What are the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Free Agent and NFL Draft Options at Slot Receiver??By Matt Tidcombe - Jan 31st, 2014 at 2:50 pm Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY SportsThe Tampa Bay Buccaneers slot receiver position has been a weakness for a number of years now and it’s time the Bucs fixed that problem. They have one of the leagues best wideout tandems in Vincent Jackson and Mike Williams, but the Bucs lack that quality third receiver who can alleviate some of the stress off Jackson and Williams, while providing whoever is playing quarterback a reliable third option. The experiment with Kevin Ogletree lasted only four games before he was cut, and while Tiquan Underwood played relatively well once he signed, it’s unclear as to whether the Bucs would like him back. Eric Page, on the other hand, is a very raw prospect as a receiver, which diminishes his chances of making the slot receiver position his own over an established playmaker. With free agency and the draft drawing closer, the Bucs will certainly have a number of options from each category. Here’s a look at some players the Bucs could target. Free Agency The free agent class of 2014 has some very viable options. While Anquan Boldin is the highest profile receiver on the market, he’s a player the Bucs won’t be making an offer too (unless something drastic happens). Some realistic options for the Bucs include Emmanuel Sanders, Darrius Heyward-Bey, Brandon LaFell, Riley Cooper, and Julian Edelman among others. The five players listed above aren’t the best receivers on the open market, but they are five players who will fill the Bucs need at the slot receiver position. Key elements of playing the slot position are speed, good hands, and the ability to run effective routes. Being smaller in height is usually considered an asset too. All five of those players have the majority, if not all, of those attributes making their value high. Another advantage is that the Bucs likely won’t have to shell out a ton of money to sign any of those guys, or any other free agent at that position. Edelman will be in high demand after his stellar season for the New England Patriots, and it’s likely the highest bidder will earn his services because Edelman has never been “paid.” If the Bucs do want him, they can pay him. Sanders and Heyward-Bey earned $2.5 million this season, with Sanders more likely to command a raise. Cooper and LaFell only made six figures on rookie contracts, so they could be affordable options, even if they do demand a pay rise. The players already mentioned are still relatively young in terms of NFL experience. If the Bucs decided they want a player who has experience, then Jerricho Cotchery could be an option. He revitalized his career with the Pittsburgh Steelers last season after a couple of very mediocre years since his departure from the New York Jets after the 2010 season. If the Buccaneers decide they want to kill two birds with one stone, then signing Devin Hester or Dexter McCluster would be ideal. Both players are elite kick returners, something the Bucs have lacked for what seems like forever. While Erik Page did a solid job last season, Hester and McCluster would be significant upgrades. They also know how to play in the slot, something Hester has shown an ability to do during his eight year career. The chance to reunite with Lovie Smith may also be a factor that favors the Bucs. It should be noted though that Hester didn’t catch a single pass last year, the one year where Smith was not his head coach. In his four years with the Kansas City Chiefs, McCluster has played exceptionally well and had a career year in 2013 where he caught over 50 passes. He has incredible speed that makes his value even higher. He began returning kicks in 2013 again after essentially taking 2012 off and ran two punt returns back for scores. His playmaking skills alone will make him a popular target for teams, and the Bucs should be in that mix. NFL Draft The 2014 draft is one of the deepest in recent years at the receiver position, which gives the Bucs a number of options with their draft selections.
Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY SportsHowever, using their first round pick on a receiver should not happen. Jackson and Williams are an elite tandem, and while adding a player like Sammy Watkins would give the Bucs the best receiving corps in the league, they have too many other needs to use the seventh pick on a receiver. Even the idea floated that the Bucs take Watkins (assuming he is still available) and then trading Williams makes no sense as the Bucs haven’t improved whatsoever while wasting their first round selection. However, using a pick in the second round or later would make more sense. The slot position is a weakness, but it’s not the number one weakness, hence why that first round selection is better off being used elsewhere. The second round could see the Bucs pick up a great young player. Brandin Cooks of Oregon State, who had a massive year (128 catches, 1730 yards, 16 TD’s) could be a viable selection. Odell Beckham and Jarvis Landry, both of LSU, are other projected second round picks that would make sense for the Bucs. The latter rounds also give the Bucs options. The Bucs do not currently have a third round pick and because of that, the Bucs may look to the fourth round or later to make a selection on a receiver. If they do that, they won’t be short of options. Robert Herron (Wyoming), Tyler Lockett (Kansas State), and Jalen Saunders (Oklahoma) could be fourth round picks. To help their draft stock, they all had excellent 2013 seasons. Josh Huff (Oregon), Ryan Grant (Tulane), Jeremy Gallon (Michigan), Eric Ward (Texas Tech), Kevin Norwood (Alabama), Tevin Reese (Baylor), and Shaq Evans (UCLA) are all viable late round options. The slot position is an area that the Bucs need to address immediately and 2014 provides them the best chance to do so. Whether they ultimately find their new slot receiver through free agency or the draft, there are a number of players with varying levels of experience who the Bucs could see running across the field for years to come. http://thepewterplank.com/2014/01/31/tampa-bay-buccaneers-options-slot-receiver/
WR is pretty deep so I think the Bucs pick up a guy in the draft. But I wouldn't be surprised if the Bucs picked up McCluster/Hester as well in free agency.
