TAMPA, Fla. — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers shed the ''Yuccaneers'' label decades ago.
They went from 0-26 to two-time Super Bowl champions and currently are four-time defending NFC South champs. They're tied for first place entering a game against the Atlanta Falcons on Thursday night when they'll be wearing their original creamsicle uniforms.
Long before Tom Brady turned the city into Tompa Bay and led the franchise to its second NFL title, the team traded Pro Football Hall of Famer Steve Young, let eventual Super Bowl MVP Doug Williams walk away and was spurned by Bo Jackson and Bill Parcells twice.
Those moments are among many of the franchise-altering decisions that are detailed in ''Raise The Flags,'' a new 10-part series that chronicles 50 years of Buccaneers football. The docuseries, which debuts on Amazon Prime Video on Thursday, gives viewers a thorough, behind-the-scenes look at the organization's journey from expansion afterthought to championship contender.
It celebrates the good times and digs into some of the biggest lows, highlighting the triumphs and the missteps over five decades and two ownership groups.
''Raise The Flags'' was commissioned and produced by Buccaneers co-owner Ed Glazer and directed by eight-time Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Trent Cooper, who is a lifelong Bucs fan.
''We tried to be as honest as we could,'' Glazer told the AP. ''A lot of people don't always hear my family speak, so I think that's going to be a first for a lot of people. But I think we try to take a real honest look at things that we've done well and mistakes that we've made as owners. You're going to hear us talk about doing this for the first time ourselves going back 25 years ago. So we're learning along the way, and there are mistakes that we made that things that we wouldn't do again today, some bold moves we made that may not have worked out well that we may not make today.
''You get a little cautious as you get older. And there's some bold moves we made that maybe we would regret making along the away also, right? I think one of them is letting some players go over the years that we would never let go today. Thinking that we could easily replace Hall of Fame players, and you can't.''