement his legacy as one of the best defender Bucs fans have ever seen.

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Giants rookie Tyler Nubin explains why he chose jersey No. 31

New York Giants rookie safety Tyler Nubin, who wore No. 27 in college, explains why he chose jersey No. 31.

For the second straight year, the New York Giants spent a second-round pick on a player from the University of Minnesota. After taking center John Michael Schmitz last year, this time the Giants took safety Tyler Nubin.

After Xavier McKinney departed in free agency to sign with the Green Bay Packers, Nubin comes in and immediately fills a void for the Giants.

Nubin wasted no time locking up his jersey number with the Giants. After wearing No. 27 in college, he will now wear No. 31 to pay homage to some other former University of Minnesota safeties who continued on to the NFL.

“I saw 31 was available and my dogs, Antoine Winfield and Jordan Howden, both wore 31 their rookie years in the league. Carrying tradition for gopher safeties wearing 31 in the league, I guess.” Nubin told reporters

Running back Matt Breida wore No. 31 last season.

Traditionally, No. 31 has been a popular one for Giants defensive backs, including Michael Thomas, Aaron Ross, Will Hill, and Jason Sehorn.

The Giants hope to continue the success they’ve had drafting safeties in the second round recently between Landon Collins (2015) and Xavier McKinney (2020).

Nubin will have big shoes to fill coming in to replace McKinney but general manager Joe Schoen seems confident he’ll fit right in.

Nubin’s reputation as an interchangeable safety seems to be the reason Schoen believes he will fit into the Giants’ defensive scheme.

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Available free agent safeties for the Broncos in 2024

Here is a list of 15 free agent safeties the Broncos should consider this offseason.

After listing notable free-agent defensive linemen yesterday, we’re looking at free-agent safety options for the Denver Broncos today.

Justin Simmons is one of the best safeties in the league, but his former partner, Kareem Jackson, is no longer on the team. Caden Sterns might be a candidate to start across from Simmons in 2024, but Sterns has missed 28 games due to injury over the last two seasons.

In case Sterns is not able to stay on the field, Denver needs another starting-caliber safety on the roster.

One big name to keep an eye on is C.J. Gardner-Johnson, who drew interest from the Broncos during free agency last year. Denver also has a notable in-house free agent safety in P.J. Locke who is scheduled to hit the open market if the Broncos do not re-sign him before March 13.

So, with free agency about a week away, here’s a quick list of 15 free-agent safeties that Denver should consider signing this spring.

Franchise tag unlikely to be an option for the Saints in 2024

The franchise tag is unlikely to be an option for the Saints in 2024, but it carries heavy implications for some of their division rivals:

Never say never, but fans shouldn’t expect the New Orleans Saints to use the franchise tag in 2024. The team did a good jump last summer getting a jump on their upcoming free agents: players like defensive end Carl Granderson,  right guard Cesar Ruiz, and defensive end Cameron Jordan all signed extensions before they would have hit the open market this spring. They lack players the tag’s heavy price tag would justify keeping.

On top of that, they’re so far in the red that they need as many cap-friendly contracts as possible, and the franchise tag is a lead weight on that scale. Once handed out it cannot be restructured, reduced, or otherwise manipulated.

But the tag could make life difficult for some of New Orleans’ division rivals, specifically the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Tampa Bay has three key candidates headed for free agency in All-Pro safety Antoine Winfield Jr., firebrand quarterback Baker Mayfield, as well as amateur boxer and wide receiver Mike Evans.

Of the three, Winfield is likeliest to receive the tag. It shouldn’t be hard for the Bucs to hammer out an extension with Mayfield. Evans is a different story. His contract voids on Monday, Feb. 19, accelerating $7.4 million onto their salary cap in dead money, and tagging him isn’t an option. He’s a rare case. If the NFL-estimated cap hit (for wide receivers this year, about $21.6 million) is lower than 120% of last year’s cap number, the team would have to pay the higher amount. In this case, that would be a fully-guaranteed $28.4 million, and the Bucs would have to balk at that.

