Training camp is about to put a spotlight on one of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ most precarious roster situations, and Chris Braswell is right in the middle of it.
The second-round pick from 2024 has not given the Buccaneers much reason to feel comfortable about his future. Through two seasons, Braswell has produced 2.5 sacks and 5.0 tackles for loss, numbers that leave him looking more like a miss than the pass-rusher Tampa Bay hoped it was getting.
That matters even more now because the Bucs are not in the mood to wait around. They’re operating in win-now mode, with jobs on the line in 2026, and the front office has already acted like it knows the pass rush needed help. Tampa Bay used its first-round pick on Rueben Bain Jr. and added Al-Quadin Muhammad in free agency, giving the room more bodies and more competition.
Those two, along with Yaya Diaby, seem set in the top three spots. David Walker is also part of the picture once he returns after missing his rookie season with a torn ACL. The team was high on Walker before the injury, and that optimism has not faded.
That leaves Braswell fighting for survival. If Tampa Bay keeps only five outside linebackers on the 53-man roster, just as it did last year, the last opening could come down to Braswell and Anthony Nelson. Nelson has at least 3.0 sacks in five straight seasons and has been a dependable presence since arriving in Tampa Bay in 2019.
Braswell’s path is rough. He’s only 24, and the fact that he was a second-round pick gives him some built-in protection. But that can only buy so much time, especially for a front office that has shown it can move on from draft mistakes when the fit is no longer there.
He still has a chance to flip the story. But with camp and the preseason looming, the margin for error is thin, and the Buccaneers’ outside linebacker group has never looked more crowded during his time in Tampa Bay.
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