What They’re Saying About the Bucs, Week 7

There is no sport more popular in the United States than NFL Football, and for many sports fans in Central Florida, there is no passion greater than the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Fortunately, there is no shortage of media sources for information on these fans’ favorite topic, from the inside access provided here on Buccaneers.com to the information disseminated by local and national newspapers, television networks, radio stations and internet sites.

The question is no longer, is there adequate coverage out there for my favorite team?  Now the question is, with everything out there being said about the Buccaneers, did I miss anything?

That’s why we are bringing you the “Word on the Street” about the Buccaneers every week during the 2011 season.  Every Friday, we’ll recap some of the national coverage about your Bucs that you may have missed, and provide you with the links so you can check it out yourself.

This week, the Buccaneers trip across the pond has led to an international version of the Word on the Streets, with a mix of links from the United States and the U.K.  Among those are a London article on the possibility of the city getting its own NFL team, plus a video on ESPN.com breaking down win probabilities based on certain statistical milestones on Sunday. You may, of course, have already read about some of these topics, but this is a chance to get another perspective and find out how the Buccaneers are viewed in communities other than our own.

So, without further ado, the Word on the Streets:

1. The arrival of Bucs, Bears has London dreaming of their own team.

As this story in London’s Evening Standard points out, the NFL recently committed to playing at least one regular-season game in London for each of the next five years.  Where the league will go from there still remains uncertain, but it is at least possible for U.K. fans of American football to contemplate the possibility of one day having their own home team.  This piece by the Standard’s Kenneth Elliott explores that concept and then looks a bit more at the nuts and bolts of the Bucs-Bears matchup on Sunday.  Though Elliott had not yet had a chance to talk to the Bears, who didn’t arrive in London until Thursday evening, about the health status of Devin Hester, he did get the Bucs thoughts on facing that explosive return man.  For a little more on the angle of Hester against the Bucs’ excellent coverage teams, here’s a stateside article that we technically found in the Seattle Times but was filed by AP.

Excerpt: “There may be potential rivals in Germany, Canada and Mexico, but London is certainly a firm favourite with the NFL . . . so how about a return for the London Monarchs and those magical nights in 1991 when they went on to lift the World Bowl at the old ‘Venue of Legends’? As for Sunday, the Bucs are back, having lost 35-7 to the New England Patriots here in 2009 in front of 84,254 fans. The Bears also make their return to the capital. They arrived in 1986 for a friendly in the American Bowl series against Dallas with the Mike Ditka-coached team, featuring big names like quarterback Jim McMahon and the somewhat bigger linebacker William ‘The Refrigerator’ Perry, defeating the Cowboys 17-6.”

2. The Trib offers up 10 thoughts on Sunday’s game.

As always, it’s instructional to get an idea of how experts in the opposing team’s camp are viewing the upcoming game, and the Chicago Tribune has sent Brad Biggs across the Atlantic to cover the week’s developments firsthand.  On Thursday, he posted a catch-all column of 10 things that strike him as significant about the upcoming Bucs-Bears matchup.  Some of his reporting comes from a trip out to the Bucs’ temporary home at Pennyhill Park, where he captured the thoughts of Raheem Morris, Greg Olson, Jeff Faine and Donald Penn.  Among the topics covered in Biggs’ column are Penn’s matchup with Julius Peppers, the development of Josh Freeman and, not surprisingly, the better-than-expected weather.

Excerpt: “The Bears would freely admit they’ve been up and down on offense this season, one of the key factors in them being 3-3. When they’ve protected quarterback Jay Cutler, things have run smoothly. When they haven’t, it’s looked like a preparation for a mutiny at times. So I asked Morris if he’s picked anything out of up-and-down performances?”

3. Video Clip: DailyMotion looks at Bucs’ arrival.

The first thing the Buccaneers did after arriving in London on Monday night and catching up on some sleep was take their rookies out for a community appearance on Tuesday morning.  The Bucs’ Rookie Club members, plus second-year linebacker Dekoda Watson, visited the Harris Academy in South Norwood and taught the game of American football to about 150 boys and girls.  A crew from Dailymotion.com took the opportunity to catch up with the Buccaneers in the early part of the week and get their thoughts on representing the NFL overseas.  The crew gathered interviews with tight end Zack Pianalto and DE Adrian Clayborn and previewed Sunday’s game against the Bears.

