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Tampa Bay Buccaneers


 

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers (sometimes abbreviated as the Bucs) are a National Football League team based in Tampa, Florida, currently owned by Malcolm Glazer and coached by head coach Jon Gruden. The team, along with the Seattle Seahawks, joined the NFL as 1976 expansion teams.

Franchise history

Started out in AFC West in 1976; moved to NFC Central in 1977. Tampa Bay went 0-14 in their inaugural season, and started their second season 0-12 before recording their first win. The club also did not win a game in which the temperature at kickoff time was below 40°F (4°C) until the last week of the 2002 regular season, having lost 20 such games prior. They also once lost 27 consecutive games played both outdoors and on artificial turf; this streak began after a victory over the Bengals at Cincinnati in the 1980 season opener and lasted until they defeated the Eagles in Philadelphia on the first week of the 1995 season. In addition, the club once had a 20-game road losing streak against AFC teams, which ended when they won 17-10 over the Denver Broncos on December 26, 1993.

Related Topics:
1976 - 1977 - Temperature - 2002 - 1980 - 1995 - Denver Broncos - December 26 - 1993

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The team made a habit of losing. The Buccaneers lost at least ten games in 17 of their first 21 seasons, including 12 straight from 1983 to 1994. After a particularly dismal effort in the late 1970s, longtime Bucs coach John McKay gave perhaps the quintessential comment on the organization's plight. A reporter asked McKay about his team's execution during the game. McKay responded, "I'm in favor of it."

Related Topics:
1983 - 1994 - John McKay

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The team's orange and white uniforms were often mocked because they looked like Creamsicles. In 1995, the estate of original owner Hugh Culverhouse sold the team to Malcolm Glazer and his three sons, whose financial support allowed them to finally become competitive. The team's performance dramatically improved when the Glazers brought in Tony Dungy to coach. The Bucs also abandoned their traditional team colors of orange and white in favor of dark red, black, and pewter.

Related Topics:
Creamsicle - 1995 - Hugh Culverhouse - Malcolm Glazer - Tony Dungy

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With league realignment in 2002, the Bucs moved into new NFC South division, along with the Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers and New Orleans Saints. They are 1-0 in Super Bowls, having defeated the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl XXXVII in January, 2003, and they are 1-2 in NFC Championship games, having defeated the Philadelphia Eagles on the road on January 18, 2003), and losing to the Rams twice, in 1979 to the Los Angeles Rams at home, and in 1999 to the St. Louis Rams on the road.

Related Topics:
2002 - NFC - Atlanta Falcons - Carolina Panthers - New Orleans Saints - Oakland Raiders - Super Bowl XXXVII - January - 2003 - Philadelphia Eagles - January 18 - 1979 - Los Angeles Rams - 1999 - St. Louis Rams

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The 2002 Buccaneers became the first team ever to win the Super Bowl after not having made selections in either of the first two rounds of the previous spring's college draft (having traded these selections to the Oakland Raiders for the rights to head coach Jon Gruden), the first team ever to win the Super Bowl after having lost at home on opening day, the first team ever to win the Super Bowl after having gained less than 100 yards rushing per game during the regular season, and the first team ever to win the Super Bowl after having been eliminated in the wild-card round of the prior season's playoffs.

Related Topics:
2002 - Super Bowl - Oakland Raiders - Jon Gruden

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The 2003 season proved to be a losing one for the Buccaneers. Finishing the regular season 7-9, it marked the first time in the decade of the 2000s that both Super Bowl teams from the previous season did not even make the playoffs; Tampa Bay was thus unable to successfully defend their Super Bowl title.

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In the 2004 season, the Bucs started out 1-5 after losing two of their best defensive players (John Lynch and Warren Sapp, both of whom had their contracts expire and were not resigned) and their two top wide recievers, Keyshawn Johnson (the team deactivated him ten games into the 2003 season, then traded the disgruntled wideout to the Dallas Cowboys for Joey Galloway) and Keenan McCardell (held out with a contract dispute and refused to play until he was given a new contract or was traded; McCardell was eventually traded to the San Diego Chargers for draft compensation) This was Tampa's worst start since Gruden took over the Bucs in 2002, and led to a final record of 5-11, which made the 2003-04 Buccaneers the first NFL team ever to follow up a Super Bowl championship with back-to-back losing seasons.

Related Topics:
2004 - John Lynch - Warren Sapp - Keyshawn Johnson - Joey Galloway - Keenan McCardell - San Diego Chargers - 2002

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Season-by-season