The Tampa Bay Buccaneers fired coach Lovie Smith on Wednesday night, dismissing him after two seasons and giving him only one with No. 1 overall draft pick Jameis Winston behind center.

Smith went 6-10 this season and 8-24 over two years in charge of the team.

"After careful consideration, we informed Lovie that we have decided to make a change," Buccaneers co-chairman Joel Glazer said in a statement Wednesday night. "I want to thank Lovie for his hard work and dedication to the Buccaneers during his time here."

The Bucs will hold a news conference on Thursday afternoon to discuss Smith's dismissal.

Over the past week, the Glazers had been discussing the direction of the franchise and the path they wanted to take, Buccaneers sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter. They were concerned about the Buccaneers' regression on defense, the struggles in the secondary, their record the past two seasons, the high number of penalties and the disappointment of some of Smith's coordinator hires, per sources.

Some of Smith's ideas to get these issues corrected did not match up with ways the owners wanted to hear or see, and so the Buccaneers' ownership made a decision to part ways with the head coach they hired two years ago.

Ownership informed Buccaneers general manager Jason Licht that they would fly to Tampa on Thursday to give Smith the news. A source had earlier told ESPN's Vaughn McClure that Smith found out about his firing over the phone, but the situation appears to have been more complex. In conversations over the phone with Licht, Smith could tell something was not right, and the general manager did not want to leave him twisting overnight, sources told Schefter.

So Licht informed Smith that he didn't think the conversations with the owners on Thursday would be good. Smith told Licht to tell the owners not to come to Tampa on Thursday, that there was no need. Bucs owners insisted they fly there, but Smith was more insistent and went to clean out his office.

Though the Buccaneers will hold a news conference Thursday, Smith will not attend.

Going forward, Buccaneers offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter is considered a "strong candidate" for the job, according to sources. But the Buccaneers want to be thorough and make sure they get it right. They do not intend to stretch out the process and will intensify their head-coaching search after Thursday's press conference.

The Buccaneers will not exercise defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier's option for the 2016 season, according to multiple reports. As of Thursday morning, however, Frazier had not been told he was not wanted back, a source told ESPN's Josina Anderson.

According to reports, three other Buccaneers defensive assistants also were told they would not be retained: defensive backs coach Gill Byrd, safeties coach Mikal Smith (Lovie Smith's son) and defensive assistant Larry Marmie.

One Bucs coach, when contacted by Anderson, said he was surprised by Smith's dismissal.

"Is this true?" said the coach, who wished to remain anonymous. "We all just met with Lovie individually today. This is strange. I wonder what happened."

The Lovie Smith-led Bucs showed some improvement this season but lost their final four games after pulling into position to compete for a playoff berth. Reinhold Matay/USA TODAY Sports

Tampa Bay linebacker Lavonte David was more blunt in his reaction in a tweet that has since been deleted.

"This is stupid," he wrote. "We can't even have a consistent coach, 3 coaches in 5 yrs."

Defensive tackle Gerald McCoy also said he was taken aback.

"I don't know what to think right now," McCoy said. "I'm at a loss for words. I was just out driving, out getting some gas, and my phone started blowing up.

"It's 10 o'clock at night. I don't know what is going on. I've always loved Lovie. He's always been great to me and my family. I've never had a bad thing to say about him. I'm just at a loss for words. I honestly feel bad for my coach."

Smith had replaced Greg Schiano in January 2014, agreeing to a four-year contract.

"This decision was difficult on a variety of levels," Glazer said in the statement. "I am disappointed that we were not more successful these past few seasons, but we are committed to doing what is necessary to give our fans the winning team they deserve. As we move forward, General Manager Jason Licht will oversee the process for finding our next head coach."

By The Numbers: Bucs' Defense A Drag Lovie Smith inherited a bad defense with Tampa Bay. Since the start of 2011, the Bucs' D ranks second-worst in opponent scoring and last in opponent completion percentage and opponent QBR:

Buccaneers Defense Since 2011 Opponent Rank PPG 26.3 31st Comp pct 66.3 32nd Total QBR 67.2 32nd *Bucs' last winning season was 2010 (10-6)

The Bucs become the seventh team in the NFL with a head-coaching vacancy, joining the 49ers, Browns, Dolphins, Eagles, Giants and Titans.

Smith's firing also drops the number of black coaches in the NFL to four: the Steelers' Mike Tomlin, the Bengals' Marvin Lewis, the Lions' Jim Caldwell and the Jets' Todd Bowles.

Smith's hiring had been a homecoming; he was Tampa Bay's linebackers coach under Tony Dungy from 1996 to 2000.

"He is an outstanding coach and a great person,'' Frazier said of Smith. "I don't understand what happened."

Smith became the head coach of the Chicago Bears in 2004, leading them to a Super Bowl appearance in the 2006 season, after a stint as the defensive coordinator for the St. Louis Rams.

The Bears fired Smith after the 2013 season after missing the playoffs for the fifth time in six seasons. He was 84-66 in nine seasons with Chicago.

Former Bears linebacker Lance Briggs, a seven-time Pro Bowler who said he would have considered finishing his career with Smith in Tampa had there been a need at his position, said he was shocked by the news.

"Other coaches keep their jobs, and Lovie gets fired," Briggs said. "Lovie gets the franchise quarterback, Tampa Bay is a playoff-contending team next year, and he gets fired. I'm disappointed in the decision to let him go."

Briggs did not play in 2015 after being limited to eight games for the Bears in 2014 before going on injured reserve because of a groin injury.

"Lovie's a championship coach," Briggs said. "He's a coach that will get you to a championship. It's unfortunate he wasn't given enough time to do that. You saw a team that improved throughout that season. The record might not have reflected it, but you saw improvement. You turn on the tape, and that team was starting to put itself in position to make that playoff run."

The Bucs showed some improvement this season with Winston at quarterback and running back Doug Martin, who was revitalized in 2015. But they lost their final four games after pulling into position to compete for a wild-card playoff berth.

For the first time, the Bucs ranked in the top 10 in total offense (No. 5) and defense (No. 10), but those numbers were deceptive. The Bucs struggled to get the ball into the end zone, ranking 20th in points. They were 26th in scoring defense, allowing 24 points or more 10 times.

The Bucs gained more than 500 yards twice and averaged a team-record 375.9 yards per game. Martin finished second to Adrian Peterson for the NFL rushing title, and Mike Evans had another big year receiving, with 74 receptions for 1,206 yards but only three TDs.

Earlier this week, Smith reiterated his belief that the team is headed in the right direction.

"Our football team isn't a finished product yet, but I think it's safe to say that we're in pretty good shape going forward with [Winston] leading us, on and off the field," Smith said.

But the Bucs will move ahead without Smith, the team's third coach since Jon Gruden was fired after the 2008 season. Gruden led Tampa Bay to its only Super Bowl win; none of his successors had an overall winning record in Tampa.

Information from ESPN's Josina Anderson, Vaughn McClure, ESPN Stats & Information and The Associated Press was used in this report.