The 1997 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season was the franchise's 22nd season in the National Football League (NFL). Having gone 6–10 the previous season, Tampa Bay finished second in the NFC Central, and secured their first playoff berth since the strike-shortened 1982 season.
1997 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season | |
---|---|
Owner | Malcolm Glazer |
General manager | Rich McKay |
Head coach | Tony Dungy |
Home field | Houlihan's Stadium |
Results | |
Record | 10–6 |
Division place | 2nd NFC Central |
Playoff finish | Won Wild Card Playoffs (vs. Lions) 20–10 Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Packers) 7–21 |
Pro Bowlers | 9
|
AP All-Pros | FB Mike Alstott, MLB Hardy Nickerson |
Team MVP | QB Trent Dilfer |
The 1997 season was notable for several reasons. The team retired their orange and white color scheme and "Bucco Bruce" logo, replacing it with a new more marketable and intimidating image. The brand new pewter and red uniforms featured a new "skulls and swords" logo, new fonts, and prominent end zone markings. The 1997 season would also be their final season playing in Houlihan's Stadium. Next door, the much-anticipated Raymond James Stadium was under construction. It was also future hall of famer Ronde Barber's first season with the team.
The Buccaneers stunned many analysts by starting the regular season with a 5–0 record. The Buccaneers had totaled more than five wins in only five of their previous fourteen seasons. By the end of the season, they had built a record of 10–6 and went to the playoffs for the first time in 15 years. Tampa Bay defeated Detroit 20–10 in the Wild Card round, their first playoff victory since 1979. They lost to the eventual NFC champion Green Bay Packers, 21–7 in the Divisional Round.
Offseason
editNFL draft
editRound | Pick # | Overall | Name | Position | College |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 12 | 12 | Warrick Dunn | Running back | Florida State |
1 | 16 | 16 | Reidel Anthony | Wide receiver | Florida |
2 | 7 | 37 | Jerry Wunsch | Offensive tackle | Wisconsin |
3 | 3 | 63 | Frank Middleton | Guard | Arizona |
3 | 6 | 66 | Ronde Barber | Cornerback | Virginia |
4 | 32 | 128 | Alshermond Singleton | Linebacker | Temple |
5 | 7 | 137 | Patrick Hape | Tight end | Alabama |
6 | 6 | 169 | Al Harris | Cornerback | Texas A&M-Kingsville |
6 | 34 | 197 | Nigea Carter | Wide receiver | Michigan State |
7 | 8 | 209 | Anthony DeGrate | Defensive tackle | Stephen F. Austin |
Personnel
editStaff
edit1997 Tampa Bay Buccaneers staff | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front office
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
|
Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
Strength and conditioning
|
Roster
editRegular season
editSchedule
editWeek | Date | Opponent | Result | Venue | Attendance | Record |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | August 31 | San Francisco 49ers* | W 13–6 | Houlihan's Stadium | 62,554
|
1–0 |
2 | September 7 | at Detroit Lions | W 24–17 | Pontiac Silverdome | 58,234
|
2–0 |
3 | September 14 | at Minnesota Vikings | W 28–14 | Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome | 63,697
|
3–0 |
4 | September 21 | Miami Dolphins | W 31–21 | Houlihan's Stadium | 73,314
|
4–0 |
5 | September 28 | Arizona Cardinals* | W 19–18 | Houlihan's Stadium | 53,804
|
5–0 |
6 | October 5 | at Green Bay Packers | L 16–21 | Lambeau Field | 60,100
|
5–1 |
7 | October 12 | Detroit Lions* | L 9–27 | Houlihan's Stadium | 72,095
|
5–2 |
8 | Bye | |||||
9 | October 26 | Minnesota Vikings* | L 6–10 | Houlihan's Stadium | 66,815
|
5–3 |
10 | November 2 | at Indianapolis Colts | W 31–28 | RCA Dome | 58,512
|
6–3 |
11 | November 9 | at Atlanta Falcons | W 31–10 | Georgia Dome | 46,018
|
7–3 |
12 | November 16 | New England Patriots | W 27–7 | Houlihan's Stadium | 70,479
|
8–3 |
13 | November 23 | at Chicago Bears | L 7–13 | Soldier Field | 43,955
|
8–4 |
14 | November 30 | at New York Giants | W 20–8 | Giants Stadium | 68,678
|
9–4 |
15 | December 7 | Green Bay Packers | L 6–17 | Houlihan's Stadium | 73,523
|
9–5 |
16 | December 14 | at New York Jets | L 0–31 | Giants Stadium | 60,122
|
9–6 |
17 | December 21 | Chicago Bears | W 31–15 | Houlihan's Stadium | 70,930
|
10–6 |
- = blacked out locally
Standings
editNFC Central | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
W | L | T | PCT | PF | PA | STK | |
(2) Green Bay Packers | 13 | 3 | 0 | .813 | 422 | 282 | W5 |
(4) Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 10 | 6 | 0 | .625 | 299 | 263 | W1 |
(5) Detroit Lions | 9 | 7 | 0 | .563 | 379 | 306 | W2 |
(6) Minnesota Vikings | 9 | 7 | 0 | .563 | 354 | 359 | W1 |
Chicago Bears | 4 | 12 | 0 | .250 | 263 | 421 | L1 |
Game summaries
editWeek 1: San Francisco
editThe "new-look" Buccaneers opened the season against San Francisco. It was the first game for new 49ers head coach Steve Mariucci, and it was the start of the second season for Tampa Bay's Tony Dungy.
