1996 Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The 1996 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season was the team's 21st in the National Football League.

The season began with the team trying to improve on an 7-9 season in 1995. It was the first season for first-time head coach Tony Dungy.

The 1996 Buccaneers season would be a turning point for the franchise, as the team began to acquire the personnel that would lead it into its most successful era.

Season Summary
Despite having been 7-7 toward the end of 1995, the 1996 team went 0-5 before getting their first win over Tony Dungy's former team, the Minnesota Vikings. The 24-13 win over Minnesota started another streak few noted at the time, in which the team held opponents to 13 points or less in four consecutive games. Despite this, the Oakland Raiders came to Tampa Bay in Week Eleven facing a 1-8 Buccaneers team. Tampa Bay defeated Oakland 20-17 in overtime, which was the first of five wins over the next seven games.

The following week, Tampa Bay traveled to the West Coast, where they had had trouble winning. Playing an interconference game at San Diego, Tampa Bay found themselves down 14-0. But Tampa Bay would go on a 25-3 run, and win by the score of 25-17. Tampa would win two of the next three, including an emotional win over the Chicago Bears 34-19 in which the Bucs returned a punt for a touchdown.

Many fans took encouragement from the team going 5-2 in the final seven games, as well as the emergence of defensive tackle Warren Sapp who had nine sacks on the season, linebacker Derrick Brooks, and fullback Mike Alstott, who along with safety John Lynch and linebacker Hardy Nickerson, were forming the core of what would prove to be a dominant defense.

The 1996 season also marked the final year the Buccaneers wore their trademark orange and white uniforms.

Offseason
The offense struggled all season, and was not helped by an ill-advised holdout by running back Errict Rhett, who would have far fewer carries the following year.

Prior to the season the Buccaneers were still unsure if the team would remain in Tampa Bay or if it would be moved by new ownership family led by Malcom Glazer and sons. Eventually, the team's future was determined by a local referendum, which approved funding for a new stadium for the 1998 season.

Rule changes earlier in the decade brought about a salary cap, and a minimum spending cap forced Bucs to spend more on players. With the new ownership, tax disclosures showed the old Culverhouse regime was running a 'for-profit' business in which players who were getting good were released before their contracts could get big, all the while claiming poor and trying to get some home games played in Orlando, Florida.

NFL Draft
Prior to the 1996 season the team drafted fullback Mike Alstott, who became one of the most popular players in the teams history, as well as defensive back Donnie Abraham. Although Alstott would become one of the Buccaneers most popular players of all time, the organization did not target him in the draft: the team had originally wanted tailback Leeland McElroy, who would be taken before the Bucs drafted.

Schedule
Notes:
 * All times in North American Eastern Time. (UTC–4 and UTC–5 during Standard Time)


 * = blacked out locally