Will Dirk Koetter call plays? If you think Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Dirk Koetter should give up play calling
Cameron Brate Jersey , you aren’t alone. Koetter was often criticized for his play calling last season. That may be why Koetter allowed offensive coordinator Todd Monken to called plays this preseason, and the offense has looked more explosive and efficient. But it’s just the preseason, right? Even if you focus on the process and not the results, it seems as though Monken does a better job leveraging down and distance and the skill sets of Tampa Bay’s very talented receiving corp. But with it only being preseason it’s hard to really judge if Monken is any better.But recently Koetter made statements that show he still hasn’t decided:And that he’s really struggling with the decision:Koetter has been noticeably cantankerous towards the media this preseason and has answered sarcastically or refused to answer at all, like he did on an innocuous question about the team captains. It’s hard to say if he’s already made up his mind, or if he’s really struggling with the decision. I’m sure Koetter has complicated feelings about this. If you let your coordinator call plays, and he’s worse than you, no big deal. But if he does it better than you, how can you go back? That’s where he finds himself right now. If he does take back play calling, at this point it might look like he’s putting his ego before the team. But he got to where he is as an NFL head coach by calling plays, and he truly enjoys doing it, so one could see how he would feel conflicted. The Dolphins are rolling the dice with DeVante Parker‘s $9.37 million fifth-year option. The Bucs will be doing the same, with more than twice as much money at risk.Quarterback Jameis Winston continues to be the starter in Tampa, even as he enters the last year of a season that has attached to it an injury guarantee for 2019 of $20.9 million. This means that, if he emerges from 2018 with any injury that keeps him from passing a physical in March
William Gholston , the salary converts to a full guarantee for 2019 and the Bucs will be stuck with Winston or, at a minimum, stuck with paying him.It makes no sense to take that risk. Even if the Bucs plan to keep Winston for 2019, why risk losing the leverage that would come from being able to tell him that, for example, if he doesn’t accept a team-friendly extension offer, he could be released before the 2019 salary becomes fully guaranteed? If, as it appears, the Bucs are planning to fire coach Dirk Koetter after the season, what value comes from trotting out Winston for a regular-season finale that will be played before a sparse crowd at best?Teams make business decisions all the time. In this case, maybe the Bucs have made the decision to consciously assume the risk that Winston will be injured. If so, what’s the reward? What more can Winston do in one meaningless game to get closer to a ceiling he may have already reached?Maybe the Bucs simply don’t want to admit error. Maybe the current coaching staff and front office will continue to be permitted to make these decisions until the moment they’re relieved of their duties. Regardless, this would seem to be one of those rare situations where the right move would be for ownership to mandate directly to Koetter and/or G.M. Jason Licht that Winston should be eating nachos in street clothes while Ryan Fitzpatrick and/or Ryan Griffin try to eat the empty calories of a worthless W.