Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles made his position on Baker Mayfield unmistakably clear Thursday, stating without hesitation that he wants the quarterback as his long-term starter, even as contract negotiations between Mayfield and the organization remain at an early impasse.
Bowles’s comments came in direct response to remarks Mayfield made last week in which the quarterback described the two sides as nowhere near aligned on a new deal heading into what is the final year of his current three-year, $100 million contract. The disconnect, at least publicly, appears real. The coach’s commitment to the player, however, appears equally real.
What is at stake for both sides
Mayfield and his representatives have set an informal but meaningful deadline for getting a deal done. They want an agreement finalized before training camp opens, with the quarterback’s expected reporting date falling in the final week of July. If a deal is not in place by then, the plan is to set negotiations aside entirely so Mayfield can focus on football without the distraction of an ongoing contract process.
That approach does not close the door permanently. Talks could resume after the season, and if nothing is agreed upon by then, Mayfield would enter the 2027 offseason as an unrestricted free agent. For Tampa Bay, that is a scenario worth avoiding. For Mayfield, it represents leverage he has every right to preserve.
The numbers tell a story that supports his case. Since joining the Buccaneers on a one-year deal in 2023 following Tom Brady’s retirement, Mayfield has led the team to back-to-back NFC South division titles. Tampa Bay’s record with him as the starter reflects a franchise that found its footing after one of the more difficult succession challenges in recent NFL memory.
Business on the field, business off it
Whatever tension exists in the negotiating room has not followed Mayfield onto the practice field. At Thursday’s organized team activity, he connected with wide receiver Chris Godwin Jr. on consecutive touchdown passes during seven-on-seven drills, the kind of performance that reinforces exactly why the coaching staff wants him under contract for years to come.
Bowles described Mayfield as completely focused and unbothered, characterizing him as the type of professional who separates the business side of the sport from his preparation and performance. The coach expressed no concern that the unresolved contract situation would affect the quarterback’s readiness or commitment heading into the season.
After practice, Mayfield participated in the team’s annual charity event benefiting pediatric cancer research, allowing cancer survivors to spray paint his hair red as part of the celebration. He was visibly relaxed and engaged throughout the event, a detail that reinforced the picture Bowles painted of a player at ease with his situation even while the larger question of his future remains open.
What happens next
The July reporting date is approaching and neither side appears to be urgently closing the gap. Bowles’s public declaration of support is meaningful but it does not resolve the financial conversation that will ultimately determine whether Mayfield remains in Tampa beyond this season.
Mayfield has made clear the timeline is not entirely within his control, and he appears unwilling to let the uncertainty affect his work in the building. Whether the organization moves with equal urgency to get something done before training camp will say a great deal about how seriously they take the possibility of losing him.

