Zac Robinson May Fix One Bucs Problem Fans Are Tired Of

Zac Robinson's fresh approach to Tampa Bay's offense defies expectations by strategically embracing a high-success NFL trend.

The Buccaneers are banking on Zac Robinson to steady an offense that’s now on its fifth coordinator in as many years, and one of his tendencies lines up with a growing NFL trend in a way Tampa Bay should like.

Robinson, who spent the past two seasons running the Atlanta Falcons’ offense, takes over after the firing of Josh Grizzard at the end of the 2025 season. Tampa Bay had hired Grizzard internally, but the move didn’t produce the results the team wanted. Now the Bucs are turning to Robinson, a Sean McVay disciple whose system should feel familiar in Tampa Bay after the team began leaning into a Rams-style approach under Dave Canales in 2023.

The bigger question is whether Robinson’s playcalling can hold up in a league that keeps exposing certain habits. Former Super Bowl-winning NFL data analyst Ryan Paganetti recently highlighted one of the NFL’s most common mistakes: teams that run the ball on second-and-10 after an incompletion on first down.

Paganetti’s numbers make the case plainly. Passing in that spot, he noted, leads to a 16.6-point jump in success rate, a +0.23 EPA/play boost and a 6.5 percentage point increase in the success rate of the full series.

That’s where Robinson gives Tampa Bay a reason for optimism. During his time in Atlanta, he threw the ball 82.9% of the time in those situations, the highest rate of any offensive coordinator.

The NFL’s most common overcorrection:Running on 2nd and 10 after a 1st down incompletion.Since 2022, passes in this spot have crushed runs:+16.6 percentage points in success rate+0.23 EPA/play+6.5 percentage points in eventual series success rateHere are the 2026 play… pic.twitter.com/d1YzTygEjH

That doesn’t make Robinson a pass-first coordinator overall. Far from it.

SumerSports data shows he ran the ball 45.5% of the time across his two seasons with the Falcons, and he leaned on the ground game heavily in key spots: 54.9% of the time in the red zone, 58.5% on first down and 79.3% on the goal line. Even with eight or more yards to go, he still called runs 43.8% of the time.

Still, the second-and-10 tendency stands out, especially because Robinson also ranks in the top five alongside his mentor, Sean McVay, whose Rams came in at No. 4 on the list.

For Todd Bowles and the Buccaneers, that’s one box checked as they search for an offensive coordinator who can stay aligned with the league’s better trends. Robinson also brings other wrinkles, including his heavy use of the pistol formation in Atlanta.

Tampa Bay will keep installing Robinson’s offense during training camp, which begins July 28, with hopes of getting far better results than the unit produced under Grizzard in 2025.

In Other News...

Rachaad White Is Getting The Chance Bucs Fans Knew He Wanted

Rachaad White spent four seasons in Tampa Bay carving out a reputation as one of the leagues more dependable pass-catching backs, the kind of player who could stay on the field when the game tightened up. His production with the Buccaneers gave him a clear NFL resume, and it also made his next opportunity easy to understand: a chance to show he can do more than just fill a niche role.

In Washington, White has already turned heads during OTAs and minicamp, putting himself in the mix for meaningful work in a crowded backfield. The Commanders have several runners competing for touches, but Whites third-down value and receiving ability give him a path to stand out, and the next step is whether that early momentum carries into a larger role when the games start to count. [Read more 🡒]

Mac Jones Had A Funny Take On Tom Bradys Bucs Return

Mac Jones still remembers the buzz around Oct. 3, 2021, when the Patriots hosted the Buccaneers at Gillette Stadium in Tom Bradys first game back in New England. The setting had all the ingredients for a marquee NFL night, with the crowd, the cameras and the nonstop buildup around Brady facing Bill Belichick again. Jones was right in the middle of it as New Englands quarterback, and he said the atmosphere felt electric from the start.

The game itself lived up to the hype, with Tampa Bay escaping with a 19-17 win and Jones turning in one of the sharper outings of his early career, going 31 of 40 for 275 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. Even with all the attention on Bradys return, the matchup also gave Jones a front-row seat to what it looks like when a franchise icon comes back under the brightest possible spotlight, and his take on the moment adds a little humor to a night that was already packed with drama. [Read more 🡒]