ESPN ranks both Bucs’ Super Bowl teams in all-time list

ESPN ranked every championship winner of the Super Bowl era, and both Bucs teams placed fairly high on the list.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have the lowest win-loss percentage in NFL history. Despite this, Tampa Bay has two Super Bowls to its name.

The Bucs put together two of the most impressive Super Bowl victories in recent history − both in pretty lopsided fashion. How does each Tampa Bay championship team rank among all 58 Super Bowl winners? Here’s what ESPN writer Aaron Schatz thinks:

2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The 2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers had nearly all the pieces to call themselves a championship-caliber team. They just needed a quarterback.

So when the Bucs made a splash in free agency and won over QB Tom Brady, they found the final missing piece of the puzzle. Brady hoisted Tampa Bay to its first playoff appearance since 2007, and eventually led the way in a 31-9 Super Bowl victory against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Schatz ranked the Bucs’ 2020 Super Bowl team as the 20th-best championship team of all time. Here’s what he said about the team:

“The Buccaneers were fourth in total DVOA for 2020 although they would have been No. 1 without a single game, a 38-3 stomping at the hands of the Saints in Week 9. Overall, the Bucs were third on offense and fifth on defense.”

Schatz made sure to give credit to the massive turnaround Tampa Bay made after their bye week. The Bucs were 7-5 and won the final four games of the regular season, and then, of course, swept the playoffs.

2002 Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Everything finally came together during the Bucs’ first Super Bowl-winning team. After letting go of HC Tony Dungy in the offseason and trading a first-round pick for former Raiders HC Jon Gruden, Tampa Bay found its footing in the playoffs. The Bucs arguably had one of the best defenses of all time and earned the No. 14 spot amongst championship teams by ESPN.

Here’s what Schatz wrote about the 2002 Bucs:

“This team ranked only 22nd in offensive DVOA. But the Bucs had the best pass defense DVOA ever put up in a full nonstrike season, and the third-best total defense in DVOA history behind the 1991 Eagles and 1986 Bears. Both sides of the ball worked together well once the Bucs got to the postseason, as they won by an average margin of 23.0 points per game.”

Tampa Bay cleared through the NFC, winning 31-6 against the 49ers and 27-10 against the Eagles. Led by 2002 Defensive Player of the Year Derrick Brooks, the Bucs stomped the Oakland Raiders 48-21 in the Super Bowl.

Tampa Bay defensive back Dwight Smith logged two pick-sixes off Rich Gannon, and Bucs WR Keenan McCardell caught two touchdown passes from QB Brad Johnson.

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Commanders’ Rivera distances himself from Del Rio, Vieselmeyer

Rivera had said repeatedly there would be no staff changes.

Ron Rivera will now be the head coach through the remainder of the 2023 season.

You see, this morning, Rivera and new owner Josh Harris dialogued, and Rivera apparently recommended that changes be made at defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach.

Consequently, Rivera did what he said he would not. He said he would not fire any of his staff. With only five games remaining, Rivera “recommended” these changes be made?

Ron Rivera actually recommended Jack Del Rio and Brent Vieselmeyer be publicly linked to the failure and be the fall guys to take the blame. With only five games remaining?

At this point, I think it wise to consider the two vantage points of Harris and Rivera. For Harris, if this is truly how it went down, then he is simply allowing his head coach to work through a season with those for whom he feels it is best for the success of the team.

On the other hand, for Rivera, he is making Del Rio and Vieselmeyer the fall guys with only five games remaining.

Coach Ron, didn’t you just tell us last week you would not be making such changes?

This raises the question, “Who actually initiated this conversation and moved that the DC and DB coach should be removed?” Did Harris inform Coach Ron that something must be done, so make a move?

Then again, if this actually arose with Coach Ron, I am not impressed. Why? Well, over the last few weeks, his demeanor has greatly changed. He has visibly been discouraged and tired.

The reality of this team having a losing season had set in on Rivera. Thus he knows he is finished following this season.

