The Commercial Appeal

Examining options for Ravens, Jackson

- Nate Davis

INDIANAPOL­IS — If the Aaron Rodgers saga is the main course of the NFL offseason, then the Lamar Jackson mystery is its very sizable hors d'oeuvre.

And while Rodgers decides when to reveal whether — or perhaps where — he will be playing in 2023, the Baltimore Ravens have until March 7 to make their first significan­t decision about Jackson's immediate future. That's the deadline for teams to use the franchise tag on one of their pending free agents in order to hinder his ability to leave.

“We're hopeful that we'll get a deal done with Lamar before that happens,” Ravens general manager Eric Decosta said Wednesday at the annual scouting combine.

“But, sure, they're big numbers. Knowing they're big numbers, we're prepared for that. And we've got four, five or six different plans based on what happens over the next 10 days.”

But what exactly are those contingenc­ies, and what's the viability of each? Let's dig into the options the Ravens are assessing:

Exclusive franchise tag

Its one-year tender for a quarterbac­k is worth approximat­ely $45 million, commensura­te with what the league's top passers earn in average annual compensati­on. It would also prevent Jackson, who represents himself, from negotiatin­g with other teams while sending a message — both financiall­y and from a restrictiv­e standpoint — that the Ravens are committed to a future with him. It also allows both sides four more months to reach an extension.

Decosta said Wednesday there's “no doubt” Jackson deserves to be paid in the upper tier of NFL QBS.

And yet the exclusive tag would put the Ravens — currently projected to have $24.3 million to spend this year, per Overthecap.

Standard franchise tag

It's worth significan­tly less than the exclusive version — $32.4 million — and would also enable Jackson to negotiate

with other teams. If he signed an offer from another club, the Ravens could subsequent­ly match it or let Jackson go but get two first-round picks from his new team as compensati­on. Yet it's worth wondering how Jackson would feel about this tag's diminished value and the fact that Baltimore would essentiall­y be telling him to find a better arrangemen­t rather than keeping negotiatio­ns in house.

“It's difficult, it's challengin­g,” Decosta said of negotiatin­g with someone who doesn't have an agent.

“You're dealing with a player, so of course it's different. It's a personal relationsh­ip. You're with that guy every single day, and you have a great appreciati­on for who he is and what he does and, yeah, so it is challengin­g.”

Trade

Even though Jackson's five-year rookie contract will officially expire in two weeks, the Ravens can still deal him — by tagging him first. Franchised players can be swapped for whatever compensati­on two parties can consent upon — meaning more or less than the two firstround­ers

that would switch hands if an outside offer wasn't matched — though Jackson would have to consummate any such agreement by actually signing the tag, which would surely require the framework of his next contract being in place with a new team.

New contract

The Ravens are certainly signaling this is the outcome they want with Jackson, and sooner than later. Owner Steve Bisciotti vented last year about how their talks would be complicate­d by the five-year, fully guaranteed $230 million deal the AFC North rival Cleveland Browns awarded quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson after acquiring him, and that appears to have proved true.

Still, signing Jackson before March 7, for whatever amount it costs, would mean Baltimore could structure his deal with more favorable cap numbers in the next few years and leave room for other free agents.

Watson's cap hit was less than $10 million in 2022, and his deal could be restructur­ed this year in hopes that an expanding salary cap will better accommodat­e it in future seasons.

Takeaways

Publicly, the Ravens seem to be saying all the right things about their desire to retain Jackson. And why not? He's been the league's MVP, and Baltimore has experience­d significan­t (regularsea­son) success in his five seasons, including four playoff trips.

“You can't win in this league without a strong quarterbac­k,” said Decosta. “I mean, that's been proven. So we want Lamar here. We think he's one of the best quarterbac­ks in the league — he's certainly one of our best players — and we want him back.

“Living in a world without a quarterbac­k is a bad world to live in.”

And a likely outcome for the Ravens if Jackson leaves the fold, especially since they're not scheduled to pick until the 22nd spot in the draft. And Baltimore seems an unlikely destinatio­n for a player like Rodgers given how the offense has been customized for Jackson over the years.

Yet that attack will be evolving under newly hired coordinato­r Todd Monken, though coach John Harbaugh believes his hiring is a sign of the organizati­on's devotion to Jackson and his continued developmen­t.

Asked if he's imagined a post-jackson scenario, Harbaugh said: “Not very much. As little as possible, for sure. Our plans are for Lamar.”

Neither he nor Decosta took issue with Jackson's absence from the Ravens' wild-card loss at Cincinnati, Harbaugh — who texts frequently with the quarterbac­k — believing Jackson was simply trying to give himself the best opportunit­y to play the following week even though he didn't appear after Week 14 in either of the past two seasons due to injuries.

“It's just what it is, part of the business,” Harbaugh said of the ongoing impasse. “I'm really hopeful and excited – fervently hopeful and can't wait for it to get done.

“We want Lamar, and Lamar wants to be a Raven. And, in the end, that's gonna work itself out in my mind . ... I've always been confident that it's gonna get worked out, and I still believe that.”

 ?? PAUL RUTHERFORD/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson reacts after defeating the Patriots at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.
PAUL RUTHERFORD/USA TODAY SPORTS Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson reacts after defeating the Patriots at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.

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