Regina Leader-Post

THEY’RE STILL RAVEN ABOUT URBAN

Canadian lineman eager to put another injury behind him, writes John Kryk.

- Jokryk@postmedia.com twitter.com/johnkryk

Exactly one year ago in this very space, to preview the first Sunday games of the NFL regular season, I profiled the indefatiga­ble Baltimore Ravens defensive end Brent Urban.

I’m doing it again for — I think you’ll agree — good reason.

Urban, a proud Canadian and native of Mississaug­a, Ont., with a population of 781,000, last year expressed relief, pride and joy at finally being named a starter for the Ravens after spending much of his first three years in the

NFL recuperati­ng from a pair of serious injuries. One was an ACL tear just weeks after the Ravens took him in the fourth round of the 2014 NFL draft and that was followed by a biceps tear the following summer.

The belief within the Ravens’ building last summer was that a healthy, fast-improving, monster-sized Urban (he stands six foot seven and weighs 300 pounds) could be on the verge of a breakout season on the interior of the Ravens’ 3-4 defensive line, especially after Urban flashed dominance in each of his 2017 pre-season appearance­s. In the 75 snaps in which he saw action, he forced two fumbles, registered one sack, had three tackles for losses and seven tackles overall.

“This is the best I’ve felt mentally and physically,” Urban said at the time, several days before Baltimore’s opener.

Then it happened.

Again.

Another serious, seasonwrec­king injury.

LATEST INJURY

THE ‘PERFECT STORM’

In a Week 3 game at Wembley Stadium in London, Urban was pressuring a Jacksonvil­le offensive lineman when Jaguars centre Brandon Linder tripped over the legs of Ravens nose tackle Michael Pierce and landed on Urban’s planted right foot.

Urban crumpled. He knew it was serious.

“It was a torn ligament in my foot,” the 27-year-old told Postmedia six weeks ago at training camp.

Specifical­ly, it’s called a Lisfranc injury. You’ll cringe at his descriptio­n of it and how the foot had to be repaired.

“Basically, a Lisfranc is an injury to the ligaments that hold your big toe and middle toe together. They get either stretched or torn. That’s what happened. It’s about the spacing between the big toe and middle toe. Basically it got stretched apart. They have to screw it back into place to heal. Then they took the screw out. Fun stuff,” said Urban.

Not so much.

And so a third fluke, serious injury shelved Urban for another season and the remainder of his rookie contract.

“It was the perfect storm, the perfect chain reaction that wound up with me being out for the year. But, you know, that’s how it goes. It’s a game where guys are falling on almost every play. Bad luck happens and you move on.”

ONE OF HARBAUGH’S ‘FAVOURITE GUYS’

Urban has had far more than his share.

Two parties, however, never stopped believing he could become a reliable, quality NFL starter for years to come: Urban and the Ravens.

Probably a number of NFL teams would have given up on Urban, if not the first couple of years then certainly in March of this year when he was set to become a free agent.

But the Ravens re-signed him to a one-year prove-it contract reportedly worth $1.1 million.

“He was one of my favourite guys in that 2014 draft,” Ravens head coach John Harbaugh said in a training camp interview. “I personally liked Brent as much as anyone coming out. I thought he fit us. He looked to me like an old Pittsburgh Steelers defensive end. I think when he’s been able to play, he’s been that. He just needs a full season, so everybody can know what we know.”

Urban said he happily accepted what he called a fair offer, considerin­g he’d played in only 25 of a possible 64 games from 2014-17 and all but three as a backup.

“Yeah, no question. I love it here,” Urban said. “It’s the only place I’ve ever played as a pro. The organizati­on has been great to me. All the coaches and everything. I’ve grown so much here and been through so much and improved so much as a player.

“So I wanted to come back and it was a great boost of confidence for me that they still thought I could come back from all these injuries. It definitely meant a lot. I’m ecstatic and just so thankful that they let me come back to prove it, which I think I’m well equipped to do.”

PERSEVERAN­CE PAYING OFF

You should know that off the field Urban projects a friendly, modest, smiles-a-lot persona. And for what seemed like his umpteenth interview with Postmedia dominated by injury and recovery talk, he also exuded an unmistakab­ly even-keeled, oh-well-what-can-you-do attitude.

