Glazers Won’t Pay “Regardless How Good He Is”
May 3rd, 2011
How dare popcorn-shoveling NFL scribe Peter King, of Sports Illustrated, write that Team Glazer has a limit on what it would pay a player even if said player is a superstar.
Didn’t King read Joel Glazer’s famous quote,”Money will never be an issue when building this team?” How dare King all but say he thinks Glazer’s comments are hogwash. Why would King attack the credibility of Team Glazer?
King shared his toughts in his recent mailbag at SI.com.
“Now that the Bucs went defensive line and linebacker in the draft, don’t they really have to go after a cornerback in free agency? Ronde Barber is old, and at the very least Aqib Talib is certainly going to be suspended by the league for his offseason gun incident, if not cut outright. Will the Glazers finally spend some money, maybe on Nnamdi Asomugha?”
— Mark, Tampa, Fla.Peter King: I can’t see the Glazers, one of the lowest-spending owner groups in the league, spending $18 million a year on a cornerback like Asomugha, regardless how good he is. But yes, they’ll need to address cornerback in free agency, maybe with someone like Cincinnati’s Johnathan Joseph, if he comes free.
Regarding the end of King’s quote, Joe assumes “free” means becomes a free agent, not free of charge, though you never know with King.
Forgetting about all this Glazer hate, Joe thinks the Bucs will scoff at the notion of grabbing a free agent cornerback, especially one with the cost and quality of Joseph.
E.J. Biggers is on the rise. Myron Lewis was a third-round pick — if you’re excited about Mason Foster, shouldn’t you be equally excited about Lewis? — and Ronde Barber is still there.
Plus there’s that talented Talib guy, who hasn’t been found guilty of anything at this point. As Joe has written over and over and over, there’s no reason now to think the Bucs will cast aside Talib like an old sock unless Talib admits to, or is found guilty of, a serious crime. That’s not how the Bucs handle things, even if the St. Pete Times beat writers insist otherwise.








Joe enjoyed a chat today with Bucs seventh-round pick Anthony Gaitor, who graduated from Florida International University this afternoon. Joe could sense Gaitor is a Raheem Morris kind of guy — real high-energy and positive. Gaitor, who played multiple positions in the secondary and returned kicks and punts at FIU, said he’s been a Bucs fan for years and talked about his experience at One Buc Place and more.
Former Bucs guard Ian Beckles (1990-1996) was on fire this morning on the 
Everyone can analyze the Bucs’ draft 20 different ways, but it’s very clear the Bucs made at least one bold statement: the team is happy returning its 2010 offense.












He sucks. He’s great. He’s an irreplaceable cog in the Bucs defense. He’s softer than natural breasts.
Rockstar general manager Mark Dominik loves to draft those college captains. Hell, all but two of the Bucs’ 2011 draft picks were team captains, men of high character and responsibility who garnered the ultimate respect of players and coaches. 

