Web search
powered by
YAHOO! SEARCH
Sports - Football - Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Published: Sunday, Nov. 01, 2009

Updated: Sunday, Nov. 01, 2009

Comments (0) |

After bye, Freeman takes over

- AP Sports Writer
Add to My Yahoo!
Bookmark and Share
Subscribe To Us
Text Size:

tool name

close
tool goes here

TAMPA — Minutes after the winless Tampa Bay Buccaneers dispersed for a four-day, bye-week break, rookie coach Raheem Morris was asked how his players were holding up under the strain of an 0-7 start.

“We actually talked about it this morning. ... Going 0-7 didn’t start yesterday. It didn’t start at the beginning of the season when we played Dallas. It started in weight training. It started in OTA days. It started in training camp,” Morris said.

“Everything we’ve done to this point is who we are. These guys are holding up, but we’ve got to do more than hold up. ... Holding up got you to 0-7. We’re here to fight through, we’re here to power through, we’re here to be our best selves.”

When the struggling team takes the field for its next game on Nov. 8, it’ll be clad in creamsicle uniforms and helmets bearing a winking pirate logo — just like the old ‘76 Bucs, who stumbled to an 0-14 record that stood as the standard for NFL futility until Detroit went 0-16 a year ago.

Sitting on an 11-game skid that’s the franchise’s longest since Tampa Bay dropped a league-record 26 straight during its first two seasons, it’s difficult to not wonder whether the current Bucs could wind up winless, too.

Five of their seven losses have been by double-digits, the remaining schedule is difficult, and now they’re turning the offense over to rookie quarterback Josh Freeman, the 17th pick in this year’s draft.

It’s been three decades since Doug Williams helped Tampa Bay leave its ugly beginning behind and reach the NFC Championship Game in 1979.

The ex-quarterback isn’t making any bold predictions about Freeman, but he sees no reason why the Bucs can’t win — and soon — with the 21-year-old leading the way.

“We’re in that position where if we find a way to win one game, you’re going to win two games,” said Williams, now the Bucs’ director of pro personnel.

“It’s going to take the guys believing that they can get it done. No matter’s who’s at running back, no matter who’s at quarterback. It’s a matter of whether or not you believe you can win.”

Six of the remaining nine games are against teams with winning records, including two with unbeaten NFC South rival New Orleans.

The three games against clubs that currently have losing records are on the road — at Miami, at Carolina and at Seattle, all of which are 2-4 entering today’s games.

But the schedule is the least of the team’s concerns.

The defense is a shell of the unit that ranked among the best in the league for more than a decade before playing poorly during an 0-4 December that cost the Bucs a playoff spot after a 9-3 start last season.

The offense has sputtered despite the offseason acquisition of tight end Kellen Winslow and running back Derrick Ward, in part because of inconsistency at quarterback — first with veteran Byron Leftwich starting, and then with second-year pro Josh Johnson.