Latest News Reports

TBO.com > Sports

Breakfast Bonus

Doug Williams Likes What He Sees


This one of the best all-around days in the National Football League: the day after the NFL draft.

All 32 teams believe they had good days Saturday and Sunday. They have reported this to their fans through the media that cover their activities.

“Give us a seven,” most will say, temporarily. “Could go up, could go down.”

Our designated judge, Ira Kaufman, gave “A” ratings to the Miami Dolphins, Kansas City Chiefs and Dallas Cowboys.

He works the Bucs and NFL beats closely for The Tribune—and you and me.

“You’re right. This is Monday after the picks. We think we did well. Everybody thinks they did well,’’ said Doug Williams, the dandy Buc quarterback who took the Washington Redskins and head coach Joe Gibbs to the rainbow’s end in the Super Bowl.

Williams is now a personnel executive with the Buccaneers. He’s good and he’s loyal and he loves what he does. He was the number one pick of the Bucs in 1978 and led the franchise to an NFC championship game before moving on to Washington.

“Aqib Talib, our first round pick first is a good one, and he is a big one. He’s 6-1 and over 200 and can fly at corner,” Williams said. “We wanted him and we got him. The receiver, Dexter Jackson, can go, and that big fellow from Rutgers at guard (Jeremy Zuttah) at 6-4 and 303, can motor as well.”

Williams then dwelled on the fifth-round pick. He would. That pick is Josh Johnson (6-foot-2, 201 pounds) from a small school, San Diego. Williams came to the NFL 30 years ago from Grambling, another Div. I-AA school.

Johnson will need work, Doug said, but he knows it.

“Man, we (already) got five quarterbacks. And we got that veteran, Jeff Garcia, he’ll make them all better. He works so hard. He’s careful, too,” Williams said. “He’s 38 now, so we got Josh, and we got Brian Griese and Chris Simms, the other young arms, and Luke McCowan and Bruce Gradkowski. Competition will be stout.”

The other Bucs picks were linebacker Geno Hayes from Florida State and running back Cory Boyd from South Carolina. Both have game credentials. Both also have baggage. Coach Jon Gruden believes he can handle that sort of thing, that player who arrives with a past he’d like to forget. Gruden tells them to straighten up and do right. Most have.

“Can’t always be sure about a young man and a pocket full of money,” Williams said. “He’ll get the shot, but he better stay clean.”

Williams was never a boy. He was always a man, to the delight of Gibbs—who found him—and the late, great John McKay—who coached him. McKay loved “Dougie,’’ as he called him.

Steve Spurrier, now the coach at South Carolina, and Parnell “Paydirt” Dickinson were the first two quarterbacks of the Bucs. Gary Huff followed in 1977, then came Doug Williams.

“I wouldn’t trade it,” Williams said. “McKay and Coach Gibbs here, then Gibbs at Washington where we won it all. I hope we can do it all over again now with all of those quarterbacks at work here.

“I like what I see, and it’ll be fun to be part of this new Buccaneer football adventure.”

Send Us Your Comments

Posted by  LARRY SCHMAUSS, FROZENHELL,MINNESOTA on 04/30  at  04:33 PM

I GREW UP IN TAMPA, HAVE ALWAYS BEEN A HUGE BUCS FAN, AND DOUG WILLIAMS AND LEROY SELMON WERE AND ARE THE CLASSIEST AND BEST BUCS EVER. IF ONLY THEY HAD TONY DUNGY AS THEIR HEAD COACH ! WHAT A TEAM THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN !


Posted by  JACK GURNEY, port charlotte on 04/30  at  03:42 PM

Doug Williams would have been the best QB in Buc history if the team owner was not a cheap-skate and a racist. After contract talks broke down, He went to the USFL and then to the Redskins. And we all know what happened there. After his playing career, Doug was coaching in college ranks.


Posted by  George Leslie Hicks, Dallas,Texas on 04/29  at  07:30 PM

I love QB Doug Williams for what he did in Tampa. I remember back in the early bucs days when Tampa played then
the LA Rams. Doug Williams played with gutts and determination when he had to play with a jaw protection on his face area. So I think he is a wonderful coach, teacher and fellor buccanneer. I think Josh Johnson will do good if he understand his role and follow other leads. Also I wished Tampa had picked CB Mike Jenkins from S Fla.


Posted by  Jeffrey Herndon, Tampa on 04/29  at  01:30 PM

With all due respect to all of the great Buccaneer players, Doug Williams should be recognized as the greatest Buccaneer of all times.  No one before and no on after has ever exhibited the class, the character, the leadership and the heart that Doug displayed each and every day of his career.  My hope is that someday soon he is placed in the hall of fame where he belongs.


Page 1 of 1 pages

Advertisement

Send Us Your Comments
Terms & Conditions

* Comments Must Include Full Name And Location


Full Name:

Email:

Location:

Smileys

comment:

Please enter the word you see in the image above:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?



Get Weekly Deals | Write a letter to the editor | Subscribe and get two weeks free | Place an Ad

Site Tools

RSS Feeds:
XML Feed for this channel
All feeds/RSS FAQ


TBO.com Forums:

About Tom:

Longtime readers of The Tampa Tribune can relive Tom McEwen's witty thoughts, insights and recollections in his TBO.com blog, Breakfast Bonus. McEwen, sports editor of The Tampa Times from 1958-62 before being named sports editor of the Tampa Tribune in 1962, graced the Tribune sports section with his award-winning column, ''The Morning After,'' and his ''Breakfast Bonus'' notes columns were a signature offering from the 19-time Florida Sports Writer of the Year.


E-Mail Tom:

Have a question or comment for Tom?


More About Tom:
Most popular sports:

This feature requires the Macromedia Flash Plugin. Please visit http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer to download this plugin.


ADVERTISEMENT

Advertise With Us:
Online | In Print | Broadcast