Home and Away

For 13 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, most of them rookies, their first full day in London was one of cultural exchange.

The Buccaneers arrived in the United Kingdom en masse late Monday evening and, by the usual conventions of their weekly in-season schedule, had Tuesday to themselves.  A baker’s dozen of players, along with a half-dozen Buccaneers Cheerleaders, team mascot Captain Fear and a clutch of team representatives, signed up for a day-long trip that was part ambassadorship, part tourism.

The group was mostly members of the team’s rookie club – defensive linemen Da’Quan Bowers and Adrian Clayborn; linebacker Mason Foster; tight ends Collin Franklin, Zack Pianalto and Luke Stocker; running backs Mossis Madu and Chad Spann; offensive linemen Chris Riley and Zane Taylor; cornerback Anthony Gaitor; and long-snapper Christian Yount – plus second-year linebacker Dekoda Watson, who never misses a chance to reach out to the community.  They began the day with a bus ride through busy, winding streets that took them to the Harris Academy in South Norwood.

There, they joined the rest of the Buccaneers contingency in creating a two-hour experience the students at Harris Academy won’t soon forget.

A group of 160 students between the ages of 11 and 13 packed a small auditorium adorned with a huge Buccaneers banner (other Buc regalia hung from many corners of the school grounds) and cheered loudly when the American team arrived.  They laughed uproariously at Captain Fear’s mascots and responded very favorably to the cheerleaders.  Each player introduced himself and described the duties of his position, and the cheerleaders performed a rousing routine.  Harris Academy Principal Sam Hainey said the kids had been looking forward to the Bucs’ visit for some time.

“The P.E. staff has been rallying the troops and looking for volunteers and that’s created a lot of excitement building up to today,” said Hainey.  “Even the students that aren’t involved and were unable to take part today were equally excited.  Particularly the young boys were desperate to get to those cheerleaders.

“I think some things that happen in school life that are one-in-a-lifetime moments.  You’re 25, you’re 35 and you’re 45, you look back and there’s always something that you remember.  I think this will be one of the moments that I’ll personally remember and I’m sure that the students will remember because it’s got all the aspects of the things you want to remember and share.”

As part of the NFL’s efforts to take the United States’ most popular sport to a world-wide audience, an “International Series” game is staged each regular season at Wembley Stadium in London.  The Buccaneers played in the game in 2009 and are the first team to be back for a second U.K. contest.  They will play the Chicago Bears on Sunday.

Tuesday’s visit to Harris Academy was part of that effort, as the Bucs sought to introduce a basketball-crazy student body to the joys of American football.  After the initial event in the auditorium, the participating students were taken in groups to a nearby gym, where they ran through a series of drills familiar to any football player.  They bashed through tackling dummies, stepped over pads, caught passes, dived onto mats and cut through cones.  Buccaneer players ran the drills, and Watson spiced up his station by instructing the kids to do a dance after they scored their “touchdowns.”  The students were particularly enthusiastic about that part of the experience.

“I told them the most important rule is that you have to do your dance, and these dance moves were something I’ve never seen before,” said Watson.  “It was nice.  Truly, I just love reaching out to kids.  This is what we do.  As Bucs players, we’ve got to reach out to the community, not only in the U.S.A. but also over here in London and anywhere we go.  It’s truly a blessing to be here.

“They may not know much about American football but at the same time, you see the smiles on their faces.  Letting them see what we do is extraordinary and I loved every part of it.”

Principal Hainey described his student body as a very sporting group, and indeed they took to the unfamiliar sport quickly.  Young Sharna Van Lucin, one of the participants who impressed Watson with her dance moves, said she was keen on the oblong shape of the Bucs’ football and the fact that the sport combines running and kicking.  She also especially enjoyed the opportunity to learn a routine from the cheerleaders while a different group was at the football stations.

“I like dancing,” said Van Lucin.  “My favorite station was the one in the other room where we got to work with the cheerleaders.”

Bowers said the students appeared to get a pretty good grasp on his sport despite their unfamiliarity with it. 