Without it, he probably couldn’t have overcome the frustratin­g series of injuries over the four-year period. Even he realized that.

“It’s just one of those things where unfortunat­ely I’ve had to deal with injuries a lot,” he said. “My attitude has always been just a go-with-the-flow kind of guy. I love playing football. I love the grind. I’ve got so used to it where I’m well equipped for an injury to happen. I kind of know where my body needs to be at.

“And as these injuries have kept happening, I’ve become more mature. I really understand what I do well, what I need to do to be productive on the field and how my body has to feel. Just all that kind of stuff.”

Through his own experience of spending so many months at Ravens headquarte­rs on crutches or in a walking boot or with an arm in a sling, he has paid close attention to how veteran Ravens players attack their injuries. He has learned from veterans such as the now-retired D -lineman Chris Canty, Haloti Ngata, who is now with the Eagles, seven-time Pro Bowl edge rusher Terrell Suggs and six-time Pro Bowl guard Marshal Yanda.

“I spent my first whole year on IR,” Urban said. “But that was a great opportunit­y for me to just kind of sit back and watch these guys, to see how they prepare and how they handle going on

IR. It’s helped me to get back faster, knowing how to come off an injury.

“There’s been so many times here where, you know, I haven’t been able to run being on crutches. It’s all of those little steps now where I know kind of how my body should feel at each and every incrementa­l step. When you experience something once, you’re better at it the second time around. And I feel like since September I just knew how to handle this injury.”

‘READY TO GO’ FOR WEEK 1 AGAINST BUFFALO

Perhaps to the surprise of some, Urban was healed and “pretty much ready to go” once team workouts and drills began in April and May.

“It was a case, though, where no one was rushing me.”

By the time the Ravens opened their training camp in the second last week of July, Urban said he was given the “full go” by team medical staff.

“And I still feel great,” he said. You have to ask Urban how he gets past the thought that he’s just injury prone. Or vexed. Or both. And how he’s able to push thoughts out of his mind that the next major injury could always be just a play away.

Urban said he doesn’t look at any of it that way.

“I’ve looked at players who have been injured a lot — guys around the league — and I’ll kind of see how they handled it, how they did when they got back.

I’ve done enough research on it, so I feel like I’m prepared and that this has been done before, that I’m not like some kind of freak, like some kind of walking injury, you know? When you’re prepared, you feel more comfortabl­e in situations. Being sharper mentally makes it easier to get over these things, too, because it’s almost more of a mental toll than anything. That’s going to help me get through and remain positive no matter what.”

Harbaugh offered a slightly different, rational take uprooted from jinxes or hoodoos or luck.

“Somebody just fell on him. That’s it,” Harbaugh said. “He’s kind of had that his whole career, though. Even in college he got hurt a lot. But I also think some of that is that he’s a tall, angular guy and gets into awkward positions sometimes. But he has trained so hard. He’s so strong right now. I don’t think that’ll happen much more. Now he’s strong enough to get his feet out of the way and move his lower body out of the way of piles and things. I’ll be surprised if he gets hurt again.”

At mid-afternoon on Friday, the Ravens released their final injury report before Sunday’s regular-season opener at home against the Buffalo Bills.

Urban’s name wasn’t on it. He’s starting at defensive end.

I feel like I’m prepared and that this has been done before, that I’m not like some kind ... walking injury, you know?

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Defensive end Brent Urban of Mississaug­a, Ont., is hoping he can finally stay injury-free this season, and so are John Harbaugh’s Baltimore Ravens.
LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Defensive end Brent Urban of Mississaug­a, Ont., is hoping he can finally stay injury-free this season, and so are John Harbaugh’s Baltimore Ravens.
 ?? JOHN KRYK ?? Brent Urban’s season-ending Lisfranc injury in 2017 followed serious ACL and biceps tears in two earlier NFL campaigns.
JOHN KRYK Brent Urban’s season-ending Lisfranc injury in 2017 followed serious ACL and biceps tears in two earlier NFL campaigns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada