Tampa Bay Buccaneers News & Rumors

Buccaneers Sign Dan Feeney, Add Sua Opeta To Practice Squad

In the wake of major injury news on both sides of the line of scrimmage, the Buccaneers have made a number of moves. Defensive lineman Calijah Kancey is dealing with a torn pectoral muscle, while right guard Cody Mauch is also out for the year with a knee injury.

The loss of Kancey prompted Tampa Bay to add defensive lineman Elijah Simmons off the Cardinals’ practice squad yesterday. Similarly, it was reported on Wednesday that the Mauch injury was expected to result in Dan Feeney being added from the Bills’ taxi squad as offensive line depth. Per Fox Sports’ Greg Auman, the Feeney addition has now indeed taken place.

The Bucs are already without left tackle Tristan Wirfs, although he is back at practice and eligible to play at any time. Right tackle Luke Goedeke is set to miss time, albeit without a firm timeline regarding how long he will be unavailable. The interior of Tampa Bay’s O-line will receive a boost once Wirfs returns, since that will allow for Graham Barton to shift back to center.

Especially until that takes place, Feeney will be a welcomed addition given his experience. The ninth-year veteran has made 120 appearances and 65 starts in his career. Feeney has yet to play this season, but he has experience at center (primarily from the 2020 season) as well as guard. Michael Jordan is in line to serve as a starter once again in Week 3, provided he is designated a gameday elevation on Saturday. Feeney will likely provide veteran depth behind him.

The same is also true of Sua Opeta. The 29-year-old was known to be taking part in a workout as potential fill-in options for the Bucs, and Auman notes a practice quad deal has been finalized. Opeta was sidelined for all of 2024 with an ACL tear, but after returning to full health he spent this past offseason with the Buccaneers. Tampa Bay moved on during roster cuts, but Opeta (who made 10 starts across four Eagles campaigns) is now back in the fold as an option to be added to the active roster if needed.

Auman adds Tampa Bay is also auditioning Royce Newman today. A former fourth-rounder, Newman spent his first three years with the Packers before spending the 2024 campaign in Tampa Bay. He too would be a familiar face, but with Feeney on the active roster and Opeta on the practice squad, Newman may not land a deal in the near future.

Buccaneers RG Cody Mauch Out For Season

The Buccaneers offensive line continues to deal with injuries, and the latest one is a doozy. According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, starting right guard Cody Mauch suffered a season-ending knee injury in Monday night’s victory in Houston.

Tampa Bay has yet to see star left tackle Tristan Wirfs in a game this season. He avoided landing on an injured list to start the year as he works his way back from an arthroscopic knee surgery, and he returned to practice last week. Right tackle Luke Goedeke left the Buccaneers without either of their starting tackles when he left Monday’s game after only 15 snaps with a reinjured foot.

The news about Mauch comes as more of a surprise. The third-year guard didn’t leave the field at all on Monday night. This injury was suffered in the game, though, per Schefter, and whatever the nature of the knee injury turns out to be, Mauch was able to play through it to finish the game. It’s a really tough blow for the 26-year-old, who hadn’t missed a game since getting drafted in the second round out of North Dakota State in 2023.

Wirfs is continuing to practice and work his way back to the field, though it’s unclear if he’ll be ready for Week 3. Goedeke has not practiced this week, and though it’s still early, some have labeled him as doubtful to play this weekend. If either can’t go, it’s been Graham Barton filling in for Wirfs at left tackle, and it was Charlie Heck who came in to cover right tackle for Goedeke on Monday. Both have struggled in their respective substitute positions, so Tampa Bay will be eagerly awaiting good news on Wirfs and Goedeke.

The Bucs currently do not roster much depth on the offensive line, seemingly preferring to carry more bodies elsewhere. With two backups already employed, only last year’s sixth-round pick Elijah Klein and undrafted rookie Benjamin Chukwuma stand as backup options. Because of the scarcity, Tampa Bay is expected to sign interior offensive lineman Dan Feeney off of the Bills‘ practice squad, as first reported by Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times. Greg Auman of FOX Sports adds that the team is expected to hold a workout tomorrow that will feature, at the very least, veteran offensive guard Sua Opeta, who spent the offseason with the team but failed to make the 53-man roster.