“They definitely liked it and I liked it myself,” said Bowers.  “I get into some of the drills myself, and this is what it’s all about, being with the kids and doing anything we can to brighten their day.  You’ve got to make it fun, because anything that’s fun they’ll stick with and learn as much as they can.”

Before leaving, the Buccaneers presented the Harris Academy with a check from the NFL for 1,500 pounds.  They also drew names to provide two lucky students with tickets to Sunday’s game at Wembley Stadium.  They departed to another thunderous round of cheers from their hosts.

From there, the group headed into downtown London and Fleet Street, where a private lunch was waiting at the Old Bank of England restaurant, located next to the purported spot of Sweeney Todd’s barbershop.  The group dined on traditional English fare, fueling up before their own bit of tourist activity.

After lunch, the next stop was the Tower of London, where the Buccaneer group was immersed in the United Kingdom’s rich cultural and military past.  The historic castle, established in the 11th century, houses hundreds of artifacts, including weapons and suits of armor, depictions of the Royal Menagerie and, of course, the Crown Jewels.

The Buccaneers were fortunate to have a local guide for their entire swing through London on Tuesday, which was particularly useful during the visit to the London Tower.  The guide led the players through the various towers inside the castle and fleshed out the historical significance of many of the displays.  For instance, the Buccaneers learned of the origins of the famous Great Star of Africa, the 530-carat diamond mounted in the head of the Sceptre with the Cross, which is part of the Crown Jewels.  The enormous stone was carved from the Cullinan diamond, the largest one ever discovered.

After the interesting history lesson, the Buccaneers boarded a bus headed back to their team hotel in Surrey.  Given the activities of the previous 48 hours and the five-hour time change that was still being adjusted to, it was a quiet ride, with a lot of dozing passengers.  The players enjoyed the outing overall, however.

“It was fun,” said Bowers.  “We had a smooth plane ride, got to visit with some kids today, got to check out all this stuff here.  There’s a lot of history here and we had a great tour guide.  I didn’t really a learn a lot but I took a lot of pictures, so I’ll get home and Google everything.”

Added Clayborn: “Something as simple as driving on the wrong side of the road – well, the right side here – is interesting to experience.  It’s not every day you get to experience different cultures and see so much history.”

On Tuesday, the Buccaneers experienced another culture, and helped some young men and women do the same.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

Home and Away

For 13 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, most of them rookies, their first full day in London was one of cultural exchange.

The Buccaneers arrived in the United Kingdom en masse late Monday evening and, by the usual conventions of their weekly in-season schedule, had Tuesday to themselves.  A baker’s dozen of players, along with a half-dozen Buccaneers Cheerleaders, team mascot Captain Fear and a clutch of team representatives, signed up for a day-long trip that was part ambassadorship, part tourism.

The group was mostly members of the team’s rookie club – defensive linemen Da’Quan Bowers and Adrian Clayborn; linebacker Mason Foster; tight ends Collin Franklin, Zack Pianalto and Luke Stocker; running backs Mossis Madu and Chad Spann; offensive linemen Chris Riley and Zane Taylor; cornerback Anthony Gaitor; and long-snapper Christian Yount – plus second-year linebacker Dekoda Watson, who never misses a chance to reach out to the community.  They began the day with a bus ride through busy, winding streets that took them to the Harris Academy in South Norwood.

There, they joined the rest of the Buccaneers contingency in creating a two-hour experience the students at Harris Academy won’t soon forget.

A group of 160 students between the ages of 11 and 13 packed a small auditorium adorned with a huge Buccaneers banner (other Buc regalia hung from many corners of the school grounds) and cheered loudly when the American team arrived.  They laughed uproariously at Captain Fear’s mascots and responded very favorably to the cheerleaders.  Each player introduced himself and described the duties of his position, and the cheerleaders performed a rousing routine.  Harris Academy Principal Sam Hainey said the kids had been looking forward to the Bucs’ visit for some time.

“The P.E. staff has been rallying the troops and looking for volunteers and that’s created a lot of excitement building up to today,” said Hainey.  “Even the students that aren’t involved and were unable to take part today were equally excited.  Particularly the young boys were desperate to get to those cheerleaders.

