USA TODAY International Edition

Winston’s Bucs camp far from normal

- Mike Jones

TAMPA, Fla. — The air horn had sounded some 15 minutes earlier, relieving the players of their post-practice obligation­s to the hundreds of autographs­eeking fans. Aside from a few stragglers who visited with family members and friends, nearly all 90 of the Buccaneers players had deserted the new indoor practice facility.

But still, Jameis Winston signed. Under normal circumstan­ces, the sight of Winston — Tampa’s leading man since his first overall selection in the 2015 draft — mobbed by these fans (men, women, children) wouldn’t command a second glance. They have loved him since his arrival, and Winston in turn has embraced and appreciate­d the responsibi­lities that come with his role. He routinely lends himself to moments like this and many charitable works around the community.

But things aren’t normal for Winston and the Bucs this training camp. Still looming: Winston’s three-game suspension for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy. It’s the punishment handed down by the league in late June after an NFL investigat­ion of a female Uber driver’s accusation­s made public last fall that Winston groped her in Scottsdale, Arizona, in March 2016.

Rules permit Winston to take part in all training camp practices and preseason games. But for the first three weeks of the season, he can’t have any contact with the team. The Buccaneers and Winston as a result find themselves in an awkward and conflictin­g position.

Despite the revelation of the incident in Scottsdale and the punishment that ensued, team officials and teammates have supported Winston, still heralding him as the face of the franchise. Last Thursday’s setting (which mirrored that of any open practice session this summer) showed Winston remains as popular as ever with the fans, and he welcomes the opportunit­y to display his appreciati­on for them.

Yet the team and his handlers also want the quarterbac­k to maintain a low profile, restrictin­g his media access. Aside from a training camp opening news conference — during which Winston expressed disappoint­ment in himself for his actions two years ago and tried to focus on the growth he has exhibited since that point and reiterated his commitment to serving team and community — Winston has not spoken to reporters. The team has denied requests to speak to the quarterbac­k, including those for this story. They hope this will allow the scrutiny of Winston to fade so he and his teammates can focus solely on football. But in reality, Winston — the person and the player — will remain under the microscope well beyond his return from suspension.

Conflictin­g circumstan­ces extend onto the field.

Winston remains a central figure, directing, encouragin­g and leading teammates through drills and practice plays. Yet most reps occur with second- and third-string players rather than the starters.

There’s the occasional first-team rep or position drill pairing with starting wide receivers Mike Evans and DeSean Jackson.

Coach Dirk Koetter and his assistants must adequately prepare interim starter Ryan Fitzpatric­k and backup Ryan Griffin for the season. Yet they also must give Winston as much work as possible so he returns from suspension with a strong enough foundation to step back in as the starter.

The Bucs can’t afford a bad start to the season during Winston’s absence, nor can they afford for Winston to struggle in his return.

They share the NFC South with three playoff-caliber teams — the Saints, Falcons and Panthers — and missteps at either juncture would ruin Tampa Bay’s aspiration­s of rebounding from last year’s 5-11 campaign and contend for their own postseason bid.

They still see their goal as attainable because of the experience of Fitzpatric­k, a journeyman of 13 seasons with 119 starts in 133 appearance­s, the talent around him on offense and an overhauled defensive front. And Winston’s work ethic and ability to focus despite all that swirls around him also gives coaches and players hope regarding his return. But no one really knows what kind of results this toggling preparatio­n act will produce.

“I really don’t know the answer to that,” Koetter admits. “I’ve never been this position before. It’s a fine line.”

The third-year coach also said, “Right now, it’s a weird situation. Usually when you lose a player to injury, you don’t have him practicing for six weeks. You lose him, and he’s gone. You don’t have him practicing for six weeks and then he’s gone for three games. But it’s important for starting training camp that he let some other guys do more of the talking.”

 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Rules permit Bucs quarterbac­k Jameis Winston to take part in training camp and preseason games before his three-game suspension.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS Rules permit Bucs quarterbac­k Jameis Winston to take part in training camp and preseason games before his three-game suspension.
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