1994 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season

The 1994 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season was the franchise's 19th season in the National Football League. The year began with the death of owner Hugh Culverhouse. Ownership was transferred to a three-man board of trustees. Season ticket sales dwindled, and rumors of the team's location were a persistent distraction all year. At mid-season, the new ownership removed all personnel responsibilities from coach Sam Wyche, and gave them to Vice President Rich McKay, who they named general manager. They also put the team up for sale.[1] On the field, Errict Rhett became the first rookie in the team's history to rush for 1,000 yards, despite not starting until the ninth game of the season.

1994 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season
Ownerthe Hugh Culverhouse estate
Head coachSam Wyche
General managerRich McKay
Home fieldTampa Stadium
Results
Record6–10
Division place5th NFC Central
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Team MVPLT Paul Gruber

The Buccaneers had one of the weakest offenses in the league, even while led by a coach who had consistently produced top offenses while with the Cincinnati Bengals.[2] At 2–9, most people in the Bay area were ready to hang Wyche and pack his bags, but the defensive line improved as Eric Curry finally matured in the second half of the season, and the Bucs began their first 4-game winning streak in 15 years. It started with an overtime win in Minnesota. Two wins over the Washington Redskins and one over the Los Angeles Rams set up a big game in Tampa against the Green Bay Packers, who was trying to secure a playoff spot. "We've arrived", Wyche announced prematurely.[3] The final game was called "Orange Pride day", and was attended by 65,000 fans (although many were rooting for the visitors), most of whom expected it to be the last football game in Tampa. The Packers won, 34–19.[1]

Offseason

NFL Draft

PickRoundPlayerPositionSchool
61Trent DilferQuarterbackFresno State
342Errict RhettRunning backFlorida
693Harold BishopTight endLSU
1365Pete PiersonOffensive tackleWashington
1656Bernard CarterLinebackerEast Carolina
2007Jim PyneCenterVirginia Tech

Preseason

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers went 2-2 in the pre-season, winning their first game against the Bengals at home. After a loss to Seattle Seahawks on the road, the Bucs beat cross state rival Miami Dolphins in game three. The last game of the preseason was lost to the New York Jets by one point. Expectations were for a break even season in 1994.

Regular season

Staff

1994 Tampa Bay Buccaneers staff

Front Office

Head Coaches

  • Head Coach/Director of Football Operations – Sam Wyche

Offensive Coaches

 

Defensive Coaches

Special Teams Coaches

  • Special Teams/Tight Ends – George Stewart

Strength and Conditioning

  • Strength and Conditioning – Brad Roll

[4]

Roster

1994 Tampa Bay Buccaneers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad


Rookies in italics

Regular season

Schedule

Regular season
WeekDateOpponentResultKickoff[a]Game siteTVAttendanceRecord
1 September 4, 1994 at Chicago Bears L 21–91:00Soldier FieldFOX61,8440–1
2 September 11, 1994 Indianapolis Colts W 24–101:00Tampa StadiumNBC36,631*1–1
3 September 18, 1994 New Orleans Saints L 9–71:00Tampa StadiumFOX45,522*1–2
4 September 25, 1994 at Green Bay Packers L 30–31:00Lambeau FieldFOX58,5511–3
5 October 2, 1994 Detroit Lions W 24–141:00Tampa StadiumFOX38,012*2–3
6 October 9, 1994 at Atlanta Falcons L 34–131:00Georgia DomeFOX52,6332–4
7 Bye
8 October 23, 1994 at San Francisco 49ers L 41–164:00Candlestick ParkFOX62,7412–5
9 October 30, 1994 Minnesota Vikings L 36–134:00Tampa StadiumFOX42,110*2–6
10 November 6, 1994 Chicago Bears L 20–61:00Tampa StadiumFOX60,821*2–7
11 November 13, 1994 at Detroit Lions L 14–98:00Pontiac SilverdomeESPN50,8142–8
12 November 20, 1994 at Seattle Seahawks L 22–214:00The KingdomeFOX37,4662–9
13 November 27, 1994 at Minnesota Vikings W 20–17 OT1:00Hubert H. Humphrey MetrodomeFOX47,2593–9
14 December 4, 1994 Washington Redskins W 26–211:00Tampa StadiumFOX45,121*4–9
15 December 11, 1994 Los Angeles Rams W 24–141:00Tampa StadiumFOX34,150*5–9
16 December 18, 1994 at Washington Redskins W 17–141:00RFK StadiumFOX47,3156–9
17 December 24, 1994 Green Bay Packers L 34–191:00Tampa StadiumFOX65,076*6–10

Notes:

a All times in North American Eastern Time. (UTC–4 and UTC–5 during Standard Time)
  • = blacked out locally

Standings

NFC Central
W L T PCT PF PA STK
(3) Minnesota Vikings 10 6 0 .625 356 314 W1
(4) Green Bay Packers 9 7 0 .563 382 287 W3
(5) Detroit Lions 9 7 0 .563 357 342 L1
(6) Chicago Bears 9 7 0 .563 271 307 L1
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 6 10 0 .375 251 351 L1

References

  1. Stroud, Rick. "30 Seasons: 1976–2005. From Sinking Ship to World-Class Cruise" St Petersburg Times. 11 Sep 2005.
  2. Lieber, Jill. "The NFC Central". Sports Illustrated. 5 Dec 1994
  3. Lieber, Jill. "The NFC Central". Sports Illustrated. 26 Dec 1994
  4. 2009 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Media Guide. pp. 44–46. Archived from the original on 2010-03-15. Retrieved 2010-04-12.
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