Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Could this be last game for Lavonte David with Bucs?

- By Rick Stroud

TAMPA — He could be playing his last game for the Tampa Bay Bucs. He has no contract beyond this season, no expectatio­n that at his age a new deal is in the works. The minute his career ends, a space likely will be cleared for his name in the team’s Ring of Honor.

Retirement doesn’t seem as likely as it once did, but he is talking about spending more time with his family. Maybe it’s better to walk away too early than limp away too late.

So appreciate one of the greatest players in Bucs history, who took them from lovable losers to Super Bowl 55 champions.

We’re not talking about the greatest quarterbac­k of all time in this case.

Instead, consider that you soon could be saying goodbye to linebacker Lavonte David.

“Every offseason, I always go in with the mindset that I’m going to train like I’m a rookie again,” said David, 32. “This time, things are different now. I have a daughter now. I want to spend time with her as much as I can and watch her grow and soak in everything. I’m blessed to be in this position, and I don’t take it for granted at all. That’s the main thing. I try to remind myself: Never take these opportunit­ies for granted.”

Rediscover­ing himself

A year ago, David suffered through one of the worst seasons of his career. He missed five games, the final three of the regular season with a painful midfoot injury. He had 97 tackles, including 5 tackles for loss (his fewest as a pro), with no intercepti­ons and 1 fumble recovery.

Until the week of the Bucs’ wild-card game against the Philadelph­ia Eagles, he wasn’t sure he would be able to play in the postseason.

“I hurt real bad,” David said. “I had to wear a cast. I had to wear a boot for a couple weeks. It was tough, just working to be able to get back out there and get myself in position where I could at least run and push off and get to where I could at least tolerate the pain. I didn’t know if I would make it.

“A couple days before the game I found out I was good enough to go, that I would be able to tolerate the pain that was going in my foot. It was definitely a tough week, I’ll say that. I wanted to get out there bad. The playoffs is something nobody wants to miss.”

David estimated he was playing at about 65% and had to throttle back his aggressive­ness just to make it through the game.

“I couldn’t be the Lavonte David I could usually be, the sideline-to-sideline guy who is instinctiv­e and things like that,” he said. “I just had to hone in and focus on my assignment and my job only for the most part. But now, to be able to have full-go, 100 percent, I’ll be able to play the game the way I know how to play the game, hopefully these playoffs will be a different result.”

David, who is in the final season of a 2-year, $25 million contract and will become a free agent in March, rededicate­d himself to training and better nutrition beginning in the offseason, rebuilding his body and emphasizin­g more rest and recovery.

“It’s a long season,” he said. “You’ve got to be able to switch up more things and get more rest. Sleeping in more. Coming in later. Fridays off, that was a huge part . ... Understand­ing what the bigger goal was. Getting to this point fully healthy. That’s something I’ve always thought about, and that’s where I was, especially last year.”

The results were remarkable for David, the NFL’s second-oldest starting inside linebacker to 33-yearold Demario Davis of the New Orleans Saints.

David responded with one of the best seasons of his career. He tied linebacker Devin White for the team lead in tackles with 124. He also had 10 tackles for loss, 3 sacks, 3 quarterbac­k hits and a forced fumble.

“He’s a true profession­al,” coach Todd Bowles said. “He came back. He worked out every day. He kept his body good. He kept his legs fresh, he did all the right things . ... You’ve got to protect him from himself sometimes, because he tries to go nonstop. But it’s a credit to him and how hungry he is and how much he loves to play the game.”

Familial bonds

Nobody endured more losing seasons with the Bucs than David until they reached the playoffs in 2020. Prior to that season, the 2012 second-round pick from Nebraska enjoyed only one winning record and zero postseason appearance­s with Tampa Bay. There also were some personal losses.

His mother, Lynette David, had always been his guiding light, encouragin­g him to stick things out at Fort Scott Community College in Kansas. She was his biggest fan and lived long enough to see David sign a 5-year, $50.25 million contract extension before she died in 2016 due to complicati­ons with diabetes.

His dad, Edward Nelson, never missed a football game from the time David played for the Liberty City Warriors in Miami. He was his motivator, and he was with him when the Bucs won Super Bowl 55. Nelson, however, died five months after that game and two months after he watched his son graduate from Nebraska in 2021.

In May, David became a father when he and his wife, Tondrea, had a baby girl, Logan Lynette David. Suddenly, he had new priorities.

“You think about a lot of things,” David said. “I want to make sure I spend plenty of time with my daughter.”

Then a moment will pass, like it did prior to the NFC South-clinching win over Carolina. Gerald McCoy, the former Bucs Pro Bowl defensive tackle who was drafted by Tampa Bay two years earlier than David, embraced his long-time teammate on the way to the locker room.

“When you come into the league you try to be the best player you can, and the team goal is to win the Super Bowl. In doing so, you create brotherhoo­ds,” McCoy said. “Some people become more than teammates. They become brothers, and that’s what Lavonte is to me.”

Sharing the moments

McCoy played nine seasons with the Bucs and was named to six Pro Bowls. But he never reached the playoffs.

“He’s living through me right now,” David said. “That’s what I always talk about: ‘I’m doing this for you.’ ”

How many more moments David will share with Bucs fans is unknown. Tampa Bay could use a high draft pick on an inside linebacker. David’s backup, K.J. Britt, hasn’t shown enough in the few times he’s played to determine if he will be David’s eventual replacemen­t.

In the meantime, David doesn’t plan to waste this chance Monday night’s wild-card game against the Dallas Cowboys.

“I love the game of football, so as long as I still love it and I’m still feeling good and playing on a high level, I’m going to keep going.”

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