RSS Bucs Team Notes

Poll: Are the Buccaneers trending up this week?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Buccaneers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Heading into Week 16, we want to know how you’re feeling after watching the team so far this year. Every week of the season we will ask fans if they are confident the team is headed in the right direction and more of the most pressing questions facing the coming game. Let us know what you think!

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...poll-are-the-buccaneers-trending-up-this-week
 
Buccaneers at Panthers: Inactives for Week 16

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The 7-7 Tampa Bay Buccaneers are in Charlotte this week to take on the 7-7 Carolina Panthers. The Bucs are coming off a bad loss against the Atlanta Falcons at home last week on Thursday Night Football, and will hope to get back on the winning side against a divisional opponent where the lead for the NFC South division is at stake with just a few weeks to play.

The Bucs will be at their healthiest they have been all season long. They saw the return of wide receiver Mike Evans and Jalen McMillan last week.

This week, the inactives list is headlined by wide receiver Sterling Shepard and tight end Devin Culp offensively.

Defensively, the Buccaneers will be without safety Rashad Wisdom and linebacker Anthony Walker.

For the Panthers, they will be without offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonu.

The full list of inactives for both the Buccaneers and the Panthers are posted below.

Inactives for #TBvsCAR ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/Rp5Gu75tVB

— Tampa Bay Buccaneers (@Buccaneers) December 21, 2025
Inactives: No Ikem Ekwonu for Buccaneers gamehttps://t.co/HegRh8LJwW

— Carolina Panthers (@Panthers) December 21, 2025

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...505/buccaneers-panthers-inactives-nfl-week-16
 
Buccaneers Week 16 Top Performers at Carolina Panthers

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I’m tired, man. I’m sure most of you all are, too.

How many more positives can be dug out of the pile of manure that’s now firmly ensconced the Buccaneers’ 2025 season? The truthful answer is, “very very few.”

For the third straight week, the Bucs faced a division rival hoping to get right and capitalize on the commanding 6-2 start they sprinted out to, and for the third straight week they failed in nail-biting fashion as they lost 23-20 to the Carolina Panthers and dropped below .500 for the first time all year. Baker Mayfield wasn’t good enough again, Todd Bowles forced a drastic change in approach and it backfired spectacularly, and the roster as a whole seems to be losing any semblance of vigor.

The vibes are just bad.

So we’re going to use the word “top” loosely here. Who would’ve thought the best Christmas present Bucs fans would be getting this year is not having to watch this franchise play on a holiday.

Offensive Top Performer: WR Mike Evans​


In the few instances where the Bucs actually decided to pass Sunday, Evans continued to look the part of WR1.

The stats were nothing special — hard to be when your QB attempts 15 passes total entering the 4th quarter — yet Evans still scored on his patented goal-line fade for Tampa’s opening TD and made some big grabs later on for a line of 5-31-1. He and Mayfield suffered from a miscommunication on the final play that led to the game-sealing interception, but it’s hard to blame Evans for breaking off his route when it was very reasonable for him to assume Mayfield would scramble.

Baker bobbles the snap and still throws a TD to Mike Evans!

TBvsCAR on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/XTldQ8i7ZE

— NFL (@NFL) December 21, 2025

Overall, Evans looks locked in and impactful still. Hopefully he’ll continue for one more year to try and end his illustrious career on a better note.

Not much else to say here.

The running game numbers look fine (169 total yards on 33 carries), but the extremely passive approach reeked of Todd Bowles pulling rank on first-year offensive coordinator Josh Grizzard in hopes of controlling time of possession and limiting Carolina opportunities. The team easily set a season-low in neutral pass rate while running the ball a staggering number of times on first down. To do this when the team finally has all of its premier weapons active at the same time in Evans, Chris Godwin, Emeka Egbuka, and Jalen McMillan is nothing short of absurd.

It was not only conservative but cowardly — reflections of an older Bowles approach that smattered the play-calling tenures of Byron Leftwich and (early on) Dave Canales. It was the mandate of man who’s out of answers and out of fight; it would be a complete shock to see him stay as head coach even if they somehow win their final two games.

Defensive Top Performer: CB Jacob Parrish​


In a completely broken defense full of underperforming veterans, it’d behoove us all to note this unit is not devoid of young talent.

Most prominently, games like Sunday are a good reminder of how good Jacob Parrish already is and how high his ceiling is. The 21-year-old prevented a touchdown early in the game with excellent coverage on Tetairoa McMillan, and he looked consistently up to the task splitting reps in the slot and outside. He finished with 5 total tackles and two passes defensed.

There’s been lumps throughout the season, as is common with most rookie corners, but there’s been a lot more good than bad and it’s exciting.

Benjamin Morrison, who collected 7 tackles, was a little more up and down but generally looked up to the task most of the day. He certainly showed the second-round flashes you want to see, and he’s hopefully on the upside of struggles that included several injuries and confidence issues. No reason to feel too pessimistic about him right now, especially with a new coaching staff likely coming in that might better harness his talent.

Special Teams Top Performer: K Chase McLaughlin​


Chase McLaughlin has made 16 straight field goals and extended his NFL-best 50+ field goal streak to boot. His 11 consecutive makes from 50+ yards this season is a new single-season NFL record.

He’s been the best kicker in football, and it would be a crime to see him miss out on All-Pro or Pro Bowl honors.

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...s-week-16-top-performers-at-carolina-panthers
 
NFL Week 17 Opening Odds: Buccaneers at Dolphins

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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have a 7-8 record after coming off a loss against the Carolina Panthers in Charlotte, giving the Carolina sole possession of the NFC South lead at 8-7. Many are seeing the Buccaneers still coming out as division champions by year’s end. However, the way their play has been and how they have even sounded when speaking to the media following games in recent weeks, this sounds more like a team that has absolutely no answers for their play on the field. But for some reason, there is some kind of faith still left in the team. We’ll see if that faith translates to giving the Bucs an advantage down south in Miami.

