If Buccaneers clean house, will Jameis Winston be wanted?

BALTIMORE, MD - DECEMBER 16: Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston (3) warms up on the sidelines during the game against the Baltimore Ravens on December 16, 2018, at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, MD. (Photo by Mark Goldman/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
BALTIMORE, MD - DECEMBER 16: Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston (3) warms up on the sidelines during the game against the Baltimore Ravens on December 16, 2018, at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, MD. (Photo by Mark Goldman/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) /
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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers may plan to keep Jameis Winston heading into next year, but would a new head coach or general manager follow suit?

As the Tampa Bay Buccaneers end another disappointing season on Sunday the future of head coach Dirk Koetter, and to a lesser degree that of general manager Jason Licht, is up in the air. The status of quarterback Jameis Winston is also a big question, with a fifth-year option guaranteed for injury in 2019. But according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the Buccaneers intend to bring back the former No. 1 overall pick next year.

Winston started this season with a three-game suspension, then took the starting job back when Ryan Fitzpatrick’s “FitzMagic” inevitably faded. He was benched in favor of Fitzpatrick, then took the starting job back again a few weeks later. Overall Winston has started eight games this season and played in 10, throwing for over 2,600 yards with 15 touchdowns, 13 interceptions and a career-best 64.7 percent completion rate. Over five starts in the second run this year as the No. 1 guy, Winston has thrown just two interceptions in 179 pass attempts.

Koetter has sounded like a man who knows he’s almost done as Buccaneers’ head coach this week. A search for a new head coach seemed sure to run parallel with deeper questions about who Tampa Bay’s quarterback next year. But as Greg Auman of The Athletic pointed out, Winston’s $20.9 million option would be on the lower end of the cost to replace him with any expectation of having someone better.

A plan on Dec. 30 can easily become an official decision to part with Winston by early March. A new head coach and/or general manager would surely have a prominent part in that decision, one way or the other, and based purely on an inconsistent level of play during his career Winston is still a question mark as a franchise quarterback.

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Assuming Koetter is fired, the Buccaneers have essentially let it out that head coach candidates have to be comfortable with Winston as the starting quarterback next year or come with a compelling case not to keep him. There’s no commitment beyond that, but if taking the job in Tampa Bay comes with Winston as a package deal, that feels like an unnecessary and preemptive limitation on the search.