Bucs hire Thomas McGaughey as new special teams coordinator

McGaughey was the Giants’ special team coordinator since 2018, but was fired this offseason. Now, he finds a new home in Tampa Bay.

Tampa Bay’s special teams coordinator search is officially over.

ESPN reporter Jordan Raanan reported on Wednesday that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers are set to hire former New York Giants special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey. McGaughey was the Giants’ special teams coordinator since 2018 but was fired in the offseason.

McGaughey has a lot of special teams experience, serving as a special teams coordinator for five teams now (including Tampa Bay). He’s familiar with the NFC South, too, having coached with the Carolina Panthers from 2016-17. He’ll replace Keith Armstrong, who retired in the offseason after spending five years in Tampa Bay.

With the hire, the Bucs will technically only need to hire a wide receivers coach to be back to full — however, coordinator Liam Coen will likely want to bring in his own staff members for some of the positions currently filled on Tampa Bay’s coaching rosters, such as quarterbacks coach and tight end coach, for example.

Baker Mayfield wins NFL on Fox Comeback Player of the Year award

The Associated Press Comeback Player of the Year award, which Mayfield is nominated for, will be revealed at the NFL Honors on Thursday.

The Associated Press Comeback Player of the Year award won’t be revealed until Thursday, but Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback [autotag]Baker Mayfield[/autotag] took home honors as the top comeback player from a different source on Wednesday.

NFL on Fox had its own voting for the NFL’s yearly awards, and Mayfield won Comeback Player of the Year. That award is based on a fan vote; the AP award is voted on by sports journalists around the nation.

Mayfield will face off against Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin, Miami Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa, Los Angeles Rams QB Matthew Stafford and Cleveland Browns QB Joe Flacco for the AP award.

Mayfield’s efforts for the Bucs were remarkable coming off a rough season with both the Carolina Panthers and Los Angeles Rams in 2022. Not only did he throw for 28 touchdowns to just 10 interceptions, but he threw six touchdown passes to three picks in Tampa Bay’s playoff run. Mayfield seemed to have clicked with the Bucs in 2023, and whether he returns to the team will depend on how much money Tampa Bay is willing to give him in free agency.

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Bucs interview more special teams candidates from college and NFL

The Bucs have now narrowed down six candidates for their vacant special teams job.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are taking their time with their vacant special teams coordinator opening, and they’ve now pinned down six different candidates for the job.

Bucs reporter Scott Smith reported Wednesday that the team has interviewed two more candidates for their special teams job. One of them is from the NFL in Saints assistant special teams coach Phil Galiano, while the other is a college football candidate in Iowa’s LaVar Woods.

Galiano has been with the New Orleans Saints since 2019, but he’s been coaching a lot longer than that. His coaching career started in 2000, where he was an outside linebackers coach. Since then, he’s had a lot of NFL experience, working with three NFL teams. One of them was the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, where he was an assistant under coach Greg Schiano from 2012-13. He was a special teams assistant then and has never served as a special teams coordinator in the NFL.

Woods has been with Iowa for his entire coaching career, so this would be a big change for him if he were to make the jump from college to the NFL. He first began coaching in 2008 with Iowa as an athletic assistant before serving as linebackers coach, tight ends coach and then as special teams coach from 2018 to now.

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WATCH: Highlights from Tampa Bay’s Super Bowl LV victory over Chiefs

It’s the three-year anniversary of when the Bucs won their second Super Bowl, and you can relive the all the action here:

Three years ago today, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers made it to the top of the mountain.

The Bucs beat the Kansas City Chiefs 31-9 in Super Bowl LV on Feb. 7, 2021, bringing the franchise its second Lombardi Trophy. Tampa Bay dominated behind the efforts of quarterback Tom Brady and a fearsome defense. Before a crowd of 24,835 — limited by the COVID-19 pandemic — the Bucs became the first team to win a Super Bowl at its home stadium.

The Chiefs scored the first points, going up 3-0, but it would be the only lead they had. The Bucs dominated in the trenches, swarming quarterback Patrick Mahomes. Mahomes threw two interceptions and no touchdown passes, and was on the run from the Tampa pass rush all night.

