Advertisement

Tampa Bay Buccaneers fire offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich in shakeup of its coaching staff

Byron Leftwich’s time in Tampa Bay is over.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers fired the offensive coordinator after four seasons, the team announced. The team said it was letting go of six total assistants, and three others decided to retire.

Leftwich is just a couple years removed from serving as Tampa Bay’s offensive coordinator when the franchise won Super Bowl 56. However, the Bucs have regressed since winning the Super Bowl on Feb. 7, 2021.

The Bucs finished 13-4 in the 2021 season but were bounced out of the playoffs by the eventual Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Rams in the divisional round. Then this year, things got progressively worse.

More: Tom Brady non-committal on NFL future after Buccaneers ousted in playoffs by Cowboys

Veteran quarterback Tom Brady briefly retired, before changing course, and center Ryan Jensen injured his knee days into training camp. When the regular season started, the Bucs offense was lethargic and it continued throughout the 18-week schedule.

The Bucs offense finished 15th in total offense, 25th in points and last in the NFL in rushing.

Despite their struggles on offensive side of the football, Tampa Bay won the NFC South with an 8-9 record. They were the only team to enter this year’s playoffs below .500.

Tampa Bay’s playoff journey was short lived. The Bucs lost to the Dallas Cowboys in a 31-14 rout in the wild-card round. Tampa Bay's offense failed to score in the first half versus the Cowboys.

More: NFL playoffs upset alert: Ranking top four seeds based on who should worry most in divisional round

The Bucs wild-card loss to Dallas was ultimately Leftwich’s final game as offensive coordinator in Tampa Bay.

Leftwich will likely get interest from other clubs searching for an offensive coordinator. He's also been a head coaching candidate in the past.

The Bucs will now search for a new coordinator, and at the same time await Brady’s decision on if he’s going to retire, comeback to Tampa Bay or opt for employment elsewhere.

Follow USA TODAY Sports' Tyler Dragon on Twitter @TheTylerDragon.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Buccaneers fire offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich