Ryan Jensen Talks Precision, Elites & Freaks
July 27th, 2021BY IRA KAUFMAN
Ryan Jensen wasn’t happy with his first season as a Buccaneer.
He wasn’t alone.
Jensen signed as a free agent from Baltimore in 2018, becoming the NFL’s highest-paid center at the time. When the Bucs went 5-11 in Dirk Koetter’s final year on the sidelines, poor offensive line play was a major culprit. The front couldn’t protect the quarterback and couldn’t consistently open up running lanes.
What else is there? Jameis Winston and Ryan Fitzpatrick were dumped 41 times and Tampa Bay averaged only 95 yards per game on the ground.
Take away the scrambling of Winston and Fitzpatrick and that rushing average shrinks to 68 yards. Flash forward two years later and the offensive line emerged as a team strength en route to a championship.
And there’s Ryan Jensen, still right in the middle of the action.
“A lot of it is just getting comfortable,” he says. “My first year outside of Baltimore was a little shaky. I don’t like saying it, but it’s the truth, I got a little big-headed after signing that big contract. I stopped doing things the right way. I wasn’t happy with it and I know they weren’t happy with it.
“I knew I had to get back to what I do. Then new coaches come in the second year and really fit what I do best. We rely on a lot of physical-type plays and that fits my personality.”
I’ve asked several of Jensen’s linemates if they feel added pressure blocking for Tom Brady and the answer is always the same: we do our best on each and every snap, no matter who is under center.
C’mon, man.
Are you telling me that the guys charged with keeping Brady upright don’t share a heightened sense of responsibility, knowing one false move could wreck Tampa Bay’s season?
“You don’t want to get too caught up in who’s back there,” Jensen says. “As an offensive lineman, your job is to protect the quarterback and run the ball. If you get too caught up in the glamour of Tom Brady, you’re not doing your job.”
That doesn’t mean having Brady on your side isn’t a huge advantage.
“I’m going into Year 9, thinking I know a lot of stuff, but Tom’s continually learning,” Jensen says. “The way he sees games, helps me. Knowing the exact spot your quarterback is going to throw from is huge. People say it’s only half a yard. Well, half a yard is a big difference for a tackle expecting you to be 7 1-2 yards back and now you’re at 8 yards.”
So much has changed since Jensen’s first game as a Buccaneer.
In the 2018 opener at New Orleans, Caleb Benenoch started at right guard and Demar Dotson was the right tackle in Tampa Bay’s startling 48-40 triumph. They’re both gone, along with Koetter, Fitzpatrick and DeSean Jackson, who caught two long TD passes that day.
Now Jensen has Alex Cappa digging into the trenches off his right shoulder and Tristan Wirfs manning Dotson’s former spot.
Jensen knows what star quality looks like in an offensive lineman.
During his career with the Ravens, Jensen was a teammate of guard Marshal Yanda, who made eight Pro Bowls and four times was named one of the NFL’s Top 100 players.
“The kid’s a freak,” Jensen says of Wirfs. “Left or right, he might have been the best tackle in the league last season — with no preseason and no OTAs. He’s consistently getting better, which is even scarier, and his work ethic is wonderful.
“Tristan is one of those generational guys. Everyone in this league is elite as an athlete, but then there are the elites within the elites, guys like Aaron Donald. You have those freaks within the freaks. Tristan is on the right track to be one of those guys.”
July 27th, 2021 at 10:40 am
So he cost Jameis his career b/c he was fat & happy w/ the new contract. What a great guy
July 27th, 2021 at 10:50 am
No Pete, ATM did that mostly himself wut all of his turnovers. Take your meds again your hallucinating!
July 27th, 2021 at 10:50 am
Great quote from Jensen, Sage!!
“Tristan is one of those generational guys. Everyone in this league is elite as an athlete, but then there are the elites within the elites, guys like Aaron Donald. You have those freaks within the freaks. Tristan is on the right track to be one of those guys.”
July 27th, 2021 at 10:51 am
@Pete So now we are blaming Jensen for Jameis? Jameis did plenty enough to not get that contract extension, and he STILL gets a shot to start for the Saints. Career ain’t over yet.
The “Knowing the exact spot your quarterback is going to throw from is huge” line is one I never really thought of before. Jameis would get all wild-eyed and bounce around the pocket – Jameis is gonna take sacks no matter where he goes.
July 27th, 2021 at 11:49 am
Dont even repond to medicated pete
Doesnt even talk football most days
Pretty sure he is tmax in disguise anyway
July 27th, 2021 at 12:21 pm
Medicated Pete- JW has everything in place to extend his career!!! Good team, good offensive line, good coaches. Now it’s up to him to protect the ball! That’s always been his problem! We’ll see how that goes!
July 27th, 2021 at 12:56 pm
There is a big difference in 7.5 yards vs 8 yards? That’s only 18 inches.
Crazy. Good stuff.
I love when an article leads me to see the game a little differently.
July 27th, 2021 at 1:19 pm
“Left or right, he might have been the best tackle in the league last year.”
Hmmmmmmm….Donovan?
July 27th, 2021 at 1:46 pm
BridleOaks, what about him? We can talk about one guy being potentially generational without bringing the other into the conversation.
July 27th, 2021 at 10:20 pm
Great story.
July 29th, 2021 at 11:01 pm
I did not like jW on the Bucs at all but I kept saying that if they could get an older QB to teach him he might be really great. Then he got Drew Brees. I’m telling you guys if he makes it as a starter WATCH OUT. We have a defense that may get him down, in that case but Idk. I never liked him and I will happily eat my words if I am wrong.