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Limited Edition Baltimore Lamar Jackson MVP Football

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Are you a die-hard football fan looking to own a piece of history? Look no further! Introducing the Limited Edition Lamar Jackson MVP Commemorative Football, a stunning tribute to the electrifying MVP season of the Baltimore Ravens’ superstar quarterback. These footballs are available NOW by CLICKING HERE.  Use code LOMBARDI at checkout for $10 off your purchase.

In 2023, Lamar Jackson took the NFL by storm, dazzling fans with his unmatched talent, athleticism, and leadership on the field. His remarkable season saw him shatter records, dominate defenses, and ultimately clinch the prestigious MVP award, solidifying his place among the game’s elite.

Now, you have the exclusive opportunity to own a football that captures the essence of Jackson’s unforgettable journey to greatness. Crafted with precision and attention to detail, this commemorative football is more than just a collector’s item – it’s a symbol of inspiration and achievement.

Expertly crafted with high-quality materials, including genuine leather, ensuring durability and authenticity, each football is strictly limited in quantity and comes with a Certificate of Authenticity, making it a rare and valuable addition to any collection.

Lamar Jackson football

Whether you’re a Ravens fanatic, a Lamar Jackson admirer, or simply a passionate football enthusiast, this commemorative football is a must-have item that celebrates the pinnacle of athletic excellence at the highest professional level and a step in Lamar Jackson’s journey to a bust in Canton.

Once again, don’t miss your chance to own a piece of history. Order your Lamar Jackson MVP Limited Edition Football today by CLICKING HERE, use code LOMBARDI for $10 off, and relive the magic of Jackson’s unforgettable MVP season for years to come!

[Related Article: Lamar Primed for MVP]

2 Responses

  1. Good Morning everyone who doesn’t have me on block and who I’m not renting out space in the Ignoratory for. I hope that all is well. I haven’t even had my coffee yet, but I just had to get this off my chest since it’s been stuck there for so long. Lol

    The Baltimore Ravens, as a fanbase, organization and overall footballing culture, is the only football culture in the league, that expects their QB to become a great passer, or is willing to declare that their QB will never become a great passer, when the culture has treated the passing game like an unwanted step-child, FOR OVER TWENTY FIVE YEARS. That makes NOOOOOOOOO sense. None.

    And we’re the only culture, where we can look around the league and see how a #1 WR has helped out any number of QBs in the their growth as passers, but declare that one wouldn’t be necessary here. WHILE MICROMANAGING OUR QBS EVERY MISTAKE IN THE PASSING GAME.

    It’s as if organization philosophy doesn’t matter. If Peyton Manning were drafted to the Ravens, and didn’t have that organization philosophy that Indy had, and didn’t have Marvin Harrison Jr., and didn’t have Reggie Wayne and didn’t have Tom Moore, he’d still be Peyton Manning. As if it just…………….happens like that.

    As if coaching doesn’t matter and philosophy doesn’t matter. BUT WE ALL SUPPOSEDLY WANT HARBAUGH FIRED, but when it comes to the QB, ‘Oh no, we have enough at WR, he should be able to do what the greats do, even though we’ve not given him anything the greats were given to develop and become great’.

    I saw the picture of Jackson hugging Flacco and you know what I saw, I saw a ‘Now I know what you went through’ hug. That’s what I saw. Jackson was probably in his arms crying like, ‘Damn Joe, man, they expect me to do all this sh*t, and expect me to make every pass perfect to Rashod Bateman, and THEN STILL CATCH HALF OF THEM FOR HIM MAN!’ And Flacco was probably like, ‘It’s okay Lamar, this is how I felt before they traded for Boldin, and after they traded Boldin’.

    Tell me where it makes any….. lick…… of sense, to declare that a QB will never be something, when you’ve not only not given him the chance to be that, but are TERRIFIED of giving him the chance to be that? And tell me where it makes sense to go into the off-season NOT building your team that way, but seeing a game play out where that way doesn’t work, and USING THAT to say, ‘See, I told you we could never be that’, knowing full well we put no real effort into being that in the off-season.

    32nd WR groups to 20th. Worst passing scheme to that 15-20 range. OH WOW, WHAT AN IMPROVEMENT. I’M INSPIRED.

    MY ……………….ASS.

    We went from putting in no effort to building even a complimentary passing game, except drafting WRs we never planned on using, since nobody else would come here……………………..to putting in the average effort that a team puts in for an average passing scheme, and the whole city was doing cartwheels like we had Denny Green, Randy Moss and Chris Carter.