The Bucs defense sacked the 49ers seven times, and knocked both Steve Young and Jerry Rice out of the game. Early in the first quarter, Warren Sapp sacked Steve Young, who suffered a minor concussion. Later in the second quarter, Sapp tackled Rice on a busted reverse play. Rice tore his ACL and MCL in his left knee, sidelining him for 14 weeks.
Trailing 6–3 in the fourth quarter, Trent Dilfer faked a hand-off up the middle to Mike Alstott and rolled out to pass to a wide-open Dave Moore in the endzone. The Buccaneers won 13–6, and the victory was considered a "statement game" for the club, particularly on defense.
Week 2: at Detroit
editRookie Warrick Dunn rushed for 130 yards and one touchdown, as Tampa Bay won 24–17. The Buccaneers defense held Barry Sanders to only 20 yards rushing.
Week 3: at Minnesota
editWarrick Dunn rushed for 101 yards (his second-consecutive 100-yard game), including a 52-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter as Tampa Bay won 28–14.
In the second quarter, Mike Alstott scored one of his most-memorable touchdowns with the club. At the one-yard line, a hand-off to Alstott up the middle saw him hit the pile and appear to be stopped short of the goal line. However, he bounced off the pile, did not have a knee down, escaped to the left, avoided three other tacklers, and powered his way into the endzone backwards.
Week 4: Miami
editOn Sunday Night Football, Tampa Bay hosted Miami. The Buccaneers jumped out to a 14–0 lead, with Trent Dilfer passing for 248 yards and four touchdowns. The Bucs defense intercepted Dan Marino twice.
With 9:30 left in the game, Tampa Bay led 24–14 facing a 3rd & 28 at their own 42-yard line. Dilfer completed a screen pass to Warrick Dunn, who weaved through and broke away for a 58-yard touchdown, putting the game out-of-reach.
Week 5: Arizona
editThe Buccaneers offense sputtered, but the defense did enough to keep Tampa Bay in the game. Alshermond Singleton blocked a punt and recovered it for a touchdown. With less than five minutes left in the fourth quarter, Karl Williams scored a go-ahead 31-yard touchdown on fourth down. With Tampa Bay leading 19–18, Arizona drove to the Tampa Bay 29-yard line in the closing seconds. Cardinals kicker Kevin Butler missed a 47-yard field goal wide right, and the Buccaneers held on to start the season 5–0.
This would be Ronde Barber's first regular season game with the Buccaneers. The 5–0 start matched the franchise best set in 1979.
Week 6: at Green Bay
editGreen Bay jumped out to a 21–3 lead, but Tampa Bay rallied to make the score 21–16 late in the game. A last-minute drive failed when Trent Dilfer threw incomplete to Warrick Dunn on 4th down at the Packers 48-yard line.
Week 7: Detroit
editBarry Sanders rushed for 215 yards, and Scott Mitchell passed for 222 yards as Detroit rolled over Tampa Bay by a score of 27–9. Sanders had rushing touchdowns of 80 yards and 82 yards respectively, the first time in NFL history a single player had two rushes of over 80 yards in a single game.
Week 8: Open date
editTampa Bay had their bye in week 8.
Week 9: Minnesota
editThe first half was scoreless. Late in the third quarter, Minnesota had a 57-yard punt return which set up the first touchdown of the game. The Vikings held on to win 10–6.
Week 10: at Indianapolis
editAfter a three-game losing streak, Tampa Bay got back to their winning ways. Tied 28–28 with 1:03 to go, Karl Williams returned a punt to the Colts 45-yard line. That set up a game-winning field goal by Michael Husted with 8 seconds remaining in regulation. Tampa Bay won 31–28, and improved to 6–3.
Week 11: at Atlanta
editTampa Bay had 199 yards of rushing, and the special teams recovered two punt fumbles by the Falcons. Tampa Bay won 31–10, and improved to 4–0 in dome stadiums for the season. At 7–3, they were one game behind Green Bay and Minnesota for the lead in the NFC Central.
Week 12: New England
editTampa Bay jumped out to a 27–0 lead by the third quarter, and the Patriots did not even have a first down until the second half. Mike Alstott rushed for 91 yards and one touchdown.
Week 13: at Chicago
editTwo turnovers by Tampa Bay in the first half allowed the Bears to jump out to a 10–0 lead at halftime. Mike Alstott fumbled on the first play of the game, and Karl Williams muffed a punt at the four-yard line with seconds remaining in the second quarter. The Bears won 13–7.
