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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are overhauling their defense after allowing the most passing yards in the NFL since 2023. They are counting on new draft picks and free agents to improve their pass rush.
Can Rueben Bain Jr. be the missing piece in Tampa Bay's pass rush? The Bucs better hope so, because they've given up more passing yards than any team in the NFL since 2023. ©Luis Santana
The pass rush is always fierce in May. Linebackers are all Pro Bowl-bound in April.
Thatâs just the way it works in the NFL, where hope springs eternal while the scoreboard is unplugged.
And so it is around One Buc Place, where the defense has gotten an infusion of draft picks and out-of-warranty free agents in the past couple of months.
The front-office types see potential. They see passion. They see size, versatility and a dash of nastiness.
And what should you see?
A fresh start.
For now, thatâs enough.
There may be a half-dozen familiar faces in the huddle come September, but, make no mistake, this is a new defense. New linemen, new linebackers, new defensive backs. All three levels of the defense will have a fresh look, and thatâs an excellent start considering the way 2025 ended.
It wasnât the most woeful defense weâve ever seen in Tampa Bay, but it was the worst in quite some time. The Bucs gave up nearly 26 points per game in the final two months of the season while stumbling to a 2-7 finish.
Specifically, the Bucs had one of the worst pass defenses in the league. They couldnât get pressure from the edge, and the linebackers couldnât cover tight ends or slot receivers. Worst of all, none of that was surprising.
The Buccaneers are infusing their defense with new draft picks and free agents to address their struggles.
The Buccaneers have struggled defensively, leading to them allowing more passing yards than any other team since 2023.
Rueben Bain Jr. is a new addition to the Buccaneers' roster, and they hope he will enhance their pass rush.
The Buccaneers' defense has been underperforming, particularly in the pass defense, prompting a complete remodeling.

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Since 2023, no NFL defense has given up more passing yards than Tampa Bay. If youâre the optimistic type, you could also point out that no defense has given up fewer yards on the ground than the Bucs during that time. But is that because the Bucs are great run-stoppers or because teams just know itâs easier to attack them through the air?
Considering how much revamping has gone on this offseason, the Bucs may have answered that question for you.
Essentially, they wanted to make opponents less comfortable â less confident â in passing situations.
With that in mind, they drafted Rueben Bain Jr. to be the edge rusher this team has lacked since Shaquil Barrett was in his prime. They signed linebacker Alex Anzalone to provide better pass coverage over the middle. They drafted Keionte Scott for the all-important nickel position.
Throw in interior linemen like free agent AâShawn Robinson and fifth-round pick DeMonte Capehart, along with rookie linebacker Josiah Trotter and veteran linebackers Christian Rozeboom and Al-Quadin Muhammad, and you have the potential for a lot of new faces on Sunday afternoons.
Or, hereâs another way of looking at it:
Of the 20 players with the most snaps on defense last season, 40% are no longer here, including Lavonte David, Jamel Dean, Logan Hall, Christian Izien and Haason Reddick. And SirVocea Dennis, who started 16 games at linebacker, will be hard-pressed to find regular playing time.
What the Bucs were looking for in the draft was production over potential. They cared more about what game tapes looked like instead of what the measurables suggested at the combine. For instance, neither Bain nor Trotter have elite 40 times, but both are exceptionally quick in short bursts, and that shows up on film.
And while Scott is undersized and older than the typical rookie â heâll be 25 by the season opener â he excelled in almost every way imaginable at Miami. He had two interceptions, five sacks, 13 tackles for loss and two forced fumbles.
Does any of that guarantee a return to the glory days of defense in Tampa Bay?
Of course not.
The Bucs have drafted edge rushers (Chris Braswell and Joe Tryon-Shoyinka) who didnât work out. They signed free agents (Reddick and Akiem Hicks) who turned out to be expensive busts. Theyâve had a revolving door in the secondary with eight players chosen in the second or third round in the seven drafts from 2018-24.
At one point or another, all of those players had similar expectations to Bain, Trotter and Scott.
But there is one basic difference:
This offseason feels like an acknowledgment that something drastic was necessary. This is more like remodeling instead of adding a few accent pillows.
With 2025 draft picks Jacob Parrish and Benjamin Morrison expected to compete for Deanâs outside corner position and Calijah Kancey hopeful of staying on the field after missing most of last season with a torn pectoral, the Bucs could look dramatically different.
Now, itâs true that new doesnât automatically mean better.
But considering Tampa Bayâs pass defense the past few years, itâs hard to imagine it being any worse.
John Romano can be reached at jromano@tampabay.com. Follow @romano_tbtimes.
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