Bucs HC provides update on Mike Evans injury status and recovery

On Monday, Bucs head coach Todd Bowles gave everyone an update on Evans and his hamstring injury.ย 

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers offense has remained efficient despite the absence of Mike Evans and Chris Godwin. We have been expecting to get Mike Evans back at some point while Chris Godwin has been on record saying that the only chance he has of coming back is in the playoffs.

On Monday, Bucs head coach Todd Bowles gave everyone an update on Evans and his hamstring injury.

“I’ll have to see where he is next week. He’s getting better and better. With the week off, hopefully he’ll be able to do something next week.”

For what it is worth, Bowles gave that same answer when discussing Josh Hayes’ and Tristan Wirfs’ injury status. He has stated this position previously after the injury occurred, so it may also indicate that not much has changed for him.

Soft tissue injuries, such as hamstrings, are always a touch-base sort of injury. It isn’t fun to deal with or monitor but that is the cards we are currently dealing with.

Bucs vs. Saints Inactives: Rachaad White and Graham Barton out

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers will face the New Orleans Saints on Sunday without two key offensive starters.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers will face the New Orleans Saints on Sunday without two key offensive starters. Rachaad White and Graham Barton have been ruled out for their Week 6 matchup on the road.

Rachaad White was on the injury report all week with a foot injury, and after being limited in practice, the team decided to play it safe. In his place will be rookie Bucky Irving, who has flashed whenever he touches the ball this season.

Another rookie, Graham Barton, will be inactive after appearing on the team’s injury report after their Week 5 loss to the Falcons. He will miss the game due to a hamstring injury, and Robert Hainsey will start in his place.

Other inactives for the game include Trey Palmer, Kameron Johnson, Christian Izien, and Devin Culp. The wide receiver group missing both Johnson and Palmer means the Bucs will rely on the Oklahoma connection of Sterling Shepard and Baker Mayfield to Gardner results for a third straight week.

Todd Bowles rules out several players for Week 5 matchup against Falcons

The Bucs head to Atlanta to play against the Falcons, head coach Todd Bowles has officially ruled out five starters on the short week.

Unfortunately, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers injury report has been in midseason form in the early stages of the 2024 season. As the Bucs head to Atlanta for a Thursday night matchup against the Falcons, head coach Todd Bowles has officially ruled out five starters on the short week, as reported by Greg Auman.

  • DL Calijah Kancey
  • S Antoine Winfield
  • T Luke Goedeke
  • WR Jalen McMillan
  • WR Trey Palmer

Calijah Kancey will miss his fifth straight game with a calf injury. Bowles did note to reporters that Kancey might have been able to see his first action this season had the game been on Sunday, as the DT had no setbacks this week at practice.

Justin Skule, who has allowed seven pressures, will get the start against an Atlanta Falcons defense that has struggled in generating pressures on opposing QBs as the 28th ranked pass rushing defense per PFF, with Luke Goedeke unable to clear concussion protocol, being forced to miss his fourth-straight game.

The Bucs signed WR Sterling Shepard to their active roster again this week as both Jalen McMillan and Trey Palmer will be out on Thursday. Shepard is coming off a 50 offensive snap outing against the Philadelphia Eagles, the most since 2022.

Bucs WR Trey Palmer ruled out of game against Eagles with a concussion

The second-year wide receiver had three catches for 26 yards and a touchdown before leaving the game.

Buccaneers wide receiver Trey Palmer has been ruled out of the Bucs’ Week 4 matchup with the Philadelphia Eagles with a concussion.ย  The second-year wide receiver had three catches for 26 yards and a touchdown before leaving the game.

With Palmer and rookie Jalen McMillan out of the game already, the Bucs will have to lean on rookie WR Kam Johnson and veteran Sterling Shepard, who was called up from the practice squad for the game.

Mayfield utilized the entire receiving corps in Sunday’s game, with receptions for seven different players on offense. The team is up 21-0 as a result of Mayfield playing as well as he has to start things. He will have to keep that up now without Trey Palmer doing his part.

WATCH: Baker Mayfield bouncing back quickly against the Eagles

Last week the Tampa Bay Bucs and Baker Mayfield struggled against a smothering Broncos defense, not the case on Sunday against the Eagles.ย 

Last week, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Baker Mayfield struggled against a smothering Broncos defense, but that was not the case on Sunday against the Eagles.

