There’s a growing sense around Tampa Bay that the Bucs’ 2026 offense could hinge on one player more than any other: Emeka Egbuka.
ESPN’s Mike Clay, Aaron Schatz and Seth Walder recently broke down every NFL roster by team strengths, weaknesses, non-starter to know and X-factor, and for the Bucs, Egbuka was the name that stood out. Walder’s case was straightforward: the second-year receiver flashed early as a rookie, faded later, and now has a chance to shape what Tampa Bay looks like next season.
“X factor for 2026: WR Emeka Egbuka. He came out of the gates flying last season as a rookie but cooled off immensely down the stretch.
Which version will the Buccaneers get in 2026? With Mike Evans gone and Chris Godwin Jr. now 30 years old, they’ll need early-season Egbuka to come through.
One number that has me a little concerned - Egbuka posted just a 36 open score last season, which ranked 104th out of 110 wide receivers. - Walder”
That’s the heart of the conversation. Egbuka enters 2026 with opportunity all around him, and the Bucs need that to turn into production.
Mike Evans is gone to San Francisco, which changes the way defenses can approach Tampa Bay, and the offense is looking to broaden what it can do. Egbuka was already the team’s leading receiver as a rookie and came close to 1,000 receiving yards, putting himself in position to take on even more.
He’s got the traits that make that leap believable. His route-running is polished, his hands are strong, and he knows how to separate. Even with Chris Godwin and Jalen McMillan in the mix, Egbuka has the profile of a receiver who can quickly become the top option.
What also makes him such an interesting piece is how ready he looked from the jump. A lot of receivers need time to settle in, but Egbuka came into the league with the reputation of being pro-ready and backed it up right away, including scoring big touchdowns early in the season.
That matters for Baker Mayfield, too. Egbuka gives him a dependable target when the game tightens up, whether that’s on third down or in the slot against a favorable matchup. His versatility gives Tampa Bay more ways to attack.
And that’s where the X-factor label really fits. If Egbuka keeps developing and picks up where he left off, opposing defenses may have a hard time figuring out how to deal with him. That kind of player can tilt the entire offense.
There are still plenty of questions around the Bucs heading into 2026. How fast will chemistry come together with new offensive coordinator Zac Robinson?
Who becomes the top target in the receiver room? Can Bucky Irving get back to form?
And does Baker Mayfield’s contract year help or hurt him?
Those questions are real. So is the upside.
If Egbuka keeps trending the right way, he could be more than just another important piece. He could become the spark that drives the whole offense. For a Tampa Bay team trying to move forward, that’s a pretty big deal.
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Instead, Irving was left on the outside of the conversation entirely, not even landing in the honorable-mention tier as other backs such as Breece Hall, Quinshon Judkins, Travis Etienne Jr. and Alvin Kamara drew support. For a player who flashed like a future centerpiece in Tampa Bay, the omission is the kind of slight that tends to linger, especially when the Buccaneers are still trying to figure out just how high Irvings ceiling can be once hes healthy again. [Read more 🡒]
