Steelers strong safety Robert Golden (21) sold his jersey number to new teammate Joe Haden. Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports

Joe Haden wore No. 23 during his seven seasons with the Cleveland Browns. Typically players like to keep the same jersey number when they go to a new team, but Haden is obviously looking to start fresh.

Haden, who signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers last week, was committed to wearing No. 21 with his new team. That number was already spoken for, but he was able to pry it away from fellow defensive back Robert Golden.

“I had to pay a little bit,” Haden said Wednesday, per Jeremy Fowler of ESPN.com.

While Haden did not specify how much he paid, he signed a three-year, $27 million contract with Pittsburgh. You have to wonder if Golden took that into account.

Players paying for a jersey number isn’t all that uncommon. If we had to guess how much Haden paid for his, we’d say it was probably somewhere in the range of what Darrelle Revis shelled out when he became a member of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Marlins trading away two-time All-Star as fire sale may already be underway
Donovan Mitchell's 50-burger goes to waste as Magic dominate the offensive glass to force Game 7
Pius Suter's late goal sends Canucks to second round
Jets HC Robert Saleh addresses QB Aaron Rodgers' status for OTAs
Eagles lose veteran OL to injured reserve
Rangers lose two-time All-Star starting pitcher to injury
Lakers make another big change after firing Darvin Ham
Draymond Green predicts LeBron James' next team
Twins place pivotal outfielder on injured list due to knee issue
Lakers' chances of landing Tyronn Lue not considered 'realistic'
Pirates option struggling former No. 1 overall pick to minors
Doc Rivers, Giannis Antetokounmpo contradict each other on star's injury
Lakers fire HC Darvin Ham after disappointing season
Rangers' Vincent Trocheck downplays second-round showdown with former team
Longtime coach compares Patriots' Drake Maye to two legends
Yankees legend John Sterling shares one regret about retirement decision
NFL media check-in: Who's out, in and staying on TV
ESPN producer gives update on Patrick Beverley snub controversy
Five NFL players with the most to prove after teams declined their fifth-year option
Yankees' Aaron Judge addresses offensive woes creeping into May