Mike Williams (Syracuse)

Bucs Notes: Wright, Hawkins, Bridgewater

The Buccaneers made it official with Major Wright and Lavelle Hawkins, tweeting the signings here and here. Last week, Luke Adams detailed Wright’s poor performance in Chicago, but the Bucs are hoping for a rebound from the 25-year-old safety who reunites with head coach Lovie Smith.

Other Bucs bits:

  • After trading away Mike Williams, the team has to address the receiver position in the draft because, “They have Vincent Jackson and almost nothing else,” says ESPN.com’s Pat Yasinskas.
  • Yasinskas also relays news that kicker Connor Barth, who missed last season because of a torn Achilles tendon, has been cleared medically.
  • Louisville quarterback Teddy Bridgewater is visiting the Bucs today, according to Ian Rapoport (via Twitter).
  • Iowa tight end C.J. Fiedorowicz is also visiting, reports Aaron Wilson of the Baltimore Sun (via Twitter). Fiedorowicz will head to the Jets next.

NFC South Notes: Bucs, Godfrey, Draft Visits

The Buccaneers, who agreed today to send Mike Williams to the Bills, talked to all 31 teams about a trade, but only had two clubs interested in a deal, tweets Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times. As was the case with DeSean Jackson, potential off-field issues likely dissuaded many teams from getting involved, but unlike Jackson, Williams’ 2014 cap hit was extremely affordable, allowing the Bucs to get something for their diminished asset.

Here’s more on the Bucs and their division rivals in the NFC South:

  • The Buccaneers will be in the market for receiving help now that Williams is gone, and the club has already started considering options, according to Roy Cummings of the Tampa Tribune, who tweets that the team took a look at longtime Titans receiver Lavelle Hawkins. Hawkins, who last played for the Chargers, had 47 receptions for Tennessee in 2011.
  • With Thomas DeCoud visiting the Panthers, there are question marks about Charles Godfrey’s future with the team, as Joseph Person of the Charlotte Observer details. Godfrey’s cap number jumps to $7.1MM in 2014, and he’s returning from an Achilles injury that sidelined him for most of last season.
  • The Panthers and Saints will be hosting USC wideout Marqise Lee for pre-draft visits, according to Pro Football Talk (via Twitter).
  • Alabama-Birmingham offensive tackle Kaycee Ike will have a private workout with the Falcons on April 15, reports Aaron Wilson of the National Football Post.

Bills To Acquire Mike Williams From Bucs

The Bills and Buccaneers have agreed to a trade that will send wide receiver Mike Williams to Buffalo in exchange for a sixth-round pick, a league source tells James Walker of ESPN.com (Twitter link). According to Pro Football Talk (Twitter link), the deal is pending a physical.Mike Williams

We heard back in February that Williams’ future in Tampa Bay was uncertain due to a variety of off-field issues, and an incident last month in which the receiver was hospitalized after being stabbed by his brother only raised more questions. At the time, at least one report suggested that there would limited trade interest in Williams, making it possible that the team would release him at some point. However, it seems as if the Bucs were able to salvage something of value in the deal with the Bills — the sixth-rounder included in the swap will be the 185th overall pick next month.

Williams, a Buffalo native, saw his 2013 season cut short due to a torn hamstring, but flourished with the Bucs from 2010 to 2012, averaging about 64 receptions, 910 yards, and eight touchdowns per year. He’ll join a Bills receiving corps led by Steve Johnson, and will presumably be catching balls from E.J. Manuel in 2014, barring an unexpected change in Buffalo.

The Bills had been seeking receiving help throughout free agency, having been linked to DeSean Jackson and Kenny Britt, among others. Perhaps the team simply didn’t view those players as the right fit for the system, or wasn’t willing to match their asking prices. However, it’s also fair to wonder if it’s simpler for the Bills to trade for a player rather than to convince a free agent to commit to a long-term future in Buffalo, which isn’t one of the league’s perennial contenders or bigger markets.

While Williams is in the midst of a lucrative long-term contract, his 2014 base salary is only $1.2MM, to go along with a $600K workout bonus, so the acquisition represents a fairly inexpensive, low-risk pickup for the Bills. If things don’t work out this time around between Williams and Doug Marrone, his former coach at Syracuse, the team could cut ties with him without being on the hook for any dead money in 2015 or beyond.

As for the Bucs, Williams is the second big-name, big-money player the team has parted ways with this offseason, having previously cut Darrelle Revis. With Williams gone, Vincent Jackson will shoulder more responsibility as the team’s No. 1 receiver, and the position figures to become a greater priority for the club in the draft.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Latest On Mike Williams

Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Williams has been at the center of a few off-field stories in recent months and years, with several 911 calls to his house since last summer. However, none of those incidents was as dangerous as yesterday’s, when Williams was hospitalized yesterday after being stabbed by his brother. The Bucs receiver, who said the stabbing was an accident, has reportedly been released from the hospital, and we wish him a speedy recovery. However, the incident casts more doubt on Williams’ long-term future in Tampa Bay.

Jason La Canfora of CBSSports.com reports (via Twitter) that Tampa Bay had been open to dealing Williams, but that off-field troubles, including this most recent incident, will limit outside interest. With a trade unlikely, it’s possible that the Bucs may ultimately decide to simply cut ties with the troubled receiver. Williams is playing on a contract that runs through the 2018 season, but most of the guaranteed money was paid in 2013, as Mike Garafolo of FOX Sports noted today (via Twitter).