Feeney, 31, likely stands a better chance at stepping into a starting role for the Buccaneers than the inexperienced Klein and Chukwuma. As a 2017 third-round pick, Feeney spent three of his first four seasons in the league as a full-time starter for the Chargers at both left guard and center. After departing in free agency, Feeney struggled to find another role as a full-time starter, but he still found plenty of opportunities to get on the field, earning eight spot starts in the four years since leaving Los Angeles.

Tampa Bay will hope to see its luck on the offensive line turn around soon. Though Wirfs is working his way back to the field and Goedeke will continue to be evaluated throughout the week, there’s a chance the Buccaneers could be without three starters on the offensive line in this week’s game against the Jets. They know for sure, though, that they’ll be without Mauch, and that will continue to hold true for the rest of the season.

NFL Minor Transactions: 9/17/25

Here are Wednesday’s minor transactions:

Houston Texans

Jacksonville Jaguars

New Orleans Saints

Philadelphia Eagles

Pittsburgh Steelers

Seattle Seahawks

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Broughton, the third-round rookie out of Texas, is expected to miss the remainder of the season with a hip injury, per Mike Garafolo of NFL Network. The team sought multiple opinions on the injury and was unsure about whether or not surgery would be necessary, but the “significant” hip issue will shut him down for the year.

Green rejoins the reigning champs, once again. It’s been a rollercoaster of employment for the 24-year-old guard, who failed to make the initial 53-man roster in Philadelphia, signed to the practice squad, was promoted back to the active roster, and then was waived two days after the team’s season opener.

Loudermilk had been working as a starter for the first time in his five-year career, but he will miss at least the next four games with a high ankle sprain. Leal, a 2022 third-round pick out of Texas A&M, has disappointed in his first three years of play. After moving to more of an outside linebacker role this summer, Leal failed to make the initial 53-man roster but was retained to the practice squad. He’ll take Loudermilk’s spot on the active roster for the time being.

Per Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2, Watson has been sidelined indefinitely with a calf muscle and Achilles injury. The tendon is not torn, so it may not be season-ending, and Watson could return at some point down the line. Luckily, the receiving corps is set to return some reinforcements as head coach DeMeco Ryans announced that both Christian Kirk and Braxton Berrios are expected to be back in Week 3. Wilson also reports that tight end Cade Stover had successful surgery recently for his broken foot.

Buccaneers WR Mike Evans Could Retire Following 2025 Season

Mike Evans has had a relatively quiet start to the 2025 season, his 12th in the NFL. Plenty of time remains for him to continue his streak of 1,000-yard campaigns, though.

If Evans is able to reach that threshold this year, he will break a tie with Jerry Rice for the most consecutive seasons of 1,000 or more receiving yards in NFL history. Doing so would add further to his legacy and no doubt help Tampa Bay enjoy another successful campaign. Given his age, however, questions continue to be asked about how much longer Evans will continue playing.

“I plan on having one of my best seasons,” the 32-year-old said about the current campaign during an interview with The Athletic’s Zak Keefer (subscription required). “And if I retire after this year, I don’t think it’ll be a shock to people. I’m close to the end, that’s all I’ll say.”

Last spring, a free agent departure loomed as a possibility. Evans said Kansas City and Houston represented attractive landing spots, but in the end he remained in place on a two-year, $41MM pact. He is thus a pending free agent, and an extension would ensure the six-time Pro Bowler’s career finishes in Tampa Bay. Another new pact may not wind up being possible, depending on how Evans views his future following the 2025 season.

The Texas A&M product is on the verge of reaching the top 20 in all-time receiving yardage, and he has amassed roughly $134MM (and counting) in career earnings. With a Super Bowl title to his name, Evans is certainly not lacking in accomplishments at the NFL level. As a result, a retirement call after the 2025 season has finished would be feasible.

