Ever since the Bucs released safety Jordan Whitehead, the notion was that Tampa Bay would move Tykee Smith from nickelback to strong safety to replace him. The reasoning behind this would be that Smith is one of the Bucs’ best players in the secondary and putting him at safety would increase his playing time from around 75% in the slot to 100% and playing the entire game with the chance of making even more plays.
However, after speaking with general manager Jason Licht and head coach Todd Bowles, those plans might be a little different. In March at the NFL Scouting Combine, Bowles hinted that Tykee Smith could be moving to his more natural position at safety, and that was even before Whitehead didn’t have the option year on his contract declined by the team.
Todd Bowles Needs Tykee Smith For All 17 Games
So why the sudden change in course? It has nothing to do with the capabilities of Tykee Smith, last year’s third-round pick, but more so his ability to stay healthy. Smith missed four games last season due to injury, and the Bucs might be planning to keep him ready to play all 17 and the postseason.

Bucs head coach Todd Bowles and NCB Tykee Smith – Photo by: Cliff Welch/PR
“Confidence in Tykee is high,” Bowles said. “It’s just a matter of him being healthy. We think he’s a heck of a football player. Coming back, just being a rookie, it’s kind of tough to go through a year like and go through 17 games plus playoff games and preseason. That’s a lot of games. So hopefully he comes back more conditioned for the NFL season, I think he’ll be fine. From a confidence standpoint, we feel like we can put him anywhere.”
Perhaps playing fewer snaps at nickelback would keep Smith healthier in the long run than playing more snaps at safety would?
What Will The Bucs Do At Safety?

Bucs DB Tykee Smith and FS Antoine Winfield Jr. – Photo by: Cliff Welch/PR
Tampa Bay general manager Jason Licht was also noncommittal to Tykee Smith playing next to Antoine Winfield Jr. at safety, citing that the team didn’t want to put too much on his plate entering his second season in red and pewter, though he could probably handle it.