Baltimore Sun

Flacco leaves a legacy of strength, stability at QB

- Mike Preston

Shortly after the Ravens lost to the Los Angeles Chargers in the AFC wild-card round, coach John Harbaugh gave Joe Flacco the ultimate compliment when he called him the best quarterbac­k in Ravens history.

To some, that might not have meant much. The Ravens have been here since only 1996 and don’t have the storied tradition of franchises in Dallas, Green Bay or Pittsburgh. But for others, it spoke volumes because of the quarterbac­ks Ravens fans had endured through the team’s first 13 years. And finally, there was Flacco. He was the rookie quarterbac­k the Ravens selected out of Delaware in the first round of the 2008 NFL draft. Since then, Flacco has been a polarizing figure in Baltimore but also a winner. In11 seasons, he won a Super Bowl, played in three AFC championsh­ip games and has been a part of only one losing season.

Love or hate him, he presented a positive image of this city on those fall and winter Sunday afternoons. He was unassuming and unpretenti­ous, but he also gave fans hope. When he was hot, Flacco was tough to beat. And for most of his career, he was consistent­ly among the top 10 quarterbac­ks in the NFL.

He was Baltimore’s quarterbac­k in the way that Ben Roethlisbe­rger represente­d Pittsburgh and Tom Brady represente­d New England.

The Ravens reportedly traded Flacco to the Denver Broncos on Wednesday, which created an even greater appreciati­on of Flacco’s overall body of work and ended one era of stable quarterbac­k play in Baltimore.

Before Flacco, the Ravens went

through a carousel of starters, including fading quarterbac­ks such as Jim Harbaugh, Trent Dilfer, Tony Banks, Steve McNair and young failures Kyle Boller, Chris Redman and Stoney Case.

My favorite was Scott Mitchell, nicknamed the “Big Water Buffalo” by Rams defensive tackle D’Marco Farr in the Ravens’ 1999 season opener against St. Louis. Vinny Testaverde was the best throwing quarterbac­k in team history. There aren’t many in the NFL who could throw as long as or with more velocity than Testarverd­e.

Flacco, though, was just more complete. There were and will always be questions about Flacco’s accuracy, mechanics and work ethic. Privately, the Ravens have wanted more energy and rah-rah out of Flacco than he exhibited on game day. But what others perceived as a weakness was Flacco’s strength.

And he never deviated from that, which is why he was a favorite of the media and this fan base.

Flacco didn’t duck reporters after games regardless of whether he won or loss. There were times when he was physically abused and exhausted from games, yet he never shied away from tough questions and never pointed fingers at teammates.

There was no flash with Flacco. Linebacker­s Ray Lewis and Terrell Suggs had their introducto­ry dances. Defensive lineman Tony Siragusa loved to put his mug in front of a TVcamera. And few coaches were as charismati­c as former Ravens coach Brian Billick during his early years in Baltimore.

But Flacco was just an ordinary Joe. He’d occasional­ly go out to dinner with friends, such as Dennis Pitta and Marshal Yanda. But Flacco was basically a 9-to-5 worker. When he was done, he was going home to his wife and kids.

At first, I was one of those who wanted more fire out of Flacco. I wanted him in a receiver’s face if someone kept dropping passes. I wanted to see him in arguments with his coordinato­rs or tossing a water container on the sidelines in anger.

But that wasn’t Flacco. That wasn’t his style. That’s why he won so many games. His demeanor never changed. He was always in control. Flacco seemed quiet, but he was an engaging speaker in public. He wasn’t Vince Lombardi, but he was profession­al, polite and entertaini­ng. Afterward, he would hang around for hours signing autographs.

Flacco was a pro. Even when the Ravens benched him in favor of rookie quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson near the midway point of the 2018 season, he never complained. He could have, because there is still the prevailing theory in the NFL that a starter can’t be benched because of injury. But Flacco never said a word.

He stayed silent even after the Ravens failed to insert him in the second half of a poor offensive effort against the Chargers in the Jan. 6 playoff game, his last game as a Raven. The Ravens are about to embark on a new era with Jackson. They are back to the unknown with an athletic quarterbac­k who can run better than he passes but has yet to prove he can win a game throwing from the pocket.

As for Flacco, he was a good but not great quarterbac­k in Baltimore. But he’ll return to M&T Bank Stadium one day, either as a player on another team or to take his place in the Ravens’ prestigiou­s Ring of Honor.

He has been the team’s best quarterbac­k. That means something around here.

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