The Buc’s offense came out of the gates firing on all cylinders, and Mayfield looks like an MVP candidate again. Through the two drives in the first quarter, he is 12/13 passing for 138 yards and two touchdowns. One of those touchdowns can be found in the tweet below.

Mayfield has found Mike Evans and Trey Palmer for big scores to give the Bucs a 14-0 lead on their first two drives.

Mayfield is proving to be efficient at distributing the ball. The trio of Mike Evans, Trey Palmer, and Jalen McMillan all had three receptions in the first quarter. The team clearly knew last week was far from their best showing, and the offense and coordinator, Liam Coen, saw what needed to be fixed, and they did it.

https://twitter.com/Buccaneers/status/1840442470456254799

Who will emerge as the Bucs’ No. 3 receiver?

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers should have a tight battle in training camp for the No. 3 wide receiver role

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers already have one of the NFL’s best wide receiver tandems in Mike Evans and Chris Godwin, but there’s an intriguing battle brewing for the No. 3 spot behind them heading into training camp.

Trey Palmer, a sixth-round pick in the 2023 NFL draft, showed flashes of big-play ability and upside as a rookie last season, with rare explosiveness that can create big problems for opposing defenses downfield and after the catch.

But while Palmer should be even more polished heading into his second NFL season, he’ll face stiff competition for that WR3 role from Jalen McMillan, one of the Bucs’ third-round picks in this year’s draft.

Sara Walsh of NFL Network recently broke down the position battle with Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero:

Whoever ends up winning that job, the Bucs offense will be better for it, as they’re likely to get the best possible versions of both Palmer and McMillan as they both sharpen one another throughout training camp and the preseason.

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Bucs 2024 training camp preview: Wide receiver

The top of the Bucs wide receiver depth chart is set. The real intrigue comes deeper in the receiver room.

The wide receiver room has long been a cornerstone of the Buccaneers roster, anchored by the stalwart tandem of Mike Evans and Chris Godwin. However, this year, the big story going into training camp is not about Evans or Godwin, but about the future of the position, particularly the looming battle for the third receiving spot between Trey Palmer and Jalen McMillan.

There is little that training camp will reveal about Mike Evans that 10 straight 1000-yard seasons do not already say. New Bucs offensive coordinator Liam Coen, like his many predecessors, is sure to build the offense around Evans’ potent game-breaking ability and near-invulnerability to man coverage.

Chris Godwin may have a more eventful training camp as he transitions back to the slot after playing 61.6% of his snaps out wide last season. While he still eclipsed 1000 receiving yards last season, he recorded his worst yards per route run (1.73) since entering the NFL per PFF. While alignment alone is not enough to explain Godwin’s reduced efficiency, a return to the slot might agree with his skillset a bit more.

Possible aging aside, the Bucs know what they have in their top two receivers. The intrigue spikes with the third receiver position. The incumbent Trey Palmer had a solid rookie campaign, particularly considering he was a sixth-round pick. While he was a regular fixture throughout the season, his production picked down the stretch, exactly what a team wants to see from a rookie.

Over a third of his receiving yards and a quarter of his receptions came in the last three games of the season. Palmer also had a spectacular 56-yard touchdown reception in the Bucs’ wild card win over the Eagles. Palmer began the offseason with a solid justification for beginning the 2024 season as Tampa Bay’s WR3.

Apparently, the Bucs had other ideas. Drafting former Washington WR Jalen McMillan in the third round was a clear indication that the WR3 position is very much up for grabs.

McMillan and Palmer have both historically played out of the slot, which where Liam Coen insists that Chris Godwin will be lining up this season. Neither McMillan or Palmer will be unseating Godwin this year, so they will have to duke it out for playing time at the “Z” or flanker position opposite Mike Evans.

Palmer’s speed might give him a leg up by opening up the field with deep routes. However, McMillan’s feel for zone coverage could afford him more targets and opportunities to make plays as it did for him in Washington.

One skill that could elevate one receiver over the other is an improvement with contested catches. Neither Palmer or McMillan have been all that reliable in contested catch situations. Palmer came down with just 33.3% of his contested targets last year, and the Washington offense rarely put McMillan in a situation where he had to make contested catches. If either can demonstrate that he can make strides with catches in traffic, that could win him the WR3 job.