How do the oddsmakers feel about this upcoming matchup for Tampa Bay? Per FanDuel, Tampa Bay is a 4.5-point favorite for Week 17 of the 2025 regular season.

Point spread: Bucs -4.5
Point total: 46.5
Moneyline: Bucs -240, Dolphins +198

The Dolphins dropped to 6-9 on the season following their 45-21 loss to the Cincinnati Bengals Sunday. Tampa Bay will do everything they can to ensure they do not fall in the division standings and keep pace with Carolina until the final week of the season.

Next week’s game between the Bucs and Dolphins is scheduled for Sunday with kickoff set for 1:00 PM ET.

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Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...ng-odds-buccaneers-dolphins-carolina-panthers
 
Buccaneers playoff picture: What Week 16 vs. Panthers means for NFC standings

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It’s already been a big week for the NFC playoff standings, and the Buccaneers haven’t even taken the field.

On Thursday night, we were treated to an incredible NFC West showdown with the Seahawks edging past the Rams to take over the top spot in the division and the top seed in the NFC — for now, at least. The Eagles beat the Commanders on Saturday, clinching the NFC East and crushing the rival Dallas Cowboys’ postseason hopes, eliminating them from contention. And in Saturday’s final game, an NFC North clash between the Bears and Packers, the Bears came out on top, sliding up to the No. 2 spot in the NFC before Sunday’s games kick off.

The Panthers matchup was crucial for Tampa Bay, and the loss — especially how it ended, with a Baker Mayfield interception — definitely hurts. The Buccaneers will take on the Dolphins in Miami in Week 17, and they’ll wrap the season with a rematch against the Panthers in Tampa Bay.

The Panthers will face the Seattle Seahawks, fresh off of a Thursday night win over the Rams that moved them up to the top spot in the NFC West and the overall NFC playoff picture, in Charlotte in Week 17. The Seahawks — on paper, at least — are a tougher matchup than the 6-9 Dolphins. It is possible for the Bucs to win out and take the division, but it very well may come down to that Week 18 rematch with Carolina.

Here’s where the Bucs stand after the late afternoon Sunday slate of games.

NFC South standings​

  1. Carolina Panthers 8-7
  2. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 7-8
  3. Atlanta Falcons 5-9
  4. New Orleans Saints 4-10

Current NFC playoff picture​

  1. Seattle Seahawks 12-3 (clinched playoff spot)
  2. Chicago Bears 11-4 (clinched playoff spot)
  3. Philadelphia Eagles 10-5 (clinched NFC East)
  4. Carolina Panthers 8-7
  5. Los Angeles Rams 11-4 (clinched playoff spot)
  6. San Francisco 49ers 10-4 (clinched playoff spot)
  7. Green Bay Packers 9-5-1
  8. Detroit Lions 8-7
  9. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 7-8

NFC teams eliminated from playoff contention​

  • Dallas Cowboys
  • Minnesota Vikings
  • Atlanta Falcons
  • Arizona Cardinals
  • New Orleans Saints
  • Washington Commanders
  • New York Giants

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...-south-standings-wild-card-tiebreaker-seeding
 
Buccaneers vs. Panthers Week 16 final score, results, stats and analysis

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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers now stand at 7-8 after a 23-20 loss vs. the Panthers, a matchup that was crucially important to the Buccaneers’ playoff hopes and the NFC Standings. The loss drops the Buccaneers to No. 2 in the NFC South and will further shrink Tampa Bay’s postseason chances.

First quarter:

Tampa Bay won the toss and deferred, and they were able to hold the Panthers to a field on the first drive of the game. The Bucs answered by chipping away at yards and eating clock on a 10-play, 6:39 drive and ended with a 1-yard touchdown from Baker Mayfield to Mike Evans.

The Panthers’ next possession barely went anywhere. After converting one first down thanks to a Chuba Hubbard 10-yard run, Carolina’s next three downs ended in a SirVocea Dennis sack of Bryce Young for a loss of 8 yards, an incomplete pass to Rico Dowdle on second and 18, and a 3-yard pass to Ja’Tavion Sanders obviously did not get the job done on third and 18. After a false start by Carolina backing them up 5 yards, they pinned the Bucs at Tampa Bay’s own 10-yard line.

Second quarter:

The next Bucs possession looked like it was going to culminate in a field goal on fourth and 4 on the Panthers’ 30 with 12:30 left to play in the half. The attempt was good, but a penalty on the Panthers gave Tampa Bay a fresh set of downs. Unfortunately, the Bucs couldn’t capitalize with a touchdown, but did extend their lead to 10-3 with 8:09 left in the second quarter.

Panthers called for a personal foul here on #94 on this field goal attempt. Bucs get an automatic 1st down and send the offense back out pic.twitter.com/MwnYJ0OxIm

— Rate the Refs (@Rate_the_Refs) December 21, 2025

The Panthers and Bucs traded three-and-outs, and after a series resulting in a loss of 12 yards, Trevor Etienne returned Riley Dixon’s punt to the Bucs’ 39-yard line. A Tetairoa McMillan 17-yard catch was the only positive yardage the Panthers needed on that possession to get into position to add another 3 to the board with a 41-yard field goal from Ryan Fitzgerald. The Bucs still led, 10-6.

The Buccaneers went three-and-out again, losing 2 yards in the process, and a 45-yard Dixon punt and Trevor Etienne 13-yard return gave the ball back to Carolina on their own 37-yard line with just over a minute left to play. Carolina moved the ball pretty efficiently, using all three of their timeouts en route to an 8-play, 59-second drive capped off by a 22-yard touchdown pass to McMillan, giving the Panthers a 13-10 lead.

Baker Mayfield took a knee on the final play of the half, sending the Bucs into the locker room trailing the Panthers by 3.

