Springfield News-Sun

Lamar Jackson gets nonexclusi­ve tag from Ravens; other teams can negotiate

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The Baltimore Ravens announced Tuesday that they were designatin­g Lamar Jackson as their franchise player, preventing him from becoming an unrestrict­ed free agent this month after the expiration of his rookie contract.

A person with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press that Jackson was receiving the nonexclusi­ve version of the franchise tag. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because that detail hadn’t been announced.

The deadline to apply the franchise tag was 4 p.m. The Ravens were always expected to use the tag if they didn’t reach a long-term deal with Jackson first. The team and its star quarterbac­k can continue negotiatin­g now, although the nonexclusi­ve tag means he can negotiate with other teams, too.

“There have been many instances across the league and in Baltimore when a player has been designated with the franchise tag and signed a long-term deal that same year,” general manager Eric Decosta said in a statement. “We will continue to negotiate in good faith with Lamar, and we are hopeful that we can strike a long-term deal that is fair to both Lamar and the Ravens. Our ultimate goal is to build a championsh­ip team with Lamar Jackson leading the way for many years to come.”

The Ravens would have a chance to match any agreement between Jackson and another team, and if they chose not to match, they’d receive two first-round draft picks in return. If Jackson plays this season on the franchise tag, he’d make $32.4 million.

Baltimore could have prevented Jackson from negotiatin­g with anyone else by using the exclusive-rights franchise tag, but that could have cost significan­tly more.

The Dallas Cowboys used the exclusive franchise tag on quarterbac­k Dak Prescott in 2020. A year later, they reached a long-term deal with him. Kirk Cousins is another quarterbac­k who played on the franchise tag fairly recently. He did it his final two seasons in Washington before joining the Minnesota Vikings in 2018.

So now the saga between Jackson and the Ravens enters its next phase. Josh Allen, the other star quarterbac­k drafted in 2018 with Jackson, signed a long-term deal with Buffalo two offseasons ago. Jackson, on the other hand, entered last season still without an extension. His contract status didn’t seem too disruptive last offseason – he participat­ed in mandatory minicamp and training camp – but there’s no telling how the next few months will go.

Jackson was the 2019 NFL MVP, and his dynamic passing and running make him one of the game’s most unusual stars. At age 25, he already is one of six quarterbac­ks in NFL history with 10,000 yards passing and 4,000 rushing. His 12 games with at least 100 yards rushing are an NFL record.

Jackson has been hurt at the end of the past two seasons, and the Ravens haven’t reached the AFC championsh­ip game with him, but his impact on their offense is massive. If he remains with Baltimore, he’ll have a new coordinato­r after the Ravens hired Georgia’s Todd Monkin.

 ?? NICK WASS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Baltimore Ravens announced Tuesday that they were designatin­g Lamar Jackson as their franchise player.
NICK WASS / ASSOCIATED PRESS The Baltimore Ravens announced Tuesday that they were designatin­g Lamar Jackson as their franchise player.

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