“I think some things that happen in school life that are one-in-a-lifetime moments.  You’re 25, you’re 35 and you’re 45, you look back and there’s always something that you remember.  I think this will be one of the moments that I’ll personally remember and I’m sure that the students will remember because it’s got all the aspects of the things you want to remember and share.”

As part of the NFL’s efforts to take the United States’ most popular sport to a world-wide audience, an “International Series” game is staged each regular season at Wembley Stadium in London.  The Buccaneers played in the game in 2009 and are the first team to be back for a second U.K. contest.  They will play the Chicago Bears on Sunday.

Tuesday’s visit to Harris Academy was part of that effort, as the Bucs sought to introduce a basketball-crazy student body to the joys of American football.  After the initial event in the auditorium, the participating students were taken in groups to a nearby gym, where they ran through a series of drills familiar to any football player.  They bashed through tackling dummies, stepped over pads, caught passes, dived onto mats and cut through cones.  Buccaneer players ran the drills, and Watson spiced up his station by instructing the kids to do a dance after they scored their “touchdowns.”  The students were particularly enthusiastic about that part of the experience.

“I told them the most important rule is that you have to do your dance, and these dance moves were something I’ve never seen before,” said Watson.  “It was nice.  Truly, I just love reaching out to kids.  This is what we do.  As Bucs players, we’ve got to reach out to the community, not only in the U.S.A. but also over here in London and anywhere we go.  It’s truly a blessing to be here.

“They may not know much about American football but at the same time, you see the smiles on their faces.  Letting them see what we do is extraordinary and I loved every part of it.”

Principal Hainey described his student body as a very sporting group, and indeed they took to the unfamiliar sport quickly.  Young Sharna Van Lucin, one of the participants who impressed Watson with her dance moves, said she was keen on the oblong shape of the Bucs’ football and the fact that the sport combines running and kicking.  She also especially enjoyed the opportunity to learn a routine from the cheerleaders while a different group was at the football stations.

“I like dancing,” said Van Lucin.  “My favorite station was the one in the other room where we got to work with the cheerleaders.”

Bowers said the students appeared to get a pretty good grasp on his sport despite their unfamiliarity with it. 

“They definitely liked it and I liked it myself,” said Bowers.  “I get into some of the drills myself, and this is what it’s all about, being with the kids and doing anything we can to brighten their day.  You’ve got to make it fun, because anything that’s fun they’ll stick with and learn as much as they can.”

Before leaving, the Buccaneers presented the Harris Academy with a check from the NFL for 1,500 pounds.  They also drew names to provide two lucky students with tickets to Sunday’s game at Wembley Stadium.  They departed to another thunderous round of cheers from their hosts.

From there, the group headed into downtown London and Fleet Street, where a private lunch was waiting at the Old Bank of England restaurant, located next to the purported spot of Sweeney Todd’s barbershop.  The group dined on traditional English fare, fueling up before their own bit of tourist activity.

After lunch, the next stop was the Tower of London, where the Buccaneer group was immersed in the United Kingdom’s rich cultural and military past.  The historic castle, established in the 11th century, houses hundreds of artifacts, including weapons and suits of armor, depictions of the Royal Menagerie and, of course, the Crown Jewels.

The Buccaneers were fortunate to have a local guide for their entire swing through London on Tuesday, which was particularly useful during the visit to the London Tower.  The guide led the players through the various towers inside the castle and fleshed out the historical significance of many of the displays.  For instance, the Buccaneers learned of the origins of the famous Great Star of Africa, the 530-carat diamond mounted in the head of the Sceptre with the Cross, which is part of the Crown Jewels.  The enormous stone was carved from the Cullinan diamond, the largest one ever discovered.

After the interesting history lesson, the Buccaneers boarded a bus headed back to their team hotel in Surrey.  Given the activities of the previous 48 hours and the five-hour time change that was still being adjusted to, it was a quiet ride, with a lot of dozing passengers.  The players enjoyed the outing overall, however.