Excerpt (transcribed): “The players are enthusiastic about the chance to increase the NFL’s fan base in the U.K.  ‘For the people over here, it’s a chance to open their eyes to the exciting game of American football,’ said Pianalto.  ‘It’s something that’s very near and dear to our hearts and hopefully people come out, come to the game and, like I said, learn a little bit more about it and learn to love it.”

4. Yahoo! contributor lists best moments in Buc history.

Here’s a wild card link this week that has nothing to do with the team’s current trip to London or their fight for first in the NFC South.  This one comes from the Yahoo! ‘contributor network,’ which enlists fans from around the country in providing analysis on their favorite teams.  Buccaneer fan Maxine Nelson took it upon herself to list the five best moments in franchise history; click here and see if you agree with her selections.  In a way, it’s an unusual list, in that it refers to 1979 as the Buccaneers’ best season, wrings two of the five picks out of the Super Bowl run and lumps an entire 20-year span of playoff campaigns into another ‘moment.’  There’s also an unfortunately-spelled reference to the late, great Lee Roy Selmon to get past, but Nelson’s contribution is a conversation-starter, if nothing else.  While on Yahoo! Sports, you can follow another link regarding the Bears’ decision to come to London late in the week, as well as this one (from another contributor) ranking the teams in the NFC South.

Excerpt: “In their first year as an NFL franchise the 1976-1977 season the Buccaneers achieved an 0-14 record. They were dubbed the worst team in the history of the NFL. The 1977 season wasn’t any better when they racked up 12 consecutive losses until December 11. That was the day the Buccaneers beat the New Orleans Saints 33-14. After the game they actually interrupted the regularly scheduled programming on TV in Tampa Bay to show the team’s homecoming. It became a huge celebration when 8,000 fans gathered to meet them at the airport.”

5. Video Clip: ESPN Accuscore gives slight edge to Bears.

We reference Pat Yasinskas’ ESPN NFC South blog in this article almost every week, and this week is no exception.  On Wednesday, Yasinskas himself linked to a video called “Accuscore – Bears vs. Buccaneers” in which analyst Jon Anik gives a breakdown of game predictions based on specific statistical milestones that may or may not be reached during Sunday’s game and how they affected simulations of the matchup.  For instance, he examines the reported difference in the likelihood of a Buccaneers victory if running back Earnest Graham does or does not reach 75 rushing yards, and if quarterback Jay Cutler is or is not sacked four times by the Bucs’ defense.  At the end, Anik reveals the Accuscore prediction for the game, with which many Tampa Bay fans are likely to disagree.  While you’re visiting Yasinskas’ blog, also check out this post regarding the YAC (yards after catch) being allowed by the Bucs’ defense, and this one regarding the challenge Tampa Bay will face in Matt Forte.

Excerpt (transcribed): “Earnest Graham projected for another strong game for the Buccaneers filling in for the injured LeGarrette Blount with 88 yards per simulation.  If Graham has 75 or more rushing yards the Bucs are 61% favorites, but if he’s held under 75 the Bears are heavy 72% favorites.”

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Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

Pennyhill Stay Ends with Cheers

Every Friday, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers use their 90-minute week-ending practice to review the game plan installed on Thursday and Friday and, just as importantly, to work on specific game situations.  Head Coach Raheem Morris emphasizes situational football in preparation for every contest, and Friday is a good time to work on such things as the two-minute drill and red zone offense.

As such, the Buccaneers’ starting offense spent a lot of time near the south end zone of their Pennyhill Park practice field on Friday, working on a variety of options to punch the ball in from inside the 20.  The converted rugby pitch that served so perfectly as their gridiron home this week fits snugly into a small valley amid hills, and one such hill rises sharply from the back of that end zone.  Watching from the top of that rise was a group of the most intense Buccaneer fans this side of the Atlantic.

Roughly 25 members of the thriving Bucs UK fan club were invited out to practice on Friday, and they stood together in a sea of red, clad in Freeman, Blount and McCoy jerseys.  They chanted for certain players to get the football and cheered when a practice play appeared to work.

One such red zone play ended in an apparent touchdown for the starting offense, setting off the kind of raucous applause one normally doesn’t get at a practice from up the hill.  Quarterback Josh Freeman responded by getting the football back from the scoring player and lofted a tight spiral up into the crowd, where one of the Bucs UK members fielded it cleanly…then looked for somewhere to stash it as a keepsake!