So, if he knows he is done after this season, why single out others with only five games remaining in your tenure as coach-centric CEO of the Commanders’ football operations?

Wouldn’t it say more of Rivera if he actually kept his word and went down with the ship in five weeks, rather than dismissing Del Rio and Vieselmeyer?

WATCH: Bucs Hall of Famers congratulate Rondé Barber on his induction

Check out this awesome tribute video for Rondé Barber from his Hall of Fame teammates

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have another Hall of Famer, as legendary defensive back Ronde Barber will be the next member of the franchise to be enshrined in Canton.

To celebrate the occasion, the Bucs released a video of Barber’s Hall of Fame teammates congratulating him on the game’s highest honor.

Watch the video above to see Derrick Brooks, John Lynch, Warren Sapp and Tony Dungy welcome Barber to football heaven.

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Tony Dungy doubled down on his insincere apology and NFL fans rightfully ripped him

Tony Dungy only made things worse with his awful Tweet on Saturday.

Tony Dungy was back on the air Saturday afternoon, talking football on NBC’s pregame show before the Jaguars and Chiefs squared off in a divisional round playoff game in Kansas City.

While he had a lot to say about football, he’s had very little to say about a disgusting tweet of his from earlier this week that supported a hateful conspiracy theory that has targeted transgender youth.

Dungy deleted the tweeted and offered a very hollow apology for his words and for seemingly believing one of the dumbest and most dangerous conspiracy theories that you’ll ever come across.

On Saturday, he decided to double down on his apology by posting an even worse one:

I mean, did he really just post a screengrab of a statement that someone was telling him to post and think that was OK and good? It sure seems that way.

And that right there only adds to the awfulness of this situation and of Dungy’s insincere apology.

NFL fans were not impressed.

Tony Dungy’s selective intolerance cannot provide the last word on any subject

Tony Dungy has every right to speak his particular truths. But when intolerance is the norm in such statements, we are all worse for it.

On January 6, four days after Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin suffered cardiac arrest during the Bills’ Monday Night Football game against the Cincinnati Bengals, Tracie Canada, an  assistant professor of cultural anthropology at Duke University, wrote an article for Scientific American in which she posited that Black NFL players are disproportionately affected by the violence of football. Not a tough conclusion to come to, given that the NFL skews over 70% Black from a player perspective. 

One individual who was offended by the article was NBC Sports analyst, former Super Bowl-winning head coach, and noted Christian activist Tony Dungy. 

Whether right or wrong, Dungy at least has two legitimate platforms on which to speak on the subject. He is a Black man, and he is a former NFL player. Whether Canada was right or wrong in invoking Hamlin’s name at such a sensitive time is another matter. 

What Dungy is not, and where he has far less authority with which to speak, is a woman who must consider an abortion for any number of reasons. But that did not stop Dungy from invoking Hamlin’s name himself at Friday’s anti-abortion March for Life in Washington D.C.

“Those prayers were answered,” Dungy said in full, regarding the prayers from both Bills and Bengals players on the field, and prayers for Hamlin’s well-being from around the country. “Damar’s recovering now, he’s home, he’s been released from the hospital. But what’s the lesson in that? An unbelievable thing happened that night in a professional football game with millions of dollars of ticket money on the line. That game was canceled. Why? Because a life was at stake. And people wanted to see that life saved. These are people who aren’t necessarily religious, they got together and called on God. 

“Well, that should be encouraging us, because that’s exactly why we’re here. Because every day in this country, innocent lives are at stake. The only difference is they don’t belong to a famous athlete, and they’re not seen on national TV. But those lives are still important to God and in God’s eyes.”

Prayer may have helped Hamlin in his recovery; that we do not know. But Hamlin was also helped to a great extent by the medical professionals in the Bills’ employ, and those at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center. Bills assistant athletic trainer Denny Kellington was specifically lauded by the doctors who worked with Hamlin at UNC after he was transported there. 

To Dungy, it seems that the use of Hamlin’s name is fair game, but only in a selective sense. Sadly, Dungy’s selective intolerance has been in the news far too often in recent days. 

