Baker Mayfield has had a career revival in Tampa Bay and was off to an incredible start to the 2025 season as he carried an injury riddled Bucs offense during the first half of the year to a 6-2 start, with wins over three eventual playoff teams including the Super Bowl champion Seahawks. After the team’s Week 9 bye, however, the wheels fell off. Tampa Bay went 2-7 over the second half of the season as the injuries took their toll and the offense sputtered. The Bucs scored over 20 points only once in their last seven games. The result was a change in offensive coordinator for the fifth consecutive season, although this time was different than the others when their OC’s were getting poached for head coaching jobs.
Heading into the 2026 season, the strengths of this Bucs offense are the depth of their backfield and the versatility and speed of their receiving corps. Tampa has Chris Godwin Jr. as a steady veteran wide receiver presence who never quite looked like himself last season as he returned from a gruesome ankle injury. Godwin is dependable and can line up all over the field, with his short and intermediate area prowess being the staple of his game. Emeka Egbuka should be the “alpha” of this offense, however, and is also capable of running a diverse route tree and moving around formations. The two of them at full strength should be the backbone of this passing game. While Godwin’s fastest days are behind him, the rest of the receivers have some serious wheels. Egbuka and the next three receivers on the depth chart all have 40-yard dash times in the 4.4’s.
The upside case for the Bucs relies primarily on their offensive scheme returning to the high level they operated at in past seasons, something that up and coming OC Zac Robinson may be able to alleviate. While Robinson’s offenses with the Falcons were not dominant statistically, they were well designed and featured his best players – highlighting their strengths and putting them in position to succeed. That is the mark of a promising coach, when they fit their scheme to what they have. Robinson is also only 39 years old and likely has his best days ahead of him. A disciple of the McVay coaching tree, Robinson knows what he is doing and this scheme should have a lot more clarity and quality than the Bucs dealt with last season. Mayfield is also a significant QB upgrade for Robinson over what he was handed in Atlanta with shaky youngster Michael Penix Jr. and immobile Kirk Cousins.
The bull case for the Bucs in 2026 is primarily built around the premise that both Mayfield and Robinson are upgrades for each other. Mayfield gets a better scheme and coaching, while Robinson gets a QB he can do more with. The result can/should be Tampa Bay returning to an upper-tier offense. Their offensive line was decimated with injuries often in 2025 as well, and should be more stable this year. A talented and deep backfield along with a deep, diverse, and electric receiving corps can open things up for some “Mayfield Magic” as Tampa Bay looks to return to the playoffs.
The bear case for this offense digs into late-season regression, a critical roster departure, and structural questions that could reshape fantasy expectations across every skill position. The takeaways section covers specific draft strategies and roster construction tips for the quarterback, a three-back committee, and undervalued receiving options. Create a free account to read the complete analysis.