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Bucs Working to Correct Slow Starts, Third-Down Struggles

Bucs Working to Correct Slow Starts, Third-Down Struggles


Last season, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers scored the second most points in the league in part because it could sustain drives by surviving third downs. The Buccaneers’ 47.1% conversion rate on third downs was the best in franchise history and second in the league in 2021 only to Kansas City’s 52.2%.

For reasons both obvious and unavoidable, the Buccaneers’ offense is off to a slow start in 2022, even with Tom Brady returning for a third season. Rampant injuries to the receiving corps and offensive line and some additional personnel turnover – Ali Marpet and Rob Gronkowski are enjoying retirement, for instance – have forced Brady and the Bucs to adjust to what is, at least for now, a new reality. And despite the struggles, the Buccaneers are 2-1 and were a two-point conversion away from sending Sunday’s loss to Green Bay into overtime.

Of all the numbers on offense that look different than last year’s output, perhaps the most stark is the Buccaneers’ third-down conversion rate. At 28.6%, the Bucs’ third-down offense is operating around 60% of what it was capable of in 2021. Head Coach Todd Bowles and his team are well aware of this issue and know that it can hold them back from their season goals if they don’t get it corrected.

“Yeah, [it’s] just execution,” said Bowles after the Bucs went two for 11 on third down tries in the 14-12 loss to Green Bay. “We’re not on the same page. We’ve got to get on the same page there and we’ve definitely got to get better at it if we want to win more games.”

The Buccaneers scored a field goal on their opening drive on Sunday but still went 0-for-2 on third downs on that possession. It took an impressive diving catch by Cole Beasley on his first target as a Buccaneer to convert a fourth-and-one from the Green Bay 42, and the drive later stalled outside the red zone due to a third-down sack. The play just before Beasley’s catch was a run for no yards by Leonard Fournette on third-and-one. That combination of results might turn one’s attention to the offensive line and especially to rookie left guard Luke Goedeke, second-year center Robert Hainsey and first-year left tackle Brandon Walton, filling in for an injured Donovan Smith. All three are essentially seeing their first NFL action, but Bowles said the young starters on the line are not the problem.

“I’m not going to sit here and blame it on the rookies,” said Bowles. “They’re playing good football. They’re making a few mistakes but they’re not to blame for everything…

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