That play – a very typical practice moment followed by a very atypical response – was a microcosm of the Buccaneers week in Surrey, England, in the countryside outside of London.  The team arrived on Monday with the express purpose of conducting their entire, normal week of practice and preparations on site, leading up to Sunday’s game against the Chicago Bears at Wembley Stadium.  The idea was to feel right at home by the end of the week, and that was accomplished.  Still, there’s no denying that the Bucs’ pocket of normalcy was surrounded by some unfamiliar elements, like the nearby luxury spa or the slightly unusual lunch menu or visiting rugby teams eager to show off their own sport.

Or 25 maniacal Buccaneer fans who somehow keep up on every player and every team development despite being separated by so many miles and time zones.  That was a very impressive reminder for the Buccaneer players on Friday morning as they practiced, and another reason the week in London has been considered such a success.

“We love London,” said Head Coach Raheem Morris, about 90 minutes before his team would pull up stakes in Surrey and head downtown.  “We love the facility they had set up for us, being out here for a week, getting acclimated to the time zone.  I don’t know if it was an advantage but it was certainly a lot of fun to come out here and be with guys at Pennyhill.”

The Bucs UK fan club, which numbers over 300 members and will play a hotly-contested flag football game against the London Bears fan club on Saturday, was led out to Pennyhill Park by Paul Stewart, its founder.  To read his thoughts from Thursday on the Bucs’ visit to his neighborhood, click here.

While Stewart and company were in Buc heaven on Friday, the players were beginning to itch for a move after a week in each other’s company at Pennyhill.  Morris and General Manager Mark Dominik noticed during the week how the camp-like atmosphere of the situation had led to some valuable team-bonding, and that will certainly help on Sunday.  Still, by the end of the work week, Morris was noticing that his players were looking for a different challenge than going up against their own teammates.

“Pennyhill Park has been awesome,” said Morris.  “It’s a great facility, great set-up, a training camp-like environment.  Our guys got a chance to be around each other, but it’s time to get away from each other now.  We had a few scuffles today in practice so it’s time to get out of here and let these guys play against some other people.”

**

Injury Updates: McCoy Questionable

Though he returned to practice on Wednesday, just a week-and-a-half after suffering what appeared to be a severe ankle sprain in San Francisco, defensive tackle Gerald McCoy will remain a question mark for Sunday’s game heading into the weekend.

McCoy was limited in practice on Wednesday and Thursday and he was held out of Friday’s capper.  The team listed him as questionable for Sunday’s game against the Bears, which means his work during the week will be evaluated, as will any further improvement over the weekend.

“Gerald gave us a little bit of practice this week so he’s a possibility,” said Morris.  “We’ll have to wait and see.  He did not go out today.  You’re just holding him back a little bit.  You don’t want to try to do it too fast.  It’s his ankle.  Hopefully we can see where he is tomorrow, see how he feels tomorrow, get him some treatment, get him off of it a little bit and see if we can get him out there.”

With the time difference between the U.K. and the States, the Buccaneers did not have an official injury report with game-status designations ready to release on Friday afternoon.  However, Morris identified only one player as definitely out for Sunday’s game – wide receiver Sammie Stroughter – though running back LeGarrette Blount is considered doubtful and center Jeff Faine may be in a similar boat.  Stroughter has been sidelined since his season-opening kickoff, on which he hurt his foot at the end of a 78-yard gain, requiring surgery.  He did return to practice this week, increasing the chances that he’ll be able to return after the bye week that follows Sunday’s contest.  Faine sustained a biceps injury against New Orleans and did not practice this week.  Blount missed last week’s game due to a knee injury suffered in San Francisco.

**

Fearless

Preston Parker doesn’t necessarily consider himself brave for taking on a role in the Bucs’ passing game that requires him to roam the middle of the field between head-hunting linebackers and safeties.  Bravery, after all, can be defined as pushing forward even in the face of fear, and fear doesn’t really enter into the equation.

Call him ‘fearless,’ then, but it wasn’t anything he set out to prove.

“That’s fearless?  Then I guess I am,” said Parker.  “But I didn’t know I was until they said, ‘You run between the tackles?  You’re not scared to do this?’  It’s a job.”