    If you want to stay married to this run the ball, control the clock, lean on the defense philosophy, no matter the QB, then it makes no sense to expect that QB to be Drew Brees or Peyton Manning or whoever. It’s basically saying you don’t have half a clue as to what goes into making a QB a great passer and just think the QB was bound to be one even if Matt Cavanaugh was calling plays and he was throwing to Stonehands his entire career.

    Only in Baltimore. Nowhere else. Yeah, they may have the occasional season where the WR group is down, or where they have to run the ball a bit more. But the overall organizational philosophy is, if we want our QB to be this great passer, we’re going to try to give him everything possible to be that. NOT, ‘We’re always going to be the Ravens, but we still expect our QBs to be Peyton Manning. We’ve now seen two QBs go through this same bullllllllshit.

    Joe got off of his couch and won Comeback player of the year. And when he was asked about how he was able to build a chemistry with Amari Cooper so quickly (Weeks ago) he said, ‘Great WRs just know how to get open’. Yet we hammered that man, for years, for not getting together with that group of jabronis we often gave him, in the off-season. Yet, here, he gets right off of his couch and it’s like he and Cooper have played together for years. Lamar gets one season with a half decent scheme, half decent WRs, he looks like a better passer than he ever has, we still average close to 30 PPG, our running game doesn’t suffer and we end up with our first hosted AFC Championship Game in team history. And guess what, his best WR still ended up being a rookie. One guy who hadn’t played in two years did what we expected: Ran great routes, had great hands, but struggled to stay healthy. And we were second to last in the league in passing attempts. The fan who stole the #15 jersey worked out as the 4th WR. But not someone you want to be a starter. And Bateman spent more time as the 3rd or 4th read in a play as the season went on and made one catch all season on an off throw. One. Zay was better than all of them, and Zay’s not even a top 20 WR right now. I think he’ll get there soon, but………

    How can someone look at the way Flacco and the passing game worked in that postseason run and not think, ‘Perhaps its time for an organizational shift’? Nope, instead trade Boldin and don’t replace him (When you could have traded up for Hopkins). And now, who can look at the changes made to the passing game and not think, ‘Man, if we continue to build on this passing game and WR room, that might REALLY put us over the top’.

    And so it will be with whatever QB is drafted after Lamar. We’ll draft him, and since he won’t be able to run like Lamar, we’ll treat him like Flacco and just ask him not to blow the game, while we simultaneously declare that he’ll never be such and such QB. Damage his growth as a passer. Maybe get some success, but nowhere near as much as we should have. Then sign some also-ran WR and treat him like the second coming of Steve Largent, and micromanage every mistake that QB makes and declare that he’ll never be Manning. Rinse and repeat.

    IT STARING US RIGHT IN THE FACE PEOPLE.

    1. Very cogent assessment! Couldn’t have said it better myself! And, as long as Harbaugh remains HC, it will always be, as you state, “rinse and repeat”……

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2 Responses

  1. Good Morning everyone who doesn’t have me on block and who I’m not renting out space in the Ignoratory for. I hope that all is well. I haven’t even had my coffee yet, but I just had to get this off my chest since it’s been stuck there for so long. Lol

    The Baltimore Ravens, as a fanbase, organization and overall footballing culture, is the only football culture in the league, that expects their QB to become a great passer, or is willing to declare that their QB will never become a great passer, when the culture has treated the passing game like an unwanted step-child, FOR OVER TWENTY FIVE YEARS. That makes NOOOOOOOOO sense. None.

    And we’re the only culture, where we can look around the league and see how a #1 WR has helped out any number of QBs in the their growth as passers, but declare that one wouldn’t be necessary here. WHILE MICROMANAGING OUR QBS EVERY MISTAKE IN THE PASSING GAME.

    It’s as if organization philosophy doesn’t matter. If Peyton Manning were drafted to the Ravens, and didn’t have that organization philosophy that Indy had, and didn’t have Marvin Harrison Jr., and didn’t have Reggie Wayne and didn’t have Tom Moore, he’d still be Peyton Manning. As if it just…………….happens like that.

    As if coaching doesn’t matter and philosophy doesn’t matter. BUT WE ALL SUPPOSEDLY WANT HARBAUGH FIRED, but when it comes to the QB, ‘Oh no, we have enough at WR, he should be able to do what the greats do, even though we’ve not given him anything the greats were given to develop and become great’.

