LAKE BUENA VISTA | Phillip
Buchanon is a young man at 27 years old, but he
feels he has gone through a lot in his six years
in the NFL.
Buchanon went from a flashy first-round draft pick to
being outright released in a little less than five
seasons.
Since coming to the Tampa Bay in 2006, however,
Buchanon is becoming known for his consistency at
cornerback.
"He's been here two years, and he's more comfortable
with me and more comfortable in the system," said Tampa
Bay secondary coach Raheem Morris. "He's looking great
in camp. He's looking awesome."
In college, many thought the 5-foot-11, 186-pound
Buchanon was on his way to joining the long list of
great University of Miami's great defensive players. He
had seven interceptions in 32 games, including five his
senior season. He also led the Big East with a 15-yard
punt return average and had two touchdowns.
That play-making ability caught the Oakland Raiders'
attention, and they traded up to take Buchanon with the
17th pick in the first round of the 2002 NFL Draft.
Yet, after two strong seasons in which he had three
interception returns and three punt returns for
touchdowns, Buchanon's stock went into a nosedive.
He was sent to Houston in 2005 and played a season and
a half before being benched. He was released Oct. 16,
2006. Tampa Bay signed him one day later and the change
of environment rejuvenated the Fort Myers native.
The problems Oakland and Houston seemingly had with
Buchanon - poor coverage skills, poor tackling - have
not appeared with the Bucs.
He played in 10 games with the Bucs in 2006 but really
had an impact last season. Buchanon set a career high
with 63 tackles, ranked second on the team with three
interceptions and ranked third on the team with a
career-high 11 passes defended. He also forced a fumble
and returned a team-high 16 punts.
"He was a great player coming out of Miami," said Tampa
Bay coach Jon Gruden. "You don't get picked in the
first round unless you are. He went to Houston and
actually did some good things there. But he is a very
athletic, gifted athlete and he's a great kid. He's got
a lot of pride and he's playing really good football
for us."
Buchanon said he got a bad rap in Oakland and Houston.
"I'm in a better environment," he said. "I never
figured myself to have a problem with tackling. The
situations that I was put in - it was down, a lot of
losing, a lot of things going on behind closed doors
that people didn't know about. It was kind of
depressing. But at the same time, I came here with the
mind-set of coming here playing. They respect you (in
Tampa). They make you feel like a man, and in certain
places they didn't make you feel that way.
"People are always going to have a knock on you,"
Buchanon said. "They're always going to have good and
bad things about you. I'm focused on doing things that
I can control, and that is focus on being a better
player, a better tackler, making more plays, helping my
team win and doing whatever they want me to do."
He knows he can't afford to rest.
With Brian Kelly leaving for Detroit, Buchanon
inherited the open starting corner spot. But the Bucs
brought in Eugene Wilson from New England and drafted
another flashy cornerback, Aqib Talib, with their first
pick in the 2008 NFL Draft.
"Competition always brings out the best in everybody,"
Morris said. "A lot of guys in my room, they're
motivated guys. I don't think anybody ever doesn't want
to be great. From the bottom up in that group, they're
going to fight everyday. Phil came back with that same
mind-set to fight. He had a bad ending in Oakland, a
bad ending in Houston, and I think he found something
here he likes and wants to keep it and he's fighting
for it."
For Buchanon, it's just a matter of focusing in on the
game he loves.
"You've heard the commercial that says 'Believe in
now?'" he asked. "I just try to take it for the now.
I'm just focused on the day and let the game come to
me. So when they come to me, I'll be ready to play."
(theledger.com)