As USA Today’s Nancy Armour put it on Friday: 

In a since-deleted Tweet, the Hall of Fame coach who is now an NBC Sports analyst ridiculed Minnesota’s efforts to treat its most at-risk students with compassion and care by sharing a debunked — and wholly nonsensical – claim that some schools are providing litter boxes because students are identifying as cats.

Armour had no trouble hammering the larger point home.

In a new poll released Thursday, 45% of transgender and nonbinary youth said they’d been cyberbullied or harassed online because of increased anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and policies, while 24% said they’d been bullied at school. Nearly 30% said they don’t feel safe going to a doctor if they’re sick or injured.

Now consider that more than half of transgender and nonbinary youth seriously considered suicide in the past year, according to The Trevor Project’s 2022 survey on mental health, and that 86% in the new Morning Consult poll said their mental health has been negatively affected by state laws restricting transgender rights.

“It has made me feel increasingly trapped and hopeless,” one person told The Trevor Project.

It’s these kids, these already vulnerable and in-peril kids, who Tony Dungy chose to pile on using his large, national platform. Who Dungy put further in harm’s way with his bigotry and ignorance, under the guise of his “Christian” faith.

Dungy didn’t have a problem forwarding that ridiculous theory. It aligned with his own beliefs, though he eventually, he backed off in a statement.

“I saw a tweet yesterday and I responded to it in the wrong way. As a Christian I should speak in love and in ways that are caring and helpful. I failed to do that and I am deeply sorry.”

But as of OutSports points out, Dungy’s history of anti-LGBTQ statements and actions goes back to at least 2006.

That year, Dungy was the headliner at a fundraiser for the Indiana Family Institute, whose primary objective was to oppose same-sex marriage. The event’s invitation featured a picture of Dungy coaching an NFL game in his Colts attire, with assurances that “an opportunity to financially support the Indiana Family Institute” would be available.

“I appreciate the stance [IFI is] taking, and I embrace that stance,” Dungy said during the IFI fundraiser of the group’s opposition to same-sex marriage. “IFI is saying what the Lord says. You can take that and make your decision on which way you want to be. I’m on the Lord’s side.”

In 2013, when NBA player Jason Collins came out publicly as gayDungy said he doesn’t “agree with Jason Collins’ lifestyle.”

The following year, after Michael Sam came out publicly as gay and was drafted by the St. Louis Rams, Dungy said he would not have wanted Sam on his team.

“I wouldn’t have taken him,” Dungy said of the Rams drafting Sam. And wait for it… “I wouldn’t want to deal with all of it. It’s not going to be totally smooth… things will happen.”

Dungy has every right to his beliefs. We know this. But he also has the capability — or at least he should — to understand what kinds of damage those beliefs can do if they’re invoked in hurtful ways.

Former NFL defensive end Esera Tuaolo, who came out two decades ago, and played for Dungy back with Dungy was the defensive coordinator for the Minnesota Vikings, put a voice to the Dungy seen as a good man, and the Dungy who has revealed himself as a narrower believer.

“He was always a kind-hearted man everyone looked up to,” Tuaolo told Zeigler. “He was very motivating and always steering us in a way of doing good in our lives and doing positive things and being a role model.”

Which is why Dungy’s current stances have to make Tuaolo feel differently.

“When I hear all of the stuff he’s said about my community, it hurts me. It’s conflicting to me because I know the person. Playing for him I never heard him say anything anti-gay or use gay slurs. I understand why some people are enraged at him, for him to support organizations that are anti-gay and work with them.”

Dungy has put himself firmly in the eye of multiple controversial subjects. In his own idea of advocacy, he surely believes that this is the right thing to do. And there are aspects of selective intolerance which naturally come with any belief system, no matter how conservative or liberal. Dungy hardly holds the patent on that.