Another team to watch: the Carolina Panthers. Spendthrift owner David Tepper has managed his money poorly and has been unable to sign pass rusher Brian Burns to a long-term extension, but he’s paid millions of dollars to multiple head coaches he’s fired (Matt Rhule, Frank Reich, and soon, history suggests, Dave Canales). The Panthers balked at both a multiyear deal with Burns and lucrative trade offers from other teams last year, then changed his position listing from defensive end to linebacker with a move to a 3-4 defense.

It means tagging Burns costs a little less (about $1.3 million), which could buy the Panthers more time to work on a longer deal. However, Burns could take them to arbitration arguing he’s a defensive end (with an estimated $23.3 million tag), not an outside linebacker (about $22 million), just as Jimmy Graham did with the Saints back in the day.

Burns will likely be staying in Carolina (largely against his will), but there’s a good chance Evans could be moving on as a free agent, catching passes and starting fights elsewhere around the league. Of course it’s possible the Buccaneers could hammer out an extension with him. They’re just going to have one less tool in their toolbox to negotiate with. The NFL’s two-week window to use the franchise tag opens on Tuesday, Feb. 20 and closes Tuesday, March 5.

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Zulgad’s four-and-out: Could Vikings pursue son of former standout cornerback to replace Harrison Smith?

Could the Minnesota Vikings sign the son of former great Antoine Winfield? Judd Zulgad looks at that and more in his Vikings notebook.

We took a look at four potential free agent fits for the Minnesota Vikings in this space last week, but we might have missed one very interesting possibility.

That and items on Kevin O’Connell’s contract, the Vikings’ Ring of Honor and which opponents the Vikings might face in London next season are all part of this week’s action-packed column.

Packers must know where Bucs S Antoine Winfield Jr. is at all times

The Packers will face one of the best and most disruptive safeties in the NFL on Sunday. Antoine Winfield Jr. of the Bucs is the real deal.

Do-it-all Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ safety Antoine Winfield Jr. is going to present a unique challenge for the Green Bay Packers offense with his ability to impact the game in a variety of ways.

“He’s an unbelievable player,” said Matt LaFleur. “It doesn’t matter whether he’s playing nickel or he’s the safety, he’s a guy you better account for on every play. He’s a very smart football player. Very instinctive. Very physical, it’s not a shock to me that he’s made the impact he’s made in this league. He’s one of the better safeties in the league.”

You name it and the Bucs’ defense probably asks Winfield to do it, and he’s going to execute at a high level. Winfield has spent the majority of his snaps this season lined up as a traditional safety, but they’ll move him around as well, with 177 snaps coming from the box and 108 from the slot.

In coverage, Winfield has allowed a completion rate of only 57 percent and come away with two interceptions and ranks second in forced incompletions among all safeties. As a blitzer, he ranks fifth in pass rush snap, which includes recording the second-most pressures and the most sacks. Winfield has also been an extremely reliable run defender, ranking first at his position group in PFF’s run defense grade and ranking fourth in run defense tackles.

Regardless of what the play-call is that the Packers have dialed up, they have to know where Winfield is lined up at all times because he will make an impact at all levels of the field and in all phases for a defense.

“He’s really good in the run and pass,” said offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich.” He’s a really instinctual player. Covers well and he’s really physical in the run game. I think he’s a complete safety. One of the better ones we’ve seen this year. You’ve just got to make sure you account for him wherever he’s at. Have an awareness for him. They’ll pressure him a lot. He’s a heck of a player.”

Overall, this has been a Bucs’ defense that has been more than willing to blitz and has been very good against the run this season, allowing just 3.9 yards per rush. In the secondary, they’re giving up the fourth-most yards per pass attempt, but have been excellent in the red zone.

