When it comes to finding the right free agents to bolster the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2026, due diligence is critical.

Most teams don’t willingly let their best players walk. The salary cap can certainly force difficult decisions, but often there’s a deeper story — especially with former first-round picks.

First-rounders are under team control for five years because of the fifth-year option. Truly elite players are usually extended before they ever reach that final season. When a team allows a player to play out that fifth year without an extension, it can signal hesitation. They may not be fully convinced he’s worth a long-term investment.

That’s where free agency becomes tricky

Some players post a “career year” in that fifth season, motivated by the impending payday. The key question is whether that performance represents genuine growth — or a spike that won’t be sustained. Evaluators must study the player’s entire body of work, not just his contract year. Will he continue ascending, or regress to what he showed in Years 1–4?

Beyond production, character and fit matter just as much. How will he mesh with a new locker room? Will he stay driven after securing a major contract? Talent alone isn’t enough.

Defensively, the Buccaneers must find at least one outside linebacker and one inside linebacker. Both need to be selfless, high-motor players who lead by example. Last season showed how damaging it can be when leadership and buy-in aren’t aligned — a situation illustrated by the brief and turbulent tenure of Haason Reddick.

There will be talented linebackers available. The challenge isn’t just finding a good player — it’s finding the right one. The Buccaneers need someone whose best football is still ahead of him, not behind him.

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