Garafolo and La Canfora (Twitter links) have confirmed that although Williams’ modest $1.8MM base salary for 2014 is guaranteed, his $5.2MM base for 2015 is not fully guaranteed. With no prorated bonus money on the contract, the Bucs could release Williams and carry just $1.8MM in dead money on their cap in 2014.

Of course, before making any decisions on Williams’ future, the team would like to touch base with him. However, GM Jason Licht said today that neither he nor head coach Lovie Smith has been able to talk to Williams since yesterday, despite an attempt to reach out (Twitter link via Greg Auman of the Tampa Bay Times). As Ian Rapoport of NFL.com tweets, Licht intends to continue looking into the situation in an attempt to find out how Williams is doing “health-wise [and] how his mindset is.”

Mike Williams’ Future With Bucs Uncertain

In July 2013, the Buccaneers rewarded receiver Mike Williams with a six-year contract extension worth $40.5MM. Now, less than a year later, his future with the team could be in jeopardy, due to an off-the-field life filled with partying, arrests, and other missteps, as detailed by Greg Auman and Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times. The article paints a picture of a life filled with chaos, with Williams causing tens of thousands of dollars worth of property damage, angering his neighbors with noise violations, and throwing raucous parties, sometimes on nights before Tampa Bay was to play a game the next afternoon.

The Bucs have spent much of the past two seasons ridding themselves of players who caused such concerns. Cornerbacks Aqib Talib and Eric Wright, as well as running back LeGarrette Blount, have either been traded or released. And while those moves came under a regime headed by now-departed general manager Mark Dominik and coach Greg Schiano, new head coach Lovie Smith doesn’t take kindly to the type of behavior exemplified by Williams, either. “There’s a pattern here and it’s disturbing,” said Smith. “No one is bigger than the football team. He has to understand that.”

Smith continued: “Have I been disappointed in Mike Williams? Of course. There’s a standard. We’re just not going to put up with it, no matter who it is. You have to be good on the field and off the field. Simple as that. And if you’re not doing what you need to do one or the other, you have problems and that’s where Mike has to take care of a few things.”

If Williams can correct his errors off-the-field, Smith would surely love to reap the benefits of having a player of his caliber. Williams, before tearing his hamstring and missing most of the 2013 season, flourished between 2010-2012, averaging 64 receptions for 910 yards and eight touchdowns. Though his rapport with new quarterback Mike Glennon remains to be seen, adding Williams to an offensive core that includes receiver Vincent Jackson, running back Doug Martin (also returning from injury), tight end Tim Wright, and an elite offensive line would be a start to turning Tampa’s fortunes around.

Even if the Bucs wished to release Williams, two factors would impede that transaction: money and depth. Cutting Williams would result in a costly $6.4MM cap hit, likely too expensive for the team to bear. And besides Jackson, the Tampa wide receiver depth chart has few inspiring options, with players like Chris Owusu and Eric Page next in line.

But the man who would make such a decision doesn’t sound pleased. New general manager Jason Licht, when asked what Williams needs to learn from these incidents, had a terse response: He has to learn not to make headlines off the field. Start there.”

Bucs Notes: Williams, Glennon, Clowney

Although Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Williams signed a five-year contract worth just under $40MM last season, his status with the team is far from certain, according to Tom Carpenter of ESPN.com. After tearing his hamstring halfway through the 2013 campaign, Williams accumulated over $200K in fines for being late to team meetings, missing team meetings altogether, and missing his scheduled rehab days, problems exacerbated by the “constant partying” that Williams documented on his Instagram account.

Carpenter writes that Williams’ behavior did not come as much of a surprise to former GM Mark Dominik. Dominik structured Williams’ new deal so that the team would have an “out” in 2014 if it needed one. As Scott Reynolds of Pewter Report observes, Williams’ deal includes a base salary of just $1.2MM in 2014. That way, if the wideout’s maturity became too much of an issue, or if his 2013 performance did not merit the length of the contract or the financial commitment, the team could release him this offseason and suffer just a $1.8MM cap hit in 2014.

However, new head coach Lovie Smith would probably like to have someone with Williams’ potential on board, particularly since his cap hit this year is so low. Since Williams’ contract is no longer guaranteed after 2014, the Bucs can simply go in a different direction if Williams doesn’t live up to that potential.

A couple of other Bucs tidbits:

  • For his part, ESPN.com’s Pat Yasinskas seems to think Williams will be back with Tampa Bay next year. In response to a reader’s question as to whether the Bucs will draft a receiver in the early rounds of the 2014 draft, Yasinskas said he thinks that the team has greater needs in other areas but that Tampa Bay would do well to target a speed receiver in the middle rounds of the draft or in free agency to complement Williams and fellow wide receiver Vincent Jackson.
  • In what is becoming an increasingly-popular question from fans around the league, another reader asks Yasinskas if the Buccaneers will trade up in the draft to nab South Carolina defensive end Jadeveon Clowney. Yasinskas replied that the Bucs would only make such a move if the team is comfortable with Mike Glennon as their quarterback. If so, and if the Bucs therefore don’t believe they need to take a QB in the first round, Yaskinsas thinks the defensive-minded Smith may push for the elite pass rusher.