Bucs Bench QB Josh Freeman

boozeman

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Bucs bench QB Josh Freeman


Updated: September 25, 2013, 6:31 PM ET
By Adam Schefter and Ed Werder | ESPN

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have decided to bench quarterback Josh Freeman for rookie Mike Glennon, coach Greg Schiano announced Wednesday.

"Mike's our starting quarterback from this point forward," Schiano said. "We're moving forward and Mike's our quarterback. That's the plan, and that's how we're going."


Schiano said he and general manager Mark Dominik "believe that this gives us the best chance to win today."

"We've lost eight of nine games and we haven't played particularly well on offense in the last nine games," Schiano said. "Although it's not completely the quarterback's fault, that position touches the ball every play."

The Bucs are making the change in part because they feel it is beneficial for Glennon with the bye week coming after Sunday's game against the Arizona Cardinals. Glennon can start this week, then have two weeks for coaches to review his performance and make adjustments before the Bucs play the Philadelphia Eagles on Oct. 13.

"It is beneficial, I think, that Mike will get to play a game and then have a bye week to really decipher through it and learn from the experience before he has to play his next game," Schiano said. "That's a side benefit of the decision. But it wasn't by any means the reason it was made now. We felt that it was time that Mike Glennon gave us the best chance to win, and that's why we did it."

There are five weeks until the trade deadline, and if a team loses a starting quarterback and has interest in Freeman, the Bucs are willing to trade him.

For now, he's their backup quarterback.

"This league is about finding a franchise quarterback, and with Josh's roller-coaster career, we don't feel he's that guy," a team source said.

Schiano said Monday that Freeman was still his starter even though he completed fewer than 50 percent of his passes during the Bucs' 0-3 start. On Wednesday, the coach moved to clarify those comments.

"After I met with [the media Monday], Mark and I spent a lot of time together and had some intense meetings trying to decide what's best for our football team," Schiano said. "We got with our ownership and we came to a conclusion as a group and made the decision organizationally that we were going to make a change at quarterback."

Tampa Bay selected the 6-foot-6, 225-pound Glennon in the third round (73rd overall) of the 2013 draft. He was the third quarterback taken in the draft and will become the third rookie to start a game at the position this season, joining the Buffalo Bills' EJ Manuel and the New York Jets' Geno Smith, the two quarterbacks picked before him. Manuel and Smith have started since Week 1.

"Mike's a smart, tough football player who loves the game," Schiano said. "I think he works extremely hard. I think he will go out and try to do what we're coaching him to do.

"He's not going to be perfect; no one is. But I think he's going to try to execute to the best of his abilities what we're asking him to do with the game plan. I think he'll be accurate, and I think he'll go out and do it."

Glennon, 23, will become the third former North Carolina State quarterback as a current starter in the NFL, joining the Seattle Seahawks' Russell Wilson, whom he backed up for the Wolfpack, and the San Diego Chargers' Philip Rivers.

Glennon said he was confident his time at NC State had prepared him for this opportunity.

"I have five years of an NFL-type offense under my belt," he said.

Freeman, a team captain the previous three seasons, was not elected as one this year. Schiano denied reports that he rigged the voting to keep Freeman from being selected and later revealed the quarterback had overslept and missed the team's annual photo session.

Freeman, drafted by the Bucs in the first round of the 2009 draft, is in the final season of his rookie contract. The team has said it was in no hurry to extend the deal.

Last season, Freeman threw for 4,065 yards and 27 touchdowns. (He is the franchise's leader in career TD passes with 80.) He has two touchdown passes and three interceptions this season.

Since his 10-6 season in 2010, Freeman is 11-23 (.324) as a starter. Among players with at least 20 starts over that span, only the Jacksonville Jaguars' Blaine Gabbert has a worse win percentage (5-20, .200), according to ESPN Stats & Information.

Freeman (17th overall) was the third of three quarterbacks selected in the first round in 2009, following top overall pick Matthew Stafford by the Detroit Lions and Mark Sanchez (No. 5) by the Jets. With Freeman's benching, only Stafford remains a starter.

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If the Bucs weren't unwatchable before, now they have the world's ugliest QB as a starter to boot.
 

EZ22

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I thought Freeman could be good but he sucks.
 

Carp

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They had some momentum last year, but Schiano pretty much sucked the life out of that team.
 

Rev

Good, bad, I'm the guy with the gun
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He will be available for the Longhorns...
 

Cowboysrock55

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I am a little curious to see Glennon. He is a tall guy with a big arm and he got a lot of hype going into the draft for awhile. Every time I watched him though his accuracy absolutely sucked. I really wanted to like the guy but I just didn't see it.
 

Smitty

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I thought Freeman could be good but he sucks.
He threw 25 TDs and 6 INTs his 2nd year in the league, he looked to be on his way (and I did not think he was any good coming out of college).

So now for the past 2 seasons I've thought he was gonna make a decent leap, but he's never done it.

This is his third year removed from that so he's probably never gonna be elite at this point.
 

boozeman

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NFLPA “coming after everyone” for breach of Freeman’s confidentiality under drug program

Posted by Mike Florio on September 30, 2013, 8:17 PM EDT


The ongoing drama regarding Buccaneers quarterback Josh Freeman continues.

A day after ESPN’s Chris Mortensen dropped a fairly ominous hint regarding the possibility that Freeman is in the league’s substance-abuse program, Mortensen reports that Freeman is in Stage One.

It means that Freeman has done something — either a failed drug test, a missed test, or some other violation of the substance-abuse policy — to land in the lowest level of the program.

Mortensen reports that Freeman isn’t one strike away from a suspension, and that Freeman has a therapeutic use exemption for a prescription drug that is otherwise banned. (Mortensen doesn’t mention whether the medication is banned by the substance-abuse policy or the performance-enhancing drug policy.)

Typically, multiple violations of the substance-abuse policy are required before a suspension arises. One violation of the performance-enhancing drug policy typically triggers a suspension.

The broader problem is that someone has committed a significant breach of the confidentiality requirements of the substance-abuse policy. A player’s status in the program is supposed to remain secret unless and until a suspension is finalized.

Breaches of the confidentiality relating to the substance-abuse program, which covers recreational substances, are all too common. Rarely if ever is action taken.

This time, it could be different. Per a league source, the NFLPA will be “coming after everyone” to determine who violated the confidentiality provisions by leaking news of Freeman’s status to Mortensen.

The leak could have come from one or more potential sources. The Buccaneers would know about Freeman’s status. The league office would know, as would Freeman’s representatives.

Other teams would be entitled to know Freeman’s status only if Freeman were one strike away from a suspension.

It could be difficult to prove who said what to whom, but it’s about time the words on paper regarding the consequences of confidentiality (i.e., a fine of up to $500,000) come to life via an effort to prove who has violated the player’s legal rights under the CBA.

Even if the offender in this case is never caught, an aggressive attempt to enforce the rule could prompt folks who may be tempted to leak confidential drug policy information in the future to think twice.
 
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