" Even the idea floated that the Bucs take Watkins (assuming he is still available) and then trading Williams makes no sense as the Bucs haven’t improved whatsoever while wasting their first round selection.". WOW; the OP either thinks Watkins isn't a legit 1st round pick, or he's talkin' about a different Mike Williams, who I think is OK, not much more, maybe even less than OK as a #2 receiver...
" Even the idea floated that the Bucs take Watkins (assuming he is still available) and then trading Williams makes no sense as the Bucs haven’t improved whatsoever while wasting their first round selection.". WOW; the OP either thinks Watkins isn't a legit 1st round pick, or he's talkin' about a different Mike Williams, who I think is OK, not much more, maybe even less than OK as a #2 receiver...
OP thinks Jackson and Williams are an elite tandem... ???
ODB please
We need to come away from the 1st day with Ebron or Watkins.
Give me Sammy Watkins all day every day!!!!!!!
We need to come away from the 1st day with Ebron or Watkins.
I like Ebron, but not at #7. Maybe they move around a bit and get him in the teens.
We need to come away from the 1st day with Ebron or Watkins.
I like Ebron, but not at #7. Maybe they move around a bit and get him in the teens.
That would be the perfect storm. There will be plenty of good prospects at WR we can get in the 2nd.
I'll say it again. The Bucs don't need a slot receiver. They need RECEIVERS. Guys who can play inside and out. Not just the slot.
I'll say it again. The Bucs don't need a slot receiver. They need RECEIVERS. Guys who can play inside and out. Not just the slot.
Looks like you buy into hype more than actual production. Vjax and Mike Williams have produced with some subpar QBs and bad offensive schemes. They're better receivers than what the Saints, Panthers, Seahawks, Patriots, and 49ers have and those are playoff teams. I would also put them ahead of DT/Decker, because even though Thomas is a bit better than Vjax, Decker is not better than Williams. The Bengals have AJ Green who is much better than Vjax, but no one else is as good as Mike WIlliams. Fans like you have no perspective on the rest of the league. The only guys who are putting up better numbers than Mike Williams as a #2 have elite QBs. There's very few #2s who actually have better numbers than him. It's not like Jordy Nelson is going to get open that much more than Mike Williams if he was running go routes all the time and getting passes from Josh Freeman. The big difference between those teams I listed and us is that they actually have some serviceable players who contribute to the offense other than their receivers. They have a good TE, pass catching RB, or slot receiver. You get a proper slot receiver in here and actually get the RBs to catch a few passes a game and watch the Bucs fly up the offensive rankings. Speed is overrated and worthless if you can't get open. Look at Tiquan Underwood. He's faster than Vjax and Mike Williams but the guy isn't open as much because he's a poor route runner, not as physical as them and can't go up and get balls. This isn't basketball here. This isn't a battle of who has the best athletes.
Don't give me the bad QB play/bad scheme excuse. Look at what Josh Gordon, Andre Johnson, AJ Green, Brandon Marshall, Alshon Jeffrey did this season and tell me who their QBs are. Don't forget also to point back to the arguments fans here make about all of those teams have bad QBs..
I'll say it again. The Bucs don't need a slot receiver. They need RECEIVERS. Guys who can play inside and out. Not just the slot.
Looks like you buy into hype more than actual production. Vjax and Mike Williams have produced with some subpar QBs and bad offensive schemes. They're better receivers than what the Saints, Panthers, Seahawks, Patriots, and 49ers have and those are playoff teams. I would also put them ahead of DT/Decker, because even though Thomas is a bit better than Vjax, Decker is not better than Williams. The Bengals have AJ Green who is much better than Vjax, but no one else is as good as Mike WIlliams. Fans like you have no perspective on the rest of the league. The only guys who are putting up better numbers than Mike Williams as a #2 have elite QBs. There's very few #2s who actually have better numbers than him. It's not like Jordy Nelson is going to get open that much more than Mike Williams if he was running go routes all the time and getting passes from Josh Freeman. The big difference between those teams I listed and us is that they actually have some serviceable players who contribute to the offense other than their receivers. They have a good TE, pass catching RB, or slot receiver. You get a proper slot receiver in here and actually get the RBs to catch a few passes a game and watch the Bucs fly up the offensive rankings. Speed is overrated and worthless if you can't get open. Look at Tiquan Underwood. He's faster than Vjax and Mike Williams but the guy isn't open as much because he's a poor route runner, not as physical as them and can't go up and get balls. This isn't basketball here. This isn't a battle of who has the best athletes.
Nice of you to blame dropped passes, slip and falls and lazy routes on bad QB play/scheme.
It's fine to look back and see what our 2 starting receivers have done in the past, but when ya look behind them, anyone would agree the cupboard was seriously bare. Looking forward, Williams appears to have lost interest in football, preferring the "diva life". Then Jackson just turned 31, and has clearly shown signs he lacks the speed to run away from secondaries... It's clear we need to upgrade our receivers if Tedford's offense is gonna amount to anything in the NFL...
We need a WR who gets YAC.....makes people miss and gets the extra yards.Speed and YAC .... a huge element that is missing and limits our offense.