Third quarter:

The Bucs received the ball to start to half. Facing third and 7 on the Bucs’ 37-yard line, Baker Mayfield scrambled for 23 yards to extend the drive. In the red zone, on first down from the Panthers’ 1, the Bucs ran the same play Mike Evans scored on in the first half, but it was incomplete. Evans was targeted again on second and 1, short left, but a DPI penalty on Jaycee Horn gave the Bucs an automatic first down. Sean Tucker casually strolled into the end zone, giving the Bucs a 17-13 lead with 6:41 left to play in the third quarter.

The Panthers answered with an 11-play, 65-yard touchdown drive culminating in a scrambling touchdown pass from Young to Ja’Tavion Sanders, giving the Panthers a 20-17 lead with seconds remaining in the third quarter.

Fourth quarter

Baker Mayfield and company took over at the Carolina 43-yard line after an outstanding return from Kameron Johnson. On third and 4 on the Carolina 23-yard line, the Panthers sent a weakside blitz and gave Mayfield almost zero time to offload the ball. Jaycee Horn took him down, and the Bucs tied it up 20-20 with a field goal with 11:24 left to play.

The Panthers answered with a six-play, 9-yard drive that chewed up about three and a half minutes of clock and got Carolina absolutely nowhere, so they punted it back to the Bucs, who took over at their own 13-yard line. Baker Mayfield launched a BEAUTIFUL bomb to Emeka Egbuka, advancing the offense to a first and 10 from the Panthers’ 49-yard line. Unfortunately, the drive fizzled after that. Bucky Irving lost two yards on first down, Mayfield’s second-down pass to Evans went incomplete, Tampa Bay was hit with a delay-of-game penalty on third down, and Mayfield’s third and 18 target to Chris Godwin went incomplete. The Bucs punted it back to the Panthers with 4:46 remaining.

A seven-play drive including a 34-yard Young pass to Jalen Coker had the Panthers facing a first and 10 from the Buccaneers’ 33-yard line. The Bucs took their first timeout after the Panthers gained zero yards on first down and 3 yards on second down with 2:28 to play. Pressure from the Bucs on third and 7 forced an incomplete pass from Young intended for Sanders, and the Panthers snuck back into a 23-20 lead on a 48-yard field goal from Fitzgerald. The Bucs offense would get the ball back with 2:20 left to play, plus the 2-minute warning.

The Bucs would start from their own 10-yard line thanks to an unnecessary roughness penalty on rookie linebacker John Bullock on the return. Mayfield hit Evans on a 6-yard throw on first down, taking us to the 2-minute warning. Mayfield wasn’t messing around on the next play, breaking loose and scrambling for the first down plus 22 more yards. A pass bounced right off Jalen McMillan’s hands and could easily have been picked, but thankfully dropped incomplete. On third and 4 with 1:21 remaining, Mayfield converted the first down with a 9-yard pass to tight end Cade Otton. A 6-yard completion to Mike Evans took the clock down to :49 seconds remaining, and the Bucs took their second time out.

And then disaster struck, starting with a false start by Emeka Egbuka, pushing the Buccaneers back to a second and 9 from the Panthers’ 42. And on the next play, Baker Mayfield snatched defeat from the jaws of victory, throwing a game-sealing interception to rookie Lathan Ransom with 42 seconds left to play.

It’s a devastating blow to the Buccaneers and their postseason hopes. The Bucs will face the Panthers again in Week 18.

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...tandings-playoffs-seeding-statistics-analysis
 
Wirfs, Winfield named to 2026 Pro Bowl

The National Football League today announced that Tampa Bay Buccaneers tackle Tristan Wirfs and safety Antoine Winfield Jr. were named to the 2026 Pro Bowl Games. The nod marks the second career Pro Bowl selection for Winfield Jr. (2021), while Wirfs has now earned five consecutive trips (2021-25) in just six NFL seasons. Both players were members of General Manager Jason Licht’s 2020 draft class.

Wirfs, who was selected as a starter, earned his fifth Pro Bowl selection – the third-most by an offensive player in franchise history, trailing only Mike Alstott and Mike Evans (six each). Wirfs and Alstott are Tampa Bay’s lone offensive players to have earned five-or-more consecutive trips to the Pro Bowl, and Wirfs became the first Buccaneers player on either side of the ball to accomplish this feat since Gerald McCoy made six consecutive Pro Bowls from 2012-17.

Wrapping up his sixth NFL season, Wirfs has garnered five Pro Bowl selections, two Associated Press first-team All-Pro selections (2021, 2024), a second-team All-Pro selection (2022) and was a member of the PFWA All-Rookie Team (2020), in addition to starting on Tampa Bay’s Super Bowl LV Championship team in his rookie season.

In 2025, Wirfs has totaled 710 offensive snaps through Week 16, and per Pro Football Focus (PFF) metrics, has yielded just four quarterback hits and two sacks. PFF has credited Wirfs with a 92.0 offensive grade this season – the second-highest among any qualified offensive lineman. Additionally, his 91.0 run-blocking grade ranks sixth and his 84.6 pass-blocking grade ranks seventh across the NFL, per PFF. Wirfs and New York Giants tackle Andrew Thomas are the only offensive linemen to have earned an 84.0+ grade in all three categories this season through Week 16.

Since Wirfs was drafted in 2020, the Buccaneers rank second in the NFL in fewest sacks allowed per pass attempt (4.6%), in addition to allowing the third-fewest total sacks (180) during that span.

Winfield Jr., who is in his sixth NFL season, has amassed 83 tackles (four for loss), seven passes defensed, two interceptions, a forced fumble, a fumble recovery, 1.0 sack and four quarterback hits over 15 games played this season. He is the only defensive back, and 1-of-3 players overall, this season with 75+ tackles, multiple interceptions, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery through Week 16.