The Bucs have Chris Godwin in the fold through 2027 after he re-signed this offseason. Tampa Bay’s receiving corps also contains 2024 third-rounder Jalen McMillan and first-round rookie Emeka Egbuka, who has enjoyed an impressive start to his career. Those three will be counted on as key figures in the passing game for the 2026 campaign, but it is unclear if Evans will join them.

Bucs’ Luke Goedeke Expected To Miss Time; Latest On Tristan Wirfs

The Buccaneers managed to defeat the two-time reigning AFC South champion Texans without either of their starting tackles. Their backups helped Baker Mayfield withstand a strong pass rush, headlined by Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter, in a last-second win.

Tristan Wirfs is on his way back from offseason knee surgery, but the team appears unlikely to have right tackle Luke Goedeke available when Wirfs returns. Goedeke left Monday night’s win with a foot injury, according to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler, who adds the recently extended tackle is expected to miss time.

Though, it is believed Goedeke avoided a serious injury. While he is still expected to miss time — potentially multiple games — Fowler describes this setback as an aggravation of a previous malady. With it not known if even multiple absences will be required, Goedeke may be a good bet to avoid IR.

Tampa Bay did not use the reserve/PUP list for Wirfs, who would have been sidelined for at least four games in that scenario. The team may also be comfortable carrying Goedeke on its 53-man roster in the event he will be ready to return over the next month. A Goedeke IR placement would sideline him until Week 7. The Bucs have home games against the Jets and Eagles over the next two weeks; they then face the Seahawks and 49ers in Weeks 6 and 7.

Goedeke signed a four-year, $90MM extension just before the season. The 2022 second-round pick made a promising transition from guard to tackle earlier in his career and secured a spot in Tampa Bay’s long-term plans in doing so. The Bucs now have Goedeke and Wirfs signed long term. The latter remains the NFL’s second-highest-paid offensive lineman. Pro Football Focus ranked Goedeke as a top-30 tackle in his first two seasons manning the Bucs’ right tackle spot.

The Bucs turned to Charlie Heck at RT once Goedeke went down. The team had previously passed on using Heck in place of Wirfs, having seen Graham Barton — a center prospect who finished his Duke career at left tackle — play well on the blind side early in training camp. While the Bucs’ first instinct was to use Heck as the Wirfs replacement, ESPN’s Dan Graziano indicates the team pivoted after setting its initial 53-man roster and decided the Barton-at-LT plan would be the Week 1 path. This moved Ben Bredeson to center and Michael Jordan to left guard. That alignment remained in place Monday night.

Wirfs began practicing last week, and while the Bucs kept him on their 53-man roster to open the season, it is possible he does not suit up until Week 5 anyway. Wirfs said (via Fox Sports’ Greg Auman) the goal is a Week 5 reemergence. The standout tackle said he could return sooner — a scenario GM Jason Licht alluded to previously — but it appears Week 5 represents the tentative plan.

Wirfs underwent surgery in early July — for an MCL injury that produced lingering effects — and was slated to miss regular-season time. Tampa Bay keeping him off the reserve/PUP list brought an encouraging development, and it should not be long until he debuts this season. For the time being, though, a Barton-Heck tackle tandem will be in place as the team attempts to move its record to 3-0.

Buccaneers DL Calijah Kancey Suffers Pectoral Tear

The Buccaneers managed to win on Monday night, but their defense suffered a serious blow in the process. Calijah Kancey appears to be in line to miss the remainder of the season.

Kancey exited last night’s game with a pectoral injury. Head coach Todd Bowles indicated after the contest the ailment could be serious, pending further testing. On that note, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports the Bucs fear Kancey tore his pec, something which would require season-ending surgery. Per NFL insider Jordan Schultz, the injury will indeed sideline him for the rest of the campaign (although that report does not specifically mention a pectoral tear).

