Baker Mayfield keeps earning the same kind of praise from the people who have to chase him: he’s a quarterback who can turn a broken play into a headache. Raiders edge rusher Maxx Crosby made that point plainly when he talked about the toughest passers to sack, and Mayfield ended up in the conversation as a “sleeper” name.
“I would say a sleeper one, too, Baker Mayfield,” Crosby said. “He pissed me off, bro.
I had like two of them I should have had on him. He low key ducked under and got out of there.
I was livid, bro. Baker is tough.
I like Baker.”
Crosby was speaking on a stream with influencer Neon and pointed back to a game the Raiders and Buccaneers played at Raymond James Stadium two seasons ago. Tampa Bay won that one 28-13, but it wasn’t a clean afternoon for Mayfield by any stretch.
He finished 18 of 29 for 295 yards and three touchdowns, while also throwing two interceptions and losing a fumble. The Bucs were sacked four times, though Crosby himself did not get one.
That’s the part of Mayfield’s game that keeps drawing attention: he doesn’t have to be the fastest quarterback in a straight line to be hard to bring down. He slips away with quick movement, changes angles fast, and makes defenders miss when the pocket starts to cave in. His size helps in that same way, making him tougher to spot and corral once things get messy.
The running game has stayed a real part of his value, too, and it showed up repeatedly in the 2025 season. Netflix’s Quarterback, which also featured Jayden Daniels, Joe Flacco and Cam Ward, highlighted several of those moments early and often.
In Week 2 at the Texans, Mayfield ripped off a 15-yard scramble on 4th and 10 with under two minutes left while the Bucs trailed by five. The series showed C.J.
Gardner-Johnson’s hit on Mayfield’s knee and the trash talk that followed as Mayfield hobbled back to the huddle before leading the comeback win.
The next week brought another big run, this time a 33-yard scramble while dealing with that knee injury. That play put Tampa Bay in position for a field goal that would have made it a nine-point lead over the Jets, but the kick was blocked and returned for a touchdown, flipping the game and giving New York a one-point edge. Mayfield still answered by guiding the Bucs down the field for another win.
Then came the Week 6 scramble against the 49ers, a 15-yard burst on 3rd and 14 that kept the drive alive after he looked finished. Plays like that are why Crosby’s comment landed the way it did. Mayfield’s knack for escaping trouble is no longer a one-off; it’s part of the package.
Last season, Mayfield had 26 first downs on scrambles, second-most in the league. Jacob Gibbs noted that he also had the highest first down conversion rate when running at 60.5%. From 2023 to 2025, Pro Football Focus credited Mayfield with the highest amount of yards after contact at 5.9.
For a quarterback who has been overlooked before, that kind of respect from a premier pass rusher says plenty. And if the 2026 season follows the same script, Tampa Bay should expect more of the same: more escapes, more scramble-drill chaos, and more plays that leave defenders shaking their heads.
In Other News...
Buccaneers Seem Closer Than Ever To Bringing Back A Fan Favorite
The Buccaneers pewter color rush look has been out of sight since 2023, but signs are pointing toward a return in 2026. The clearest clue has come from the team store, where pewter jerseys for Baker Mayfield, Bucky Irving and Emeka Egbuka are now easy to find after being harder to track down a year ago, a small but telling shift for a uniform that still has plenty of fans in Tampa Bay.
The team has not officially released its 2026 uniform schedule yet, so there is still some guesswork involved, but the timing feels notable. If the pewter set does come back, it could show up in preseason or as a regular-season road alternate, giving the Buccaneers another chance to lean into one of their more distinctive looks without having to wait much longer. [Read more 🡒]
Zac Robinson Stat Suggests The Bucs Offense Could Look Very Different
The Buccaneers offense may be headed for a noticeable shift after the team moved on from offensive coordinator Josh Grizzard and turned to Zac Robinson to run the unit in 2026. Robinson arrives from Atlanta with a reputation for leaning into the pass, especially in situations where many play callers might choose to play it safe and stay on schedule.
One of the clearest signs of that approach came on second-and-10 after a first-down incompletion, where Robinson was among the leagues most aggressive play callers last season. Tampa Bay is betting that style can translate well in a new setting, but how much of that philosophy carries over with Baker Mayfield and the rest of the offense is still something to watch. [Read more 🡒]
Bucs Enter 2026 With One Huge Question Hanging Over Everything
After a disappointing 2025 season, Tampa Bay heads into 2026 with the kind of uncertainty that tends to linger over a roster even when the offseason brings fresh faces. The Buccaneers still have enough talent to believe they can stay in the mix, but the bigger picture is harder to ignore: this is a team trying to prove last year was a detour, not the start of a slide.
Todd Bowles enters the year with pressure building, and the defense remains the most obvious place where the Bucs need answers after another uneven showing. If the group cant take a clear step forward and the wins dont follow, the conversation around the franchise could shift quickly from contention to what comes next, including whether Tampa Bay is forced to rethink its direction again in 2027. [Read more 🡒]
