The Tampa Bay Buccaneers spent the offseason attacking the one area that had kept their defense from reaching another level: the pass rush. Now, after a wave of additions up front, ESPN is taking notice and calling the defensive front the strongest part of the roster.
That’s a notable shift for a unit that has been a problem for several seasons. Todd Bowles’ defense has had plenty of pieces, but an ineffective pass rush kept the whole group from fully clicking. Jason Licht made it clear the front needed help, and he went after it aggressively.
The biggest move came in the draft, where Licht used his first-round pick on edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr. Tampa Bay also added edge rusher Al-Quadin Muhammad, who is coming off an 11-sack season with the Detroit Lions.
Inside, the Bucs signed defensive tackle A’Shawn Robinson, a player expected to bring both production and the kind of attitude and mean streak this defense has been missing. They also brought back defensive tackle Rakeem Nunez-Roches, who spent five seasons in Tampa Bay from 2018-2022.
On paper, the overhaul is obvious. The front suddenly looks deeper, tougher, and far more dangerous than it did a year ago.
ESPN’s Mike Clay pointed to that group as Tampa Bay’s biggest strength when ranking every roster in the NFL, where the Buccaneers landed at No. 18. Clay wrote:
"This is a balanced roster, so it was tough to pick a clear strength, but we'll give a nod to a good-looking defensive front. It starts with Vita Vea, who is 11th among interior linemen with 23.5 sacks since 2022.
Calijah Kancey (7.5 sacks in 2024) returns after missing all but 91 snaps last season due to injury. Veteran A'Shawn Robinson was a strong offseason addition."
For Tampa Bay, that kind of praise is a welcome change from the usual conversation. The offense has often drawn the attention, and the secondary has its own playmakers, but the defensive front has quietly become the group with the most upside.
There is still a reason for caution, of course. Buccaneers fans have seen enough to know that what looks good in July has to hold up once the games begin. But if this front delivers the way Tampa Bay believes it can, the defense has a real chance to become something much bigger than a solid unit.
The Bucs have already been strong against the run, and that has been true going back to 2019, when Todd Bowles became defensive coordinator and Vita Vea became a full-time starter. The missing piece was pressure on the quarterback. Now Tampa Bay has built an arsenal that can threaten from the edge and from the interior.
If it all comes together in 2026, this defense could start looking like the kind of dominant group Tampa Bay had in 2020 and 2021.
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