Las Vegas Review-Journal

Banged-up Ravens need Brown

Wide receiver missed all of preseason with hamstring injury

- By Noah Trister

Marquise Brown didn’t play in any of Baltimore’s preseason games and just recently returned from a hamstring injury.

He can’t afford to dwell too much on the time he missed.

“Very frustratin­g,” he said. “I came into this camp feeling the best I have felt, and I was excited. I had a good start to camp, and then … it was frustratin­g, but everything happens for a reason.”

The Ravens are preparing for their opener Monday night against the Raiders. Now entering his third season, Brown is Baltimore’s top returning receiver — and although the Ravens tried to upgrade the position this offseason, injury problems limited the group during training camp.

First-round draft pick Rashod Bateman (groin) is still out, so Baltimore might lean on Brown as much as usual early in the season.

Not only did Brown miss time, but so did quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson, who was out at the beginning of camp following a positive COVID-19 test. Unlike Bateman and newly acquired receiver Sammy Watkins, Brown has had two seasons to develop chemistry with Jackson.

“When I got back out there, it was just like we picked up where we left off. Just being out there is definitely better than not being out there,” Brown said. “You can always gain more and more each day that you’re out there. So, that’s the goal is to always be at practice.”

Brown, a first-round draft pick in 2019, started 25 games over his first two seasons. He had 58 catches for 769 yards and eight touchdowns last season.

Brown’s injury was hardly the biggest concern for the Ravens this preseason — star cornerback Marcus Peters and running backs J.K.

Dobbins and Gus Edwards suffered season-ending knee injuries. But Brown’s ailment was a setback.

“You can’t get those days back, but he’s a really good football player,” coach John Harbaugh said. “He’s in good shape. I think our people have done a good job with the rehab, the conditioni­ng and all that. He’s been in all the meetings. He knows what to do, so now he has to go out and do it.”

Brown said last week he believes the injury is behind him.

“I stayed dialed in with my teammates. Just because I wasn’t out there, every rep they were taking I felt like I was taking,” he said. “Every mistake or every good thing they did, I put myself in those shoes. So, when I got out here, I knew what to expect, I knew how to do stuff and I knew the standard that the room has been setting this whole camp.”

The Ravens ranked last in the NFL in passing last season, so Jackson and the receivers will be under pressure to improve that — especially with the injuries to Dobbins and Edwards affecting the running game.

“There’s no shying away from competitio­n in the room,” Brown said. “If someone makes a big play, the next person wants to make a big play. That’s how the competitiv­eness in the room is going to fuel everyone to make big plays out there.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Nick Wass
Baltimore Ravens receiver Marquise Brown caught a career-best 58 passes for 769 yards last season.
The Associated Press Nick Wass Baltimore Ravens receiver Marquise Brown caught a career-best 58 passes for 769 yards last season.

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