This competition was very clearly engineered by the front office and coaching staff. Neither player has established himself in the NFL and are in a position to push each other through training camp and the preseason to greater heights. All Jalen McMillan has to do is keep Trey Palmer angry, if Palmer’s 2023 pre-game tweets are to be believed.

Regardless of who wins the WR3 role, the Bucs will enjoy more depth at receiver than last season. After making the roster as an undrafted rookie last year, WR Rakim Jarrett returns with a little more seasoning and a clear path to the 2024 roster.

Though he was used sparingly as a receiver last season, Jarrett ended his 2023 campaign with a 41-yard catch against San Francisco. A quad injury robbed him of the rest of the season, but Jarrett will have a leg up on Tampa Bay’s depth chart. Heย played more special teams snaps last season than any receiver currently on the roster. A continued role in kick and punt coverage should guarantee him a roster spot at the end of the preseason.

The Bucs signed Sterling Shepard last month in what appeared to be a move to fortify Tampa Bay’s receiver depth. However, the longtime Giants receiver’s production has declined steadily over the last few years and is unlikely to pose a real challenge for playing time.

While Shepard has a history of catching passes from Baker Mayfield at Oklahoma, he will need to prove he can still be productive after eight seasons in the NFL. The Bucs made it clear last year that they can get by with just five receivers on the roster, so Shepard will need to have a strong camp to justify his place in Tampa Bay.

The rest of the receiving corps consists largely of developmental prospects and camp bodies. Undrafted rookies Lateral Jones, Tanner Knue and Kameron Johnson will have to be special teams standouts to have any shot of making the final roster. The same goes for 2023 practice squad members Cephus Johnson III, Raleigh Webb and Ryan Miller, who could find themselves back with Tampa Bay in the same capacity following training camp.

Don’t sleep on Bucs WR Trey Palmer in 2024

Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Trey Palmer is primed for big things in 2024 after a promising rookie season

Yes, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers already have one of the NFL’s best veteran receiver tandems in Mike Evans and Chris Godwin.

Yes, they also just spent a third-round pick on Washington wide receiver Jalen McMillan, a steal by all accounts.

But there’s another talented pass-catcher who brings explosiveness and big-play ability to the Tampa Bay offense, and he’s primed for even bigger things in his second NFL season after a promising rookie campaign.

A sixth-round pick out of Nebraska in the 2023 NFL draft, Trey Palmer had flashes of brilliance for the Bucs last season, and he’s got a bright future, regardless of what the rest of the depth chart looks like:

Evans and Godwin will still get the lion’s share of the targets in the Bucs offense this year, and McMillan looks like a promising young player in his own right, but don’t sleep on what Palmer can do this season.

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Bucs had more rookie snaps in 2023 than any other NFL team

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ impressive 2023 season came despite playing their rookies more than any other team in the NFL

Last year, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were expected by many to return to the bottom of the NFL standings following the departure of legendary quarterback Tom Brady.

Instead, they won a third straight NFC South title and made a fourth consecutive playoff appearance, falling just short of making a trip to the NFC Championship Game.

They did that despite relying heavily on their rookie class, more so than any other team in the league, in fact. Tampa Bay’s rookies played a total of 5,660 snaps in 2023, more than any other team.

Led by defensive studs like Calijah Kancey, Yaya Diaby and Christian Izien, as well as key contributors on offense like Cody Mauch and Trey Palmer, the Bucs got immediate results from their first-year players in 2023, which played a large part in their success.

Imagine what that group will do this year.

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Trey Palmer set the bar for WR speed in the NFL last season

Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Trey Palmer had the quickest burst of any NFL wide receiver as a rookie

When the Tampa Bay Buccaneers spent a sixth-round pick in the 2023 NFL draft on Nebraska wide receiver Trey Palmer, they were looking to add elite speed to their passing game.

That’s exactly what Palmer delivered, flashing his big-play ability throughout his rookie campaign, including an epic catch-and-run touchdown in the Bucs’ wild-card playoff win over the Philadelphia Eagles.

As it turns out, Palmer had the quickest burst of any wide receiver in the NFL last year, beating out big names like A.J. Brown and Tyreek Hill, according to Next Gen Stats.

Palmer should be even more productive in his second season and beyond for Tampa Bay.

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