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2014 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season


2014 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season
The Glazer family
Jason Licht
Lovie Smith
Raymond James Stadium
2–14
4th NFC South
Did not qualify
DT Gerald McCoy

The 2014 season was the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' 39th in the National Football League (NFL). It was also the first season under head coach Lovie Smith, replacing Greg Schiano, who was fired at the end of the 2013 season, and under general manager Jason Licht, who replaced Mark Dominik after a disappointing 2013 season. It was the franchise's first season under new ownership since 1994, after longtime owner Malcolm Glazer died on May 28, 2014. Glazer's sons took over team operations.

The Buccaneers tried to improve their record of 4–12 of last season, but failed after tying their number of losses when they lost to Carolina in Week 15. Following a 2–14 record, their worst since 1986, the Buccaneers finished last overall in the NFC and tied with the Tennessee Titans for the worst record of the 2014 season, but was statistically (via a tiebreaker) last overall for the 2014 NFL season, thus earning the right to the first overall pick in the 2015 NFL draft. The Buccaneers did not win a single home game in 2014, going 0–2 during the preseason and 0–8 in the regular season at Raymond James Stadium.

RoundSelectionPlayerPositionCollege
Mike EvansWide receiverTexas A&M
Austin Seferian-JenkinsTight endWashington
Charles SimsRunning backWest Virginia
None — see draft trades below
Kadeem EdwardsGuardTennessee State
Kevin PamphileOffensive tacklePurdue
Robert HerronWide receiverWyoming
None — see draft trades below

Draft trades

  • The Buccaneers traded their fourth-round selection (No. 104 overall) along with their 2013 first-round selection (13th overall) to the New York Jets in exchange for cornerback Darrelle Revis on April 21, 2013.
  • The Buccaneers traded their seventh-round selection (No. 221 overall) and a 2015 fifth-round selection to the Buffalo Bills in exchange for the Bills' 2014 fifth-round selection (No. 149 overall).
  • The Buccaneers traded their original sixth-round selection (No. 183 overall) to the Chicago Bears in exchange for offensive tackle Gabe Carimi on June 9, 2013. The Buccaneers later acquired a new sixth-round selection (No. 185 overall) in a trade that sent wide receiver Mike Williams to the Buffalo Bills on April 4, 2014.

Immediately after being named the new head coach, Lovie Smith began overhauling personnel. The primary goal was to reinstall the Tampa 2 defensive scheme that brought the club success during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Among the key cuts were Davin Joseph, and Darrelle Revis. Among the many new signings were quarterback Josh McCown, defensive end Michael Johnson and cornerback Alterraun Verner.

On August 26, the Buccaneers traded with New England for guard Logan Mankins. The Buccaneers finished the preseason only 1–3, but were still picked by some media members to be much-improved, and to even be a wild card contender.

The Buccaneers started the Lovie Smith Era off on a low note, losing on opening day to Carolina, then losing in the last minute to the Rams in week 2. In week three, the team was humiliated on a nationally televised Thursday night game, 56–14 to division rival Atlanta. Smith stated afterwards he was "embarrassed" by the performance, and said the loss was so terrible to the team, that it would "leave a scar."

One week later, Mike Glennon started at quarterback, and Buccaneers bounced back in a big way. Tampa Bay defeated Pittsburgh, their first win of the season, with a last-second go-ahead touchdown pass.

Tampa Bay went winless in October, with Mike Glennon at quarterback. Two overtime losses, and one blowout loss to Baltimore dropped the Buccaneers to 1–6.

Mike Glennon was benched after losing to Cleveland, and Josh McCown was back in at quarterback. Tampa Bay managed to win against the Redskins, with help from a breakout game from Mike Evans. Despite only two wins, the Buccaneers were still mathematically alive for the division title through the end of November due to the lackluster records of the NFC South teams.

Tampa Bay ended the season on a six-game losing streak, going winless in December, to finish the season 2–14. In the final game of the season against New Orleans, the Buccaneers blew a lead in the fourth quarter, sitting some of their starters in the second half. But by virtue of the loss, the Buccaneers mathematically clinched the first pick in the 2015 NFL Draft, beating out the Tennessee Titans (who also went 2–14).

Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5
Front office

Owner/president – Estate of Malcolm Glazer Co-chairman – Bryan Glazer Co-chairman – Edward Glazer Co-chairman – Joel Glazer General manager – Jason Licht Director of player personnel – Jon Robinson Director of football operations – Shelton Quarles Director of pro scouting – Scott Cohen Director of football administration – Mike Greenberg Head coaches

Head coach – Lovie Smith Offensive coaches

Offensive coordinator – Jeff Tedford Quarterbacks – Marcus Arroyo Running backs – Tim Spencer Wide receivers – Andrew Hayes-Stoker Tight ends – Jon Embree Offensive line – George Warhop Assistant offensive line – Matt Wiegand Offensive quality control – Ben Steele | | | Defensive coaches Defensive coordinator – Leslie Frazier Defensive line – Joe Cullen Assistant defensive line – Mike Phair Linebackers – Hardy Nickerson Cornerbacks – Gill Byrd Safeties – Mikal Smith Defensive quality control – Dave Borgonzi Senior defensive assistant – Larry Marmie Special teams coaches

Special teams coordinator – Kevin O'Dea Assistant special teams – Carlos Polk Strength and conditioning

Head strength and conditioning – Dave Kennedy |

Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5Column 6Column 7
Quarterbacks (QB)
 8 Mike Glennon
12 Josh McCown
Running backs (RB)

25 Mike James 22 Doug Martin 43 Bobby Rainey 34 Charles Sims Wide receivers (WR)

13 Mike Evans 10 Robert Herron 83 Vincent Jackson 15 Tavarres King 11 Solomon Patton 89 Russell Shepard Tight ends (TE)

84 Cameron Brate 82 Brandon Myers 86 Evan Rodriguez 88 Luke Stocker | | Offensive linemen (OL) 61 Josh Allen C 73 Anthony Collins T 75 Oniel Cousins G

62 Evan Dietrich-Smith C 69 Demar Dotson T 72 Garrett Gilkey C 70 Logan Mankins G 66 Patrick Omameh G 64 Kevin Pamphile T Defensive linemen (DL)

91 Da'Quan Bowers DE 57 Larry English DE 96 T. J. Fatinikun DE 92 William Gholston DE 90 Michael Johnson DE 98 Clinton McDonald DT 77 Lawrence Sidbury DE 56 Jacquies Smith DE 97 Akeem Spence DT 58 George Uko DT | | Linebackers (LB) 54 Lavonte David OLB 50 Dane Fletcher MLB 59 Mason Foster MLB 51 Danny Lansanah OLB 45 Orie Lemon OLB 52 Jason Williams OLB Defensive backs (DB)

27 Johnthan Banks CB 39 Brandon Dixon CB 32 Isaiah Frey CB 38 Dashon Goldson FS 29 Leonard Johnson CB 30 Bradley McDougald SS 37 Keith Tandy FS 21 Alterraun Verner CB 41 C. J. Wilson CB Special teams (ST)

48 Andrew DePaola LS  9 Michael Koenen P  7 Patrick Murray K | | Practice squad 44 Denicos Allen LB 36 Derrius Brooks CB (PS/I) 35 Ka'Lial Glaud LB 49 Jeremy Grable LB (PS/I) 26 Shelton Johnson S 85 Chandler Jones WR  3 Mike Kafka QB 95 Matthew Masifilo DT 78 Matt Patchan T 23 Varmah Sonie CB 60 Jeremiah Warren C Reserve

94 Adrian Clayborn DE (IR) 71 Kadeem Edwards G (IR) 24 Mike Jenkins CB (IR) 46 Jorvorskie Lane FB (IR) 53 Brandon Magee OLB (IR) 93 Gerald McCoy DT (IR) 18 Louis Murphy WR (IR) 87 Austin Seferian-Jenkins TE (IR) 31 Major Wright SS (IR) Rookies in italics 53 active, 11 reserve, 9 practice squad |