Week 14: at N.Y. Giants
editTampa Bay guaranteed their first winning season in 15 years, defeating the New York Giants. The game was iced in the fourth quarter when the Giants (trailing 14–8) went for it on a 4th down & 1. John Lynch stuffed Tyrone Wheatley for no gain, and Tampa Bay would go on to win 20–8.
Week 15: Green Bay
editGreen Bay defeated Tampa Bay 17–6, and the Packers clinched the NFC Central title. The Buccaneers were held without a touchdown for the first time all season, and would need a victory in the last two weeks to secure a wild card spot for the playoffs.
Week 16: at N.Y. Jets
editJets Otis Smith returned two interceptions for touchdowns (45 yards and 51 yards respectively) and Leon Johnson ran for a 101-yard kickoff return touchdown. The Tampa Bay offense, minus an injured Mike Alstott, went 0 for 13 on third down conversions.
Tampa Bay was crushed 31–0. However, when the 4 o'clock games were decided, Tampa Bay mathematically clinched a wild card berth for the playoffs.
Week 17: Chicago
editThe final regular season game at Tampa Stadium saw Tampa Bay take on division rival Chicago, with playoff seeding on the line. A win by Tampa Bay would clinch the #4 seed in the playoffs, and secure a home game for the wild card round.
Karl Williams scored a dramatic 61-yard punt return touchdown at the end of the first quarter, en route to a 21–3 halftime lead. Tampa Bay padded the lead in the second half, particularly with Warrick Dunn's 119 yards rushing.
Tampa Bay won 31–15, won the final regular season game at Tampa Stadium, and secured a home game against Detroit for the wild card playoffs. In only head coach Tony Dungy's second season, the Buccaneers had a winning record and a return to the postseason.
NFC Wild Card Game: Detroit Lions
editThe Buccaneers won their first playoff game since 1979, in what turned out to be their final game at Houlihan's Stadium. Tampa Bay built a 20–0 lead midway through the third quarter. Quarterback Trent Dilfer threw a 9-yard touchdown pass to receiver Horace Copeland, running back Mike Alstott had a 31-yard touchdown run, and Michael Husted made two field goals. The Bucs defense limited Lions quarterback Scott Mitchell to just 10 of 25 completions for 78 yards, and running back Barry Sanders to 18 carries for 65 yards. Frank Reich replaced Mitchell after he suffered a concussion late in the third quarter. Detroit then scored 10 points to cut the lead in half midway through the fourth quarter, with Jason Hanson's 33-yard field goal and Tommy Vardell's 1-yard touchdown run. But the comeback was short-lived when, after completing a long pass on third down during the final minutes of the game, Reich accidentally spiked the ball on fourth down, giving the ball to Tampa Bay.
NFC Divisional Playoffs: at Green Bay Packers
editPackers running back Dorsey Levens rushed for a team playoff record of 112 yards and a touchdown while also catching 4 passes for 29 yards as the Green Bay defense held Tampa Bay to 90 rushing yards and intercepted 2 passes from Trent Dilfer, who finished the game with only 11 of 36 completions for 200 yards.
Early in the game, Tampa Bay had a chance to score first, but Packers defensive tackle Bob Kuberski blocked Michael Husted's 43-yard field goal attempt. Green Bay then drove for the first touchdown of the game with Brett Favre's 3-yard touchdown pass to tight end Mark Chmura. Early in the second quarter, Packers receiver Robert Brooks' 28-yard punt return and 21-yard reception set up a field goal by Ryan Longwell. And later on, defensive back Tyrone Williams intercepted a pass from Dilfer and returned it 14 yards, setting up Longwell's second field goal with six seconds left in the half, making the score 13–0.
Green Bay receiver Antonio Freeman returned the second half kickoff 90 yards for a touchdown, but a holding penalty on Darren Sharper eliminated the score and moved the ball all the way back to their own 11-yard line. Green Bay still managed to drive into scoring range, but on the eighth play of the drive, Bucs defensive back Donnie Abraham intercepted a pass from Favre on the Tampa Bay 6-yard line. Dilfer subsequently led the Bucs offense 94 yards in 8 plays to score on fullback Mike Alstott's 6-yard touchdown run, cutting the score to 13–7. But two possessions later, the Packers drove 54 yards and scored with a 2-yard touchdown run by Levens. Then, Favre closed out the scoring by running in the 2-point conversion on a quarterback draw.
Playoffs
editWeek | Date | Opponent | Result | Stadium | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wild Card | December 28, 1997 | Detroit Lions | W 20–10 | Houlihan's Stadium | 73,361
|
Divisional | January 4, 1998 | at Green Bay Packers | L 21–7 | Lambeau Field | 60,327
|
References
edit- ^ 2009 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Media Guide. pp. 44–46. Archived from the original on March 15, 2010. Retrieved November 26, 2009.