Netflix’s latest season of Quarterback gives Buccaneers fans a front-row seat to Baker Mayfield’s 2025 season, and it doesn’t take long for the show to make one thing clear: the quarterback was dealing with a lot more than just the usual wear and tear.
The series spotlights Mayfield’s fire, his edge, and even a look at Mike Evans’ final game as a Buccaneer. But the biggest takeaway for Tampa Bay observers is the same one that lingered all offseason - Mayfield was banged up, repeatedly, and it showed.
The numbers tell the story. Tampa Bay opened 6-2 over the first eight weeks, with Mayfield playing at an MVP level by plenty of measures. He posted an EPA/play of 0.148, completed 67.2% of his passes, averaged 8.6 air yards per attempt and threw 13 touchdowns against just two interceptions.
Then came the bye week, and the season changed.
From Weeks 10-18, Mayfield’s production fell off sharply. His EPA/play slipped to 0.039, his air yards per attempt dropped to 7.5, and his completion percentage over expected moved from -1.8% to -2.4%.
The turnover count ballooned, too: just two interceptions in the first eight weeks, then nine over the final stretch. Tampa Bay went 2-7 in that span.
The deep ball suffered as well. Mayfield’s accuracy on throws downfield went from 25.7% in Weeks 1-8, when he was 9-for-35, to 20.8% in Weeks 10-18, when he was 5-for-24.
The injuries help explain why. Beyond the AC joint sprain that knocked him out for a half against the Los Angeles Rams in Week 12, Mayfield said on Quarterback that he dealt with a long list of issues throughout the year.
He sprained his MCL and PCL in Week 2 against the Houston Texans, and that same game also left him with a bone bruise that he reaggravated in Week 7 against the Detroit Lions. In Week 3 against the New York Jets, he suffered a tendon injury in his throwing-arm biceps, and the bruising was so severe that he wore a sleeve to cover it up.
Then came the AC joint sprain against the Rams, with Teddy Bridgewater stepping in during the second half.
Mayfield played through all of it except that one half, and that toughness is part of the appeal. But it also raises a real question: did his refusal to sit actually hurt Tampa Bay?
There’s a precedent for this. Back in 2021 with the Cleveland Browns, Mayfield played through a partially torn labrum in his non-throwing shoulder, suffered in a Week 2 game against the Texans.
That injury followed him all season. He finished with 17 touchdowns, 13 interceptions, a 60.5% completion rate and a brutal -2.7% CPOE.
He sat out the final game to have surgery, but the damage had already been done.
That year eventually pushed the Browns toward Deshaun Watson, and while that was a poor decision for plenty of reasons, the 2021 season still set the stage for what happened in Tampa in 2025. Mayfield’s injuries clearly affected his execution, and they were part of the reason the Buccaneers faded so badly down the stretch.
The tricky part is sorting out responsibility. A quarterback like Mayfield is always going to want to stay on the field.
That’s baked into the job. Sitting yourself down can look weak; playing through it can get you criticized when the results go south.
But the team has to have a voice, too. If Mayfield was hurt enough to drag down the offense for weeks, Todd Bowles and his staff may have needed to pull the plug sooner. A short IR stint or even a few games off might have given him a chance to heal and avoid further aggravation.
The problem was Tampa Bay didn’t have a backup who could steady the ship. Bridgewater’s relief appearance against the Rams didn’t inspire much confidence.
He threw for just 62 yards in that half and completed 53.3% of his passes. That’s not the kind of performance that makes a team eager to sit its starter, even if the starter is compromised.
Still, that circles back to the front office. Jason Licht has to make sure the backup quarterback can keep the team afloat if the starter goes down, and Bridgewater clearly wasn’t that answer after what happened against the Rams.
There’s also the matter of how Tampa Bay uses Mayfield as a runner. The Buccaneers have talked often about wanting to “let Baker be Baker,” but if the hits he takes while scrambling are contributing to injuries, that philosophy needs a second look. The team has to manage that better, and Mayfield has to be more willing to avoid contact as he gets deeper into his 30s.
So yes, Mayfield’s habit of playing through injuries is a problem. It hurt him in 2021, it hurt him again in 2025, and while Tampa Bay’s collapse also involved other injuries, coaching issues and a lack of depth, his decline was a major part of the story.
At the same time, the Buccaneers have to own their share of it. They need to coach him on when to take a hit and when not to, recognize when he’s too banged up to keep going and build a better insurance policy behind him. That didn’t happen in 2025, and Tampa Bay paid for it.
The Bucs have since taken a step in the right direction by signing Jake Browning as the backup quarterback. Now the challenge is finding the balance: keeping Mayfield dangerous in the way that makes him special, while cutting down on the unnecessary punishment. And at some point, Mayfield has to be honest about the toll, too.
Tampa Bay and Baker Mayfield return to training camp on July 28.
In Other News...
Mike Evans Exit Says Something Bucs Fans Wont Like About Baker
Mike Evans departure from Tampa Bay in the offseason already stung for a Buccaneers offense that has leaned on him for years, but the broader conversation around where he landed has added another layer to it. The Bucs reportedly made an offer to keep him, yet Evans still chose San Francisco, leaving Tampa Bay fans to wonder what the move says about the appeal of the quarterback situation he left behind.
The comparison at the center of the discussion is Baker Mayfield and Brock Purdy, two passers whose numbers are close enough to make the debate feel unsettled. Evans decision does not settle anything on its own, but it has become part of the argument for those trying to read which quarterback receivers trust more, and why a veteran like Evans might have seen one setup as the better bet. [Read more 🡒]
Buccaneers Crossed A Line With One Post And Fans Let Them Hear It
A social media post from the Buccaneers drew immediate attention for all the wrong reasons after the team paired footage of a bison attack at Yellowstone National Park with a clip tied to one of its touchdown celebrations. The reaction was swift enough that the post did not stay up long, but by then it had already sparked plenty of criticism from fans who felt the comparison crossed a line.
The incident involved Carl McDaniel, a 65-year-old man who was injured in the Yellowstone encounter and suffered a broken femur. McDaniel has already undergone surgery and is expected to go through physical therapy as he works his way back, while the Buccaneers are left dealing with the fallout from a post that turned a serious real-life injury into a punchline. [Read more 🡒]
Sean Tucker Just Validated What Buccaneers Fans Know About This Team
Sean Tucker may be penciled in as the Buccaneers third-string running back for 2026 behind Bucky Irving and Kenny Gainwell, but his view of the offense still carries some weight. He pointed to Tampa Bays offensive line as a major strength, and it is easy to see why that matters in a system built to keep the run game moving and the offense on schedule.
The lines importance was underscored by how much the group was missed when injuries piled up in the middle of the 2025 season, a stretch that helped derail a team that had been in position to chase the NFC South. Even with the backfield hierarchy taking shape, Tuckers comments serve as a reminder that the Buccaneers ceiling may still hinge on whether the front stays intact long enough to let everything else work. [Read more 🡒]
