Bruce Arians doesn’t hand out offensive praise lightly, so when the former Buccaneers head coach says new coordinator Zac Robinson has a “great, great future,” that carries real weight.
Arians, who spent years coaching elite quarterbacks like Peyton Manning, Andrew Luck, Ben Roethlisberger, Carson Palmer and Tom Brady, has seen just about every kind of offensive mind there is. He also knows what it takes to run one at a high level, owning an 80-48-1 regular-season record with the Cardinals and Buccaneers and earning two NFL Coach of the Year awards along the way. So when he talked about Tampa Bay’s decision to bring in Robinson after his two seasons as Atlanta’s offensive coordinator, he zeroed in on the value of experience.
“I don’t think there is any doubt he’s going to help a lot,” Arians said. “When you have at least three years of experience at the job, it’s so much easier.
He knows what he wants to do. He’s failed.
He knows how to correct it. He’s got the answers to the test.
That gameplan he put on Thursday night against us last year was outstanding. To me, that’s when I would have gone straight to him, too [laughs].
I didn’t get asked about it, but I thought it was a great hire for us. I think Zac’s got a great, great future.”
Arians also pointed to the ground game as a key part of what Robinson can unlock in Tampa Bay. If the Buccaneers can get the rushing attack back to the 2024 level - when it finished in the top 5 in the NFL - it would give the offense more balance and open up the play-action passing game even more.
That’s where Kenneth Gainwell comes in, in Arians’ view. The new back had more than 1,000 yards from scrimmage in his only season with the Steelers last year, rushing for 537 yards and five touchdowns while adding 73 catches for 486 yards and three more scores.
“I thought he was the best offensive acquisition of the offseason,” Arians said. “I’ve always had a great admiration for him.
We tried to draft him a couple of years back when he came out. The ability to pass block - he’s not the biggest guy in the world but he can pass block, so he doesn’t have to come out of the ballgame…
“Kenny, he brings explosiveness to the offense. So, if Bucky does go down … I was a big Rachaad White fan, don’t get me wrong, I drafted him.
I think we got a great replacement for him. Great in the passing game, great in the running game.
Adds that spark, so I thought it was a huge acquisition. Getting back to a duo - and then Sean [Tucker].
Sean, he’ll blossom in this offense.”
Put together, Arians sees a lot to like in Tampa Bay’s offensive setup for 2026, from Robinson’s play-calling background to the potential boost from Gainwell and the rest of the backfield.
In Other News...
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There is a broader trade-market element to all of this, too, because the Lightning are weighing needs in the same kind of price-sensitive environment that has forced other teams to walk away from talks. BriseBois also pointed to the current defense group as the club sorts through its options, which leaves Tampa Bay balancing immediate roster needs against the cost of making a move before the market moves on without them. [Read more 🡒]
Lightning Finally Landed The Blue-Line Addition Fans Were Waiting For
The Lightning finally got their blue-line addition, landing John Carlson on a two-year deal after spending the day waiting on one of the markets most accomplished defensemen. For a team looking to strengthen the back end, Carlson brings a long track record of staying relevant at the NHL level, with more than 1,100 games and a rsum that includes a Stanley Cup and multiple league honors.
What makes the fit intriguing is the way the move came together, with Tampa Bay able to step in after Carlsons path took him from Washington to Anaheim before arriving in Florida. He was still productive in the stretch after that trade, and now the bigger question is how quickly the Lightning can fold a veteran of his caliber into their lineup and whether this is the final major piece they wanted on the blue line. [Read more 🡒]
