Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Candidates were told Trask will get shot to start at QB

- By Rick Stroud

TAMPA — Kyle Trask will get his shot to be the Tampa Bay Bucs’ starting quarterbac­k. He has waited without complaint or complacenc­y for two seasons and has earned the opportunit­y.

That’s what the Bucs told at least several candidates who interviewe­d for the offensive coordinato­r job that went to Dave Canales. But they also said they plan to add a veteran or two to compete with the former Florida star.

However, the Bucs are $56.53 million above the $224.8 million salary cap, so they admitted during interviews that money will affect which veteran quarterbac­ks they can attempt to sign.

It’s important to note that Tampa Bay drafted Trask with the final pick in the second round of the 2021 draft. Only the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence, the N.Y. Jets’ Zach Wilson and the San Francisco 49ers’ Trey Lance, taken with the first three picks, The Chicago Bears’ Justin Fields, No. 11 overall, and the New England Patriots’ Mac Jones, No. 15 overall, went ahead of him.

Trask has been the heir apparent to Tom Brady but couldn’t win the No. 2 spot from Blaine Gabbert in last year’s training camp.

Nonetheles­s, the NFC South at the moment is fresh out of franchise quarterbac­ks, so there’s no reason to not let Trask try to see what he can do in Canales’ quarterbac­k-friendly scheme.

Canales, who spent the past 13 seasons coaching in the Seattle Seahawks’ offense, believes his system doesn’t require a quarterbac­k to have the most size, the strongest arm or the quickest feet.

Trask is 6 feet 5 and 236 pounds, with only adequate arm strength and functional mobility in the pocket. He has worked hard to lean out and improve his heavy feet. But he has completed only 58.4% of his passes in the preseason, with 2 touchdowns and 4 intercepti­ons. He went 3-for-9 for 23 yards in his only regular-season appearance with the Bucs, in the 2022 season finale at Atlanta, so his accuracy must improve.

“I like that he’s a worker,” former Bucs coach Bruce Arians said. “He’s got stature. His arm strength is better. He’s athletic enough. Smart. He had two years to see how Tom and Blaine prepared. Yes, hopefully we get a veteran to compete [with him].”

The system, Canales said, will handle the rest.

“It’s a style of play,” Canales said. “If I go back to [the University of Southern California] for a bit [where he spent a year as assistant strength coach], you just start rattling off the quarterbac­ks that came out of there. Going back to Carson Palmer, you had Matt Leinart, then here comes John David Booty and then Mark Sanchez. Matt Barkley falls into that category as well. One guy after the other, highly touted, gets a lot of accolades, when really it’s a system that is friendly for the quarterbac­k.

“I heard [former Saints and new Broncos coach] Sean Payton say this the other day, and I thought it was brilliant: ‘You’ve got to take the quarterbac­k off the high dive.’ … You can’t be leaning on him to make every single play all of the time.”

Brady led the NFL in pass attempts each of the past two seasons. But Bucs coach Todd Bowles hired Canales hoping he could bring the Seahawks’ efficient run game with him.

Seattle tied for fifth in the league averaging 4.8 yards per attempt last season; the Bucs were last with a 3.4-yard average.

“The best way to do it is just to hand it off to your talent in the backfield,” Canales said. “Teaching the quarterbac­k how to win was critical.

“[Seahawks quarterbac­k] Geno [Smith] spent a couple of years sitting behind that [with Russell Wilson starting], watching it like, ‘I can do that. I can manage that.’ And then Geno [starting last season after Wilson was traded] allowed us to open up the playbook a little bit with some of our pass stuff that he was a little bit stronger in. So we just tilted it a little bit this way or that way based upon who the quarterbac­k was.”

Still, just as they did after Jameis Winston’s fifth and final season in Tampa Bay, the Bucs will continue to look to see what’s behind door No. 2.

If Trask wins the starting job, the key will be for Canales to tailor the offense to him. More athletic quarterbac­ks have operated in this offense, but Canales doesn’t believe it will be a problem for Trask.

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