Baltimore Sun

QB clock tick ... tick

As deadline approaches, long-term contract still sought with Jackson

- By Hayes Gardner

INDIANAPOL­IS — Dozens of media members packed into the Indiana Convention Center on Wednesday as Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta fielded questions. The first he received was about Lamar Jackson. So was the second. And the third.

DeCosta said he recently met with the team’s star quarterbac­k and that he’s “optimistic” the Ravens and Jackson will agree to a long-term contract. Coach John Harbaugh echoed the confidence. “I’m really hopeful and excited, fervently hopeful,” he said.

As they spoke, the clock ticked closer to Tuesday, the deadline for the Ravens to place Jackson under the franchise tag, which would give the 26-year-old a contract for next season but provide little stability.

It’s a rickety foundation for the face of a franchise to be on.

Meanwhile, all 32 NFL teams are gathered in Indianapol­is for the NFL scouting combine. Many seek an elite quarterbac­k and would be more than willing to offer

draft picks to the Ravens and a hefty contract to Jackson to attract the dynamic playmaker. The team’s future with Jackson is murky, but in the coming weeks, it’ll become clearer in a hurry as league deadlines approach and demand action.

“There’s no bigger question right now and no bigger decision,” DeCosta said. “There’s no bigger challenge for this organizati­on moving forward than this contract. So all of my effort — well, most of my effort — is focused on this. I would say the rest of it is focused on the draft and free agency.”

Free agency begins in two weeks and the draft takes place in late April. By that point, the Ravens will have a much better picture of Jackson’s future in Baltimore — if there is one.

Asked if he’s thought much about the potential of the Ravens moving on without Jackson, Harbaugh said, “not very much.”

“As little as possible, for sure,” he said. “Our plans are for Lamar.”

Jackson has been eligible for a contract extension for two years and yet, here things stand, approachin­g the buzzer without a signed deal. The Ravens are stuck in a holding pattern as they must resolve Jackson’s contract dispute before moving on to some other items of offseason business. DeCosta acknowledg­ed that the situation “does kind of create a little bit of a haze as to what the future’s going to look like with your roster.”

The would-be lucrative contract is the major story of this NFL offseason. If the Ravens and Jackson are unable to hammer out an eleventh-hour deal, they are expected to place the 2019 NFL Most Valuable Player under the franchise tag. They could use the exclusive tag, paying him about $45 million for the next year and preventing other teams from signing him, or they could use the nonexclusi­ve tag, paying him about $32 million but leaving the possibilit­y open for other teams to offer him a deal. If the Ravens chose not to match a rival’s offer in that scenario, Baltimore would receive two first-round picks as compensati­on for losing Jackson. DeCosta did not say which tag the Ravens would use.

Then, there’s the possibilit­y of a trade — which fans of opposing NFL teams crave; other general managers could be balancing their time scouting in Indianapol­is with packaging a deal for Jackson. However, DeCosta didn’t want to discuss trades.

“I covet great players. And I love Lamar,” he said.

DeCosta declined to comment on particular­s of his negotiatio­n with Jackson, who has reportedly sought a fully guaranteed contract, saying that he and Jackson have an agreement to keep details of the negotiatio­ns between them.

Although the Ravens are expected to tag Jackson by Tuesday, that probably won’t end negotiatio­ns. The sides could come to an agreement before a July 15 deadline.

But time is not on the Ravens’ side. If they tag Jackson, there is a chance he’d be unwilling to play (other stars have sat out when placed under the one-year tag, wanting a longer contract), which would leave Baltimore without a starting quarterbac­k. Their options then become: Sign a quarterbac­k in free agency, draft one or play backup Tyler Huntley (a restricted free agent) as the starter.

With free agency and the draft approachin­g, it would behoove the Ravens to have a resolution to their negotiatio­ns with Jackson sooner rather than later. Despite his stated optimism that a deal will be finalized, DeCosta said the team is “preparing for every contingenc­y.”

Jackson’s future with the Ravens has been hazy since he and the team did not sign a contract ahead of last season and it’s remained so in the months since. As deadlines loom, though, it’s about to get a lot clearer.

Before DeCosta fielded a dozen Jackson-related questions from reporters Wednesday, he opened his remarks with a quote from one of his favorite books, “Where The Wild Things Are.”

“Let the wild rumpus begin,” he said.

 ?? JUSTIN CASTERLINE/GETTY ?? Ravens leadership projected confidence that it’ll be able to sign quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson to a long-term contract, but general manager Eric DeCosta, pictured, also said Wednesday that he is “preparing for every contingenc­y.”
JUSTIN CASTERLINE/GETTY Ravens leadership projected confidence that it’ll be able to sign quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson to a long-term contract, but general manager Eric DeCosta, pictured, also said Wednesday that he is “preparing for every contingenc­y.”
 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/AP ?? Ravens coach John Harbaugh said Wednesday that he’s “really hopeful and excited, fervently hopeful” about the team signing quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson to a longterm deal.
MICHAEL CONROY/AP Ravens coach John Harbaugh said Wednesday that he’s “really hopeful and excited, fervently hopeful” about the team signing quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson to a longterm deal.

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