The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have enough solid pieces on the roster that some veterans are going to feel the squeeze when camp opens, and Payne Durham looks like one of the names squarely in that conversation.
For a 2023 fifth-round pick entering his fourth season, this is the kind of summer that can decide everything. Durham is no longer in the “developing prospect” lane. He needs to show he belongs, because there are no guarantees he makes the team.
His best stretch came in his second season, when he started six games, caught 11 passes and scored two touchdowns. But his 2025 production fell well below that level and even dipped under what he did as a rookie. He started 10 games, was targeted only four times, finished with one reception and did not score.
Durham’s value is supposed to come mostly as a blocker, but that role has not exactly hidden the bigger issue. An ESPN look at the Buccaneers’ roster pointed to the fact that his presence did not move the offense in the right direction.
"The Buccaneers' running backs had roughly the same performance with Durham on the field as they had without him"
Adam Schatz - ESPN
That matters because even with 10 starts last season in place of an injured Otton, the numbers did not show a clear boost. If a player is on the field and the offense looks the same, that makes the roster argument a lot harder.
Still, Durham has one thing working for him: the tight end room is thin. Otton is the starter, and only he and Ko Kieft have more NFL experience than Durham. Two rookies are also in the mix, including one taken in the sixth round, which leaves the group looking light overall.
That said, Tampa Bay could still add help after final cuts in late August. Durham will get a full camp and preseason to make his case, but even that does not lock him into a spot on the 53-man roster when the season begins.
This is the kind of camp that can settle a player’s future fast, and for Durham, the margin for error is about as slim as it gets.
In Other News...
Buccaneers Line Just Got The Kind Of Praise Fans Didn't Expect
For a unit that spent much of 2025 dealing with moving parts, the Buccaneers offensive line is suddenly getting a lot more respect than many expected. Sharp Football Analysis slotted Tampa Bays front among the leagues best, a nod that says as much about the talent up front as it does about how well the group held together through all the disruption. Tristan Wirfs remains the anchor, and the rest of the projected core with Luke Goedeke, Graham Barton, Cody Mauch and Ben Bredeson gives the Bucs a foundation they can build around.
The bigger question now is whether that praise holds up once the season starts and the line is asked to stay healthy long enough to settle in. Tampa Bays offense has been at its best when the protection is clean and the run game has some balance, so the health of this group looms as one of the most important storylines on the roster. If the Buccaneers can keep their front intact, this could be one of the reasons the offense takes another step. [Read more 🡒]
Bucs Fans Should File Away This Quarterback For Future Draft Talk
A quarterback to keep on the radar for later draft chatter is Drew Mestemaker, the Oklahoma State passer who is drawing attention as he heads into the 2026 season. For Buccaneers fans already thinking ahead to future quarterback discussions, he checks a lot of the early boxes that tend to get scouts interested, from arm talent to the kind of quick decision-making that can help a young passer settle in fast.
Mestemaker also brings mobility and the ability to work all levels of the field, which is part of why his stock could keep moving if the progress continues. The next step is the one that matters most for any rising quarterback: cleaner accuracy, more reps, and the kind of experience that turns promise into something NFL teams can trust by the end of the season. [Read more 🡒]
