Bucs pick Barton to rebuild line

by Gary Shelton on April 26, 2024

in general

Friday, 4 a.m.

You remember things about a champion.

You remember the quarterback, the best there ever was. You remember the running back and the cool nickname. You remember the relentless pass rush.

And, perhaps, you remember a solid but effective offensive line.

The Tampa Bay Bucs took a step toward rebuilding that Thursday night when they drafted Graham Barton of






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Duke, who they immediately proclaimed as a center. It was a well-received pick, an accomplished player in an area of need.

"He's a very athletic guy,'' Bucs' general manager Jason Licht said. "He plays with great base. He plays with a nasty temperament. It's all the ingredients we look for in our offensive line."

In recent years, the Bucs’ line has been patched together. Think of the starting offensive line from the Super Bowl — center Ryan Jensen, guards Ali Marpet and Alex Kappa and tackles Donovan Smith and Tristan Wirfs.

But Marpet retired.

And Jensen got hurt.

And Kappa left as a free agent.

And Smith didn’t live up to his contract.

And Wirfs moved from right to left tackle.

Rebuilding that line hasn’t happened overnight. But if Barton can handle the middle, the team has a chance at its best line since that Super Bowl.

"I think part of this whole process has been m positional flexibility," Barton said. "I think center (or) guard is what works best for me."

Yeah, the Bucs need a better pass rush still. They could use another receiver, another corner, another tight end. But Barton seems like a safe spot to start.

The second round of the draft begins at 7 p.m. tonight.

Bolts on brink of elimination after loss

by Gary Shelton on April 26, 2024

in general

Sramkos added another goal./TIM WIRT

Friday, 3 a.m.

From here, you can see the darkness.

From here, you can hear the silence of an empty arena. You can imagine the fans who may not have much left to cheer about. You can see the rocks below.

From here, the Tampa Bay Lightning can see the off-season.

The Bolts are down to their last breath after Thursday night’s 5-3 loss to the Florida Panthers. Playing at Amalie






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Motte celebrates his goal./TIM WIRT

Arena didn’t make a difference — once again, the Panthers were quicker, crisper in their third straight victory.

This time, the Bolts were able to get a lead. They went ahead 2-1 early in the second period on goals by Steven Stamkos and Tyler Motte. But the Panthers regained the lead by the end of the period, then closed the Lightning out in the third.

Nicholas Paul also scored a goal for the Bolts.

“It was disappointing that second period down a goal,” Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. “I felt we deserved a better fate. Don’t get me wrong — two good players shooting pucks, but one of them was from 60-something feet, the other was through a screen.”

All of it puts the Lightning in a situation where they have to win the next game…and the next…and the one after that … and the next.

The Bolts play the Panthers Sunday afternoon at 5 p.m. at Amalie Arena.

Paul scored a Lightning goal./TIM WIRT


Mead’s home run leads Rays to victory

by Gary Shelton on April 25, 2024

in general

Mead hit his second homer./TIM WIRT

Thursday, 4 a.m.

The last thing you might expect from the Tampa Bay Rays is the guy from down under to go up and over.

Curtis Mead, hardly a fence-buster, lifted the Rays to a 7-5 victory over the Detroit Tigers with a two-run homer in the sixth inning. It was Mead’s first home run of the season, and the second of his career. Mead is hitting .231 on the season.






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The Rays salvaged one win in the three-game series against the Tigers, but it didn’t come without a struggle.

Tampa Bay had built a 4-1 lead, but fell behind 5-4 with the Tigers’ two-run sixth.

The Rays came back with a strong day from the bullpen. Jason Adam went two hitless innings, and Garrett Cleavinger picked up his second save. 

The Rays had 11 hits, including two each from Yandy Diaz, Isaac Paredes and Ben Rortvedt.

The Rays had lost four of their previous five games. They are now 13-13 on the season.

The Rays are off today, then play at the Chicago White Sox on Friday night at 7:40 p.m.

Bolts fall behind 2-0 in series against Panthers

by Gary Shelton on April 24, 2024

in general

Vasilevskiy stopped 34 shots./TIM WIRT

Wednesday, 4 a.m.

The moments when it got away are with them still. Carter Verehaeghe’s winning goal. The save by Sergie Bobrovskiy’s elbow. The four-minute power play where they didn’t score.

They might as well look at those moments.

It beats looking at their situation.






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The Tampa Bay Lightning dropped its second 3-2 game (this one in overtime) to the Florida Panthers Tuesday night. The Bolts fell behind, then came back, then lost in overtime. It was the Panthers’ 11th straight overtime win; the Bolts are 1-10 in their last 11 overtimes.

This one felt closer than the Bolts’ opening 3-2 loss to Florida. After a flat first period when Tampa Bay fell behind 2-0 on goals by Sam Bennett and  Vladimir Tarasenko.

The Bolts tied the game on goals by Brayden Point and Steven Stamkos to force overtime. But one key save by Panthers’ goalie Sergei Bobrovsky came in the second period when he dove and blocked a shot by the Lightning’s Matt Dumba with his elbow.

“You’re looking at two of the best,” Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. “Sometimes, you have sit here and marvel at some the saves that were made.”

Former Lightning player Verhaeghe scored the winning goal three minutes into overtime.

After tw games, NHL leading scoring Nikita Kucherov has just one point and only three shots.

“This group knows how to get it done,” Cooper said. “It was so damn close to getting done.”

The teams play again Thursday night at 7 p.m. at Amalie Arena.

Rays’ bullpen blows another game

April 24, 2024 general

Wednesday, 3 a.m. Stop them if you’ve heard this before. The bullpen of the Tampa Bay Rays is still leaky. The Rays dropped a 4-2 game to Detroit — their fourth loss in five games — when, once again, their relief corps could not make a narrow lead hold up late. This time, the losing […]

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Tigers batter Rays behind Skubal

April 23, 2024 general

Tuesday, 4 a.m. The less said about this one, the better. The Tampa Bay Rays were clobbered Monday night, losing a 7-1 rout to the Detroit Tigers and pitcher Tarik Skubal. It was the team’s third loss in its last four games and sent them back to the .500 level at 12-12. The Rays could […]

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Bad innings dooms Rays against Yanks

April 22, 2024 general

Monday, 4 a.m. There are terrible places to forget how to play baseball. Standing on the mound at Yankee Stadium is one of them. Aaron Civale, in the middle of a pretty good pitching performance, had his control abandon him in the fifth inning of a 5-4 loss. Pitching in a 1-1 tie, Civale got […]

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Caballero’s double lifts Rays to victory

April 21, 2024 general

Sunday, 4 a.m. It was the kind of game that makes the Yankees’ beancounters pay attention. “We paid this….for that? Despite the highly paid lineup of the New York Yankees, the Tampa Bay Rays slipped past the Yanks 2-0 in 10 innings Saturday afternoon. The Yankees managed only four hits — and no runs — […]

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Rays can’t hold on against Yankees

April 20, 2024 general

Saturday, 4 a.m. Perhaps the New York Yankees noticed something new about the Tampa Bay Rays Friday night. They can’t field. They can’t relieve. They can’t hit with runners in scoring position. Oh, and they can’t win. Content beyond this point is for members only. Already a member? To view the rest of this column, […]

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Pepiot shuts down Angels in victory

April 19, 2024 general

Friday, 4 a.m. A few more of these, and perhaps the fans of the Tampa Bay Rays won’t miss Tyler Glasnow quite so much. Ryan Pepiot, who came to the Rays in the Glasnow shed-his-salary trade, was masterful Thursday in a 2-1 victory over the Los Angeles Angels. Pepiot went six innings and gave up […]

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