But to work Damar Hamlin’s name into an anti-abortion speech without mentioning Hamlin himself seems a bit off. Did Dungy speak of Hamlin’s charity, which has raised over $9 million since his injury? Did he speak of Hamlin’s beliefs, perhaps gleaned by a visit or call to Hamlin to see how he’s doing? Dungy has been an informal adviser to the NFL in situations going back to Michael Vick’s reinstatement into the NFL following his prison term for federal dogfighting charges, so you’d think he might work that in as well.

If Dungy actually reached out to Hamlin to pray for him or with him, that would make more sense. But we do not know whether Dungy has done that. Perhaps if he had led the group he was speaking to in a prayer for Hamlin, it would look more that Dungy was speaking from his faith, and less that he was using Hamlin as a pawn.

None of this is to say that NBC should terminate Dungy’s contract. I do not believe in “cancel culture,” so it would be hypocritical of me to advocate for it here. But if Dungy is going to say these things, and if he sees himself as the ultimate arbiter for who can and cannot say this or that thing, he’s going to have to take responsibility for those words and actions at some point.

It will be Dungy’s challenge, and NBC’s challenge, to align his religious beliefs with his potential for continued employment. But I would say that it is Dungy’s challenge alone to frame his statements in ways that do more good than harm. In his statement, Dungy said that as a Christian, he “should speak in love and in ways that are caring and helpful.”

The extent to which he’s done that this week is open to opinion. That said, whenever selective intolerance is the last word on any subject, we are all the worse for it.

Al Michaels defends low-key call of Jaguars’ wild comeback win

Al Michaels says the criticism of his subdued call of the Jaguars’ 27-point comeback is “Internet compost.”

Al Michaels is a legend of broadcasting who has lended his voice to decades’ worth of iconic sports moments. But he and Hall of Fame coach Tony Dungy are getting roasted for their call of the Jacksonville Jaguars’ thrilling playoff victory Saturday.

Despite the Jaguars erasing a 27-point deficit against the Los Angeles Chargers to steal a 31-30 win with a field goal as time expired, Michaels and Dungy mostly sounded unmoved in the booth.

Michaels has seen the criticism of his low-key call during an instant postseason classic and he says he isn’t bothered by it. In texts with the New York Post’s Andrew Marchand, Michaels called the chatter surrounding his call “Internet compost.”

“I thought the energy was much better once Jax made it a game. 27-0 makes it difficult to make it sound like more than it is,” Michaels told Marchand. “A lot of folks who understand this industry are annoyed with the over-the-top yelling that makes a game sound like an offshoot of talk radio. I’m in that corner, but there are others who obviously think otherwise.”

Michaels, 78, spent 16 years calling Sunday Night Football games on NBC, first with John Madden and then with Cris Collinsworth. In 2022, he joined the Thursday Night Football team at Amazon where he calls games alongside Kirk Herbstreit.

His return to the NBC booth over the weekend was in an emeritus role and it’ll be Mike Tirico and Collinsworth in the booth next weekend when the Jaguars play the Kansas City Chiefs.

This video of a fake Al Michaels and Tony Dungy calling the Bengals’ fumble return is too funny

This is hilarious.

Man, that was a fun weekend of NFL playoff games, wasn’t it? And Monday night we get one more when Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers host Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys.

Everything wasn’t perfect over the weekend, though. Lots of fans noticed how boring Al Michaels and Tony Dungy were during Saturday night’s thrilling come-from-behind victory by the Jaguars over the Los Angeles Chargers. They just lacked the energy all night, which was a shame because that game was an instant classic.

Thankfully Al and Tony weren’t on the call for Sunday night’s Ravens-Bengals game because Cincinnati’s 98-yard, game-winning fumble return wouldn’t have been as fun with those guys breaking it down.

You know what is fun, though? This video:

I’ve watched it probably 10 times and can’t stop laughing each time.

Twitter loved it.

NFL fans ripped Al Michaels and Tony Dungy for sucking the air out of Jaguars’ unforgettable win

Al and Tony treated a historic comeback like it was a random Thursday night.

