TAMPA, FL — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers aren’t waiting for the draft to fix their front five. Veteran offensive tackle Justin Skule officially signed a one-year contract to return to Tampa Tuesday, following a career-best 2025 campaign with the Minnesota Vikings where he logged 578 offensive snaps across 16 appearances.
Veteran Insurance for the Trenches
Skule isn’t a new face at One Buc Place. The 6-foot-6, 315-pound blocker spent three seasons in the red and pewter before a one-year detour to the Twin Cities. His timing couldn’t be better. After a 2025 season where stars Tristan Wirfs and Luke Goedeke combined to miss 11 games due to injury, General Manager Jason Licht made securing a reliable swing tackle a top priority. Skule held his own in Minnesota, earning a 65.7 overall PFF grade and ranking 47th among 89 qualifying tackles.
The Buccaneers struggled with depth last year, at one point resorting to an undrafted rookie when the injury bug bit the edges of the line. Skule provides a proven floor. He already knows the scheme and has the versatility to slide into either tackle spot if the starters go down again. This signing effectively erases the “emergency” need for a tackle in the early rounds of the upcoming draft.
“It feels right to be back in this building. I learned a lot during my time away, but Tampa is where I’ve played my best ball. I’m here to do whatever this team needs to get back to the top of the NFC South.”
— Justin Skule, Buccaneers Offensive Tackle
Draft Strategy Shift: Best Player Available
Currently sitting with the 15th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, the Buccaneers now have the flexibility to ignore positional desperation. Before the Skule signing, analysts predicted Tampa might force a reach on a tackle like Utah’s Caleb Lomu. Now, Licht can hunt for a defensive playmaker or a successor to Mike Evans, who departed for San Francisco earlier this spring. With seven total picks and the veteran presence of Skule locked in, the Bucs have successfully insulated themselves against the draft-day chaos that often forces teams into bad decisions.