Parker has taken on a bigger role in the Buccaneers’ passing attack in the absence of Stroughter, and that means filling Stroughter’s usual slot-receiver duties.  Like Stroughter, Parker is not a particularly big receiver, but he’s solid, strong, shifty and, yes, fearless.  Through six games he ranks fourth on the team in receptions, second among wideouts, with 19 grabs for 268 yards and two touchdowns.  His 19-yard catch-and-run for a score last Sunday provided the eventual winning margin in the Bucs’ 26-20 win over the Saints.

“You start with his toughness,” said Morris.  “He’s absolutely one of the toughest kids on our football team.  He’s fearless to go over the middle, he’s fearless to catch the ball in the slot, he’s fearless to do just about anything we ask him to do as far as blocking.”

The Bucs also have asked Parker to handle almost all of their punt and kickoff returns this season, and he approaches that job in the same manner.  Parker’s best returns have come when he has fielded the football and shot straight forward into the teeth of the oncoming coverage team.  So far he’s returned 10 punts for 97 yards and 11 kickoffs for 234 yards, with a handful of key big-gainers in the mix.  For instance, his 12-yard punt return in the fourth quarter against the Saints, in which he fielded the ball in traffic near the sideline and managed to weave through several tacklers to get back to the Bucs’ 40, set up the team for its final field goal drive of the afternoon.

“Then you have his ability to take back kickoffs and take back punt returns with the same fearless type of mentality,” said Morris.  “He makes some mistakes, but those are the mistakes you live with when you’re dealing with a guy like Preston because you know he’s a tough guy.  We’ve just got to keep getting him better and that’s my job and my coaching staff’s job to help him with that.  We are loving the effort that he is playing with.  You want to talk about a guy that’s playing fast, smart, hard and consistent?  He’s the ultimate example.”

The Buccaneers have won the field-position battle in most of their outings this year with excellent special teams play, and they rank eighth in opponent punt return average and second in opponent kickoff return average.  That means anything Parker gives them in the return game is usually enough to tip the scales in their favor.  That could be difficult this week, however, as the Bears possess perhaps the most dangerous return man in league history, Devin Hester.

Parker and Hester share a home county of Palm Beach, and the young Buc returner would love to get the best of his Bears counterpart this weekend.

“I’m going to compete with him just because he’s from Palm Beach and he’s on the opposite team,” said Parker.  “Everybody knows it’s Devin Hester.  He’s good and we’ve got to go out and stop him.  I’m just going to try to match him on the other side, on my return game.  It will become real competitive, especially because we’re from the same county.”

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Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

Glory Days for Bucs UK

(Editor’s Note: The following article was written by Paul Stewart, the founder of the Bucs UK fan club in London, which has been in existence for nearly three decades and is 300 members strong.  Stewart, long a valued friend of the Buccaneers organization, has been attending team practices at the Pennyhill Park Hotel in Surrey with media credentials and has padded his deep knowledge of the franchise with first-hand observations.  Stewart has also created a website called Bucpower.com that is rich in information about the team’s past.)

Two years ago, British Buccaneer fans saw their team come to London for a memorable weekend of events, one they thought would never happen again.   And here we are in 2011, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers are back in London ready to take on the Chicago Bears in the NFL International Series game but so much has changed since that 35-7 loss to the Patriots.

First of all, the Bucs are a winning team.  The 2009 team was 0-6 when it came across the Atlantic.  This version is 4-2 and leading the NFC South division after the 26-20 win over the New Orleans Saints last Sunday.

Secondly, the Bucs are more prepared this time.  Having flown in two days before the 2009 game, the players arrived Monday night to allow themselves to properly acclimatise and have a full week of practise at their Surrey hotel location.

And for the fans in the UK, it is a chance to make this second visit a lot more special than the first, to really welcome the team to Wembley Stadium and to be involved in the week as much as possible.

The Bucs UK is the largest NFL fan club in the country and has been in existence for 27 years.  Their 300-strong membership will be at Wembley on Sunday in two sections, and for 20 lucky members the chance has been given for them to watch a practice session later in the week and to meet many of their heroes.

A club meal has been arranged for the night before the game in the centre of London with alumni and media attending, and then gameday morning will see the Bucs UK take on their British Bears counterparts in a touch football game at Wembley with the likes of Brad Johnson and Richard Dent adding to the experience.   The Bucs UK are defending an unbeaten record having inflicted a pair of defeats on the British Patriots fans in 2009, so will be looking to continue their winning streak when NFL Network covers this prelude to the main event.

