Jul 30, 2023; Tampa, FL, USA; Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Kyle Trask (2) and Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield (6) work out during training camp at AdventHealth Training Center. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports

Buccaneers to start Baker Mayfield in preseason opener

It’s Baker Mayfield to start preseason Game 1 and Kyle Trask in preseason Game 2.

So said Tampa Bay head coach Todd Bowles on Wednesday as the Buccaneers prepare for their first season without Tom Brady and uncertainty at the quarterback position.

Bowles said “not really” when asked if there was thought that went into the starter for Friday night’s game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. That seems to mirror the Bucs’ depth chart released Tuesday that denotes Mayfield or Trask at QB1.

Trask will draw the start against the New York Jets on Aug. 19, and the team “will go from there,” Bowles said.

The word “or” shows how close the training camp competition is between the signal-callers vying to replace Brady, the retired seven-time Super Bowl champion.

Mayfield signed with Tampa Bay in March as the presumed starter after making three stops during a whirlwind 2022. After being traded from the Cleveland Browns to Carolina that offseason, he was 2-8 with 2,163 yards, 10 touchdown passes and eight interceptions with the Panthers and Los Angeles Rams.

Mayfield, 28, is 31-38 as a starter since being drafted with the No. 1 overall pick by Cleveland in 2018.

Trask, 25, has only appeared in one game since Tampa Bay drafted him in the second round in 2021. Last week, offensive coordinator Dave Canales said Trask had closed the gap on Mayfield with his performance in camp.

–Field Level Media

Jan 8, 2023; Seattle, Washington, USA; Los Angeles Rams quarterback Baker Mayfield (17) participates in early pregame warmups against the Seattle Seahawks while wearing a    Love for Damar    t-shirt in honor of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin (3, not pictured) at Lumen Field. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports

Bucs QBs Baker Mayfield, Kyle Trask to battle into training camp

With training camp just around the corner, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers are still trying to determine who will fill Tom Brady’s shoes under center.

After three seasons with the Buccaneers, Brady officially announced his retirement back in February. It looked as if Kyle Trask was going to take over starting quarterback duties after sitting behind Brady in 2022, but Tampa Bay proceeded to sign veteran Baker Mayfield to a one-year deal worth up to $8.5 million in March.

Three months later, the Buccaneers still haven’t named a starter.

“Some time during camp or right after camp, there will be a decision made,” Tampa Bay coach Todd Bowles said. “It’s still a quarterback competition right now — I’m not going to award (anybody) in shorts and t-shirts.”

Mayfield, 28, will be looking to revive his career after struggling last season with the Carolina Panthers and Los Angeles Rams. He completed 60 percent of his passes for 2,163 yards with 10 touchdowns and eight interceptions.

In six starts with the Panthers and four with the Rams, Mayfield combined to go just 2-8-0.

The 25-year-old Trask, on the other hand, appeared in just one game last season, completing 3 of 9 passes for 23 yards.

Although the Buccaneers are without a starter just under three months from the regular season kicking off, Bowles isn’t worried about the state of his offense.

“In any competition, there’s waiting involved — you have to see who wins out and wins the competition,” Bowles said. “So, we’re good.”

Regardless of who gets named starter, Bowles assured that they will be ready. He said that both Mayfield and Trask have been getting sufficient reps this offseason.

Whoever locks down the job will be working with a new offensive coordinator in Dave Canales, who spent a total of 13 seasons with the Seahawks under Pete Carroll. He most recently served as a quarterbacks coach but was also a wide receivers coach and passing game coordinator during his time in Seattle.

–Field Level Media

Dec 25, 2022; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Todd Bowles: Bucs’ QB competition ‘constant analyzation’

After legendary quarterback Tom Brady hung up his cleats and called it a career, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers have been left with a huge void to fill under center.

Tampa Bay drafted Kyle Trask in the second round of the 2021 draft to help prepare for Brady’s eventual departure, but the Buccaneers also brought in a veteran presence this past offseason when they signed Baker Mayfield to a one-year deal.

With the starting position up for grabs, Tampa Bay coach Todd Bowles has been keeping a close eye on both Trask and Mayfield during organized team activities.

“You don’t hit the quarterbacks in OTAs, nor do you hit them in mini-camps or even training camp until they play games. So you really don’t know who is what under pressure,” Bowles said Tuesday. “From an analyzing standpoint, again it’s the grasp of the offense, it’s the reading of the defense — it’s not necessarily making the big play but the right play.

“Then it comes down to moxie, it comes down to intelligence — in-game intelligence and adjustments and fits and film work. You can see who the team galvanizes around and who’s ready to play the first game and you make a decision from there. It’s constant analyzation, whether it’s small or whether it’s big.”

Former Los Angeles Rams quarterback John Wolford is also on the depth chart but has not taken any reps as a starter at OTAs.

