Baltimore Sun

Wolfe finally where he wanted to be

DE has long desired to join Ravens, expects big things

- By Jonas Shaffer

When Derek Wolfe was a star defensive tackle coming out of Cincinnati in 2012, he thought the Ravens would take him in the NFL draft.

Instead, he landed with the Denver Broncos at No. 36 overall — one pick after the Ravens took linebacker Courtney Upshaw.

When Wolfe was stuck on a mediocre Denver team last season that he figured didn’t want him back in 2020, he considered asking Broncos general manager John Elway for a trade to Baltimore. Wolfe decided not to, out of a sense of loyalty to the only franchise he’d ever known.

When Wolfe, a free agent coming off an elbow injury that had ended the “best season of my career,” saw that the Ravens had agreed to a deal with Los Angeles Rams defensive lineman Michael Brockers in the first wave of free agency last month, he was resigned to his fate.

“I was kind of like, ‘Ah, maybe missed my chance there.’ ” he said.

But Wolfe did not despair.

In a conference call Friday with Baltimore reporters, he was zen-like in his approach to football and life: “Everything happens for a reason, man. When things are supposed to happen, they do.”

And after eight years and those three missed connection­s, Wolfe ended up where he thought he could’ve fit all along.

That happened for a reason too: Brockers never signed with the Ravens.

In an interview Wednesday with former Rams teammate Chris Long on the “Green

Light” podcast, Brockers explained that after he underwent a physical, the Ravens medical staff flagged the results of his MRIand X-rays. He had sprained his ankle in the Rams’ season finale and been carted off the field, but the injury did not require surgery.

After the Ravens sent the results to a specialist, Brockers said, the deal fell through last week. And when it did, Wolfe said he called his agent immediatel­y. He wanted to know about the Ravens’ market for a defensive lineman.

“He said, ‘I’m already on the phone with them,’ ” Wolfe recalled. “I was like, ‘Yes. I really don’t care about the money at this point. I just want to get on that team. That’s a team I want to be on.’

“I feel like if I can come in there and prove myself that they’ll extend me for a few years and I can be a part of the organizati­on for more than just one year. That was my goal and it ended up working out.”

Wolfe signed a one-year, $3 million deal, with up to $3 million more available in incentives. He knows his dislocated elbow probably cooled interest leaguewide. He’s also two years removed from a procedure that he said alleviated nerve pain in his neck.

After making it through the “hardest training camp I’ve ever been through” last year, Wolfe said he felt “really good” entering the season. His production matched it. After a slow start, Wolfe had seven sacks over his final six games.

Yes, he turned 30 in February, almost a year older than Brockers and four years older than predecesso­r Chris Wormley, whom the Ravens traded last month to the Pittsburgh Steelers. But Wolfe said he still knows how to move.

“Turn on the film from last year,” he said. “It shows you that I’m still running at 16 mph during the game. I’m still hitting those speeds, 16, 17 mph.

“I’m still playing really strong at the point. I’m still able to pick guys that are five, six years younger than me and put them on their back, put them into the quarterbac­k’s laps.

“I think that I have a lot of football left. I don’t see any reason why I can’t play for four more years.”

Just as in Denver, Wolfe will be a popular quote in the Ravens locker room.

Wolfe said he ate breakfast every morning in Denver with quarterbac­k Joe Flacco, who praised the Ravens’ “big family” organizati­on. He sought advice in free agency from former Broncos and Ravens defensive end Elvis Dumervil, who was “like a big brother to me.”

Said Dumervil: “You’re going to love it” in Baltimore.

Wolfe talked Friday about “eat[ing] these quarterbac­ks” up in defensive coordinato­r Don “Wink” Martindale’s aggressive scheme and said he is looking forward to potentiall­y beating the defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs and Patrick Mahomes twice this season.

And Wolfe delighted in how, when enough things happened to let him finally come to Baltimore, he was joining a defensive line with Pro Bowl defensive end Calais Campbell and defensive tackle Brandon Williams.

“It was a no-brainer for me,” Wolfe said. “It was just like, ‘You know what, man? I think we can have the best defensive line in the league, for sure. We could break records. We could break the rushing record for [fewest] yards per rush, stuff like that.’ Those are the kind of goals that I like to set.

“Sometimes you don’t reach them, but you can get close. And that helps you win. So I think that we’re going to be able to shut that run game down, and then when it comes to our offense keeping us up by 10 [or] 20 points a game, it’s going to get ugly for these quarterbac­ks.”

Note: The Ravens announced several changes to their communicat­ions department Friday.

Chad Steele has been promoted to senior vice president of communicat­ions, where he’ll oversee the Ravens’ public and community relations department­s.

Heather Darney is the new VP of community relations and continues to serve as the executive director of the Ravens Foundation Inc.

Patrick Gleason has been named the VP of public relations, a role responsibl­e for the developmen­t and execution of all football-side publicity efforts.

Kevin Byrne whom owner Steve Bisciotti in a news release called “one of the most highly regarded communicat­ions profession­als in the history of pro sports,” is retiring as the Ravens’ executive VP of public and community relations in May.

An original Ravens employee who moved with then-owner Art Modell from Cleveland in 1996, Byrne will remain a consultant to the team through the 2020 season.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI/AP ?? New Ravens defensive end Derek Wolfe says the team could be in for something special next season.
RICK SCUTERI/AP New Ravens defensive end Derek Wolfe says the team could be in for something special next season.
 ?? JACK DEMPSEY/AP ?? Derek Wolfe, playing for the Broncos, pursues Colts quarterbac­k Andrew Luck during a 2015 playoff game.
JACK DEMPSEY/AP Derek Wolfe, playing for the Broncos, pursues Colts quarterbac­k Andrew Luck during a 2015 playoff game.

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