On the back end, this is an aggressive unit that will challenge the Green Bay receivers through physical play. If Jordan Love is indecisive, as LaFleur said he was early on against the Giants, or he and his receivers aren’t on the same page, or there is pressure that gets to him, a player of Winfield’s caliber will often be in the area to capitalize on any mistakes.

“He’s a really good safety,” said Love at his locker on Wednesday. “He does a lot of good things just with coverage recognition and understanding the routes. Then obviously playing off the quarterback’s eyes. He’s a guy that’s a ball hawk, he wants to jump routes and go make plays on the ball. I think he does a really good job. He’s a guy that you’ve got to know where he’s at.

“Obviously do some things where you’re able to look him off. But just knowing where he’s at and knowing what he’s capable of, and being aware of that is huge.”

LaFleur said on Thursday that he did not expect Christian Watson to practice on Friday, putting his status for Sunday’s game very much in jeopardy. Jayden Reed and Dontayvion Wicks are both on the injury report as well, but have practiced and seem to be trending in the right direction.

The running back room is also dealing with unknowns of its own. AJ Dillon is dealing with a broken thumb, while Aaron Jones is still working his way back from an MCL sprain—although he feels good about where he’s at. Even if both players were available this week, whether or not they would be able to handle a full workload remains to be seen.

With the injuries at the running back position, along with Green Bay facing a stout Tampa Bay defensive front that has been very good against the run, the Packers path to success on offense Sunday may have to largely come through the air, and that means dealing with Antoine Winfield, both in coverage and as a blitzer.

Ranking the 8 best 2024 free agents for the Steelers to consider

The Steelers will need to look to free agency to fix some problems on this roster.

The Pittsburgh Steelers are midway through the 2023 season and while everyone is excited about the team being 6-3 and finding ways to pull victory from the jaws of defeat, we all recognize this roster has some problems. Looking over the list of pending free agents for 2024, here are the eight names that we feel could help the Steelers the most.

3 causes for concern as the Bills face the Buccaneers in Week 8

3 causes for concern as the #Bills face the #Buccaneers in Week 8:

The Buffalo Bills are looking to get back into the win column as they welcome the Tampa Bay Buccaneers home to Highmark Stadium to start off Week 8 of the 2023 NFL season.

Buffalo will be looking to make a statement after a disappointing loss to a division rival last week, the New England Patriots. While this can be an opportunity for Buffalo to win, there are never any easy games in the NFL and Thursday will not be easy.

Here are three causes for concern for the Bills (4-3) against the Buccaneers (3-3):

26 days until Vikings season opener: Every player to wear No. 26

16 players have worn the No. 26 in Minnesota Vikings history, including DB Antoine Winfield.

The Minnesota Vikings will kick off their 2023 regular season in 27 days at home against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sept. 10.

From now until then, we will take a trip down memory lane and count each day by revisiting the players that have worn that specific jersey number.

Running back Kene Nwangwu currently wears the No. 27 for the Minnesota Vikings.

With 27 days until kickoff, here’s a look at every player to wear No. 27 in a regular season with the Vikings (via Pro Football Reference):

Top five NFL Combine shuttle performances by Ohio State players

Top five NFL Combine shuttle performances by Ohio State players #GoBucks

The 2022 NFL Scouting Combine starts this week in Indianapolis, Indiana, and it always provides a unique and stress-inducing showcase for future NFL players. The combine is typically the most important part of the pre-draft process for many NFL prospects and serves as the most important job interview these young men may have in their lives.

Any seasoned NFL scout will tell you that the combine is not the end all be all and is just a part of the process, but fans love the idea of the underwear Olympics, and seeing some of these freak athletes accomplish insane feats in the bench press, shuttle run, 40-yard dash, vertical jump, and broad jump.

The following are the top five shuttle performances by former Ohio State football players. We are only tracking numbers from the NFL Scouting Combine and not from pro days and only numbers since the NFL Scouting Combing moved to Indianapolis in 1987.

More Buckeye best NFL Combine performances: Bench Press