Buccaneers Move Quickly to Replace Suspended RB
Whatever shock the Tampa Bay Buccaneers had after learning of the NFL’s 6-game suspension for running back Josh Williams didn’t get in the way of business. In this case, that meant figuring out how to replace Williams on the 53-man roster with a quickness.

“Bucs have signed running back Owen Wright from the practice squad to the 53-man roster,” Fox Sports NFL reporter Greg Auman wrote on his official X account on Friday, November 14. “Need depth with Josh Williams suspended for the next six games.”
The Buccaneers, who are 6-3 and in first place in the NFC South Division, face Super Bowl contenders in consecutive games with at trip east to face the Buffalo Bills in Week 11 then a trip west to face the Los Angeles Rams in Week 12.
Wright Broke Into NFL as Undrafted Free Agent
While we don’t know much about how Wright, 5-foot-9 and 214 pounds, might hold up against NFL competition, we do know he’s resilient. That’s something we can say about pretty much anyone who makes it into the NFL as an undrafted free agent.
Wright started his college career at William & Mary before transferring to Monmouth, another FCS school, and was an All-CAA pick in 2022 by scoring an incredible 17 touchdowns — 16 rushing and 1 receiving — on just 74 combined touches.
In 2023, Wright made the Baltimore Ravens and played in 1 regular season game before spending 2024 on injured reserve. He signed with the Buccaneers in the offseason and made it to final roster cuts on August 26 before being brought back on the practice squad on October 7.
Wright has played in 1 regular season game for the Buccaneers — a home win over the San Francisco 49ers in Week 6.
NFL Came Down Hard on Williams
The NFL announced it was suspending Williams, a rookie running back, on November 11. That means he’s not eligible to return until a Week 17 road game against the Miami Dolphins.
“Bucs RB Josh Williams has been suspended six games without pay for violating the NFL’s Performance-Enhancing Substances Policy, the league announced,” Tampa Bay Times reporter Rick Stroud wrote on his official X account.
The problem for the Buccaneers at running back is depth. Starter Bucky Irving, who rushed for over 1,000 yards as a rookie in 2024, will miss his sixth consecutive game in Week 11 with a shoulder injury.
“Bucs rookie running back Josh WIlliams has been suspended for six games without pay for violating the NFL’s Performance-Enhancing Substances Policy,” Fox Sports NFL reporter Greg Auman wrote on his official X account. “He has played in three games this season, with four carries for 11 yards.”
Williams and Wright are similar running backs who have been on similar career paths.
Williams, 5-foot-9 and 210 pounds, wasn’t selected in the 2025 NFL draft out of LSU and made the Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent.
It wasn’t much different than college, when Williams went from a walk-on at LSU to having 2,094 career yards of total offense and 18 touchdowns for the Tigers.
“Originally a walk-on at LSU, Williams spent five years with the program,” LSU Wire’s Alexis Yoder wrote after Williams made Tampa Bay’s 53-man roster in August. “His most productive season came in 2022 when he took 97 carries for 532 yards and six touchdowns. Last year, he took 117 carries for 482 yards and six touchdowns.”
Packers RB Josh Jacobs Honors His Debt of Gratitude With A Quiet Lifetime Promise

Not every NFL story is about yardage and highlight reels. For Green Bay Packers running back Josh Jacobs, one of the most powerful chapters of his journey was written long before he ever wore green and gold. It began on a dim night, in a small home, when football looked more like a distant dream than a real future.

Years ago, Jacobs was a teenager trying to balance school, family responsibility and the fragile hope of an NFL career. His family was struggling with unpaid bills, late rent and nights where dinner was more of a question than a guarantee. Football practice meant bus rides, borrowed cleats and a constant fear that money would run out before opportunity arrived.
At one of those breaking points, a neighbor who had quietly watched the family for years stepped in. She was not a coach, not a scout and not a sponsor. She was a single mother of two who worked double shifts at a local diner. One evening, after seeing Jacobs walk home in worn out shoes, she knocked on the door and did something that changed everything.
She covered the overdue power bill so the lights would stay on.
She slipped him cash so he could afford gear and transportation to practice.
And more than that, she sat him down and told him that his dream was not a burden, but a gift he owed it to himself to chase.
For her, it might have felt like simple kindness. For Josh Jacobs, it was a lifeline.
From that night on, he told himself one thing.
If he ever made it to the NFL, if the cameras ever turned his way, he would never forget the person who helped him when nobody else was looking.
Years later, after signing his first major NFL contract and eventually landing in Green Bay, Jacobs kept that private promise. Each month, consistently and quietly, he has been sending financial support to the woman and her family who once kept his own family afloat. Not as charity, and not to be publicized, but as a personal covenant of gratitude.
According to people close to him, the commitment is simple.
He made sure her debts were cleared.
He set up a monthly transfer so she would never have to choose between the light bill and groceries again.
And he told her that as long as he is blessed to play this game, her family will never be forgotten.

Jacobs has never focused on the numbers. The total amount over the years has grown far beyond what she once gave him in that desperate moment. But to him, the math was never the point.
What matters is loyalty, gratitude and honoring the people who believed in him when the rest of the world saw just another kid from a struggling neighborhood.
His appreciation did not stop with money. Wanting the connection between the families to be more than a bank transfer, Jacobs later offered a job to her oldest son. Today, that son works directly for Jacobs in Green Bay, helping with transportation, errands and family logistics, especially when Jacobs is traveling during the season.
It is not just a paycheck. It is stability, dignity and a new chapter that has turned an old act of kindness into a permanent bridge between two families.
In Green Bay, fans cheer Josh Jacobs for his relentless running style, his hard yards between the tackles and his ability to keep drives alive when defenses know the run is coming. They see the touchdowns, the broken tackles and the passion he brings to every snap.
Stories like this one show another side.
A man who remembers the dark nights before the bright lights.
A player who understands that success is not only measured on the field, but also in how far he reaches back to lift up the people who once lifted him.
For Josh Jacobs, greatness is not just about what he gains with the ball in his hands. It is also about what he gives away, quietly, in the name of gratitude.