The former CEO of Apple John Sculley is mulling a bid for BlackBerry, according to The Globe and Mail, in what would be the latest expression of interest for the struggling vendor. Firm offers however have been thinner on the ground.

Sculley would not comment himself although he did state his enthusiasm for the company in an interview.

“The only thing I would say is, I think there’s a lot of future value in Blackberry but without experienced people who have run this type of business, and without a strategic plan, it would be really challenging,” he said.

Fairfax Financial announced a tentative offer for BlackBerry. And a securities filing earlier this month showed co-founders Mike Lazaridis and Douglas Fregin are also considering a bid.

Otherwise, Sculley joins a growing list of companies thought to be interested in bidding for BlackBerry. These include Cisco, Google, SAP and Lenovo.

“Whoever buys it would have to have a strategic plan that was credible and could succeed, and they would want to have an experienced team that would be able to implement that plan,” the former Apple CEO said.

Sculley is famous for dramatic disagreements with Steve Jobs at Apple in the ’80s. The company’s board backed Sculley and famously fired Jobs, who spent some years away before his triumphal return.