Among safeties with 35+ defensive targets this season per the NFL’s Next Gen Stats, Winfield Jr. ranks second in lowest opponent passer rating when targeted (75.7) and seventh in hawk rate (17.9%), which measures thepercentage of targets where the nearest defender recorded either an interception or pass defensed.

Since entering the league as a second-round selection in the 2020 NFL Draft, Winfield Jr. has collected a first-team All-Pro selection (2023) and was a member of the 2020 PFWA All-Rookie Team, in addition to his two Pro Bowl honors and starting on the Buccaneers’ Super Bowl LV championship team.

Buccaneers alternates for the 2026 Pro Bowl games include cornerback Jamel Dean and quarterback Baker Mayfield.

For the first time, the 2026 Pro Bowl Games will move to Super Bowl LX Week, in the San Francisco Bay Area. The event brings the league’s top players together for an AFC vs. NFC flag football showdown, coached by Pro Football Hall of Famers Jerry Rice (NFC) and Steve Young (AFC), which will preview the elite athleticism and competition of the sport ahead of its LA28 Olympics debut.

The televised event will air live from San Francisco’s Moscone Center South Building on Tuesday, Feb. 3, which will be transformed into a dynamic flag football arena. Coverage of the Pro Bowl Games powered by Verizon will begin on ESPN starting at 6:30 p.m. ET with the flag game at 8 p.m. ET. The game will air on ESPN, Disney XD and ESPN Deportes.

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/general/66551/wirfs-winfield-named-to-2026-pro-bowl
 
Buccaneers at Panthers: 2025 NFL Week 16 Game Discussion

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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are in Charlotte this week as they are set to play the 7-7 Carolina Panthers for an NFC South clash.

The Bucs will see be without veteran receiver Sterling Shepard this week. You can see the rest of the inactives here.

Kickoff is set for 1:00 PM EST. Enjoy each other’s company in the comments section!

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Staff game picks and score predictions​


Gil Arcia (11-3): Panthers 24, Bucs 20
Mike Kiwak (10-4): Bucs 24, Panthers 20
Evan Wanish (11-3): Bucs 23, Panthers 21
Will Walsh (8-6): Bucs 22, Panthers 18

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...-at-panthers-2025-nfl-week-16-game-discussion
 
Buccaneers at Panthers: Predictions and picks for Week 16

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As the Buccaneers get set to take on the Panthers in Carolina following their disappointing Thursday night loss to the Atlanta Falcons last week, we here at Bucs Nation will dive into some picks and predictions for Tampa Bay’s big Week 16 matchup against an NFC South opponent.

Check it all out below.


Predictions​


Offense

Tampa Bay appeared to have their offense clicking a bit more consistently than they have in recent weeks, perhaps months. But it fell apart in the end when a Baker Mayfield interception shifted the momentum Atlanta’s way. This week, they will rely heavily on the run game meaning that Bucky Irving, Rachaad White, and Sean Tucker will total 150 yards on the ground and two touchdowns.

Defense

The Bucs just can’t do anything right defensively. They apply pressure early and often but cant seem to make stops when it matters most. Will that be the case this week? Who knows. But they will at least record three sacks and an interception off Carolina’s quarterback Bryce Young.


Week 16 Staff Picks​


Gil Arcia (11-3): Panthers 24, Bucs 20
Mike Kiwak (10-4): Bucs 24, Panthers 20
Evan Wanish (11-3): Bucs 23, Panthers 21
Will Walsh (8-6): Bucs 22, Panthers 18

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...-picks-nfl-week-16-baker-mayfield-bryce-young
 
Buccaneers playoff picture: Updated NFC standings after Week 17 vs. Dolphins

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There’s still just one NFC playoff spot up for grabs, and for the Buccaneers and NFC South, it’ll come down to Week 18 vs. the Panthers.

Not one, not two, but THREE of the four NFC West team have clinched playoff spots, and all of the other spots except for the NFC South winner are already filled. The Buccaneers are lucky that the Panthers also dropped this week’s game against the Seahawks — Carolina still holds a one-game lead in the division and stays penciled into that top spot in the NFC South, and whoever manages to walk away with a win in next week’s Panthers-Bucs matchup will also punch their ticket to the postseason.

Here’s the latest after Sunday’s early slate of games.

Updated NFC South playoff picture​

  1. Carolina Panthers 8-8
  2. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 7-9
  3. Atlanta Falcons 6-9
  4. New Orleans Saints 6-10

Updated NFC playoff picture​


1. Seattle Seahawks 13-3 (clinched playoff berth)
2. Chicago Bears 11-4 (clinched NFC North)
3. Philadelphia Eagles 10-5 (clinched NFC East)
4. Carolina Panthers 8-8
5. San Francisco 49ers 11-4 (clinched playoff berth)
6. Los Angles Rams 11-4 (clinched playoff berth)
7. Green Bay Packers 9-6-1 (clinched Wild Card spot)
11. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 7-9

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...s-nfc-standings-wild-card-seeding-tiebreakers
 
Week 17 Game Recap: Buccaneers could not look worse in 20-17 loss to Dolphins

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First Quarter:​


On Sunday, the Buccaneers were once again in a familiar position for the 2025 season— Win against an “inferior” team to keep your playoff hopes alive. After an opening drive that concluded in a Miami punt, the Buccaneers’ offense cruised down the field sprinkle in doses of Bucky Irving, Sean Tucker, Jalen McMillan, and then ultimately Chris Godwin snagged a contested catch in the end zone for the game’s first touchdown. 7-0, Buccaneers.

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Tampa Bay giveth and then they taketh away. 7-0 transformed into 7-7 in less than a blink as Quinn Ewers found Theo Wease Jr. for a wide open deep touchdown. Todd Bowles’ defense in 2025 has been poor, Sunday’s opening quarter made sure to keep that trend alive and well.

