Baltimore Sun Sunday

Ravens need to move on to business of football after anthem posture

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Stadium before today’s AFC North showdown between the Ravens and Pittsburgh Steelers. And you shouldn’t be surprised if you see another flat performanc­e inside the stadium by a Ravens team that looked like it was on another planet — not just in another country — during last week’s blowout loss to the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars.

No one should need John Harbaugh to explain that football is about focus. It is played with more emotion and intensity than any of the other three major profession­al team sports and it requires a level of commitment and concentrat­ion during the week of preparatio­n leading up to each game that — apparently — is easily disrupted.

How else can anyone explain the unrecogniz­able team that showed up in London and struggled to execute in any phase of the game?

The Ravens returned to a more friendly time zone to get ready for one of their most important regular-season games of the season and Harbaugh is hell-bent on making sure nothing distracts from that effort.

“We’re getting ready to play a football game, and that’s what we do, and that’s all we can do,” Harbaugh said Wednesday. “The other issues are bigger than that; they are beyond our ability to address and deal with, but we can focus on the task at hand, and that’s our responsibi­lity. That’s our job, and that’s what we’re required to do.”

Sounds great in theory, but how much can the players reasonably be expected to block out when fans are threatenin­g to boycott the team and thousands have signed a petition calling on the Ravens to remove the statue of Ray Lewis that stands so prominentl­y outside the north end of the stadium?

The statue isn’t going anywhere and this all will pass, but only if the players decide they’ve made whatever point they were trying to make (since it is a bit of a multiple-choice question) and the angriest fans realize that even the athletes they pay so much to see have a constituti­onal right to voice or display opinions others might not share.

The week has been full of speculatio­n about what the Ravens, Steelers and the other 30 teams might do today and it’s clear the Ravens players have spent significan­t time discussing that among themselves. How much time and emotional energy has been expended is not known, but we saw how the Ravens played after last week’s attempt to show unity in the wake of Trump’s provocativ­e comment.

Every team was grappling with the same issue and will be again, but only one team had to travel to London last week, return to face their chief division rival today and will be headed to the West Coast to face a tough Oakland Raiders team next week.

This is a critical juncture in the season for a team that badly needs to return to the playoffs this year. Maybe that pales in real importance next to the social issues that are being debated in between those games, but it is important to the fans who have supported the Ravens at no small expense over the past two decades.

Or, at least, the ones who plan to stick around.

 ?? MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ravens players, including former player Ray Lewis, second from right, kneel down during the playing of the national anthem last week.
MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS Ravens players, including former player Ray Lewis, second from right, kneel down during the playing of the national anthem last week.

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