Buccaneers Just Made A Familiar Bet On Their Biggest Weakness

The Buccaneers' decision to bring back experienced lineman Rakeem Nunez-Roches signals a strategic move to bolster their defensive line with both familiarity and fresh talent.

The Buccaneers spent the offseason trying to reshape a defense that fell short in 2026, and one of their quieter moves may end up mattering just as much as the splashier additions.

Tampa Bay used the draft to help the front seven, taking edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr. and defensive tackle DeMonte Capehart. The team also added free agents across the defense, including DT A'Shawn Robinson. But general manager Jason Licht also turned to a name that already feels familiar in Tampa: Rakeem Nunez-Roches.

Nunez-Roches is back with the Buccaneers for 2026 after playing five seasons in Tampa Bay from 2018-22. He was part of the Super Bowl team in 2020, and after the Bucs let him leave in free agency following the 2022 season, he spent three years with the New York Giants before returning.

That stop in New York may have sharpened his game. Over three seasons with the Giants, Nunez-Roches posted 5.5 sacks, compared with 2.0 in his entire Tampa Bay run, with all of those coming in 2022. He also reached career bests in total tackles with 52 in 2024 and added four pass breakups, which matches his career total in that category.

Now he comes back in a rotational role with a system he already knows. He’s older - 32 - and he isn’t being brought in to win a starting job, but Tampa Bay isn’t asking him to be a star. It’s asking him to be useful, steady, and ready when called on.

That matters on a defensive line that will lean heavily on rotation. Nunez-Roches often lines up at nose tackle, so he can spell Vita Vea or work next to him in the middle. He is set to fill the spot Greg Gaines held, and the numbers make the case for the move: Nunez-Roches had two sacks and five tackles for loss in his last season with the Buccaneers, while Gaines finished his Tampa Bay stint with three tackles for loss total.

The Bucs are clearly betting that familiarity plus experience still counts. If Nunez-Roches gives them solid snaps and players like Calijah Kancey and Elijah Roberts also deliver, Tampa Bay’s front seven could look a lot different in 2026.

The Buccaneers and Nunez-Roches report to training camp on July 28.

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