Baltimore Sun

Griffin sits with future uncertain

Jackson, Woodrum get QB playing time in 30-20 win vs. ’Skins

- By Jonas Shaffer

The face of the Ravens’ roster uncertaint­y stood on the sideline Thursday night in his his white No. 3 jersey, ready to play but no longer needed. Robert Griffin III, out of football only a year before, had done enough.

So said coach John Harbaugh shortly before the team’s preseason finale against Season opener Sept. 9, 1 p.m. TV: Ch. 13 Radio: 97.9 FM, 1090 AM Notes: Defense strong again on third downs the Washington Redskins, with whom Griffin had ascended to superstard­om as a rookie dynamo before things fell apart. First it was his knee, then his hold on the Redskins’ No. 1 job under center, then his role in a league in which his talents no longer seemed needed.

Immediatel­y after the Ravens’ 30-20 win, their 13th straight preseason victory, it was unclear whether Griffin’s future was secure on the Ravens’ 53-man roster or on another’s. Harbaugh had said on the team’s pregame radio broadcast that first-round pick Lamar Jackson would play the first half, and that fourth-stringer Josh Woodrum would handle the second. Given Jackson’s still-under-developmen­t status and Griffin’s steady play throughout the preseason, Harbaugh had made his case for keeping Griffin past Saturday’s NFL deadline for the 53-man roster.

The Ravens haven’t opened the season with three quarterbac­ks on their roster since 2009, as much a testament to starter Joe Flacco’s durability as the team’s desire to fill in the gaps around him, big and

small. On Thursday, the team got one last good look at those players on the fringe.

Of the 89 players on the Ravens’ roster after Tuesday’s trade of reserve outside linebacker Kamalei Correa for an undisclose­d Tennessee Titans draft pick, only about 49 were active.

On the night’s opening drive, Jackson jogged out onto the M&T Bank Stadium field with Jordan Lasley and Darren Waller to throw to and Andrew Donnal and Randin Crecelius to protect him, among others. When the Ravens defense took the field, likely cuts Kai Nacua and Darious Williams stood alongside certain future Ravens Tyus Bowser and Anthony Averett.

Perhaps few had taken as circuitous a path to the Ravens’ bubble as Griffin. The 2012 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year in Washington, he started five games for the Cleveland Browns in 2016 before being released the following March. He was off an NFL roster last year, but he said he continued to prepare as if the next phone call might be the one welcoming him back.

Still, it was a long shot. When the Ravens brought him in this March, it was for a reported workout with then-freeagent wide receivers Willie Snead IV and Michael Floyd. Griffin was the “random guy there throwing to them,” he said to laughter at his introducto­ry news conference. Two weeks later, the Ravens drafted Lamar Jackson. His future was guaranteed; Griffin’s was not, especially on a cheap one-year deal.

But it was Jackson who started Thursday against Griffin’s old team, not Griffin. Jackson’s first drive in his first NFL start was the game’s best of the first half, if not the game.

Undrafted rookie running back De’Lance Turner, a roster long shot, followed his 65-yard score Saturday against the Miami Dolphins with a 28-yarder. Jackson nickle-and-dimed the Redskins defense with his arm and his leg. When running back Mark Thompson’s 16-yard rushing touchdown was ruled just shy of the goal line, Jackson coasted into the end zone on a naked bootleg two plays later, somer- Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson tumbles into the end zone to score a touchdown against the Redskins in the first quarter of a preseason game at M&T Bank Stadium. saulting in for dramatic effect.

“It was just wide open on the outside,” he said. “The corner caged in, the safeties were down, and it was easy to walk in.”

After three straight preseason games of sub-47 percent accuracy, Jackson built on Saturday’s win with another accurate and careful performanc­e through the air. He finished 9-for-15 for 109 yards — though an intercepti­on on a deep pass intended for wide receiver Breshad Perriman was overturned on review — and had three carries for 25 yards.

The Ravens settled only for a pair of field goals after the opening score, and Jackson pledged that they would “be better next time.”

“It felt pretty good,” he said of his half. “I felt like we should have scored more touchdowns than we did. We only scored 13 points and had two field goals. … That really wasn’t what we wanted.”

Elsewhere, the Ravens got contributi­ons from veterans largely forgotten and rookies desperate to latch on. Tight end Mark Andrews had a 45-yard catch-and run in the second quarter, his first highlight-reel play of the preseason. Defensive lineman Patrick Ricard forced a fumble while being illegally held. Neither has to worry about his place in Week1, only how much he’ll play then.

The back end of the Ravens’ depth chart provided the real intrigue. Kaare Vedvik hit all three of his field-goal attempts, one a 56-yarder.

Outside linebacker Bronson Kaufusi had two sacks, a performanc­e that does not tend to pop roster bubbles. He finished with 10 tackles overall. Wide receiver Breshad Perriman, targeted four times, had three catches for 24 yards.

 ?? KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Robert Griffin III, whose regular-season roster spot is one of the Ravens’ biggest decisions, warmed up before the final preseason game against the Redskins on Thursday, but didn’t play as Lamar Jackson and Josh Woodrum shared the quarterbac­k duties.
KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN Robert Griffin III, whose regular-season roster spot is one of the Ravens’ biggest decisions, warmed up before the final preseason game against the Redskins on Thursday, but didn’t play as Lamar Jackson and Josh Woodrum shared the quarterbac­k duties.
 ?? KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN ??
KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN

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