The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Broncos to acquire Flacco from Ravens

- By Arnie Stapleton

ENGLEWOOD, COLO. >> Joe Flacco has gone from Broncos tormentor to savior.

The Ravens have agreed to trade the veteran quarterbac­k to the Broncos in exchange for a fourth-round pick in this year’s NFL draft, a person with knowledge of the agreement told The Associated Press.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity Wednesday because neither team announced the deal, which was first reported by ESPN. NFL rules prohibit teams from discussing trades until the start of the league year on March 13.

Flacco, the MVP of the 2013 Super Bowl following a miraculous win at topseeded Denver, became expendable in Baltimore with the emergence of rookie Lamar Jackson, the former Louisville star who led the Ravens into the playoffs after Flacco got hurt.

The Broncos again needed an upgrade at QB after Case Keenum’s middling debut in Denver, where a 6-10 finish led general manager John Elway to turn to Vic Fangio , his fourth head coach in six seasons.

Now, he’s landed his seventh quarterbac­k since Peyton Manning’s tearful retirement Ravens quarterbac­k Joe Flacco passes against the the Browns during the 2018 season.

following Denver’s win in Super Bowl 50.

The others all bombed: draft picks Brock Osweiler, Trevor Siemian, Paxton Lynch and Chad Kelly, trade acquisitio­n Mark Sanchez and Keenum, who threw for 18 TDs and a career-high 15 intercepti­ons last season to go with a career-high 34 sacks.

Flacco has three years and $63 million left on his contract with a salary of $18.5 million next season, which is 10th-highest in the NFL at his position. His cap hit of that same amount is 21st among quarterbac­ks in the league.

The Broncos could trade Keenum and save $18 million next season. Releasing him would produce $11 million in savings but cost them $7 million. Keenum

signed a two-year, $36 million deal in Denver last season with $25 million guaranteed.

Either way, Elway’s deal for Flacco continues his build-but-don’t-rebuild ethos. The Broncos have a solid core of young stars and a still superior defense led by Von Miller and Chris Harris Jr. that Elway believes can keep up with the Chargers and Chiefs in the AFC West with the right quarterbac­k leading the way.

They wanted a proven veteran such as Flacco or Nick Foles, another Super Bowl MVP.

At 34, Flacco is four years older than Foles but he’s been durable, starting all 16 games in nine of his 11 NFL seasons. The other years he started nine and 10 games. Foles has started more than eight games just twice in his seven NFL seasons.

Fangio also knows Flacco well, having served on Baltimore’s coaching staff during the quarterbac­k’s first two seasons there.

Facilitati­ng the deal for Flacco was the extra fourthroun­d pick Elway had at his disposal from the Demaryius Thomas trade to Houston last fall.

In Flacco, the Broncos are turning to a quarterbac­k who broke their hearts six years ago.

Denver was the top seed after going 13-3 in Manning’s first season in Denver and the Broncos took an 11-game winning streak into their divisional round playoff game against Baltimore.

In the waning seconds of regulation, Flacco connected with Jacoby Jones on a 70-yard touchdown pass to force overtime in a game the Ravens won 38-35 in double overtime. Safety Rahim Moore went for the intercepti­on instead of the tackle and mistimed his leap, allowing Jones to catch the ball at the 20-yard line and trot into the end zone with the tying touchdown.

Flacco, who turned 34 last month, has played all 11 of his seasons with the Ravens after being selected 18th overall in the 2008 NFL draft.

 ?? RON SCHWANE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
RON SCHWANE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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