The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have officially cut Desmond Watson.
Standing at 6-foot-6 and weighing 464lbs on his pro day in March, the rookie defensive tackle out of Florida was the heaviest player in NFL history, as he now looks for a new home.
Watson was signed by the Buccaneers after going undrafted in April, but never was able to step foot onto the field.
The 22-year-old, who lost 25 to 30lb before entering the league, understood that he would need to cut even more weight to have a chance of playing in the pros.
But despite the progress he had already made, Watson opened training camp on the non-football injury list.
While it’s not clear how much Tampa Bay wanted him to him lose, Watson will now hope to lose the weight for his next team if/when he gets picked up.
According to reports, he has been asked to do 10 laps without stopping, as footage showed Watson walking across the field without his pads on.
On Tuesday, a video surfaced of Watson at practice, watching his teammates practice while he stood on the sideline in shorts and a T-shirt.
“I feel bad for him,” posted one fan.””i feel bad for him,” posted one fan.
“It’s kinda sad,” posted another.
Watson has also been working with a team nutritionist in an attempt to get ‘healthier’.



“It’s just about trying to get him better, to be a healthier player and getting him on the field a little more,” Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles said, after Watson was placed on the NFI list.
“That’s kind of where I’m at right now.
“He’s working at it and we’re working with him and that’s all you can ask right now.”
Todd Bowles had revealed new plans for Desmond Watson
Heading into the Bucs’ final week of preseason, Watson remained on the team’s non-football illness list.
However, head coach Todd Bowles was asked about Watson before they decided to cut him and provided an update.
“That’s something we’re going to meet about in the next two days,” Bowles, who has raved about fellow Bucs rookie Shilo Sanders, said.
“I’d like to have some long-term plans for him going forward because he’s making some progress and I feel like down the line he can help us, but we’ll have those conversations toward the end of the week.”
The deadline for teams to cut down to their final, 53-man rosters is Tuesday, August 26.
Watson has virtually no chance of making the shortlist, but Sports Illustrated has broken down how the Bucs can retain Watson’s services this season without playing him.
“Watson could go to the reserve-NFI list to start the year, and that would allow him to continue his goal of losing weight,” River Wells wrote for the outlet.
“He would not count toward the active roster on this list, but the team also doesn’t have to pay him any money, either, so it’s likely they’d come to some sort of agreement on that end. Once the team wants Watson to make an attempt to play, he would have 21 days to come off of the NFI list. After that period of practice, the Buccaneers can either cut him or activate him to the active roster, so it would leave them with some options.”

Why have the Bucs signed Watson?
Analysis suggests Watson will be useful defending on critical fourth-and-1 plays.
The NFL saw a record 71.5 percent fourth-and-1 conversion rate in 2024, and some of that was due to the opinion-splitting ‘tush push’ play run by the Philadelphia Eagles.
Watson has previously been dubbed ‘the tush push terminator’ for his ability to stuff the line of scrimmage, but Bowles has insisted the young player could offer much more.
“To judge him right now is very early, and we didn’t get him for the tush push — we got him because we really thought he could play,” the Bucs coach said in May.
“It’s just a matter of getting him to the point where he can play more than two or three plays (per drive).”
“I feel like my name is etched in history, of course, as being the official heaviest player in the NFL,” Watson said back in May.
“It’s a good story, but at the same time, I don’t want that to be my narrative and things like that.
“I want to be known as a football player, and a good football player at that.
“But it is nice to be able to make history, I guess.”


Who are the NFL’s heaviest players?
No current player tops 400lbs, with Baltimore Ravens guard Daniel Faalele the heaviest in 2024, weighing in at 380lbs.
There have, though, been a few stars who have played heavier in years gone by.
Aaron Gibson, a first-round draft pick by Detroit in 1999, weighed 410lbs. He started 15 games for the Lions before getting waived in the middle of his third season.
He also played with the Dallas Cowboys and Chicago Bears before getting one final shot in the NFL with the Buffalo Bills, where he was cut near the end of training camp.

Terrell Brown, who stood at 6-foot-10 and weighed 403lbs, signed with the St. Louis Rams as an undrafted rookie in 2013.
He arrived 15lbs heavier than the then-Rams coach Jeff Fisher expected, and while the Mississippi prospect shed some weight during camp, he didn’t make the team.
Nate Newton, who was one of the most dominant guards of the 1990s, joined the Cowboys when he weighed 401lbs.
He famously lost a footrace with legendary Dallas coach Jimmy Johnson, which pushed him to get into better shape.
Newton went on to make six Pro Bowls while blocking for Emmitt Smith and Troy Aikman, and helped the Cowboys win three Super Bowls.
Rookie Watson would certainly love a career like that, but unless he loses a significant amount of weight, that looks unlikely to ever happen.
If he does, he could be a useful asset in the current NFL climate.
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