For Tampa Bay Buccaneers fans who have been following the plethora of team focused podcasts out in the world http://www.buccaneerslockerroom.com/authentic-kendell-beckwith-jersey , picking your favorites is hard to do.In the pool of content creators there are long-time media members, fringe media, former players, and fans of the team simply looking to get their thoughts out there for everyone to hear.One such podcast is The PewterCast, hosted and created by Brent Allen. Two years ago he brought on current co-host Ren Daxt, and the show has only expanded into more content and improved technology ever since.Every year for the last three seasons, Brent and Ren have been holding their annual awards ceremony where the nominees are determined by a secret panel spanning all levels of influence, and the winners are determined by the fans themselves.Of the awards, Brent had this to say,You may have noticed recently that SB Nation has decided to get into the podcasting world, and Bucs Nation has been represented strongly by several members on the staff beginning this endeavor. However, none of those were around long enough to garner a nomination.One show that did earn a nomination and subsequently a win in the ‘Podcast of the Year’ category was the Locked on Bucs podcast hosted by Bucs Nation staff members, James Yarcho and David Harrison.This was the show’s first ‘Pewtie’ and second-year being nominated in the category.James and David have been with Locked on Bucs since the middle of the 2017 season, and continue to churn out relevant content with four episodes per week during the off-season and five in-season.No doubt Vernon Hargreaves III Jersey , helping along the way are the regular appearances by Carmen Vitali of Buccaneers.com and players like Chris Godwin and O.J. Howard.The best part of the show according to the two hosts however, are the voicemails submitted by listeners giving their thoughts on the shows content and asking the questions ever Bucs fan wants to know the answers to.Both were humbled by the win, and agree with Brent that while the trophy is cool, the fact it was the listeners themselves who decided it, is the real prize.Check out all of their work on the Locked on Podcast network, and we look forward to seeing our resident Bucs Nation podcasts on the nomination list in 2020!Other categories included the traditional slate of team awards, but also more media focused ones for fans’ favorite guest of The PewterCast during 2018.If you didn’t catch The PewterCast Awards, you can download it or watch it on YouTube, now. We highly recommend the YouTube option. This is not an April Fool’s Day joke. This is not an April Fool’s Day joke.We repeat: This is not an April Fool’s Day joke.The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are seeking “millions of dollars” in compensation from BP Exploration & Production for the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.The Buccaneers’ effort to recover these significant amounts came to light in a court order filed Friday by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. The court order denies an effort by the Buccaneers to seal the courtroom for oral arguments regarding an appeal of whatever amount the Bucs did or didn’t receive from a lower court.In ruling against the team, the appeals court made it clear that the team’s efforts to ensure secrecy go well beyond the boundaries of the role of the inherently public court system. The Buccaneers argued that, among other things, “private spite” on the part of BP, the promotion of “public scandal,” and harm to the team’s “competitive standing.”The Buccaneers also claim that they have an “expectation of secrecy” in the process of having their claim approved and paid. The court rejected that approach by pointing again to the public nature of the judicial system M.J. Stewart Jersey White , and by chiding the Buccaneers for trying so hard to conceal information from public view.“The court will leave it to others to guess why the team is so concerned about public disclosure of its claim when numerous other BP claimants in the appeals inundating our court are not,” Judge Gregg J. Costa writes in the five-page order. “Just three months into this year, at least ten Deepwater Horizon decisions naming the claimants have issued. Among them is one from another of Tampa Bay’s professional sports franchises, the NHL’s Lightning. . . . The court is unable to discern any reason for keeping secret the oil-spill claim of a football team when the claim of a hockey team (and of course those of numerous other businesses) is a public matter.”Thus, the court concluded that the Buccaneers “should not able to benefit from this public resource while treating it like a private tribunal when there is no good reason to do so,” adding that “the public will be able to access the courtroom it pays for.”Contacted for comment on the situation, the Buccaneers provided this statement to PFT: “As per our usual team policy, we do not comment regarding ongoing litigation matters.”Although the Buccaneers apparently will be able to keep their financial information secret, the outcome won’t be. At some point, the amount to be paid by BP to the Buccaneers will be known, along with the reasoning for doing so.