Baker Mayfield left little room for interpretation after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers‘ 28-23 loss to the New England Patriots on Sunday, November 9.

His frustration wasn’t about a single blown assignment or a single missed chance.

It was about a pattern, a creeping sense that Tampa Bay is repeating the same mistakes that have cost them games before, and that accountability is not where it needs to be.

“That’s a good team that we just played, but quite frankly, we didn’t do nearly a good enough job on the fundamental things. And when you play a good team like that, I’ve said that multiple times, they’re gonna take advantage of it,” Mayfield told the Buccaneers Radio Network.

He then sharpened the critique: “And at some point, these players need to get absolutely sick of it and they need to take accountability for it and get it f—-fixed. We just got beat on a twist. Same sh- that we put on tape in the past, and we didn’t do it again. So we gotta get it fixed.”

The message was aimed at everyone, teammates, coaches and the locker room culture itself.

Mayfield had thrown three touchdowns and played well enough to win, but his tone made it clear the team’s issues go far beyond offensive production.

Missed fundamentals, lapses in execution, and avoidable breakdowns are defining the conversation far more than the Bucs’ explosive potential.

Todd Bowles mirrored much of Mayfield‘s frustration.

He told reporters, “Obviously, we didn’t play it well enough. I definitely didn’t coach it well enough. It starts with me, and those things can’t happen if you’re playing against a good team like that, or any team in this league. We gave them up, and it was inexcusable on our part.”

Bowles didn’t shy away from Mayfield‘s bluntness either. “When certain people talk, everybody takes heat for it. I’m perfectly fine with it,” he said, reinforcing that leadership must drive the group’s response.

A team searching for urgency as pressure mounts

The following week’s walkthrough was described internally as “one of the best” the team had produced.

But players themselves acknowledged that practice precision must turn into Sunday consistency.

Wide receiver Emeka Egbuka underscored the point: “We know that everyone has to do their one-eleventh. People took great accountability … just have to continue stacking days throughout the week to fix everything that we need to fix before Sunday’s kickoff.”

The Patriots exploited Tampa Bay’s defensive breakdowns with rookie quarterback Drake Maye throwing for 270 yards and two touchdowns.

It wasn’t the kind of loss a contender can dismiss easily, especially after a bye week designed for correction and reset.

As Mayfield noted, the problem wasn’t the scheme, but instead an issue of focus and discipline.

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