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueRecap
.mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}August 8at Jacksonville JaguarsL 10–160–1EverBank FieldRecap
August 16Miami DolphinsL 14–200–2Raymond James StadiumRecap
August 23at Buffalo BillsW 27–141–2Ralph Wilson StadiumRecap
August 28Washington RedskinsL 10–241–3Raymond James StadiumRecap
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueRecap
September 7Carolina PanthersL 14–200–1Raymond James StadiumRecap
September 14St. Louis RamsL 17–190–2Raymond James StadiumRecap
September 18at Atlanta FalconsL 14–560–3Georgia DomeRecap
September 28at Pittsburgh SteelersW 27–241–3Heinz FieldRecap
October 5at New Orleans SaintsL 31–37 (OT)1–4Mercedes-Benz SuperdomeRecap
October 12Baltimore RavensL 17–481–5Raymond James StadiumRecap
Bye
October 26Minnesota VikingsL 13–19 (OT)1–6Raymond James StadiumRecap
November 2at Cleveland BrownsL 17–221–7FirstEnergy StadiumRecap
November 9Atlanta FalconsL 17–271–8Raymond James StadiumRecap
November 16at Washington RedskinsW 27–72–8FedExFieldRecap
November 23at Chicago BearsL 13–212–9Soldier FieldRecap
November 30Cincinnati BengalsL 13–142–10Raymond James StadiumRecap
December 7at Detroit LionsL 17–342–11Ford FieldRecap
December 14at Carolina PanthersL 17–192–12Bank of America StadiumRecap
December 21Green Bay PackersL 3–202–13Raymond James StadiumRecap
December 28New Orleans SaintsL 20–232–14Raymond James StadiumRecap

The first game for new head coach Lovie Smith was against division rival Carolina. A lackluster first three quarters saw the Panthers run out to a 17–0 lead, with Derek Anderson making his first start since 2010 in place of an injured Cam Newton. In the fourth quarter, the Buccaneers rallied, scoring late two touchdowns, and trimming the lead to 17–14 with 2:06 remaining. The Bucs defense forced a 3 & Out, and Carolina punted, giving the ball back to the Bucs offense with just under two minutes to go. On the first play of the drive, however, Bobby Rainey's catch was fumbled away, and Carolina recovered.

St. Louis kicker Greg Zuerlein kicked a 38-yard field goal with 42 seconds remaining to take a 19–17 lead. On the ensuing drive, Tampa Bay quarterback Josh McCown completed a 19-yard pass to Bobby Rainey, then spiked the ball to stop the clock with 20 second left in regulation. McCown completed a 29-yard pass to Mike Evans at the St. Louis 32 yard line. As the team scurried to line up and spike the ball, A hesitant Evans was injured on the play. With no timeouts left, Tampa Bay was forced to accept a ten-second runoff penalty, and time expired.

Atlanta throttled the Buccaneers by the score of 56–14, tied for the second-most lopsided defeat in franchise history. The Falcons jumped out to a 56–0 lead by the third quarter, including Devin Hester's NFL-record 19th return touchdown. In the first half alone, the Falcons forced three turnovers, and held Tampa Bay to 63 yards offense and only two first downs. This was the first NFC vs. NFC game to air on CBS since the 1993 NFL season.

Tampa Bay won their first game of the season, as well as the first win for new head coach Lovie Smith. One week after a humiliating loss at Atlanta, the Buccaneers bounced back, and upset the Steelers, the first win in franchise history at Pittsburgh. Trailing 24–20 just inside the two-minute warning, Tampa Bay drove to the Pittsburgh 14 yard line. The Steelers forced a turnover on downs, and took over at their own 14. The Tampa Bay defense held the Steelers to a 3 and out, and forced a punt with 50 seconds left in regulation. Brad Wing's punt was high and short, and was downed inside Pittsburgh territory on the 46. Two plays later Mike Glennon, connected to Louis Murphy, who broke free for a 41-yard gain all the way to the 5 yard line. With 7 seconds left, Glennon completed the game-winning touchdown pass to Vincent Jackson in the left corner of the endzone.

