Baker Mayfield says he wants to keep his future tied to Tampa Bay, and he’s not hiding the fact that the fit has felt right from the start.
Speaking in a video posted on the SoonerScoop YouTube channel, the Buccaneers quarterback said he and the team both want a deal done, even if the process still needs the right middle ground. He also said Tampa has become home for his family.
“I would love to be there,” Mayfield said, via a video posted on the SoonerScoop YouTube channel. “I think both sides want to get it done.
Now it’s a matter of finding that middle ground and what makes both sides happy. . . . We fell in love with Tampa, and it’s a great place to raise kids and be around.
So regardless of what happens, I think we’ll spend our offseasons there. Obviously, it’s a little brutally hot, but it’s good for training, but it’s - yeah, I want to be there long term.
They treated me right, and it’s the first place I’ve gotten to that feels like Oklahoma when it comes down to football is football. How can they put you in the best position to have success on the field, and how can they give their resources to help you out?
And so, it’s a great place.”
The Buccaneers also brought in another quarterback who already feels a connection to the organization. Undrafted rookie Jalon Daniels said his 30 visit helped him lock in on Tampa, thanks to the coaching staff and the way people around the team invested in him before he was even on the roster.
“I kind of just fell in love with the staff, how much they poured into me just even on my 30 visit, just how much I felt I was going to be able to learn from the coaching staff here, the environment, the teammates that I now have that I met when I was on my 30 visit,” Daniels said, via the team website. “It meant a lot to me, being able to have so many people who poured into me before they even got the chance to know me. When I got the opportunity to be able to come here after the draft I was like, ‘Alright, Tampa Bay is going to be the place I go.'”
Daniels said the early focus has been on keeping the game enjoyable while soaking up everything he can from the staff. He pointed to Coach Chandler, Coach Z-Rob and Coach T.J. as the people helping him understand the next level one step at a time.
“I think the key thing for me is continuing to have fun with it,” Daniels added. “Like I said on my 30 visit, I had a lot of coaches pour into me while I was here, so when I got here the main thing for me was continuing to be able to work with Coach Chandler, continue to work with Coach Z-Rob, continue to work with Coach T.J. They’ve done a tremendous job being able to break down this level of the game for me, step by step, every single practice all the way from rookie minicamp since I touched down here.”
In New Orleans, Saints center Cesar Ruiz made it clear he hasn’t forgotten the heat that came his way when his 2025 season went sideways. He said the criticism was real, but he’s not the type to retreat into excuses. Instead, he says the response has to come on the field.
“I got a lot of disrespect,” Ruiz said, via Matthew Paras of NOLA.com. “And ultimately, I’m not a guy who goes into his turtle shell and blames the world for what’s going on.
You’ve got to go figure out how to change the narrative and how to go out there and make it happen. So that’s what I’m doing and I’ve made it happen.”
In Other News...
Cam Jordan And Saints Fans Explode Over Latest Alvin Kamara Disrespect
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Cam Jordan was among those who jumped to Kamaras defense, underscoring how differently the locker room views a player whose value is measured by more than carries and yardage. For the Saints, the bigger question is not just what outside voices think of Kamara, but how much of that noise spills into camp as the team tries to settle on its direction. [Read more 🡒]
Former Rams Lineman Just Landed The Kind Of Deal Fans Notice
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For New Orleans, the fit matters as much as the name. Edwards is expected to anchor the left guard spot in 2026 and help form a sturdier interior alongside Kelvin Banks Jr. and Erik McCoy, a setup the Saints hope can make the line look more reliable from week to week. The real question now is how much more protection the deal included, and just how heavily the Saints are investing in him as part of that upgrade. [Read more 🡒]
Saints May Have Found A Silver Lining In Vernon Broughtons Lost Year
Vernon Broughtons rookie year never really got started, but the Saints may still come out ahead after the long detour. The third-round pick spent most of the season sidelined by a hip injury, and while he was missing on Sundays, he was still getting work in other ways - learning the defense, absorbing the playbook and trying to make sure the lost reps did not turn into lost progress. New Orleans defense held up well without him, which only adds to the sense that his return could be more addition than rescue.
Broughton was cleared to resume normal activities in March, and now the attention shifts to whether the rookie can turn all that rehab-time preparation into something real on the defensive line. The Saints are expected to count on him alongside fellow rookie Christen Miller, and the appeal is obvious: a pair of young interior pieces developing while the units veteran core starts to age into a different phase. For a team that got by just fine in his absence, the next question is whether Broughton can turn a lost year into an early payoff. [Read more 🡒]