But for the Buccaneers, arriving earlier in the week is going to be so much more beneficial to them as they prepare to take on the Bears.   Only the Saints and Chargers in 2008 have arrived so early in the week before a London game and not surprisingly, both those squads looked by far the best of any NFL team taking to the field in the previous four International Series games.

In 2009, the Bucs arrived on the Friday morning and then had their scheduled walkthrough practice postponed because of inclement weather.   The trip was almost like a long road game as quarterback Josh Freeman remembers.

“Last time it was short, it was quick,” said Freeman.  “We were here for two days, very similar to a West Coast trip.  This year coming in, you can use the facility and get acclimated to the time, the weather and so on, and come back and be ready to go.  I’m really excited, I think it will benefit our team.”

The 4,000-mile, eight-hour trip across the Atlantic can take more out of a player than one would first think and any British fan returning from a pilgrimage to Raymond James Stadium is well aware of knowing it can take a couple of days at least to get back to normal.  So with the Bears arriving Friday morning, there could be a real advantage to be gained for the Buccaneers before they even set foot on the Wembley turf.

“It’s a five-hour time difference, so being here early and getting back in your normal routine and not having your routine altered that close before the game, I think it’s going to do wonders for us,” said Freeman as he concluded the team’s first practice in their new home for the week.

Freeman made his NFL debut two years ago in London when he saw playing time at the end of the 35-7 loss to the Patriots so he will always have an association with the Wembley crowd.  The play was even called by a British commentator to really add to the international flavour of the moment.     And making the return flight to the United Kingdom on the back of the win over the Saints will have made the whole trip a lot more enjoyable and potentially successful.

“We travelled on Monday, which is pretty much a recovery day, a day to go back and reflect on the previous game” he said.  “We were on the plane.  Everything was scheduled.  We had our off day.  We had a chance for everybody to get used to the time and used to the setting.”

Watching the Bucs play is normally an exercise in devotion and dedication for the members of the Bucs UK.  The recent win over Indianapolis on Monday Night Football was a 1.30am start on the other side of the Atlantic with the final kneel down play coming just as the sun was dawning across the United Kingdom.  It is a badge of honour for British fans to have watched their team throughout the night, just as it is to make the journey to watch games at Raymond James Stadium.

And for the next home game, the November 13th clash with the Houston Texans, over 30 members of the club will be timing their annual vacations to coincide with the game in Tampa and again planning a series of events that weekend with local Buccaneer fans.

So as Wembley prepares to play host to its fifth International Series game, the Buccaneers could already be a step up on their NFC opponents thanks to their experience from 2009 and the moves they have made to make sure they return from this one as winners

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Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

Gone Camping

The atmosphere at the Pennyhill Park Hotel and Spa, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers temporary home in the U.K., has been described as collegiate, perhaps due to the fall foliage around the practice field and the ivy climbing the resort walls.  In terms of how the Buccaneers feel about their stay at Pennyhill, however, the better comparison might be to an age-old NFL institution: training camp.

The Buccaneers chose to move their operations to the London area for the entire week leading up to their International Series game against the Chicago Bears at Wembley Stadium on Sunday.  The main impetus was to allow the players to become acclimated to their surroundings and a five-hour time difference, and to arrive at Wembley on Sunday feeling just as they normally would on a game day.

However, a perhaps-unforeseen additional advantage has been discovered over the last three days at Pennyhill.  Both General Manager Mark Dominik and Head Coach Raheem Morris, the young leaders of the NFL’s youngest team, have commented on how much the experience has felt like a training camp.

The Bucs aren’t working as heavily as they would during a normal training camp (or at least as heavily as they have in previous camps before the new rules of the new CBA) but they have been spending a similar amount of time together.  Holing up for a week in a hotel, or a pair of hotels as the Bucs will move into London proper on Friday afternoon, has brought the players together in a way they don’t normally get when they scatter from One Buccaneer Place for their various homes.

“We’ve started to get acclimated as the days have gone and that’s really good for us,” said Morris.  “This has been a great trip for us to focus on our family of football, our brotherhood of men, so to speak.  Watching these guys bond around the hotel, here at the Pennyhill, has been phenomenal.  Watching these guys be around each other, be around their coaching staff and really be forced to do it here among all our friends has been great.  That’s been awesome for us, as well as the football.”

