Rueben Bain Jr. will fill a key need without having to relocate especially far. The Buccaneers are adding the Miami defensive end whose minor slide stops at No. 15 overall.
In its pass rush, Tampa Bay will pair the former Hurricane standout with YaYa Diaby, who is heading into a contract year. Diaby has had moderate blitzing success so far, totaling 19.0 sacks over his first three years of NFL play. He’s been part of a team-wide effort to get after the quarterback over the past few years, splitting the responsibility with Calijah Kancey and Vita Vea along the defensive line.
To that point, the Buccaneers couldn’t have asked for a better player to fall to them at this point in the draft and contribute to this team-wide pass rush effort. Bain is the epitome of such play, as evidenced by his three years in Coral Gables. As a true freshman, when teammate and fellow first-round pick Akheem Mesidor went down with injury, Bain stepped in as a starter and filled a giant role on the Hurricanes defense. Without lining up directly over center, Bain played all over the defensive line for Miami, leading the team with 7.5 sacks and finishing second on the team with 12.5 tackles for loss.
Miami dedicated Bain more consistently to the edge after that. After an injury-limited sophomore campaign, Bain got to pair with Mesidor when both were healthy for the first time this past year, and the two terrorized teams all through the Hurricanes’ College Football Playoff run to the national title game. Bain’s addition to the Tampa Bay pass rush should excite Buccaneers fans, as Bain tends to bring as much success to the pass rushers around him as he achieves himself. They should expect to benefit from the attention opposing offensive lines will feel obligated to dedicate to Bain.
A pair of controversies threatened Bain’s draft status and future NFL career as a short arm-length measurement as the NFL Scouting Combine and an unfortunate driving accident from two years ago made frequent headlines over the last month of the pre-draft process. By most accounts, NFL teams took much less stock into Bain’s arm measurements than draft pundits, and they had reportedly been made aware of the driving incident months before the story broke in the media.
Whether these issues contributed to Bain falling out of the top 10 to 15th overall or if it was simply a run of tackles and series of trades that delayed his name getting called, it no longer matters. Bain will head up Alligator Alley to continue his pro ball in-state. The Buccaneers will now have to figure out how to use Bain in their base 3-4 front, as an outside linebacker opposite Diaby or a versatile in-line defensive end next to Vea, Kancey, A’Shawn Robinson, and fellow former Hurricane Elijah Roberts.

Lowkey a steal
Huge steal for the Bucs, didn’t see Bain dropping this far at all, plus he fits that Bucs culture perfectly
This guy when they talked to him looked to be all business. He looked ready to go at the draft