According to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo, today’s MRI has in fact confirmed a tear took place. As a result, Kancey’s attention will now turn to the rehab process. A chance existed prior to testing that a strain had occurred, something which would have set up a much short recovery timeline. Instead, Tampa Bay’s defensive front will be notably shorthanded for the rest of the campaign.

Kancey has served as a full-time starter since entering the league in 2023. The former first-rounder flashed potential right away with four sacks and 13 QB pressures during his rookie season. Last year, those respective figures jumped to 7.5 and 19. Another step forward looked to be in store for 2025, but that will no longer be the case.

A decision will need to be made on Kancey’s fifth-year option next spring. The 24-year-old was limited to 14 games as a rookie and 12 the following year, so injuries were already something of a concern in his case. That will now be true to a much larger extent given today’s news. If Kancey’s option is declined, he will enter the 2026 season as a pending free agent.

Before that decision will need to be made, Tampa Bay will move forward without a key figure on the D-line. The Buccaneers have an edge rush group headlined by YaYa Diaby and free agent addition Haason Reddick; veteran Anthony Nelson and a number of younger contributors round out the depth chart. The team’s plan in terms of pass rush production counted on a strong interior presence from Kancey in particular.

Now, the team will proceed with two-time Pro Bowler Vita Vea continuing to lead the way in terms of D-tackle workload. Greg Gaines (who is known more as a run-stopping presence) and Logan Hall (who has posted 8.5 sacks in 51 career games) are also in the fold. Those two could be in line for an increased role in Kancey’s absence. Tampa Bay also has three DL options to choose from on the practice squad in terms of promotions and/or gameday elevations.

With nearly $21MM in cap space, the Buccaneers could afford a modest in-season addition to help compensate for today’s injury news. Failing that, internal options will be counted on the rest of the way for the 2-0 outfit.

NFL Minor Transactions: 9/15/25

Today’s minor moves:

Dallas Cowboys

Houston Texans

Las Vegas Raiders

Philadelphia Eagles

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Washington Commanders

As expected, Cowboys center Cooper Beebe landed on injured reserve today after suffering an ankle and foot injury during yesterday’s win over the Giants. The lineman suffered a lateral sprain in his ankle along with a bone fracture in his foot, an injury that’s expected to keep him sidelined for six to eight weeks. During an appearance on 105.3 The Fan, Cowboys EVP Stephen Jones expressed optimism that the injury timeline is “on the shorter end of that” (per Charean Williams of ProFootballTalk.com).

Jamel Dean Addresses Buccaneers Pay Cut

Earlier this week, it was learned Jamel Dean and the Buccaneers worked out a restructure. The veteran corner accepted a substantial pay cut for 2025 while the final year of his pact was removed. Jamel Dean (vertical)

Dean’s scheduled compensation for 2026 was not guaranteed, meaning a release could have been highly likely anyway. The 28-year-old is nevertheless a pending free agent, and Tampa Bay’s other cornerback moves strongly point to a parting of ways next spring. Instead of being cut (or at least benched) this year, Dean is now on course to collect $4.25MM in base pay as a result of his pay cut agreement, something he recently spoke about.

“It was just more like I’m comfortable here,” Dean said about remaining in place with the Buccaneers (via Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times). “So it’s just really not about the money anymore. I’m not in the mood to try to figure out a whole new team and city and go through all I went through my rookie year. So just to save me a headache.”

The seven-year veteran logged 74 defensive snaps in Week 1, working alongside Zyon McCollum and Jacob Parrish as a starter in the secondary. Parrish was selected in the third round of this year’s draft, while McCollum recently signed a big-ticket extension. Both of their futures are assured for years to come, and the same is also true of second-round rookie Benjamin Morrison.

Morrison did not play in Week 1, but head coach Todd Bowles said (via Stroud) he is expected to suit up on Monday night. A special teams role will await him, although Bowles added Morrison could also see part-time usage on defense. Dean can be expected to remain a first-team presence for at least the time being, but he could be in danger of being surpassed on the depth chart over time.