Players roam the halls of Pennyhill Park and its unorthodox layout, passing fireplaces and snack stations and converted meeting rooms.  When they have free time, they spend it together at the hotel, or get in whatever sight-seeing will fit into the break.  On Wednesday night, a desire for some familiar comfort food prompted one player to call the local Domino’s Pizza, and soon the place was delivering dozens of pies to the Pennyhill lobby.  On Thursday afternoon, with practice over and a the schedule showing a long break in between meetings, a group of young defensive linemen rounded up a shuttle bus for some quick tourism.  And on the practice field both Wednesday and Thursday, an already loose team was even more animated and upbeat than usual.

“Practice has been just like at home,” said Morris.  “We’re kind of a fun team to watch practice.  There’s a lot of trash talk, there’s a lot of speed, there’s a lot of tempo.  These guys are young and they love to compete.  So it’s been awesome.  It’s been just like at home.  It’s been no different in our preparations.

“Our team’s getting better.  You can see the energy in the morning, see everything that’s happened.”

Morris referred to Thursday’s practice, the one during the week where pads are worn and the tempo really picks up, as “phenomenal.”  In fact, he stressed the word to the point that it might deserve all caps.  Of course, he might have missed a play or two because the crisp and cloudless morning was a bit too scenic at the Bucs’ tree-hidden pitch.

“The weather’s been awesome,” said Morris.  “It was a little chilly this morning [before practice] but after that we got it going.  The sun came out and it’s a beautiful day.  I caught myself at practice looking around at how beautiful the facilities we were.  I had to refocus, because I hadn’t seen the changing of the leaves in awhile.”

The Buccaneers came to London two years ago but didn’t arrive until Friday and barely had time to get settled before the game was played and they were winging back to Tampa.  This year’s schedule has produced an atmosphere that has served the team well, in terms of both acclimating to the surroundings and coming together as a team.

“We’ve come over and got a chance to get acclimated with everybody here, got a chance to really settle in,” said Morris.  “We got a chance to really be around each other, be around family.”

**

Bucs Run Into Saints Again

Tampa Bay took over a share of first place in the NFC South last Sunday when it defeated division rival New Orleans, 26-20, to push each team’s record to 4-2.  The Saints will get their chance for revenge soon, as the Bucs head to New Orleans after their Week Eight bye to rekindle the rivalry.

On Thursday in Surrey, the Bucs found themselves matched up against a different group of Saints, but one that looked just as imposing.  That’s because the Northampton Saints of the AVIVA Premiership visited practice to take in a little American football and show their U.S. cousins a thing or two about their sport.

That would be rugby, a rugged sport with more than a few things common with football.  One of those things, however, is not pads.  The Saints and their opponents slam into each other with abandon during a game with little apparent regard for their own well-being.   Pierre Berbizier, a French rugby coach, once famously responded to accusations of foul play in a game by saying, “If you can’t take a punch, you should play table tennis.”

Of course, the Buccaneers play one of the most hard-hitting sports in the world, and are extraordinarily tough men in their own right.  The hitting in the NFL might not be equaled in any rugby union.  But they also wear pads, and tackle Donald Penn wouldn’t want it any other way.

“I have tremendous respect for them,” said Penn of the rugby players and their unpadded sport.  “I can’t imagine it, don’t even want to try it.  I do have tremendous respect for those guys – it’s a big, physical sport.  You’ve got to have a strong mentality to play that rugby.  I can’t imagine playing without pads.  I’d tap out quick.”

The Northampton Saints, in partnership with Gatorade, came to the Bucs’ practice site to promote their sport.  After practice, they interacted with the Bucs’ offensive line, as well as quarterback Josh Freeman, and tried to pass on the feel of their game.  The two squads took pictures together and then finished up with what proved to be a humorous demonstration of an inbounds pass.

Rugby teams often contest an inbounds pass by using several players to lift another one in the air to catch a very high throw.  For the demonstration, a group of Saints lifted one of their players while three of Jeremy Zuttah’s teammates hoisted him into the air.  On the first try, Zuttah came up well short of the lifted Saint as his jersey and shoulder pads slipped over his head.  The Bucs’ linemen took a second crack at it and did a better job of lifting Zuttah, but the canny Saints had slid their pyramid back a few yard and the inbounds pass easily sailed over the Bucs’ heads.

