FLAGSTAFF, Ariz.(AP)
Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Anquan Boldin asked to be
traded, saying he doesn't feel his situation can be resolved
and declaring he has no relationship with coach Ken Whisenhunt.
"I'm a football player. That's about it,"
Boldin said Tuesday when asked to characterize his dealings with
the coach these days.
A team spokesman said the Cardinals have no plans to trade the
sixth-year standout and still hope to sign him to a contract
extension.
Whisenhunt sounded puzzled when discussing reports that Boldin
had said he was no longer speaking to the coach.
"We've been communicating," he said. "If
communicating is talking, that's what we have been doing at
practice. As we go forward, I don't know. I don't foresee
anything changing. If it does, it's in his court."
Boldin offered a glimpse of his talent late in Tuesday's
workout, splitting a pair of defenders on a slant route during a
2-minute drill. He made a nimble catch on a bullet thrown by Kurt
Warner for a 25-yard gain.
But with training camp starting to wind down, Boldin made it
sound as if it was a tortured three weeks off the field.
The two-time Pro Bowl player, who blasted team officials as camp
opened, claims the Cardinals reneged on an offer to re-negotiate
his contract.
He has three years left on the four-year, $22.75 million
extension he signed after the 2005 season that keeps him under
contract through 2010. He's making an average of $4 million a
year.
"It's a tough situation, especially when you come into
a working environment," Boldin said after practice. "But
my job is to stay professional. I'm going to do what I'm
supposed to do."
Although Boldin previously denied asking for a trade, he said
Tuesday that his agent, Drew Rosenhaus, has asked the Cardinals to
consider it now.
"At the beginning of camp, I hadn't asked for a
trade," Boldin said. "As of recently, we did."
Asked if he believes his standoff with Arizona can be resolved,
Boldin shook his head and simply said, "No."
Teammate Larry Fitzgerald signed a four-year $40 million, deal
after last season, with $30 million guaranteed, but Boldin has said
he believes Fitzgerald earned the deal and that's not why
he's unhappy.
Boldin is one of the NFL's top receivers. He reached 400
career receptions faster than any other player, doing it in 67
games. In five seasons, Boldin has 413 receptions for 5,458 yards
and 29 touchdowns.
"If I'm not going to be treated fairly, if my hard work
and loyalty isn't going to be rewarded here, then let me go
somewhere where it's going to be rewarded. That's how I
feel," Boldin said.
Boldin accused Whisenhunt of getting too involved with his
contract talks, suggesting that's why they haven't moved
forward, but he wasn't specific.
"That's where it became a problem," Boldin said.
"Honestly, I think it should be completely separated. I think
that's why we have a department that deals with that."
Whisenhunt said it's not an issue, noting that it's not
unusual for NFL players to lobby for a new contract through the
media.
"Nothing has changed from a few weeks ago," Whisenhunt
said. "I feel the exact same way about Anquan. He is a good
football player. The Cardinals have extended his contract once,
tried to do it again, and our intent is to do it the first chance
we get."
Boldin said he's not worried about whether the dispute could
hurt his reputation with fans.
"Anybody that knows me, that knows what kind of guy I am,
they know I'm a hard worker," he said. "I'm a guy
that does the right things, on and off the field. I'm not
worried about my reputation being tarnished for me telling the
truth."
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