The offense, meanwhile, got the ball rolling. Brady and the Bucs put up 31 points, with every score coming from a player the team signed that year. Tight end Rob Gronkowski scored two touchdowns, wideout Antonio Brown caught a TD pass and running back Leonard Fournette ran for one as well. In the end, Tampa Bay entered a group of 15 teams that have won two or more Super Bowls.

You can relive the highlights and grandeur of that night below:

Bucs hire OL coach Kevin Carberry

The Bucs have made their first offensive hire of the Liam Coen era, and naturally, it’s someone Coen worked with in Los Angeles.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have made their first offensive hire under new offensive coordinator Liam Coen, and naturally, it’s someone he’s quite familiar with.

ESPN’s Dan Graziano reported on Tuesday that the Bucs are set to hire Kevin Carberry as the team’s new offensive line coach. Carberry is set to replace Joe Gilbert, who left to become the offensive line coach of the Carolina Panthers under Dave Canales this offseason.

Carberry most recently served as a division rival for Tampa Bay, as he was the assistant offensive line coach with the New Orleans Saints. Coen knows him from before that, however, as he served as the Los Angeles Rams’ offensive line coach from 2021-22. The hire brings an added element of familiarity to Coen, and it could perhaps predict a trend going forward for his next set of hires.

Carberry was a Super Bowl champion in 2021 with the Rams, and Coen and the Bucs are certainly hoping he can bring that acumen to Tampa Bay in the near future. Now, he’ll get to coach dynamic players like Tristan Wirfs on the left side and Luke Goedeke on the right, and he will hopefully be able to mend the Bucs’ poor interior offensive line play that it showcased last season.

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How new Bucs OC Liam Coen views the offense

Check out how new Bucs HC Liam Coen sees the offense and his stance on a number of offensive subjects like personnel usage, playcalling philosophy and more.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator Liam Coen was officially introduced as a coach for the Bucs on Tuesday, and of course, he made his thoughts and philosophies on the offense clear in his press conference.

Coen, who served as the Kentucky Wildcats’ offensive coordinator last year, is a disciple of Sean McVay dating back to Coen’s time with the Los Angeles Rams. As such his offense is similar to that of current Chicago Bears coordinator Shane Waldron’s, who inspired Carolina Panthers head coach Dave Canales when the two were together at Seattle. Coen’s offense may be very similar, but his philosophies and thoughts on personnel usage are not one-to-one.

Here are a few tidbits from how Coen views the offensive side of the ball:

New Bucs OC Liam Coen: QB Baker Mayfield is ‘an igniter’

Coen looked back to his time working with Mayfield with the Los Angeles Rams and had a lot of great things to say about the pending free agent signal caller.

New Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator Liam Coen was introduced on Tuesday, and he was asked for his thoughts on quarterback Baker Mayfield, who is a pending free agent.

Coen served as the offensive coordinator for the University of Kentucky in 2021 and 2023, but in between, he worked with Sean McVay and the Los Angeles Rams as offensive coordinator. He didn’t call plays then, but he’ll get that opportunity in Tampa Bay for 2024.

Coen looked back at that time with the Rams, when Mayfield came to the team at the end of the year to fill in at quarterback. Coen called that a “tough year,” but he mentioned that Mayfield completely changed the energy within the team when he came to Los Angeles.

“Baker, as you guys know, he’s an igniter,” Coen said. “That’s the type of guy that you want to be around. He came into our organization at a really difficult time. A time [when] we weren’t having a lot of fun. He came in and made football fun for a lot of people at that time. He came in and made football competitive again at practice, and he’s jawing at Jalen Ramsey, and they’re going at it.”

Coen told reporters that he while he doesn’t know whether Mayfield will return next season, he certainly is hoping that is the case and that he knows Mayfield feels very positive about the organization as a whole heading into free agency.

“He’s obviously a reason that I’m here,” Coen said. “I want him to be here. I think he wants to be here, he wants to work with me and do this with Coach [Todd Bowles] and the organization — he has nothing but good things to say about this place, so hopefully that can get done.”