“It was fun,” said Bowers.  “We had a smooth plane ride, got to visit with some kids today, got to check out all this stuff here.  There’s a lot of history here and we had a great tour guide.  I didn’t really a learn a lot but I took a lot of pictures, so I’ll get home and Google everything.”

Added Clayborn: “Something as simple as driving on the wrong side of the road – well, the right side here – is interesting to experience.  It’s not every day you get to experience different cultures and see so much history.”

On Tuesday, the Buccaneers experienced another culture, and helped some young men and women do the same.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

Freeman Up for Third Air Award

In a game that featured 686 passing yards and numerous big plays from both quarterbacks, it was the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Josh Freeman who finally ruled the air.  In fact, NFL fans may eventually decide that no one in the league had a better aerial day in Week Six than Freeman, who guided the Bucs to a 26-20 win over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday.

Freeman is one of three players nominated for the league’s Air Player of the Week for Week Six, an award he also won after his final two outings of 2010.  As always, fans can choose the winner by visiting NFL.com and placing a vote for one of three nominees.  Click here to go to the voting page.

Freeman’s competition this week is Chicago Bears quarterback Jay Cutler and Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

Freeman threw for 303 yards and two touchdowns in the win over New Orleans, which improved the Buccaneers’ record to 4-2 and pulled them into a tie for first place in the NFC South with the Saints.  Freeman’s Week 17 Air Player award last year also came after a victory over the Saints.

Freeman completed 23 of 41 passes in the Bucs’ win, and was neither intercepted or sacked.  He finished with a quarterback rating of 95.9.  The outing included a career-long 65-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Arrelious Benn in the second quarter that gave Tampa Bay a lead they would never relinquish.  His 19-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Preston Parker later in the second period completed a 17-point burst that put the Bucs up 20-10 at halftime.

Though the Saints pulled to within three points in the fourth quarter, Freeman clinched the game with two more extended drives.  He led the team on a 40-play field goal drive midway through the period that included key strikes of 11 yards to wide receiver Mike Williams and 15 yards to tight end Kellen Winslow, setting up Connor Barth’s 38-yard shot.  After linebacker Quincy Black intercepted Saints quarterback Drew Brees in the end zone with three minutes remaining in regulation, preserving a six-point lead, Freeman converted a key third-and-nine with a 20-yard pass over the middle to wide receiver Dezmon Briscoe.

Fans have until 12:00 p.m. Eastern time to cast their votes for the Air Player of the Week on NFL.com.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

Insurance Payout

Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Williams has only played a season and a third with Earnest Graham, so he can be forgiven if he hasn’t yet learned this about his more seasoned teammate: With Graham, no extra motivation is needed.

Williams was mostly joking, of course, when he recounted his efforts to pump Graham up in preparation for the veteran running back’s first start at tailback in years.  With usual starter LeGarrette Blount out with a knee injury and the Buccaneers in desperate need of a reliable rushing attack to keep the ball away from the New Orleans Saints’ powerful offense, Williams knew Graham was going to play a key role in Sunday’s game.

It was after Graham answered the bell in spectacular fashion, notching his first 100-yard game since 2008, that Williams claimed some motivational credit.

“I’ve been telling him all week, ‘Come on man, get that old body moving,’” said the young receiver with a laugh.  “I’ve been playing with him and stuff. He got it moving today, it helped a lot. Got the passing game going. With him doing that, it helped us a lot.”

Overall, the Buccaneers racked up 420 yards of offense in their 26-20 win, holding their own in a shootout with Drew Brees and the Saints attack (453 total yards).  Graham’s contributions were invaluable beyond the raw yardage totals – they allowed Tampa Bay to win the time-of-possession battle, 31:27 to 28:33; they put some bite into the play-action game and they salted away the win in yet another successful four-minute drill for the Bucs’ offense.

“That was big,” said the Bucs other young starting receiver, Arrelious Benn.  “We knew Earnest was going to do that. Earnest is a guy that we depend on. We look up to him. He’s a leader on and off the field.”

