
Mike Evans is leaving the only NFL home he’s known, and the reason isn’t a mystery once you read the fine print.
Evans agreed to a three-year deal with the San Francisco 49ers worth up to $60.4 million with $16.3 million guaranteed, ending his 12-season run with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
His agent, Deryk Gilmore, said Tampa Bay made a serious push to keep him and that the decision wasn’t driven by dollars.
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“Mike Evans’ decision to leave Tampa was never about money. The Buccaneers were extremely aggressive in their pursuit and presented a very strong offer, demonstrating how much they value him and everything he has meant to the franchise. In the end, this decision simply came down to Mike wanting a new challenge and a fresh opportunity while he still feels he has a great deal left to give the game.”
Gilmore added that the Bucs hoped Evans would finish his career in Tampa and “potentially become just the fourth player in franchise history to spend his entire career as a Buccaneer and ultimately walk into Canton representing the organization.”
Tampa Bay’s statement after the move showed appreciation, then acceptance.
“Saying goodbye to a legend such as Mike Evans is never easy, but today we are filled with appreciation and gratitude for all that he did during his extraordinary 12-year career as a Buccaneer. Our goal was always to ensure that Mike would play his entire career as a Buccaneer, but as we got further in the process it became clear he was looking for a new challenge. … When the time comes, we look forward to gathering once again to honor his many accomplishments and celebrate his eventual Hall of Fame career.”
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For the 49ers, “new challenge” is a neat way to describe a receiver room that has been in flux and a team still built to compete immediately. For Evans, the checklist was more practical than sentimental once he decided he wasn’t retiring.
After playing through an injury-shortened 2025, Evans wanted the best path to another Super Bowl, and his evaluation included the quarterback position, the offensive coordinator and what his role would be.
That last part matters because Tampa Bay’s offensive staff is changing again. The Buccaneers moved on from offensive coordinator Josh Grizzard after one season and hired Zac Robinson, the former Atlanta Falcons offensive coordinator, to take over the unit.
Evans’ resume in Tampa is already franchise-level. The seventh overall pick in 2014 and the first-ever draft pick by Buccaneers general manager Jason Licht, Evans became the team’s all-time leading scorer with 662 points and spent the better part of a decade as the Bucs’ top red-zone weapon and deep-ball target.
His consistency has been the headline for years. Evans’ 11 consecutive seasons with 1,000 receiving yards are tied with Hall of Famer Jerry Rice for the most consecutive 1,000-yard seasons in NFL history. He was chasing sole possession of that record in 2025 before a broken collarbone in Week 7 sent him to injured reserve. He returned in Week 15 and posted 132 receiving yards in a 28–19 loss to the Atlanta Falcons.
League-wide, Evans sits in rare company: he’s one of 10 players in NFL history with at least 13,000 receiving yards and 100 receiving touchdowns, alongside names like Rice, Randy Moss, Terrell Owens, and Larry Fitzgerald.
The move also closes an era in Tampa Bay, where Evans was not just the production baseline but also a mentor to younger receivers, including Chris Godwin and others who came through the room behind him.
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