| Tampa Bay Buccaneers Team History
  Awarded 
                  the National Football League's 27th franchise in 1974 with the 
                  first kickoff scheduled for 1976, owner Hugh Culverhouse, a 
                  successful Florida tax lawyer and broker, hired John McKay as 
                  the first coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. McKay had achieved 
                  great success at the University of Southern California with 
                  four national championships in his 16 years and it was McKay 
                  who orchestrated the building process that led to the Buccaneers' 
                  stunning early success. 
 After losing a league-record 26 consecutive games, the Bucs 
                  broke into the win column at New Orleans on December 11, 1977. 
                  Two years later, Tampa Bay stunned the football world when it 
                  reached the 1979 NFC championship game in only its fourth season. 
                  The Bucs clinched the NFC Central title with a dramatic 3-0 
                  win over Kansas City in a driving rainstorm and then defeated 
                  Philadelphia 24-17 in playoff action to advance to within one 
                  game of the Super Bowl. But in the NFC championship, the Los 
                  Angeles Rams prevailed with a hard-fought 9-0 victory.
 
 One of the hallmarks of Tampa Bay's early success was an excellent 
                  defense led by Hall of Fame defensive end Lee Roy Selmon, who 
                  was the Bucs' first draft choice and the number one pick of 
                  the 1976 NFL draft. In his nine-season career, Selmon was named 
                  to the NFC Pro Bowl team six times and was selected as the NFL 
                  Defensive Player of the Year in 1979. Offensively, the 1979 
                  Buccaneers were led by quarterback Doug Williams and running 
                  back Ricky Bell, who gained 1,263 yards. The Buccaneers reached 
                  the playoffs for the second time just two years later in 1981. 
                  They again won the NFC Central division championship with a 
                  9-7 record. As was the case in 1979, it took a dramatic 20-17 
                  final-week win over the Detroit Lions to clinch the title. Selmon 
                  on defense and Williams at quarterback were once again key players 
                  for the Buccaneers.
 
 Although no divisional championships were awarded in the strike-shortened 
                  1982 season, the Bucs qualified for postseason play for the 
                  third time in four seasons by winning five of their final six 
                  games. A first-round playoff loss to Dallas ended Tampa Bay's 
                  season.
 
 McKay retired as coach following the 1984 season after nine 
                  years at the helm of the Buccaneers ship. In the years since 
                  McKay's departure, Leeman Bennett, Ray Perkins, Richard Williamson 
                  and Sam Wyche all have served as the Tampa Bay head coach but 
                  their cumulative record in the first nine post-McKay years was 
                  37-106-0, a .259 winning percentage. With head coach Jon Gruden 
                  at the helm and young stars leading the way, the new-look Buccaneers 
                  captured their first NFL championship with a convincing 48-21 
                  win in Super Bowl XXXVII.
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