Benn should be thanking Graham.  It was play-action that helped free him for a career-long 65-yard touchdown in the second quarter.  Quarterback Josh Freeman faked a handoff to Graham, successfully pulling a safety up towards the line and out of coverage.  Benn ran deep, cutting from left to right across the field, and was wide open when Freeman threw a perfect bomb to him down the right numbers.  That gave the Bucs a lead they would never relinquish.

Freeman used the play-action threat to throw for 303 yards, the second-highest total of his career.  He also threw two touchdown passes and was not sacked or intercepted.  It was the sort of performance the Bucs had begun to grow used to in the second half of Freeman’s outstanding 2010 season, but according to the young passer it wasn’t even close to the team’s potential peak.  In fact, Freeman singled out only Graham as having an outstanding game.

“Today we didn’t play close to our potential,” he said. “You know, we played a good game, a game good enough to win but we left a lot of yards and a lot of points on the field offensively speaking. I mean, our defense played great but we could play better. But we will say that Earnest Graham played a fantastic game. He just did his thing, especially down in that four-minute [offense]. He was reading his blocks, making those cuts, and allowed us to get in our victory formation.”

Graham isn’t now and never has been a flashy player.  His nickname – “Insurance Graham,” bequeathed by Head Coach Raheem Morris – speaks more to his versatility and dependability than any legendary speed or Barry Sanders-like moves.  Yet he seems to turn in an enormous play or two every time he’s called on to carry the load.  He has four career runs of 46 or more yards, and his 34-yard jaunt against the Saints on Sunday set up one of Connor Barth’s four field goals.

Graham needed only 17 carries to get his 109 yards, averaging 6.4 per tote.  Most of his carries started out straight up the middle and turned into seven, eight or 12 yards after he made one hard cut at the first line of defense.  His most impressive run might have been a 12-yarder during that clock-killing four-minute drill, when the Saints defense knew he was coming.

“We can’t say enough about him,” said Morris.  “Put him at tight end, he plays tight end, put him on special teams, he plays special teams. He just does anything you ask him to do. He was almost a linebacker the week before.  He just does it, he gets it, he loves football.”

There is a reason, of course, that we’re relying on Graham’s teammates and coaches to summarize the importance of his performance against the Saints.  The veteran back never really reacts when the team asks him to take on yet another challenge, and he never seeks out praise after he has met that challenge.

Graham didn’t feel particularly different after Sunday’s game than he did after an eight-reception day in the season opener or an evening spent mostly blocking for Freeman in San Francisco.

“No, I don’t focus on anything; I don’t feel entitled to anything,” he said. “You know, I just count my blessings and I’m happy I play football. I never felt entitled to be the starting running back or to anything. When you feel that way and just handle your work and handle your career, you want to be able to step up and be ready when it’s time, because you know you not dealing with sulking over certain things. I’m not like that.”

Graham’s teammates know exactly what he’s like – even the relative newcomers like Williams.  And they know he’s going to be there when they need him.”

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

A Flight to Remember

Have the St. Louis Cardinals trademarked their new “Happy Flight!” slogan?  If not, it would serve the Tampa Bay Buccaneers well as Week Six transitions into Week Seven in the NFL.

The MLB’s Cardinals chanted their unofficial motto on the pitchers’ mound at Miller Park on Sunday night after clinching the National League pennant with a 12-6 win over the Milwaukee Brewers, knowing that yet another flight out of town would come on the heels of a win.  That Game Six victory in the NLCS wrapped up about five hours after the Buccaneers finished off their own exciting win over the rival New Orleans Saints at Raymond James Stadium.

Tampa Bay’s 26-20 victory over the Saints pulled the Buccaneers back into a first-place tie in the NFC South and also sent them off to London in a very good frame of mind.  The Bucs will take on the Chicago Bears at Wembley Stadium next Sunday in the latest International Series game, marking the second time in the last three years they have been chosen for that prominent stage.

Of course, the Cardinals’ flight is headed straight to the World Series, while the Buccaneers still have a long path ahead in their quest to return to the playoffs.  In a way, the two trips are comparable, however, because the international setting for the Bucs-Bears matchup definitely lends Week Seven a postseason feel.