Second Quarter:​


The Buccaneers began the second quarter in much more familiar fashion for the 2025 season. The Bucky Irving-centric offense failing to net any success and the team needing to punt. Miami’s offense took the field backed up, but no worry they would just be a few handoffs and missed tackles away from midfield. Midfield was only a wide open running lane away from the a first and goal. On the doorstep of another touchdown, Miami got a bit cute in their play calling— attempting the three play sequence of a shovel pass, tight end screen, and then a second consecutive tight end screen. Tampa’s defense engineered a goal line standing, holding the Dolphins to three. 10-7, Miami.

One Baker Mayfield toss-up interception later, fans got to see more Miami offense and more missed tackles. Quinn Ewers’ began making his claim to join the elite pantheon of Tyler Shough, Kirk Cousins, and Bryce Young as chefs who invited Todd Bowles into their kitchen. Ewers ripped his second touchdown pass of the day, over the middle of the field, like a dagger into Todd Bowles’ job security. 17-7, ‘72 Dolphins.

Tampa Bay had the half-hearted response of an attempted but ultimately missed field goal attempt, leaving the score at 17-7 during the intermission.

Third Quarter:​

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The intermission ended but poor Floridian football did not. Tampa Bay’s first drive out of break was a punt. Miami’s first drive of the second half— A punt. Limping back on the field to try and find some semblance of success. Mayfield and the Buccaneers moved, sluggishly, down the field. Of course, while the team did make it to the redzone they stalled upon arrival. A short field goal that was set up by perhaps the ugliest fumbled pass attempt and subsequent recovery the NFL has seen this season.

Chase McLaughlin, righting his wrong from the end of the first half, was good on his kick. 17-10, Dolphins.

Fourth Quarter:​


Todd Bowles’ illustrious Tampa Bay Buccaneers were immediately down by another 10 points the moment the fourth quarter got underway. The Dolphins’ offense, continuing to massage Todd Bowles into an early retirement, put their second field goal of the game through the uprights. 20-10, Dan Marino’s squad.

With the Dolphins backed up inside their own five-yard line, Tampa seized the opportunity by allowing a first down, giving the Dolphins enough room to comfortably punt the ball. Taking back over at the 20 with a few ticks more than eight minutes left on the clock, the Bucs’ offense needed their best drive of the day. They got— an interception. Baker Mayfield’s second pick of the day on a down field pass to Emeka Egbuka had to have Tampa Bay fans’ eyes rolling as late-game interceptions have become a bit of a Baker Mayfield theme down the stretch of the season.

Tampa’s defense needed and got their team a stop on the Dolphins’ next drive. Rest assured though, the Buccaneers would not be pulling out any late heroics because while Baker Mayfield would not go on to throw a third interception, there are multiple ways to turn it over. The Buccaneers’ next drive would be wrapped up by a Baker Mayfield fumble. The game would tighten up, closing out at 20-17, following a garbage time explosion. A three-play touchdown drive featuring all the superstars of yesteryear. 20-17, Dolphins victory.

For more Bucs coverage check us out here:

@Will_Walsh_NFL(X)

@Bucs_Nation(X)

@Will_Walsh_NFL(YouTube)

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...could-not-look-worse-in-20-17-defeat-dolphins
 
NFL Week 18 Opening Odds: Buccaneers vs. Panthers

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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have a 7-9 record after coming off a loss against the Dolphins down in Miami, allowing the Carolina Panthers to remain in sole possession of the NFC South lead at 8-8. Many are seeing the Buccaneers still coming out as division champions by the end of next week’s season finale. However, their play has been mediocre at best and they have even sounded defeated when speaking to the media following games in recent weeks. From Todd Bowles to Baker Mayfield, the organization does not sound lien a winning organization. But for some reason, there is some kind of faith still left in the team. We’ll see if that faith translates to giving the Bucs an advantage at home when the division — as well as the playoffs — are on the line.

How do the oddsmakers feel about this upcoming matchup for Tampa Bay? Per FanDuel, Tampa Bay is a 3-point favorite for Week 18 of the 2025 regular season.

Point spread: Bucs -3
Point total: 44.5
Moneyline: Bucs -146, Panthers +124

Next week’s game between the Bucs and Panthers is scheduled for Saturday with kickoff set for 4:30 PM ET.

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Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...s-todd-bowles-baker-mayfield-gambling-betting
 
Buccaneers at Dolphins: 2025 NFL Week 17 Game Discussion

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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are in Miami this week as they are set to play the 6-8 Dolphins.

The Bucs will see about about getting back to the top of the NFC South without veteran let tackle Tristan Wirfs this week. You can see the rest of the inactives here.

Kickoff is set for 1:00 PM EST. Enjoy each other’s company in the comments section!

Join the conversation!​


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Staff game picks and score predictions​


Gil Arcia (12-3): Bucs 26, Dolphins 23
Mike Kiwak (10-5): Bucs 23, Dolphins 17
Evan Wanish (11-4): Bucs 20, Dolphins 16
Will Walsh (8-7): Bucs 26, Dolphins 12

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...-at-dolphins-2025-nfl-week-17-game-discussion
 
Buccaneers at Dolphins: Inactives for Week 17

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The 7-8 Tampa Bay Buccaneers are in Miami this week to take on the 6-9 Dolphins. The Bucs are coming off a bad loss to the Carolina Panthers last week and will hope to get back on the winning side after giving up the lead for the NFC South division while in Charlotte. But they will have to do it without their guy on the let side of the line.

The Bucs will be without starting left tackle and 2026 Pro Bowler Tristan Wirfs. The veteran tackle injured his toe last week against Carolina and while he was able to finish the game, he did not practice all week. The offense will also be without wide receiver Sterling Shepard.

Defensively, the Buccaneers will be without outside linebacker Anthony Nelson after he injured his knee against the Panthers. Additionally, defensive lineman Calijah Kancey will be inactive one more week after the team announced this week that he had begun his 21-day practice window, making him eligible to be activated at any time during that period.

