NFL_Czar's Blog
by: NFL_Czar
Breaking down the Bucs
Jul 30, 2007 | 6:48PM | report this

There is no debate in Tampa Bay. Jeff Garcia, now 37, is clearly the starting quarterback of the Tampa Bay Bucs. Talking with Garcia on Monday, I can also say that he was torn about leaving Philadelphia, where he helped lead the Eagles into the playoffs last season.

“I had such a great time there and everything about Philadelphia was very comfortable for me,” Garica said. “The players, the fans and I knew that offense pretty well. My dad says otherwise, but I think I would have been fine competing with Donovan (McNabb). But coming here figures to be my last stop and I’m hoping to make it a great one.”

The key to this move to Tampa was head coach Jon Gruden.

“I always wanted to play for him,” Garcia said. “I’d watch him on NFL Films rattling off those plays and couldn’t believe how long the verbiage was. And his intensity. I mean, too, I’ve played in the west-coast offense for a long time and Philly was a lot like it was in San Francisco for me. All these west-coast coaches are different. Mike Holmgren has made it very basic and very easy for a quarterback. Andy Reid and Steve Mariucci make it a little more complicated, but Jon has added three times as much stuff. I didn’t think it was possible to do. And his playbook? Well, it’s twice as much as everyone else’s.”

The Bucs are under the NFL radar, but there’s definitely talent here. Maurice Stovall, a second-year receiver from Notre Dame, has stood out in OTAs and the first few days of training camp. “He’s a man already,” Garcia said of the 6-foot-5 Stovall.

Then there is David Boston, who is attempting to make another comeback after failing to play anywhere last season.

“I tell you he’s a 180 percent better than last year,” said Bucs veteran Ronde Barber of Boston. “Today he makes our team; he’s been very impressive.”

And Joey Galloway? Well, Joey still runs like he’s 23 instead of 35.

There has been some rancor around the team because of the release of Simeon Rice. The team’s view is that Rice’s shoulder remains messed up or they would have kept him regardless of the $7 million salary. If they wanted to dump him simply to unload the salary, they would have done it months ago when the club could have used it to sign someone else.

“I tell you, we’re going to miss him in the locker room,” Barber said of Rice. “We all know this is a business and I’m going to trust our administration on this one. You know the saying, players play, coaches coach and everything else takes care of itself.”

The two most impressive players after three days of camp have been ex-Colt linebacker Cato June and guard Davin Joseph, last year’s first-round pick. Joseph has been dominating in practices thus far. After years of struggling, the Bucs might actually be okay this season on the offensive line.

Culpepper’s Price

If he really wants to play this season, Daunte Culpepper will have to alter his negotiating stance. The word is that Culpepper wants to sign for only one season and wants about $6.5 million. Any team seriously considering Culpepper would prefer a multi-year deal. Why would any team want to pay that much, then have Culpepper play at a high level and then sell himself in 2008 to the highest bidder?

His price doesn’t make sense in those terms even though the NFL average for a top quarterback is now around $9 million annually.

Curiously, when the Bucs met with Culpepper it was in an airplane hangar and no footballs were tossed around.

Trading Strahan

Few NFL people really believe that Michael Strahan wants to retire; most believe he simply wants to recoup some of that $15 million he lost in his divorce settlement. For example, Strahan’s after-football career appears to be in a television studio and none of the major networks currently has an opening that would pay him $1 million or more. His Giants salary calls for $4 million this season, the next to last year of what was a blockbuster contract when Strahan signed it. His deal was heavily front-loaded and for two full seasons stood as the benchmark for players at his position. Remember, when Strahan signed his current deal, the Giants were criticized a bit for paying so much.

But can and would the Giants really trade Strahan? Going someplace else, like Washington, is the only way that Strahan can get a salary bump, something he feels he deserves.

“I wouldn’t be interested in giving him $7 or $8 million a year,” one general manager told me. “How can you do that for someone who is 35 and coming off an injury? I agree that he has huge marquee value. You are also right in saying the Redskins, maybe even the Broncos, would do something like that if they could but the compensation would be fairly low.”

The Giants should have been proactive in the Strahan situation. They should have either reworked the contract, like reducing his base salary while adding big incentives so that he could earn more this season if he played and was productive. In lieu of that, they should have given him permission to seek a trade months ago. Or, at least before they moved Mathias Kiwanuka from defensive end to linebacker.