Penn enjoyed the demonstration but had no interest in replacing Zuttah at the top of the lift.

“I’m too big,” said the 310-pound tackle.  “They couldn’t pick me up.  I wouldn’t even let them.  They would break their backs.”

**

Hall of Fame Breaks Down Bucs-Bears

Each week, the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s web site – a deep and rich source of information on all NFL history, not just its elected members – chooses one of the league’s contests as its “Throwback Game of the Week.”  This week, the selected game is Buccaneers-vs.-Bears.

Fans looking for another take on Sunday’s meeting of two old NFC Central foes – one with interesting new angles and little-known facts – should take a minute to visit profootballhof.com and check out this weekly feature.

The Throwback Game analysis looks at the history of the Bucs-Bears series and of course explores any connections to the Hall of Fame.  The page is also peppered with more unusual notes, including “Oddities” and “If Twitter were around in…”  Here’s an excerpt from a note entitled, “Not Happening This Week.”

“While the Bucs will rely on QB Josh Freeman this weekend, don’t look for him to throw 67 passes on Sunday. But, that’s the total that Bucs’ QB Brian Griese attempted the last time these two teams met. Only four quarterbacks in the history of the NFL have attempted more passes in a game than Griese’s total against the Bears on Sept. 21, 2008.”

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Gone Camping

The atmosphere at the Pennyhill Park Hotel and Spa, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers temporary home in the U.K., has been described as collegiate, perhaps due to the fall foliage around the practice field and the ivy climbing the resort walls.  In terms of how the Buccaneers feel about their stay at Pennyhill, however, the better comparison might be to an age-old NFL institution: training camp.

The Buccaneers chose to move their operations to the London area for the entire week leading up to their International Series game against the Chicago Bears at Wembley Stadium on Sunday.  The main impetus was to allow the players to become acclimated to their surroundings and a five-hour time difference, and to arrive at Wembley on Sunday feeling just as they normally would on a game day.

However, a perhaps-unforeseen additional advantage has been discovered over the last three days at Pennyhill.  Both General Manager Mark Dominik and Head Coach Raheem Morris, the young leaders of the NFL’s youngest team, have commented on how much the experience has felt like a training camp.

The Bucs aren’t working as heavily as they would during a normal training camp (or at least as heavily as they have in previous camps before the new rules of the new CBA) but they have been spending a similar amount of time together.  Holing up for a week in a hotel, or a pair of hotels as the Bucs will move into London proper on Friday afternoon, has brought the players together in a way they don’t normally get when they scatter from One Buccaneer Place for their various homes.

“We’ve started to get acclimated as the days have gone and that’s really good for us,” said Morris.  “This has been a great trip for us to focus on our family of football, our brotherhood of men, so to speak.  Watching these guys bond around the hotel, here at the Pennyhill, has been phenomenal.  Watching these guys be around each other, be around their coaching staff and really be forced to do it here among all our friends has been great.  That’s been awesome for us, as well as the football.”

Players roam the halls of Pennyhill Park and its unorthodox layout, passing fireplaces and snack stations and converted meeting rooms.  When they have free time, they spend it together at the hotel, or get in whatever sight-seeing will fit into the break.  On Wednesday night, a desire for some familiar comfort food prompted one player to call the local Domino’s Pizza, and soon the place was delivering dozens of pies to the Pennyhill lobby.  On Thursday afternoon, with practice over and a the schedule showing a long break in between meetings, a group of young defensive linemen rounded up a shuttle bus for some quick tourism.  And on the practice field both Wednesday and Thursday, an already loose team was even more animated and upbeat than usual.

“Practice has been just like at home,” said Morris.  “We’re kind of a fun team to watch practice.  There’s a lot of trash talk, there’s a lot of speed, there’s a lot of tempo.  These guys are young and they love to compete.  So it’s been awesome.  It’s been just like at home.  It’s been no different in our preparations.

“Our team’s getting better.  You can see the energy in the morning, see everything that’s happened.”

Morris referred to Thursday’s practice, the one during the week where pads are worn and the tempo really picks up, as “phenomenal.”  In fact, he stressed the word to the point that it might deserve all caps.  Of course, he might have missed a play or two because the crisp and cloudless morning was a bit too scenic at the Bucs’ tree-hidden pitch.

