NFL: Bucs C Ryan Jensen (knee) to miss ‘months’

Date:

Share post:


Tampa Bay Buccanneers center Ryan Jensen will miss “months” with a knee injury he sustained in practice, coach Todd Bowles confirmed Friday.

Jensen was carted off the practice field with the knee injury at training camp on Thursday morning.

“We don’t know the severity of it per se, but I do know he’ll miss some significant time, up to a couple of months, whether he’ll be back later in the season, November or December, that depends on what they find. He won’t be available anytime soon,” Bowles told reporters.

Jensen, 31, was selected to his first Pro Bowl last season after starting all 17 games for the Bucs. He has not missed a start since the 2016 season.

He has competed in 100 regular season games (90 starts) and seven playoff games (six starts) with the Baltimore Ravens (2014-17) and Buccaneers. Baltimore drafted him in the sixth round in 2013 and he won a Super Bowl championship with Tampa Bay.

Bowles said Robert Hainsey and Nick Leverett will compete for the starting center spot.

“Being able to learn from Ryan and watch the way he plays the game has helped me a great deal over the last year to kind of figure out who I am as a center because that was new to me when I first got here,” Hainsey said. “So (he’s) been a great tool to have and a great mentor to have.”

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Florida flips 4-star USC LB commit Ty Jackson

Four-star linebacker and Florida native Ty Jackson flipped his Class of 2025 commitment from Southern California to the...

NCAAF: Report: ECU removing interim tag for Blake Harrell

East Carolina is removing the interim label and promoting Blake Harrell to head football coach, ESPN reported Monday. The...

NCAAF: Oregon still No. 1, but AP Top 25 reshuffled after slew of upsets

Oregon, Ohio State, Texas and Penn State held on to their spots atop the Associated Press Top 25...

NCAAF: Report: Texas QB Quinn Ewers (ankle) to undergo MRI

Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers is set to undergo what is being termed a "precautionary MRI" to determine the...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.