Apology to Browns fans

OK, I messed up when I wrote Braylon Edwards was your first pick last season. However, you also are aware of the significance of my comments. Edwards was the third overall choice two years ago just like Joe Thomas was this year. And I am sure that even Cleveland fans know that a quarterback (rookie of the year Vince Young was the third overall pick last year) and any skilled offensive player tends to be more valuable to a team’s offense than an offensive tackle. I like Thomas, but should he really receive quarterback-like money? Thomas signed for a year less than Gaines Adams, the fourth overall choice, did with Tampa Bay, but his bonus was $4 million more than Adams. This is the rub for Brady Quinn. Should he really be slotted or should he be paid like a top quarterback in this draft.

11 Comments | Add a comment  
 
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ohio94
Jul 30, 2007
8:25 PM
Brady Quinn Is an overated QB. Whatever QB that
starts for the Browns this year will have a break
out season because of the Oline. Tim Couch knows
exactly what I'm talking about after running for
his life and so does Frye. Frye is almost what Big Ben was in College but didn't have the cast
around him. Look at what is in front and around
these guys before passing judgement.

sportsfan78
Jul 31, 2007
2:15 PM
What do the Bucs need? Garcia will sounds good considering he took the Eagles to the playoffs. I don't know about Sims. I didn't like him messing w/ my Longhorns, but from the few games I saw he was decent (well for the Bucs anyway). Then he goes and gets his spleen ruptured. How do you that, and how does that not hurt like the begesus?
I haven't picked my one team in the NFL yet. If forced to do so I'd say DA BEARS!

coloradodude
Jul 31, 2007
3:23 PM
i say good luck garcia we eagles fans will miss you GO BIRDS!

BoergsBleedsRedAndGold
Jul 31, 2007
4:05 PM
Ha, how don't you have a fave NFL team?


49ers all day.

Anyways, Garcia is just being passed around like nothing, and as a 49er fan i say good riddence.

Dowboy
Jul 31, 2007
4:57 PM
Quinn must forget where he was picked at and why he didn't go earlier. What big game has he ever won where he put the team on his back? Sign your contract, pack it with incentives and revisit it after a couple years clause. Get into camp and help your team get better. And I'm a Steelers fan!

THEJD
Jul 31, 2007
5:19 PM
The only way you cannot cheer for Garcia this year is if your team is in the NFC South, especially after the way Philly exited him after the way he played. You got to give the guy props, and have you seen his girl friend. Strahan needs to suck it up or sit it out, I am so tired of hearing about that gapped tooth whiner, lets move on. Culpepper just needs to sign whatever deal Oakland puts in front of him if he wants to play football this year and have any chance or resurecting his career what better place to do it than with a franchise with Oaklands history and a 2 and 14 record last year, this should be a gift horse of an opportunity for him, otherwise he should sign with an arena league team, because after Oakland that is all that remains.

Last edited by THEJD on July 31st at 5:24 PM.

darkknight76
Jul 31, 2007
10:14 PM
I hope garcia turns that team back into the dominating team it once was, and I think he's the man with the plan! I just want the Bucs to destroy the FLUKE Saints! That team was nothing more than a fluke riding the sympathy of hurricane Katrina! Now lets see them take third in the division behind Carolina and Tampa! GO Garcia!

sunbum1
Aug 1, 2007
5:06 AM
Garcia is a great fit with the Bucs. They have been rebuilding the D with alot of new and proven talent. Monte has some great guys to work with. And the Offense has been greatly improved from the last few years.Garcias' mobility and ability to get the ball away should bring new life to our recievers who have the talent but needed a QB. Stovall will be a breakout player and our tight ends should be more effective. I hope with Garcia , Clayton returns to his rookie form. And all of this should bode well for Cadillac Williams. GO BUCS!!

bwit
Aug 1, 2007
9:37 AM
Quinn owes Cleveland a favor by keeping him from going to the second round. Time to repay!

Last edited by bwit on August 1st at 9:39 AM.

RAZORBACKFAN
Aug 2, 2007
8:17 AM
I think Quinn will do well in a couple of years. Garcia will be fair on a fair team.

Favorite teams? I have two : The Saints and who ever is BEATING dallas.

fenster99
Oct 21, 2007
9:51 AM
I don't understand how all these quarterback problems seem to pop up in this day and age, yet when Terry Bradshaw, Y. A. Tittle, Bart Starr, Johnny Unitas...all played the exact same game but yet it seems like it wasn't even close to being the same game....
These guys are just spoiled multimillionaires

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ABOUT ME


NFL_Czar
John Czarnecki, a former sportswriter with over 20 years experience covering the NFL, has been the editorial consultant for the Emmy Award-winning
FOX NFL Sunday since its 1994 inception. Prior, he provided exclusive information to CBS Sports' The NFL Today program from 1991 to 1993, holding a similar position. Prior to joining CBS Sports, Czarnecki was a pro football writer for The National Sports Daily (1989-91), The Dallas Morning News (1989), and The Los Angeles Herald-Examin
er
. An archive of work can be found here.
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