That being said, if Mayfield doesn’t return to Tampa Bay, Coen will be ready. He mentioned working with Bucs backup QB John Wolford with the Rams in 2022 and that he’s watched film on Kyle Trask, particularly praising his throw to the back of the end zone to Chris Godwin during Tampa Bay’s game against the Indianapolis Colts (a throw that ended up being incomplete).

“I think [Trask] has got some accuracy and some ability, and if you have to pivot, you have to pivot,” Coen said. “And I do think college does prepare you a little bit for some of those things.”

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Bucs interview two more candidates for special teams opening

One of the new interviews includes an in-house hire that played safety for the Bucs for six years.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are continuing their coaching search, as they have conducted two more interviews for their special teams coordinator opening.

The team announced Monday that it has interviewed both Bucs special teams assistant Keith Tandy and Seattle Seahawks special teams coordinator Larry Izzo for their special teams coordinator opening. With the two interviewed, there have been four total interviews for the spot after previous special teams coordinator Keith Armstrong retired.

Tandy has history with the Bucs, and it isn’t just as a coach. He spent six years with the team as a safety from 2012-17, and he came on to the team as a special teams assistant in 2020 and has a Super Bowl ring with the Tampa Bay from their 2020 season. Tandy is the in-house candidate for the Bucs, having been involved in the organization for a total of 10 years.

Izzo is the Seahawks’ special teams coordinator and has been since 2021. A former player himself in the league from 1996-2009, Izzo was not explicitly fired in Seattle but he was not retained after new head coach Mike Macdonald brought on Jay Harbaugh to serve as special teams coordinator. Izzo has been a coach in the NFL for quite some time, beginning his coaching career in 2011 with the New York Giants.

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Bucs interview two coaches for vacant special teams opening

The Bucs have begun their interview process to replace special teams coordinator Keith Armstrong after his retirement.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers may have hired offensive coordinator Liam Coen, but that doesn’t mean that they’re done in the hiring cycle — far from it, in fact.

The team has another position to fill, seeking a new special teams coach after the retirement of their previous one in Keith Armstrong. The Bucs are officially looking to fill that void, interviewing two candidates for the job on Monday — former New York Giants special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey and former Tennessee Titans special teams coordinator Craig Aukerman.

McGaughey was most recently the Giants’ special teams coordinator, serving at the position from 2018-23. Counting college teams as well, he’s served as special teams coordinator for five different teams over the course of his coaching career. He was fired by the Giants on Jan. 8 alongside offensive coordinator Mike Kafka. Defensive coordinator Wink Martindale mutually parted ways with the Giants two days later.

Interestingly enough, Craig Aukerman also has been a special teams coordinator from 2018-23. He served at that position with the Tennessee Titans, and he was fired by Tennessee after a particualrly brutal special teams breakdown against the Indianapolis Colts in Week 13 of the regular season.

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Bucs QB Baker Mayfield named Pro Bowl Games offensive MVP

It’s safe to say Baker Mayfield had fun at his first Pro Bowl — and he made a big impact, too.

The season may be over for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but that doesn’t mean that Bucs quarterback [autotag]Baker Mayfield[/autotag] has to stop baking.

Mayfield was selected to his first Pro Bowl as an alternate for Dak Prescott in 2024, and he made it count. After the NFC officially won the Pro Bowl games, Mayfield was named the offensive MVP for the games. Ironically, he stood on the same stage as a division rival, as New Orleans Saints linebacker Demario Davis was named the defensive MVP.

Mayfield kicked off the Pro Bowl Games with a victory in the Precision Passing event, winning 9-8 over AFC quarterback C.J. Stroud. He also showed out in the flag football game for the NFC, coming in for the fourth quarter and throwing two touchdowns to help bring the NFC to victory.

While the victory is unlikely to affect the way the Bucs view him for his play on the field, it does put his contract situation once again front and center in the NFL world. Mayfield is a free agent for 2024, and Tampa Bay will decide whether it wants to bring him back or not for the upcoming season.

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