The full list of inactives for both the Buccaneers and the Dolphins are posted below.

Inactives for Week 1️⃣7️⃣ pic.twitter.com/4noABLJDkA

— Tampa Bay Buccaneers (@Buccaneers) December 28, 2025
Inactives for #TBvsMIA pic.twitter.com/pf321roKoH

— Miami Dolphins (@MiamiDolphins) December 28, 2025

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...ives-for-week-17-tristan-wirfs-calijah-kancey
 
Buccaneers at Dolphins: Predictions and picks for Week 17

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As the Buccaneers get set to take on the Dolphins down in Miami following their disappointing Week 16 loss to the Carolina Panthers last week, we here at Bucs Nation will dive into some picks and predictions for Tampa Bay’s big Week 17 matchup against an interstate opponent.

Check it all out below.


Predictions​


Offense

Something has been going on with the Bucs passing game, and last week in Charlotte they seemed to have not cared to pass the ball match. But this week, they face a Miami team that gives up practically seven yards per play through the air. Look for Baker Mayfield to redeem himself as the Bucs passing game gets back on track as he will average nearly the same per pass play, and total 300 yards through the air.

Defense

Miami is averaging nearly five yards a carry, and we all remember what happened when the Bucs faced a team with a running game that averaged five yards a carry. This week will be different, as the Buccaneers will hold the Miami run game to an average of three yards per carry.


Week 17 Staff Picks​


Gil Arcia (12-3): Bucs 26, Dolphins 23
Mike Kiwak (10-5): Bucs 23, Dolphins 17
Evan Wanish (11-4): Bucs 20, Dolphins 16
Will Walsh (8-7): Bucs 26, Dolphins 12

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...-predictions-picks-nfl-week-17-baker-mayfield
 
Changes need to come for the Buccaneers

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As the holiday season winds down and we look toward the new year, the Buccaneers gave their fans something for Christmas that nobody wants, a big lump of coal. One thing that has become clear are that real changes need to be made to this team over the coming months because what is happening right now should not and cannot be acceptable.

After a 6-2 start, the Bucs have completely plummeted and now sit at 7-9 after their fourth straight loss on Sunday to Miami and now find themselves no longer in control of their own destiny ahead of Saturday’s gigantic contest between Tampa Bay and Carolina. The Bucs could win that game against the Panthers and still lose the division if Atlanta beats New Orleans on Sunday. They have completely lost control of the division they had full control of just weeks ago and they have no one to blame but themselves. The team has said for weeks that they have everything right in front of them and for awhile that was true but four straight losses, including three of those losses being to teams already eliminated from the playoffs when you played them will have you scrambling at the end of the year just like Tampa Bay is.

The Bucs look like a team without a lot of answers for what’s going on right now and it starts with the head coach. Todd Bowles has done an admirable job the last few seasons and stabilized things after the Tom Brady era. He was able to find success and even win a playoff game in a year where everyone figured Tampa Bay would be a rebuilder. Bowles deserves credit for that, but I think the time has come to seriously evaluate whether or not he is the right coach for this football team. Bowles has been with the Buccaneers for seven seasons now, three of them as defensive coordinator and four as head coach. So in year seven of the system, why is it so often that mainstays in this defense like Lavonte David, Antoine Winfield Jr, Vita Vea and Jamel Dean constantly look bewildered as to what’s happening on certain plays. These are veteran players who just don’t seem to have a clue what’s happening on some of the most critical plays of the game. It’s not all on Bowles of course. He can’t go out there and cover the opposing team’s top receiver or successfully tackle the ball carrier, but this is his defense and mistakes like that shouldn’t be happening game after game.

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It may just simply be time for a new voice for this team. Last year when there were calls for Bowles to be replaced by Liam Coen, it was tough to see that after a 10 win season and another division title but no matter what happens in the final game this year, Bowles’ team will finish with a below .500 record for second time in his four years as the team’s head coach. Even if they make the playoffs, there’s little faith here that this team can win a playoff game. As Buccaneers head coach, Bowles’ record is 34-33 in the regular season with a 1-3 record in the playoffs. Is that good enough for the Bucs? It shouldn’t be.

The standard shouldn’t be just get to the playoffs and see what happens every year. That was fine in 2023 and maybe even 2024, but the expectations for this group were higher as they should be. A significant step back should be a red flag when evaluating the future of this team. Yes injuries have hampered them a bit, but since they’ve gotten healthier, specifically on offense, they’ve only gotten worse. The goal in football is to win the Super Bowl. Do the Bucs believe that Todd Bowles is the man that can lead them there? If not, then they need to find someone who they believe can. They did that once before and it paid off pretty well. Jameis Winston was the franchise’s number one overall pick and had some success, but the organization determined that he was not going to be the one to lead them to the Super Bowl and they made a change. It worked out. Obviously that situation isn’t the exact same, but a change may be what this team needs.

It would be an egregious decision to keep this coaching staff in place if the Bucs were to lose on Saturday to Carolina and end the season with a 7-10 record and finish the season on a five-game losing streak. How could you sell that to your fan base? The fans don’t run the team, but they do spend their hard earned money going to the games and spend their Sundays watching this team. How could you sell that to season ticket holders? Not saying the team should be making decisions solely on how the fans feel, but at the end of the day they are the consumer and what they have been watching for the past two months has been anything but entertaining.

Tampa Bay is 1-7 since week 10. That is among the worst records in the entire NFL. The Glazers have fired coaches like Jon Gruden and Raheem Morris for having collapses down the stretch, why should Bowles be an exception? Because he’s won three division titles in one of the worst divisions in football? The contract extension Bowles received before the season should also not matter. Gruden was fired a year after signing an extension and the Glazers have plenty of money to cover it and they have not been scared to do so in the past. Mediocrity should not be accepted by this organization. If it is, then shame on the Glazers. I don’t think Todd Bowles is a bad guy. I think the players like him and enjoy playing for him, but all things must come to an end, and his message just may not be working as well as it once did. Bowles is the Buccaneers captain, and this team is a sinking ship. Unfortunately for Bowles, the captain has to go down with his ship.

