TAMPA, FL — The “No Risk, No Biscuit” era in Tampa Bay is reaching a fever pitch. After a rocky 2025 season that saw the Buccaneers miss the postseason and watch franchise icon Mike Evans bolt for San Francisco, General Manager Jason Licht is reportedly hunting for a franchise-altering move. League sources suggest the Buccaneers are exploring a massive trade-up from the No. 15 pick to secure Miami defensive end Rueben Bain Jr. in the 2026 NFL Draft.
Replacing a Legend with a Wrecking Ball
The loss of Mike Evans to the 49ers left a crater in the offense that Kenneth Gainwell and Bucky Irving can’t fill alone. While the front office added defensive depth with Alex Anzalone and Al-Quadin Muhammad during the March frenzy, the roster still lacks a terrifying edge presence. Tampa Bay’s defense struggled to collapse the pocket last year, finishing in the bottom third of the league in adjusted sack rate. Licht knows he can’t wait for a star to fall to him at 15. He has to go get one.
Enter Rueben Bain Jr. The 263-pound Miami product is coming off a dominant 2025 campaign where he bagged 10 sacks and 67 total pressures. He didn’t just win; he bullied ACC offensive tackles on his way to earning ACC Defensive Player of the Year honors. Scouts rave about his heavy hands and a motor that never quits. For a Todd Bowles defense that thrives on chaos, Bain is the perfect fit. He has the frame to slide inside on sub-packages and the speed to ghost past left tackles on third-and-long.
“We aren’t here to just fill holes and hope for the best. This city expects a certain level of violence on the defensive front. If we see a guy who can change our DNA, we’ll do what it takes to get him.”
— Anonymous Buccaneers Front Office Executive
The Cost of Greatness
Moving into the top five won’t be cheap. A trade-up of this magnitude would likely cost the Buccaneers their 2026 first-rounder, a 2027 first-rounder, and potentially a mid-round sweetener. Critics argue that a team with multiple holes shouldn’t move draft capital. However, the Buccaneers are in a unique spot. With Baker Mayfield still under center and a young core featuring Cade Otton and Calijah Kancey, the window is still open. Adding Bain creates a defensive front that forces quarterbacks into quick mistakes, helping a secondary that just lost Jamel Dean to Pittsburgh.
The muggy Florida heat is already rising as the draft approaches, and the tension in the Bucs’ war room is just as thick. Licht has a history of aggressive swings. If he pulls the trigger on Bain, it signals to the rest of the NFC South that Tampa Bay isn’t interested in a slow rebuild. They want to reclaim the division crown right now.

