TAMPA BAY — Tampa Bay sat comfortably at 6-2. The defense looked menacing. A No. 1 seed felt entirely within reach. Then, the floor caved in. The Buccaneers lost seven of their final nine matchups, finished 8-9, and watched the playoffs from their couches.
The Elephant in the Film Room
Head coach Todd Bowles stood at the podium this week and brushed off the glaring absence of defensive tackle Calijah Kancey as a non-factor in the late-season nosedive. Kancey tore his pectoral muscle in a brutal Week 2 Monday night scrap against the Houston Texans (a narrow 20-19 victory).
He didn’t see the field again until the regular-season finale against Carolina on January 3rd.
Bowles refused to bite on the injury excuse. He claimed the team did the losing all by themselves. But denying Kancey’s impact ignores the massive crater left in the middle of the defensive line.
“That had no bearing on the games that we could have won. We could have used the energy and the talent, but there are going to be some injuries every year. We are not going to use that as excuses. We had guys out there that we had confidence in who could go out and play and help us win the ballgame.”
— Todd Bowles, Buccaneers Head Coach
The Ripple Effect of a Missing Anchor
Bowles is protecting his locker room. No coach wants to sound like a defeated general passing the buck. But you cannot replace a disruptor of Kancey’s caliber with rotational depth and expect the same hostility in the trenches. When Kancey stood on the sidelines in street clothes week after week, the defensive strategy fractured:
- Opposing offensive lines easily double-teamed Tampa Bay’s edge rushers.
- Linebackers were forced out of their comfort zones to plug interior gaps.
- The defense surrendered 30-plus points in brutal, back-breaking losses to the Bills and Rams.
Make no mistake: Calijah Kancey is not Joe Tryon-Shoyinka. Tryon-Shoyinka drifted through four years in Tampa Bay, failed to develop, and ultimately became a cheap trade deadline rental for the Chicago Bears last November. That is a true draft bust—a player fully over his head at the professional level.
Kancey possesses rare, explosive talent. He racked up 11.5 sacks in his first two seasons. The problem isn’t skill; it is availability. The former first-round pick has missed significant time due to injuries in each of his three professional seasons. Talent wins championships, but only if that talent is actually wearing cleats.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Buccaneers enter the 2026 offseason with massive structural questions. They squandered a red-hot start, and Bowles faces immense pressure to rebuild the defense’s identity. For Kancey, 2026 becomes a make-or-break campaign. He enters the final guaranteed year of his rookie contract and must find a way to endure a punishing 17-game slate. If he stays healthy, Tampa Bay fields a terrifying defensive front. If he goes down again, the front office will be forced to draft his replacement.

