San Antonio Express-News

Ravens’ Wolfe discovers passion for football again

- By David Ginsburg

Derek Wolfe signed as a free agent with the Baltimore Ravens last March because he missed the joy of competing in the NFL playoffs.

Wolfe, an energetic and talented defensive end, lost his passion for the game during a miserable fouryear stretch in Denver that featured three head coaches, 37 defeats and not a single trip to the postseason.

“I started playing this game when I was 7 years old because I liked to win,” Wolfe said. “Unfortunat­ely, I had the rough four years in Denver. It made me really not love the game anymore.”

So he took a one-year deal with Baltimore, and now Wolfe and the Ravens are right where they want to be in the middle of January: still alive in the playoffs and very much in the running for a trip to the Super Bowl.

After defeating Tennessee last Sunday, Baltimore faces Buffalo on Saturday night with a berth in the AFC title game on the line.

The Ravens got the 30year-old Wolfe because he’s a run-stopper, can pressure the quarterbac­k and provides leadership in the locker room and on the field. Before that dry spell in Denver, Wolfe was part of a team that reached the playoffs four years in a row. The Broncos compiled a 50-14 regular- season record during that span and reached the Super Bowl twice, winning one and losing one.

So, in spite of his troubling final four years in Denver, Wolfe knows what it takes to win.

“I really have so much experience that I know what a winning team looks like and the kinds of things you have to do,“he said. “I really just try to lead by example, and I try to speak up when I feel like I need to say something.“

Wolfe had 51 tackles, a sack, a fumble recovery and knocked away two passes this season. Then he helped the Ravens limit

NFL rushing leader Derrick Henry to 40 yards in a 20-13 victory at Tennessee.

Wolfe tied for the team lead with six tackles against the Titans and had Baltimore’s lone sack.

“He’s one of the best leaders I’ve ever seen,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. “Guys like that, in a sideline situation like that when you go down10, that’s what holds a team together. That’s what keeps guys fighting.”

Harbaugh was hoping to get Wolfe on the Ravens after watching him star with the University of Cincinnati, but the Broncos snagged him in the second round of the 2012 draft. Still, Harbaugh never lost sight of the 6-foot-5, 285pound lineman.

“When he came for his visit we really hit it off, and I think we both thought it was going to happen,” Harbaugh recalled. “In the back of my mind, after you watch him all those years, I was always kind of hoping we’d get him here. You see what a great fit he is.”

 ?? Terrance Williams / Associated Press ?? A bad four-year stretch in Denver left Derek Wolfe disillusio­ned. Since signing a one-year deal with Baltimore, the defensive end found his love for football.
Terrance Williams / Associated Press A bad four-year stretch in Denver left Derek Wolfe disillusio­ned. Since signing a one-year deal with Baltimore, the defensive end found his love for football.

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