Subscribe to our newsletter

OTL: Ravens & Odell Beckham Meet & “Love Was There”

Odell Beckham jr Harbaugh OTL
Share
Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Monday was a rough one in Baltimore, and most are still shocked or recovering from the news that Lamar Jackson requested a trade from the Ravens on March 2.

It’s disappointing to say the least, especially looking back on what a likeable player Jackson was in his first few seasons with the team. Ava’s Tweet sums it up pretty well:

Jackson is a charismatic leader that the city fell in love with, but as Tony Lombardi explains below, that guy isn’t the same as he once was. In turn, his situation with the team has changed, as well.

Buh-Bye Lamar

Dov Kleiman highlights that Jackson is the 5th Ravens draft pick to request a trade in the last few seasons, which is not a great look for the organization:

My problem with this is that the situations for each player are different here. Sure, ideally the team would keep them all, but as RSR’s Adam Bonaccorsi walks us through, they were all unique.

Moreover, as Jeff Zrebiec writes for The Athletic, Jackson’s request doesn’t really change much in all reality:

It’s worth a read, but ultimately I do think Zrebiec is right – there is something off about this standstill between the team and Jackson. The two parties aren’t just at a crossroads. Instead, it feels like they’ve already decided to split. Well, according to his request, Jackson certainly has.

But I wonder if it is more of a monetary thing than one about who he’s playing with. If Jackson wants more weapons on offense, he might be getting one in Odell Beckham Jr.:

Lombardi feels the move makes no sense for Beckham, and I tend to agree with him:

Regardless, here’s how Beckham thought it went:

To me, it doesn’t sound like Beckham’s nearing a deal with the Ravens at all. Time will tell.

That said, having the Super Bowl winning WR join the fold in Baltimore would, as Kevin Oestreicher says, be a “needle mover:”

Signing Beckham likely does require the Ravens holding onto Lamar Jackson, as Beckham simply wouldn’t play with Tyler Huntley or others, though. So, more accurately, it would be a “miracle” if Baltimore was able to sign him at this stage.

Things are looking bleak right now, but at the snap of a finger they could turn around. I’m still holding out hope that Jackson stays in Charm City, even if that is naïve.

To brighten things up I’ll completely change the subject. NFL players can now wear the number 0:

 

What do you think of it, and which Raven feels like a number 0 the most?

4 Responses

  1. Eh, I think zero is fine if that’s the number they want to go with. Maybe next year they’ll change it to allow Roman numerals too. I never really considered OBJ as a legit option because he’s had the opportunity to come here before and didn’t.

    I think the LJ situation just went sideways again. LJ thinks he ‘clapped back’ at the media about his injury concerns, when really he just confirmed what everyone was so concerned about. That he does get injured and when he does, he does not play injured. Evidently he’s not a team first guy either. Anyway, hope we draft a QB in rd 6 to replace LJ. His last name is cunningham and he has an agent.

  2. Why does LJ have to deal with “the bottom line “ (1-3 playoff record; he’s not durable etc) when there are reasonable explanations? But the TEAM doesn’t have to. The BOTTOM LINE is that the homegrown players have been leaving. No explanations for LJ, none for the team. Bottom line-he has to play hurt and win playoff games. Bottom line-the team has been losing home grown talent, and now Bateman is also unhappy. So yes, the team has to eat that narrative and get it fixed.

    1. I somewhat agree but there are many issues. The ownership/management is tied to Harbaugh. Harbaugh is here and has his own way of doing things-run first offense, deception and misleading, not totally trustworthy, reactive vs proactive, pass the buck kinda guy.

      I am biased. I believe many of our problems are a result of Harbaugh, directly or indirectly. Many of the decisions made by the FO and Bisciotti are based on their relationship and input by Harbaugh. IMO there will continue to be issues as long as Harbaugh is here. I do believe he’s a good coach but sometimes the game passes you by and it’s time to move on.

      We have a few more years of Harbaugh as head coach and if the team falters(especially with a different QB) then maybe we have change. Just my view on the whole situation.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

4 Responses

  1. Eh, I think zero is fine if that’s the number they want to go with. Maybe next year they’ll change it to allow Roman numerals too. I never really considered OBJ as a legit option because he’s had the opportunity to come here before and didn’t.

    I think the LJ situation just went sideways again. LJ thinks he ‘clapped back’ at the media about his injury concerns, when really he just confirmed what everyone was so concerned about. That he does get injured and when he does, he does not play injured. Evidently he’s not a team first guy either. Anyway, hope we draft a QB in rd 6 to replace LJ. His last name is cunningham and he has an agent.

  2. Why does LJ have to deal with “the bottom line “ (1-3 playoff record; he’s not durable etc) when there are reasonable explanations? But the TEAM doesn’t have to. The BOTTOM LINE is that the homegrown players have been leaving. No explanations for LJ, none for the team. Bottom line-he has to play hurt and win playoff games. Bottom line-the team has been losing home grown talent, and now Bateman is also unhappy. So yes, the team has to eat that narrative and get it fixed.

    1. I somewhat agree but there are many issues. The ownership/management is tied to Harbaugh. Harbaugh is here and has his own way of doing things-run first offense, deception and misleading, not totally trustworthy, reactive vs proactive, pass the buck kinda guy.

      I am biased. I believe many of our problems are a result of Harbaugh, directly or indirectly. Many of the decisions made by the FO and Bisciotti are based on their relationship and input by Harbaugh. IMO there will continue to be issues as long as Harbaugh is here. I do believe he’s a good coach but sometimes the game passes you by and it’s time to move on.

      We have a few more years of Harbaugh as head coach and if the team falters(especially with a different QB) then maybe we have change. Just my view on the whole situation.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Don’t Miss Anything at RSR. Subscribe Here!
Latest posts
Join our newsletter and get 20% discount
Promotion nulla vitae elit libero a pharetra augue