“We switch them up all the time,” Bowles said about who gets to take snaps as a starter. “It doesn’t mean anything — Kyle has taken them and Baker has taken them.”

Mayfield, 28, will be entering his sixth season and has already given the league a taste of what he brings to the field. However, there are a lot of unknowns surrounding the 25-year-old Trask, who appeared in just one game last season and only had nine pass attempts.

“He’s getting the reps,” Bowles said of Trask. “When you get more reps, you get more confidence. Obviously, and rightfully so, with Tom there last year and Blaine (Gabbert) there, he didn’t get the reps he should get. He’s getting a lot of reps right now.

“It’s really an indoctrination of his rookie year — getting all the reps he’s getting. As he gets those reps, he gets more confidence so he’s happy to be playing.”

Trask has also been adjusting to offensive coordinator Dave Canales, who is entering his first season with the Buccaneers after holding various roles with the Seattle Seahawks on Pete Carroll’s staff from 2010-22.

Canales’ offensive scheme focuses more on working outside of the pocket, which is something that Trask has been enjoying.

“This new scheme allows you to get outside the pocket and use your legs more. That’s really exciting for me,” Trask said. “As a quarterback, anytime you can get out on the edge it’s really exciting to throw one on the run or get outside the pocket and make a play (or) run for a first down or something like that.”

Should he land the starting job, Mayfield will be looking to redeem himself after a disappointing 2022 season. He played seven games (six starts) for the Carolina Panthers and five games (four starts) for the Rams, completing 60 percent of his passes while throwing for 2,163 yards, 10 touchdowns and eight interceptions.

–Field Level Media

Jan 8, 2023; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Kyle Trask (2) throws a pass against the Atlanta Falcons in the second half at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports

New Bucs OC: Kyle Trask needs to be a ‘point guard’

There’s a new offensive coordinator in Tampa Bay and there will be a new quarterback as well, just perhaps not Kyle Trask, the one — and only — signal-caller on the Buccaneers’ roster in late February.

It matters not to Dave Canales, who was introduced as the Buccaneers’ new OC on Wednesday. To him, the Bucs’ second-round pick in 2021 with one NFL game under his belt is the heir apparent to Tom Brady in Tampa.

“The way that I’ve been trained is, ‘They’re ours until they’re not,’” Canales said. “So, right now, I’ve got one Buccaneers quarterback — it’s Kyle Trask.”

Let the training commence.

“The thing that we’re going to help Kyle continue to build on here is to just be a point guard,” Canales said. “Point guards don’t have to be the one to score all the points — you just distribute. Play on time, get the ball out of your hands, life is better that way when you do that.

“You’ve got these bears chasing you and if you don’t like bears chasing you, get rid of the ham — and that’s the football, right? So just teaching him those principles, allowing him to be a distributor,” Canales added.

Canales replaces Byron Leftwich, who was let go as part of a massive overhaul of the coaching staff after the Bucs lost in the wild-card round to the Dallas Cowboys on Jan. 16. Since then, Brady called it a career.

Canales himself has a learning curve — he hasn’t called plays in the NFL or at the collegiate level, noting it was a “concern” he had to address during his interviews with the Bucs and head coach Todd Bowles.

“I really respect the play-calling position. I respect how hard it is,” Canales said. “I respect the skill that the guys that I worked for, that they had to have the mastery of the gameplan and the call sheet. I know that I’m going to take some lumps and have to learn my lessons along the way, but I’ll learn quick. I am a quick study.

“It’s something that I am really excited about. I really have been champing at the bit just trying to get an opportunity.”

However, Canales also said play-calling is not the “hardest part” about the job.

“The hardest part about this job is creating a culture, creating a language, teaching my coaches what the system is so they can give me good information and then teaching them how to communicate it to the players, making sure that our language stays consistent,” Canales said. “No synonyms, we say it like this. High and tight — that’s how we talk about ball security.

“The play-calling is just fun. That is the part that is like the payoff at the end of the week.”

The Bucs replaced their entire offensive coaching staff, including the hire of Skip Peete — let go by the Dallas Cowboys last month — as their new running backs coach. The team brought back Jeff Kastl as offensive quality control coach after parting ways with him originally.

Canales, 41, served as the Seahawks’ wide receivers coach from 2010-17. He was the team’s quarterbacks coach the following two seasons, then spent two seasons as Seattle’s passing game coordinator before moving back to quarterbacks coach last year.

–Field Level Media

Oct 31, 2020; Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA;  Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith (6) and Alabama quarterback Mac Jones (10) celebrate a touchdown pass from Jones to Smith at Bryant-Denny Stadium during the second half of Alabama's 41-0 win over Mississippi State. Mandatory Credit: Gary Cosby Jr/The Tuscaloosa News via USA TODAY Sports

Heisman: DaVonta Smith’s hands vs. three arms

With its bid for the CFP National Championship Game trophy still a week away, No. 1 Alabama will find out Tuesday if it will grab a different piece of hardware before facing No. 3 Ohio State.

