Buccaneers' 2026 Nightmare Starts With One Familiar Fear

Can the Tampa Bay Buccaneers overcome a volatile roster and Baker Mayfield's inconsistency to maintain their grip on the NFC South?

2026 doesn’t have to be a title-or-bust year for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but the margin for error is still thin. The Bucs are the favorites to win the NFC South, yet CBS Sports’ worst-case outlook paints a pretty clear path to trouble: Baker Mayfield’s late-season issues linger, the young talent doesn’t take the next step, and Todd Bowles winds up staring at a very hot seat.

That scenario starts with Mayfield, because it already happened once. Tampa’s 2025 season followed his rhythm almost perfectly.

Through the first nine games, he looked every bit like an MVP-level quarterback, piling up 16 touchdowns against just two interceptions while the Bucs went 6-3. Then the bottom started to fall out.

Over the final eight games, he threw 10 touchdowns and nine interceptions, and Tampa closed 2-7.

CBS’ Tyler Sullivan laid out the concern this way: “The second-half struggles from Baker Mayfield (14 touchdowns and 10 interceptions over his final 11 games in 2025) persist in 2026,” wrote CBS’ Tyler Sullivan. “The young pieces the Buccaneers were hoping would rise up -- like (Emeka) Egbuka and (Rueben) Bain Jr. -- aren't ready for that responsibility just yet.

That allows the rest of the division to continue closing the gap, with Atlanta and New Orleans both catching lightning in a bottle in their respective quarterback rooms. For the second straight year, the Bucs miss the playoffs, putting Todd Bowles' job firmly at risk.”

The youth development piece matters just as much as the quarterback play. Egbuka flashed early in 2025, topping 100 receiving yards three times in Tampa’s first nine games. But he never got past 64 yards in any of the final eight, and that slump cost him a shot at Offensive Rookie of the Year.

Now the attention shifts to Bain, Tampa Bay’s next first-round pick and a player expected to help immediately on the defensive line. Bain arrived with a strong reputation after being named the ACC’s Defensive Player of the Year at Miami last season, and plenty around the league believed he could have gone in the top 10, maybe even the top five. Instead, the Buccaneers got him at No. 15 and were thrilled.

That excitement comes with pressure. If Bain doesn’t make an immediate impact, one of Tampa Bay’s biggest issues from 2025 - pass-rushing - could roll right into 2026 unchanged.

The division picture in Sullivan’s scenario also turns on quarterback volatility elsewhere. Atlanta’s room would feature Tua Tagovailoa, who the Falcons signed after six seasons with the Miami Dolphins, alongside Michael Penix Jr., the team’s 2024 first-round pick who tore his ACL in November. New Orleans, meanwhile, is hoping Tyler Shough can build on a solid rookie year in which he completed 67.6% of his passes, threw for more than 2,300 yards, and finished with 10 touchdowns and six interceptions in 11 games.

If those pieces break the wrong way for Tampa Bay, the Bucs could find themselves outside the playoffs for a second straight year, and Bowles would be the one left paying the price.

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