“It’s great, man – big-game exposure and an opportunity to put our team out in the forefront of everything,” said Head Coach Raheem Morris.  “To get our guys in the International game, people love the game over there.  It’s a lot of fun for us to travel over there – it creates a little excitement, creates a nice little buzz.  It’s a Super Bowl-like atmosphere, so it’s a bunch of fun for us.”

The Buccaneers had fun on their seven-hour flight over the Atlantic, thanks to both the comfortable Virgin Atlantic plane and the lingering excitement over the previous day’s win.  Tampa Bay’s defense intercepted Saints quarterback Drew Brees three times and also forced a fumble in a shootout that featured 873 combined yards between the two teams.  Linebacker Quincy Black clinched the win with an interception in the end zone late in the fourth quarter.

“It’s definitely a better flight after a win,” agreed Morris.  “It was a great night last night.  We got a chance to celebrate last night and now we get back to work.”

The Bucs were on buses headed to the airport roughly 12 hours after leaving Raymond James Stadium on Sunday, the accelerated schedule designed to preserve as much in-season normalcy as possible.  Two years ago, the team conducted most of its preparation in Tampa before heading to London on Friday.  A whirlwind three days included a 35-7 loss to the New England Patriots.  This time around, the idea is to transport the entire work week across the pond and arrive at next Sunday’s game more acclimated to the surroundings.

That means a day of planning by the coaching staff on Tuesday, regular practice hours on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday and a Saturday that combines the usual walk-through and an NFL rally in London’s Trafalgar Square.  There will be a few sight-seeing opportunities for the players along the way, but they won’t get in the way of football work.

“It will be the exact same,” said Morris of the weekly schedule.  “That’s why we’re going out there for a week, so we can get our whole week of work in.  We’ll get a chance to get out there, do our stuff and get it all in on time.

“The coaches don’t have anything fun planned.  We’ll get in there Tuesday and put in a day of work, go back to practice on Wednesday, get ready for Thursday, get a chance to get our half-day on Friday and maybe see a little bit of London on Friday night.  Then we’ll go back to work on Saturday and be ready for the game on Sunday.”

The Bucs will hopefully create yet another “Happy Flight” – apologies to the Cardinals – a week from Monday by taking down the Bears and staying at least tied for first place in the highly-competitive NFC South.  At the same time, they can introduce one of the NFL’s most promising young teams to an even bigger audience than usual.

“It’s awesome,” said Morris of once again taking his team to London.  “It creates a great experience for us, a great experience for our organization.  To get a chance to be out on the stage is nice.”

**

RB Spann Added to Practice Squad

Rookie running back Chad Spann landed in London on Monday and was probably still wondering how he got there.

Spann had the fortuitous timing to be signed by the Buccaneers to their practice squad just before the team took off on its trip across the Atlantic.  The team waived rookie linebacker Derrell Smith to make room for Spann on that eight-man crew.

The Buccaneers brought all of their practice squad players with them to the United Kingdom for two reasons.  One, obviously, the team is going to be practicing all week, just as if they were back at One Buccaneer Place, and that’s where practice squad players contribute every week.  And, two, if any unexpected injuries occur and the team wants to activate a practice squad player to the 53-man roster, it’s a simpler process if that player is on hand.

The Buccaneers needed some practice depth at the running back position after rookie running back Allen Bradford was waived last week and then claimed off waivers by the Seattle Seahawks.  The Bucs had released Bradford to make room for safety Tanard Jackson’s activation from the exempt list.

Spann played four seasons at Northern Illinois University, racking up 2,916 rushing yards and a remarkable 48 touchdowns on 536 carries.  As a senior in 2010, he was named the MAC Offensive Player of the Year after establishing a new school record with 22 touchdowns to go with his 1,388 rushing yards.

Spann played his high school football in Indianapolis and, perhaps not coincidentally, began his NFL career by signing with the Colts as an undrafted free agent in July.


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Tampa Bay Buccaneers : News

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