Bucs Offense Looks Loaded But One 2026 Concern Wont Go Away

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers' offensive potential for the 2026 season hinges on addressing a critical void in their tight end lineup.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers enter 2026 with plenty to like on paper, but one area keeps standing out as the clearest problem spot: tight end.

That’s the view ESPN analyst Mike Clay took when he broke down Tampa Bay’s projected starting lineup, and it’s hard to argue with the logic. The Bucs have a roster that looks fairly balanced overall, but there are still some real questions hanging over it - especially if injuries become an issue again.

Health is the first thing Tampa has to get right. The 2025 season was battered by injuries, with Mike Evans, Chris Godwin Jr., and Jalen McMillan all missing major stretches.

Bucky Irving also missed seven games, and four of the team’s five starting offensive linemen were sidelined for five or more games. That kind of attrition can wreck even a talented roster.

There are also concerns in the secondary. Tampa is set to roll out a young, untested cornerback group, and how that unit holds up could shape the ceiling of the defense.

Zyon McCollum leads the group after what was described as a very disappointing year. He’ll be joined by second-year corners Jacob Parrish and Benjamin Morrison.

Parrish played well as a rookie, but he’s moving from the starting slot role to outside corner to open the door for rookie Keionte Scott, who is expected to take over at nickel.

Still, Clay’s biggest concern was the tight end room, and the reasoning is pretty straightforward. Cade Otton is a usable starter, but Tampa Bay doesn’t have a difference-maker at the position, and the depth behind him is thin.

“Biggest weakness: Tight end. The Bucs are set to return the same tight end room that ranked last in the NFL in receiving yardage last season.

Cade Otton has been solid (40 to 60 receptions in all four of his NFL seasons) but is often phased out of the passing attack when the team is healthy at wide receiver. His lone touchdown came in Week 18 last season.

Backups Payne Durham, Devin Culp, and Ko Kieft combined to run seven routes per game last season, and sixth-round pick Bauer Sharp was the only offseason addition. -- Clay”

That’s not the kind of group that forces defenses to adjust.

Otton gives Tampa Bay a steady option, but the Bucs don’t have much margin for error at the position. If the offense is going to fully cash in on its receiver and running back talent, the tight end spot can’t remain this limited. And if one of the bigger names at wide receiver or running back misses time again, the lack of firepower at tight end becomes even harder to hide.

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