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...66599/changes-need-to-come-for-the-buccaneers
 
Week 18 Game Recap: 2025 Buccaneers refuse to go quietly into the night

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First Quarter:​


Tampa Bay began Saturday’s must-win contest with the ball and their offense put their best foot forward. Baker Mayfield stormed down Raymond James Stadium’s rainy field. A drive that began as most 2025 Buccaneer drives do, with a Bucky Irving run up the middle, ended in the end zone with a Cade Otton touchdown reception. 7-0, Bucs.

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Tampa’s defense kept that same energy, coming out stingy on Carolina’s first drive. After a frivolous penalty on the game’s opening snap, Todd Bowles’ crew brought the clamps out. One Carolina punt later and the Buccaneers were back on the attack. The pewter pirates drove quickly into striking distance before a Payne Durham drop in the end zone stalled the team’s progress. 10-0, Bucs on a short Chase McLaughlin kick.

Second Quarter:​


The second quarter began with a Carolina Panther third down and long and a Tet McMillan drop.

Third drive of the day for Tampa Bay’s offense would be a backed up drive where the Bucs would work their way off the goal line but into deeper trouble. A forced third down and long pass over the middle of the field for giftwrapped interception. Nothing can jumpstart momentum for a struggling offense like short field touchdowns and Tampa made sure to give Carolina that. Mayfield’s interception handed the Panthers a wide open touchdown. 10-7, Buccaneers.

The Bucs had a near crisis on the ensuing kick off— a fumble that luckily Tampa managed to get back on top of it. That fumble would be a sign of things to come as the Bucs’ drive would be mired in mediocrity. Tackle by Baker Mayfield on his own running back, a contactless fumble, and just general slop led to Riley Dixon punt.

Monsoon games, like the one Tampa found themselves Saturday, often feature sloppy play, ugliness, and poor execution. On their next drive, Carolina came out firing— Looking like a fighter that had survived his opponent’s early borage and came back swinging with the realization he was facing a puncher without knock-out power. That confidence had Dave Canales calling Bryce Young’s number, with great frequency— Bad service on the other end of that line though. Young was late and inside on a out-breaking route tossing a layup of and interception and evening the turnover battle at one 1-1.

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The Buccaneers, bleeding the remainder of the clock, finished up the half with another Chase McLaughlin. 13-7, Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Third Quarter:​


Carolina opened up the second half with movement but a missed field goal and no points scored. The Buccaneers’ offense could not take advantage of the field position and opted to opt on a fourth down and two, a play that drew quite a negative reaction to those fans who chose to brave the elements to watch their team.

As the third quarter slipped past the six-minute mark, Carolina looked to have converted their first third down of the game. Bryce Young hurled a down field strike to Tet McMillian and the Panthers looked to have flipped field position, snagged momentum and put themselves in the driver’s seat. In an odd and slightly delayed ruling, the refs came back into frame, after appearing the signal first down, saying their was actually offensive pass interference on the play— A push off by McMillian giving him the necessary separation to make the catch. No first down, Carolina punt, Tampa Bay ball.

Fourth Quarter:​


The Buccaneers kicked off the fourth quarter with a kick. From Chase McLaughlin’s foot, to the back of the end zone, through the uprights, and good. 16-7, Buccaneers.

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Tampa’s defense, in the midst of having a very solid game, proceeded to look suspect during Carolina’s next drive. On a pass to Xavier Leggette, Bryce Young gave his team their first third down conversion of the game. Unfortunately for the Panthers, the sequence would soon turn sour as an attempted Flea Flicker turned into a hefty blunder. A fumbled pitch back to Bryce Young, led to a Lavonte David swan song-moment. In what may be his last career regular season game, David swooped into action scooping up the loose ball and giving Tampa Bay a chance for a dagger. For Buccaneers fans, not only did it mean their team was back in possession and control of the game but it also meant an opportunity to see a Tampa Bay legend ‘row the boat’ one more time.

The Bucs’ special teams unit has been a bottom-dwelling group all season and the unit’s lack of reliability showed up again— A blocked field goal. Failing to cash in on Lavonte David’s turnover via their offense and special teams, the Buccaneers’ defense wilted— Dave Canales versus Toss Bowles, touchdown. 16-14, Buccaneers.

One of Tampa’s many struggles this season has been ball control at the end of games to kill and run out the clock. Baker Mayfield and co. did manage to navigate their way past the first down marker once, however, that was not enough to close the game out with the ball in their hands. Able to walk off the field with their heads held high the Buccaneers’ defense stopped Carolina and gave Tampa Bay a chance. Now, fans and players alike will await Sunday’s results between Atlanta and New Orleans to find out their team’s fate.

For more Bucs coverage check us out here:

@Will_Walsh_NFL(X)

@Bucs_Nation(X)

@Will_Walsh_NFL(YouTube)

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...uccaneers-refuse-to-go-quietly-into-the-night
 
Buccaneers Week 18 Top Performers vs. Carolina Panthers

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Well, wins are still wins.

As horrible as the last two months have gone for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, their playoff hopes still glimmer after yet another messy, rain-soaked game in the confines of Raymond James Stadium. Despite the defense almost blowing it, again, the Panthers couldn’t surmount their own mistakes and some questionable officiating as the Bucs won 16-14.

All the same struggles of the last 8-9 games were still apparent in some form — turnovers, unacceptable special teams mistakes, busted coverages / limited pass rush — but a repeat of Tampa’s ball-control heavy game plan from the first matchup won out this time around.

Tampa needs to be New Orleans Saints fans Sunday, as a win from the latter over the Atlanta Falcons would grant the Bucs their 5th straight division title and 6th straight playoff appearance. I’m not sure how you could argue they deserve it, but someone’s got to make the tournament.