The Heisman Trophy presentation will take place Tuesday night, giving the Crimson Tide one last potential distraction on their way to team glory. Or maybe it will be motivation.

In a concession to the COVID-19 pandemic, the ceremony will he held virtually from ESPN studios at Bristol, Conn., with all four candidates on hand from remote locations.

Alabama will have two chances at the award as wide receiver DeVonta Smith and quarterback Mac Jones wait to see if their name will be called. Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence and Florida quarterback Kyle Trask also are finalists.

Smith and Jones showed their Heisman credentials in a 31-14 CFP Semifinal victory over Notre Dame on New Year’s Day at a displaced Rose Bowl in Arlington, Texas. Smith had seven catches for 130 yards and three touchdowns. Jones was the provider for Smith’s big day by going 25-for-30 passing for 297 yards and four touchdowns.

Just don’t ask Smith to break down the race between him and his teammate. In fact, don’t even mention it with so much team glory at stake soon.

“Right now I’m not really worried about the Heisman Trophy,” Smith said Monday. “I’m just trying to come in with the team this weekend, just look forward to getting on to the game plan for Ohio State.”

That kind of focus helped Smith to 105 catches in his senior season for 1,641 yards and 20 touchdowns. He could be the first wide receiver to win college football’s top honor since Michigan’s Desmond Howard in 1991.

Quarterbacks have won the award nine of the last 10 years and Jones put himself in contention during a season when he passed for 4,036 yards, 36 touchdowns and four interceptions in 12 games. Lawrence had 3,153 yards passing, 24 touchdowns and five interceptions in 10 games. Trask had 4,283 yards passing, 43 touchdowns and eight interceptions in 12 games.

He faces some formidable quarterback competition for the award, and while Smith might not want to discuss individual accolades so close to a championship game, he said that he is honored to represent wide receivers on the national stage.

“I guess you could say that, just showing that it really just — the person that goes out and just puts in the work, they’re going to get the things that they deserve,” the Amite, La., product said. “So if you work for things you’re going to get the things that you deserve.”

–Field Level Media

Dec 19, 2020; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide quarterback Mac Jones (10) throws a pass during the first quarter against the Florida Gators in the SEC Championship at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

Alabama’s Jones, Clemson’s Lawrence among Heisman finalists

Alabama quarterback Mac Jones, Alabama receiver DeVonta Smith, Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence and Florida quarterback Kyle Trask were named finalists for the 2020 Heisman Trophy, the Heisman Trust announced on Thursday night.

The field of 10 was narrowed to four, with the winner to be announced on Jan. 5 during a virtual ceremony on ESPN.

Alabama running back Najee Harris placed fifth in the voting, ahead of Iowa State running back Breece Hall and Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields, who placed sixth and seventh, respectively.

BYU quarterback Zach Wilson placed eighth, followed by Notre Dame quarterback Ian Book and Florida tight end Kyle Pitts, who became the first player at his position to finish in the top 10 in the Heisman vote since 1977. Pitts had 770 yards and 12 touchdowns receiving in just eight games this season.

Jones has thrown for 3,739 yards, second highest nationally, with 32 touchdowns and four interceptions. He has completed 76.5 percent of his passes, and would become just the third Alabama player and first Crimson Tide quarterback to win the award.

Smith is tops nationally in receptions (98), receiving yards (1,511) and yards after the catch (768) while ranking second in receiving touchdowns (17) and receiving yards per game (137.4). He is vying to become the first receiver to win the award since Michigan’s Desmond Howard in 1991 and the first non-quarterback to claim it since former Alabama running back Derrick Henry took it home in 2015.

Lawrence could become Clemson’s first Heisman Trophy winner. He has thrown for 2.753 yards, 22 touchdowns and four interceptions despite missing two games after testing positive for COVID-19. He has gone 34-1 as a starter with three ACC titles, a national championship and a runner-up finish. The highest Heisman voting finish for a Clemson player was by Deshaun Watson, who was a finalist twice and the runner-up in 2016.

Trask leads nationally in total touchdowns (46), touchdown passes (43), passing yards (4,125) and passing yards per game (375) in 11 games. He also is the only Southeastern Conference quarterback ever to throw for at least 400 yards five times in a season. His 46 touchdowns are second only to Tim Tebow’s 55, which he posted during his Heisman Trophy-winning season in 2007. Trask is seeking to become the fourth Gator quarterback to win the Heisman, also joining Danny Wuerffel in 1996 and Steve Spurrier in 1966.

Jones and Smith will lead top-ranked Alabama against No. 4 Notre Dame in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1, while Lawrence and the No. 2 Tigers will face No. 3 Ohio State in the Sugar Bowl, also on Jan. 1. Trask and the No. 7 Gators face No. 6 Oklahoma in the Cotton Bowl on Dec. 30.

–Field Level Media