Mike Glennon passed for 249 yards and two touchdown passes, as the Buccaneers led the Saints 31–20 in the fourth quarter. New Orleans rallied to tie the game and force overtime. The Saints won the coin toss in overtime, and proceeded to score a touchdown on the first possession to win the game.

Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco threw five touchdown passes in the first 17 minutes of regulation (setting a new NFL record), as Baltimore jumped out to a 38–0 halftime lead (also an NFL record for a road team). The Ravens handed Tampa Bay their second dominating loss of the season.

Offensive futility plagued both teams in the first half, with Minnesota kicking a field goal as time expired in the second quarter to take a 3–0 lead into halftime. Trailing 10–6 in the fourth quarter, Mike Glennon threw a 7-yard touchdown pass to Austin Seferian-Jenkins with 2:02 remaining in regulation. The Buccaneers briefly took a 13–10 lead, but the Vikings were able to tie the game at 13–13 and force overtime.

In the overtime period, Tampa Bay won the coin toss and received. On the first play from scrimmage in overtime, Austin Seferian-Jenkins caught a 10-yard pass at the 27 yard line, but fumbled the ball as he was tackled. Anthony Barr scooped up the ball and returned it 27 yards for a touchdown, and Minnesota won 19–13.

Mike Evans caught two touchdown passes from Mike Glennon, as Tampa Bay led 17–16 in the fourth quarter. Cleveland scored with 8:59 remaining in regulation, and won the game by the score of 22–17. In the final two minutes, Tampa Bay drove to the Cleveland 28 yard line, but an offensive pass interference penalty pushed them back to the 47. Facing 4th down & 11, Glennon's pass was incomplete, and the Browns defeated Tampa Bay for the first time since 1995.

Josh McCown returned as the starting quarterback for Tampa Bay. The Buccaneers led 17–16, but Atlanta scored a go-ahead touchdown early in the fourth quarter and held on for the win. In the final two minutes, Tampa Bay drove to the Atlanta 4 yard line, but McCown's pass to Vincent Jackson was tipped and intercepted in the endzone, sealing the game for Atlanta.

Mike Evans had a breakout game, catching 7 passes for 209 yards and two touchdowns (36 yards and 56 yards, respectively). Tampa Bay won their second game of the season.

The Buccaneers blew a 10–0 halftime lead with three turnovers in the third quarter. The Bears scored two touchdowns off of turnovers, and a total of 21 points in the third quarter to take the lead and the win. This was head coach Lovie Smith's first return to Chicago since the Bears fired him following the 2012 season.

Trailing 14–13 in the closing seconds, Tampa Bay completed a 21-yard pass to the Bengals 20 yard line, but a replay showed they had 12 men on the field for the play. The penalty took the Buccaneers out of field goal range.

With the loss, the Buccaneers were officially eliminated from playoff contention.

Like the meeting in week 1, Panthers quarterback Cam Newton was on the sidelines, this time due to injuries suffered in a car accident. Carolina swept the Buccaneers, using backup quarterbacks in both games.

Green Bay won for the first time at Raymond James Stadium since 2003, and for only the second time ever.

Tampa Bay took a 20–7 lead into halftime, but New Orleans rallied for the victory. Drew Brees threw a 36-yard touchdown pass to Marques Colston with 1:57 remaining. On the ensuing drive, the Saints defense sacked Josh McCown for a safety, and secured a 23–20 victory. The Saints swept Tampa Bay for the third straight season, and won their seventh overall in the rivalry. The Buccaneers, finishing 2–14, clinched the first pick in the 2015 NFL draft. The Bucs had also finished 0–8 at home, and 0–6 against their division. Finishing winless at home for the first time since 1976 and lost their 9th straight home game.

NFC South
(4) Carolina Panthers781.4694–26–6339374W4
New Orleans Saints790.4383–36–6401424W1
Atlanta Falcons6100.3755–16–6381417L1
Tampa Bay Buccaneers2140.1250–61–11277410L6
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