TAMPA, Fla. — The confetti has settled, the parades are over, and the NFL has officially turned the page to the 2026 offseason. But for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the real season starts now. The franchise sits on a razor’s edge, and the man holding the balance is none other than Mike Evans.
For twelve seasons, Evans has been the heartbeat of this organization. Now, just weeks away from free agency, the veteran wideout faces a career-defining fork in the road: run it back with Baker Mayfield, test the open market, or hang up the cleats for good.
The $20 Million Question
Let’s cut through the noise. While the Buccaneers have a roster to build, retaining Evans isn’t just a “nice-to-have”—it’s a necessity. Even as he approaches age 33, Evans remains one of the few true X-receivers who can tilt the field. Sure, the legendary 1,000-yard streak finally snapped in 2025 due to nagging injuries, but when Evans was on the field, he was still a problem for secondaries.
Baker Mayfield knows it. General Manager Jason Licht knows it. The question is, does Evans believe Tampa is still the place to chase another ring?
PFF’s Mason Cameron didn’t mince words when analyzing the best fit for the future Hall of Famer. Surprise, surprise: it’s right where he started.
“Evans has called Tampa Bay home for the entirety of his career, and given his level of play, the Buccaneers should do everything in their power to retain him until the day he decides to hang up the cleats. It wouldn’t be just for sentimental reasons; it’s also tied directly to his production and chemistry with Baker Mayfield.” — Mason Cameron, Pro Football Focus
The Baker Connection
You can’t manufacture the kind of chemistry Evans and Mayfield have developed over the last three seasons. Mayfield, entering the final year of his own contract, relies on Evans not just as a safety blanket, but as the engine of the red-zone offense. Without #13, the Bucs’ attack loses its vertical identity.
If Evans walks, Tampa Bay isn’t just losing a player; they’re losing the locker room’s north star. If he stays, the window for a 2026 playoff run stays cracked open.
What’s Next: The March Deadline
The clock is ticking. Free agency opens in exactly one month. We’ve heard the rumblings that Evans wanted to wait until after the Super Bowl to make his call. That time is now.
The Verdict: Expect the Bucs to make a hard push in the coming days. If Evans signals he wants to return, a deal likely gets done before the legal tampering period begins. If we hear silence by March 1, panic mode in Tampa will officially set in.