The Auburn product has been a mainstay throughout his Tampa Bay tenure, totaling 64 starts to date. Dean has totaled just one interception since the start of the 2023 season, however, and his coverage statistics over recent years have marked a downturn from the beginning of his career. Especially given the recent adjustments to his contract, a trip to free agency after the current campaign would thus come as no surprise. For now, though, Dean is content to remain with the only NFL team he has played for.

Buccaneers’ Chris Godwin, Tristan Wirfs Return To Practice

During cutdowns at the end of training camp, the Buccaneers elected to keep both Chris Godwin and Tristan Wirfs on the active roster. That decision was made despite the fact both are expected to miss multiple games in September.

Moving either or both players to the reserve/PUP list would have ensured a four-game absence but also prevented them from being able to practice. Instead, remaining on the 53-man roster has opened the door for Godwin and Wirfs to take part in practice in September while rehabbing their respective injuries. That process has taken a notable step forward beginning today.

Godwin is taking part in Thursday’s practice on a limited basis, as first reported by NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. That has since been confirmed by Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times, who adds Wirfs is participating as well. In both cases, practicing twice this week is the team’s goal as the next stage of a lengthy recovery path.

A fractured ankle ended Godwin’s 2024 season and ensured he would miss time early this year. Week 2 had been targeted as the point at which he would return to practice, though, so today’s update comes as little surprise. The 29-year-old turned down more lucrative offers to remain in Tampa Bay this offseason. Godwin will take on a key role in the passing game upon return, joining a group led by Mike Evans and first-round rookie Emeka Egbuka.

Wirfs is believed to have a strong chance of returning to game action earlier than Godwin, and suiting up at some point in September is a possibility following his offseason meniscus surgery. That would be a welcomed development for the Bucs’ offensive line, a unit which underwent a number of changes ahead of Week 1 to compensate for Wirfs’ absence. The four-time Pro Bowler is under contract through 2029, so a cautious approach will of course be taken with his recovery process.

Tampa Bay will look for a 2-0 start to the season on Monday against Houston. That effort will not include Godwin or Wirfs, but their respective rehab processes have reached an important final phase.

Buccaneers CB Jamel Dean Accepts Pay Cut

Jamel Dean‘s Buccaneers future was a talking point this offseason, although the veteran corner remained in place once roster cuts were finished. Dean has worked out a restructure which could make this season his final one in Tampa Bay, though.

Team and player agreed to a pay cut on Monday, as first reported by PewterReport’s Joshua Queipo. The move has since been confirmed by Fox Sports’ Greg Auman, who notes Dean’s base pay for this season has been reduced from $12.5MM to $4.25MM. $750K could be earned back through playtime incentives.

Critically, the restructure also removed the final year of Dean’s contract. The former third-rounder was on the books through 2026 (although his scheduled compensation for that year was not guaranteed). Instead, Dean is now on track for free agency next spring. Given today’s news, it could certainly come as no surprise if a departure were to take place on the open market in this case.

Dean emerged as a starter for the Super Bowl winning Buccaneers in 2020, and he’s maintained his starting spot over the past four years. Thanks to his production, the defensive back earned a four-year, $52MM contract ($21.5MM guaranteed) from Tampa Bay ahead of the 2023 campaign. He’s continued to produce under his active contract, with Pro Football Focus grading him as a top-3o cornerback over each of the past two seasons.

While the Buccaneers may be signaling that they don’t have future plans for the cornerback, the team is clearly relying on him for the time being. Once a candidate to get benched, Dean earned a 97 percent snap share yesterday. The 28-year-old finished the season opener with six tackles and three passes defended.

The organization clearly started preparing for a post-Dean secondary during this year’s draft. The team selected Notre Dame’s Benjamin Morrison in the second round before selecting Kansas State’s Jacob Parrish in the third round. With Zyon McCollum and Josh Hayes also still attached to their rookie contracts, the Buccaneers are clearly pivoting to youth in their cornerbacks room.

Ben Levine contributed to this post.