Let’s do possibly the final shoutouts of the year and then play the waiting game.

Offensive Top Performer: TE Cade Otton​


It took all season, but Otton finally found the endzone in the team’s most important game. After recording the most targets and catches of any player in the NFL without a touchdown, Otton struck paydirt on the team’s opening drive with an 18-yard grab.

BAKER MAYFIELD TO CADE OTTON FOR THE TIGHT END'S FIRST TD OF THE SEASON 🔥

Bucs up 7-0 early in Tampa 😮‍💨

(via @NFL)

pic.twitter.com/jfO7Nsj3Lz

— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) January 3, 2026

He stayed hot from there, serving as a vital safety valve for Baker Mayfield’s Houdini acts en route to his best stat line of the season: 7 catches for 94 yards and the score, including the game-clinching first down reception at the 2-minute warning. Otton has been stuck doing the dirty work in the trenches for a large chunk of 2025, but he’s proven to be a reliable performer in whatever area the team asks him to contribute.

While it wasn’t perfect, this was also easily Mayfield’s best game in many weeks. He still threw an inexcusable pick, but he largely succeeded in blending decisive strikes in the quick passing games with his trademark swagger and escapability on gotta-have-it downs. He finished 16 of 22 for 203 yards passing, 1 touchdown and 1 interception, as well as 4 carries for 31 yards. If the team squeezes into the playoff picture, it will need this version of him and then some.

Baker Mayfield… ARE YOU KIDDING ME?! 🤯

📺: #CARvsTB on ESPN pic.twitter.com/vibJ3FEb2z

— Tampa Bay Buccaneers (@Buccaneers) January 3, 2026

Defensive Top Performer: LB Lavonte David​


If it’s the last time we see Lavonte David suit up in red and pewter, at least it came in a victory.

The franchise legend made it a potential finale to remember. He not only led the team in tackles (6), but in doing so tied Hall of Famer Derrick Brooks for the most tackles in franchise history (1,714) and sixth-most in NFL history. The national media accolades may have evaded David in a way they never did for Brooks, but it’s not at all outlandish to say David’s impact on the franchise sits close to Brooks’.

The man. #54 Lavonte David 🫡 #WeAreTheKrewe pic.twitter.com/mgq577jG0D

— 95.3 WDAE & AM620 (@953WDAE) January 4, 2026

To add to that sentiment, David also recovered a key fumble late in the game with the Panthers threatening in Tampa territory. The recovery marked his 35th career takeaway and 21st fumble recovery (both most of active players at linebacker). He joined Hall of Famers Ray Lewis and Brian Urlacher as the only players with 40-plus sacks and 35-plus takeaways since at least 1982.

3⃣5⃣ CAREER TAKEAWAYS!

Lavonte David is in elite company, joining Hall of Famers Ray Lewis & Brian Urlacher as the only players since 1982 with 40+ sacks and 35+ takeaways 🤯 pic.twitter.com/coY5GQP6vr

— Tampa Bay Buccaneers (@Buccaneers) January 3, 2026

As one saga draws to a presumptive close, another may just be getting started with rookie corner Jacob Parrish. Parrish has been very good all season, and he closed it out with a key interception (his third takeaway of the season) and 3 tackles. He’s produced despite getting split a significant amount between nickelback and outside corner due to injuries to everyone else. For him to handle so much on his plate and produce is very encouraging for a team that desperately needs some long-term stability at the position.

Special Teams Top Performer: P Riley Dixon​


Special teams mostly sucked again, big surprise.

But ultimately, the unit needed only one big play, and it got exactly that from Riley Dixon. While he’s endured a rollercoaster first season in Tampa, he dropped a beauty of a punt with less than 30 seconds remaining in the contest, having it downed at the 3-yard line to essentially eliminate the possibility of a possible game-winning field goal attempt for Carolina.

With how beleaguered the team’s defense has been, especially in 2-minute situations, that punt couldn’t have come at a more critical moment. Dixon performed well overall, dropping all three of his punts inside the 20.

With any luck, the unavoidable changes that are coming to the unit in 2026 should hopefully bolster Dixon’s consistency as well.

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...s-week-18-top-performers-vs-carolina-panthers
 
It’s time for the Buccaneers to cut ties with Todd Bowles

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It shouldn’t have come down to the snooze fest between the New Orleans Saints and the Atlanta Falcons to decide whether the Bucs or Panthers would be playoff bound and division winners. But it did, and this just proves the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ continued commitment to Todd Bowles would be indefensible. Known as a defensive-minded head coach, Bowles has failed to deliver a defense that consistently impacts games — or a team that finishes seasons with urgency.

Under Bowles, the Bucs’ defense has routinely ranked middle of the pack or worse in critical categories. Over the past three seasons, Tampa Bay has hovered around 18th–22nd in yards allowed, struggled to generate takeaways, and finished near the bottom third of the league in third-down defense. For a coach whose calling card is pressure and disguise, the results simply haven’t matched the résumé.

This season was the clearest indictment yet. Despite opening with a strong start, the Buccaneers collapsed down the stretch, finishing below expectations and squandering a weak NFC South. Late-game defensive breakdowns became routine, with blown coverages, passive play-calling, and an inability to close out winnable games.

Bowles’ overall record in Tampa hovers around .500, and while division titles exist on paper, they’ve come without playoff growth or sustained dominance. The truth is harsh but clear: the Buccaneers are stagnant, predictable, and wasting prime roster years.

Tampa Bay doesn’t need stability — it needs accountability and evolution. Keeping Todd Bowles is choosing comfort over progress, and that’s a losing formula — a formula that won’t go away while Bowles is still the head coach.

Source: https://www.bucsnation.com/tampa-ba...a-bay-buccaneers-to-cut-ties-with-todd-bowles
 
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