    I saw the picture of Jackson hugging Flacco and you know what I saw, I saw a ‘Now I know what you went through’ hug. That’s what I saw. Jackson was probably in his arms crying like, ‘Damn Joe, man, they expect me to do all this sh*t, and expect me to make every pass perfect to Rashod Bateman, and THEN STILL CATCH HALF OF THEM FOR HIM MAN!’ And Flacco was probably like, ‘It’s okay Lamar, this is how I felt before they traded for Boldin, and after they traded Boldin’.

    Tell me where it makes any….. lick…… of sense, to declare that a QB will never be something, when you’ve not only not given him the chance to be that, but are TERRIFIED of giving him the chance to be that? And tell me where it makes sense to go into the off-season NOT building your team that way, but seeing a game play out where that way doesn’t work, and USING THAT to say, ‘See, I told you we could never be that’, knowing full well we put no real effort into being that in the off-season.

    32nd WR groups to 20th. Worst passing scheme to that 15-20 range. OH WOW, WHAT AN IMPROVEMENT. I’M INSPIRED.

    MY ……………….ASS.

    We went from putting in no effort to building even a complimentary passing game, except drafting WRs we never planned on using, since nobody else would come here……………………..to putting in the average effort that a team puts in for an average passing scheme, and the whole city was doing cartwheels like we had Denny Green, Randy Moss and Chris Carter.

    If you want to stay married to this run the ball, control the clock, lean on the defense philosophy, no matter the QB, then it makes no sense to expect that QB to be Drew Brees or Peyton Manning or whoever. It’s basically saying you don’t have half a clue as to what goes into making a QB a great passer and just think the QB was bound to be one even if Matt Cavanaugh was calling plays and he was throwing to Stonehands his entire career.

    Only in Baltimore. Nowhere else. Yeah, they may have the occasional season where the WR group is down, or where they have to run the ball a bit more. But the overall organizational philosophy is, if we want our QB to be this great passer, we’re going to try to give him everything possible to be that. NOT, ‘We’re always going to be the Ravens, but we still expect our QBs to be Peyton Manning. We’ve now seen two QBs go through this same bullllllllshit.

    Joe got off of his couch and won Comeback player of the year. And when he was asked about how he was able to build a chemistry with Amari Cooper so quickly (Weeks ago) he said, ‘Great WRs just know how to get open’. Yet we hammered that man, for years, for not getting together with that group of jabronis we often gave him, in the off-season. Yet, here, he gets right off of his couch and it’s like he and Cooper have played together for years. Lamar gets one season with a half decent scheme, half decent WRs, he looks like a better passer than he ever has, we still average close to 30 PPG, our running game doesn’t suffer and we end up with our first hosted AFC Championship Game in team history. And guess what, his best WR still ended up being a rookie. One guy who hadn’t played in two years did what we expected: Ran great routes, had great hands, but struggled to stay healthy. And we were second to last in the league in passing attempts. The fan who stole the #15 jersey worked out as the 4th WR. But not someone you want to be a starter. And Bateman spent more time as the 3rd or 4th read in a play as the season went on and made one catch all season on an off throw. One. Zay was better than all of them, and Zay’s not even a top 20 WR right now. I think he’ll get there soon, but………

    How can someone look at the way Flacco and the passing game worked in that postseason run and not think, ‘Perhaps its time for an organizational shift’? Nope, instead trade Boldin and don’t replace him (When you could have traded up for Hopkins). And now, who can look at the changes made to the passing game and not think, ‘Man, if we continue to build on this passing game and WR room, that might REALLY put us over the top’.

    And so it will be with whatever QB is drafted after Lamar. We’ll draft him, and since he won’t be able to run like Lamar, we’ll treat him like Flacco and just ask him not to blow the game, while we simultaneously declare that he’ll never be such and such QB. Damage his growth as a passer. Maybe get some success, but nowhere near as much as we should have. Then sign some also-ran WR and treat him like the second coming of Steve Largent, and micromanage every mistake that QB makes and declare that he’ll never be Manning. Rinse and repeat.

    IT STARING US RIGHT IN THE FACE PEOPLE.

    1. Very cogent assessment! Couldn’t have said it better myself! And, as long as Harbaugh remains HC, it will always be, as you state, “rinse and repeat”……

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