If you had zero score context, you would’ve thought that Al Michaels — in a special return appearance to NBC — and Tony Dungy were calling a random, run-of-the-mill October game. But no, they actually had the call of the Jacksonville Jaguars shocking the Los Angeles Chargers in the third-largest playoff comeback in NFL playoff history.

Did the announcing pair sell the moment, adding relevant excitement or thrills to one of the more remarkable outcomes in the sport’s century-plus lore? Did they noticeably change their tone or have viewers on the edge of their seats as the Jaguars slowly inched their way back to drive a stake into the Chargers and continue that franchise’s curse? Perhaps they even discussed what might be on the line for Brandon Staley and his future in L.A. as the drama built in Jacksonville?

Dearest Readers, if they did, I must have missed it! And so did nearly everyone else watching the chaos unfold on Saturday night. It’s almost difficult to describe just how badly Michaels and Dungy whiffed on the dramatic moment. Their call of the game was that bad.

The football world wasn’t remotely happy with the guys in the booth.

Tony Dungy voted for Doug Pederson to be AP Coach of the Year

Doug Pederson already has one vote for AP Coach of the Year.

When the Jacksonville Jaguars host the Los Angeles Chargers in the first prime-time playoff game in TIAA Bank Field history, it’ll be legendary broadcaster Al Michaels with Hall of Fame coach Tony Dungy in the booth for NBC.

Dungy, 67, spent six seasons as head coach the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and seven with the Indianapolis Colts. The two teams reached the postseason a combined 11 times in those 13 seasons, and the Colts won Super Bowl XLI after the 2006 season with Dungy at the wheel.

And according to that extremely accomplished and credentialed former NFL coach, the Jaguars’ Doug Pederson put in the best coaching performance of the 2022 regular season.

“Well, I have to tell you, I have a vote on the AP awards and I voted for Doug for Coach of the Year,” Dungy told Brian Sexton on the Jaguars-produced show, Drive Time. “I knew he would do well and I knew he would transfuse energy into this franchise and get them going, but I thought it would be a couple years to really get it. And they clicked in after about eight weeks. It’s amazing.”

The Jaguars picked first in the 2021 and 2022 NFL drafts after finishing with the worst record in the league in back-to-back seasons. After a 4-8 start to Pederson’s first season, Jacksonville won its last five games to earn the AFC South title and reach the playoffs.

While Dungy thinks Pederson should be the Coach of the Year, oddsmakers have generally considered him an underdog for the award, behind the Eagles’ Nick Sirianni, the 49ers’ Kyle Shanahan and the New York Giants’ Brian Daboll.

Tony Dungy incensed with Texans’ decision to fire Lovie Smith

Former Super Bowl-winning coach Tony Dungy is upset the Houston Texans decided to fire Lovie Smith after a 3-13-1 season.

Count Tony Dungy as someone who is not pleased with the Houston Texans’ decision to fire Lovie Smith as coach.

The former Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Indianapolis Colts coach and current NBC Sports analyst took to Twitter Sunday evening to react to the news of the Texans firing Smith after a 3-13-1 finish.

“What are the Texans doing,” Dungy wrote. “What kind of operation is this where you don’t have any convictions about supporting the coaches you hire. Who is going to want to coach there if you might only get one year to implement your plans. Two years in a row is ridiculous.”

Dungy raises an interesting notion that the Texans are displaying a lack of convictions about providing support for coaches when they fire them after just one season. It could be argued that Smith’s plans, especially on the defensive side of the ball, already had two years of implementation due to the fact Smith was hired as defensive coordinator on David Culley’s staff in 2021.

Firing a coach two years in a row is also puzzling and could be a deterrent to other candidates. What kind of stability is there in a job when it has been shown on record the past two seasons they are willing to get rid of a coach.

Smith got his start coaching at the NFL level under Dungy with the Buccaneers in 1996 as linebackers coach. Smith remained at the position through the 2000 season when he was hired by the St. Louis Rams during the 2001 offseason. Smith later was the coach of the Chicago Bears in 2006 and ended up going to Super Bowl XLI where they faced Dungy’s Colts.