“The weather’s been awesome,” said Morris.  “It was a little chilly this morning [before practice] but after that we got it going.  The sun came out and it’s a beautiful day.  I caught myself at practice looking around at how beautiful the facilities we were.  I had to refocus, because I hadn’t seen the changing of the leaves in awhile.”

The Buccaneers came to London two years ago but didn’t arrive until Friday and barely had time to get settled before the game was played and they were winging back to Tampa.  This year’s schedule has produced an atmosphere that has served the team well, in terms of both acclimating to the surroundings and coming together as a team.

“We’ve come over and got a chance to get acclimated with everybody here, got a chance to really settle in,” said Morris.  “We got a chance to really be around each other, be around family.”

**

Bucs Run Into Saints Again

Tampa Bay took over a share of first place in the NFC South last Sunday when it defeated division rival New Orleans, 26-20, to push each team’s record to 4-2.  The Saints will get their chance for revenge soon, as the Bucs head to New Orleans after their Week Eight bye to rekindle the rivalry.

On Thursday in Surrey, the Bucs found themselves matched up against a different group of Saints, but one that looked just as imposing.  That’s because the Northampton Saints of the AVIVA Premiership visited practice to take in a little American football and show their U.S. cousins a thing or two about their sport.

That would be rugby, a rugged sport with more than a few things common with football.  One of those things, however, is not pads.  The Saints and their opponents slam into each other with abandon during a game with little apparent regard for their own well-being.   Pierre Berbizier, a French rugby coach, once famously responded to accusations of foul play in a game by saying, “If you can’t take a punch, you should play table tennis.”

Of course, the Buccaneers play one of the most hard-hitting sports in the world, and are extraordinarily tough men in their own right.  The hitting in the NFL might not be equaled in any rugby union.  But they also wear pads, and tackle Donald Penn wouldn’t want it any other way.

“I have tremendous respect for them,” said Penn of the rugby players and their unpadded sport.  “I can’t imagine it, don’t even want to try it.  I do have tremendous respect for those guys – it’s a big, physical sport.  You’ve got to have a strong mentality to play that rugby.  I can’t imagine playing without pads.  I’d tap out quick.”

The Northampton Saints, in partnership with Gatorade, came to the Bucs’ practice site to promote their sport.  After practice, they interacted with the Bucs’ offensive line, as well as quarterback Josh Freeman, and tried to pass on the feel of their game.  The two squads took pictures together and then finished up with what proved to be a humorous demonstration of an inbounds pass.

Rugby teams often contest an inbounds pass by using several players to lift another one in the air to catch a very high throw.  For the demonstration, a group of Saints lifted one of their players while three of Jeremy Zuttah’s teammates hoisted him into the air.  On the first try, Zuttah came up well short of the lifted Saint as his jersey and shoulder pads slipped over his head.  The Bucs’ linemen took a second crack at it and did a better job of lifting Zuttah, but the canny Saints had slid their pyramid back a few yard and the inbounds pass easily sailed over the Bucs’ heads.

Penn enjoyed the demonstration but had no interest in replacing Zuttah at the top of the lift.

“I’m too big,” said the 310-pound tackle.  “They couldn’t pick me up.  I wouldn’t even let them.  They would break their backs.”

**

Hall of Fame Breaks Down Bucs-Bears

Each week, the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s web site – a deep and rich source of information on all NFL history, not just its elected members – chooses one of the league’s contests as its “Throwback Game of the Week.”  This week, the selected game is Buccaneers-vs.-Bears.

Fans looking for another take on Sunday’s meeting of two old NFC Central foes – one with interesting new angles and little-known facts – should take a minute to visit profootballhof.com and check out this weekly feature.

The Throwback Game analysis looks at the history of the Bucs-Bears series and of course explores any connections to the Hall of Fame.  The page is also peppered with more unusual notes, including “Oddities” and “If Twitter were around in…”  Here’s an excerpt from a note entitled, “Not Happening This Week.”

“While the Bucs will rely on QB Josh Freeman this weekend, don’t look for him to throw 67 passes on Sunday. But, that’s the total that Bucs’ QB Brian Griese attempted the last time these two teams met. Only four quarterbacks in the history of the NFL have attempted more passes in a game than Griese’s total against the Bears on Sept. 21, 2008.”

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