Every NFL team’s most underrated player heading into 2022

These players don’t get the recognition they deserve in the NFL.

The NFL has no shortage of superstars who are the face of the league. But there are plenty of impact players in the NFL who don’t necessarily get the recognition they deserve.

Whether overlooked or ignored all together, these players are significant contributors for their respective teams. They’ve had proven success but haven’t necessarily gotten the praise they deserve.

Our NFL Wire editors examined the most underrated player for each team heading into the 2022 season, highlighting why they’re deserving of recognition.

The NFL’s top 13 safeties

Doug Farrar kicks off Touchdown Wire’s NFL positional lists with the 13 best safeties in the league.

It is very hard to be a great safety from season to season in the NFL.

When we released our list of the league’s best safeties in 2021, we were pretty sure about the greatness of those players. Just five of the 11 players we listed last year made the cut this time around, and that’s with the move to a Top 13 in 2022, because the position has recently exploded in importance and excellence. We’ll eschew the spoilers for the repeat performers, but Anthony Harris, Harrison Smith, Jessie Bates III, Julian Blackmon, John Johnson III, and Darnell Savage aren’t in this list, and they were all in the mix last season.

In some cases, injuries were the reason — Julian Blackmon, for example. Other safeties simply didn’t perform up to their usual standards, and in most cases, we’re talking about fractions of regression — Jessie Bates, Darnell Savage, and Harrison Smith would certainly qualify there. Other safeties took time to find their way with new teams and new schemes — that would be the case for John Johnson III and Anthony Harris.

For the five repeat guys, and the eight new safeties on this list, there were new challenges. An increase in the importance of both two-safety looks and man/match coverage has made it a different game for a lot of players, as has the ever-expanding roles all defensive backs must play in the modern pro game. This has filtered to the collegiate game, as most of the players listed as safeties in the last few draft classes are less “free” and “strong” safeties, and more moveable chess pieces required to do all kinds of things.

Most of the guys on this year’s list are primarily coverage safeties. It’s great when you can blow up run fits and crossers from the slot, and if you can blitz from the edge, that’s fine, too. But in today’s NFL, where everything is about creating and preventing explosive plays, we wanted to focus on the safeties who do the latter thing best. Not to undermine those who ply their trades closer to the line at a more exclusive level, but when we’re talking about the most valuable safeties in the modern game, you’d best be able to erase deep.

So, with five repeat entrants, and eight new guys, here are Touchdown Wire’s top safeties for the 2022 NFL season. It’s the first of 14 different position lists written by myself and Mark Schofield, leading up to our list of the NFL’s top 101 players.

Ravens’ Jaylon Ferguson died of accidental drug overdose

Ravens LB Jaylon Ferguson died of an accidental drug overdose

The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Maryland said Friday that Baltimore Ravens linebacker Jaylon Ferguson died of an accidental overdose.

The drugs involved the combined effects of fentanyl and cocaine, which cost Ferguson his life at the age of 26.

Ferguson was found unresponsive at his home in North Baltimore on June 21 before police were called to the scene. “Ferguson never regained consciousness and was pronounced dead at the scene by medics,” police said.

Agency spokesperson Bruce Goldfarb said no written autopsy report was available yet, but the agency’s goal is to have one 90% completed within 90 days.

Per the Baltimore Sun:

Baltimore Police said previously that investigators had not ruled out the possibility of an overdose, but that there were no signs of trauma or foul play. Det. Vernon Davis, a police spokesman, said Friday the investigation was ongoing. He did not answer questions about whether the agency had identified a suspect or criminal wrongdoing.

… In a statement, the Ravens said: “Our priority is focused on the man Jaylon was and the positive impact he made on so many as a father, son, fiancé, friend and teammate. It would be inappropriate for us to comment further while we continue to support his family and teammates, who are mourning the tragic loss of a loved one and will celebrate his life tomorrow.”

 

How the Ravens’ safeties can save their new-look defense

The Ravens’ defense fell apart in 2021, but with a new defensive coordinator and safety group, watch out for this Baltimore rebuild.

Throughout its history, the Baltimore Ravens have generally been known for great defense. Since the Ravens’ first season in 1996, the team has ranked in the top 10 in Football Outsiders’ Defensive DVOA metrics 21 different times, in the top five in 13 separate seasons, and first overall in four seasons (1999, 2003, 2006, 2011). The 2000 Ravens defense ranked among the greatest in NFL history ranked second in the league behind the Tennessee Titans; the best Ravens defense ever by DVOA was the 2008 unit (-27.6%; Defensive DVOA is better when it’s negative).

The point is that this is not a franchise used to defensive regression. Which is why the 2021 season was so alarming. Baltimore ranked 28th in Defensive DVOA, the worst such ranking since the inaugural season of 1996. The Ravens ranked fourth in run defense… and 30th against the pass.

Injuries certainly played a part. Only Marlon Humphrey and Anthony Averett managed more than 550 snaps among Baltimore’s cornerbacks. Marcus Peters missed the entire season with a torn ACL. Jimmy Smith, who hasn’t played a full season since 2015, lost more games to injuries and COVID. Humphrey was lost for the rest of the season in early December to a torn pectoral muscle.

Things were similarly thin in the Ravens’ safety corps — Deshon Elliott (now with the Lions) managed just six games, and outside of Chuck Clark, things were pretty patchwork back there, and Clark allowed 31 catches on 45 targets for 448 yards, 182 yards after the catch, four touchdowns, two interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 112.1. Third-round rookie Brandon Stephens played the second-most snaps among Baltimore’s safeties, and he allowed 33 catches on 42 targets for 506 yards, 234 yards after the catch, four touchdowns, no interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 148.6.

Peters coming back to the field will obviously help the cornerback group, but general manager Eric DeCosta and his staff worked overtime in the offseason to build the safety position back up. The Ravens signed former Saints safety Marcus Williams to a five-year, $70 million contract with $37 million guaranteed. Then, they selected Notre Dame safety Kyle Hamilton, the best player in the 2022 draft class according to those people at Touchdown Wire, with the 14th overall pick.

Moves that had to happen if the Ravens were going to get back to the kind of defense expected of the franchise, with some fascinating new wrinkles thrown in.

It’s time to go to the tape and see how it could shake out.

Ravens look to Josh Johnson with Tyler Huntley shelved due to COVID-19

It looks like the Baltimore Ravens will start Josh Johnson against the Bengals

The Baltimore Ravens are in quarterback trouble as they get ready for an AFC North clash with the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.

Lamar Jackson is already unlikely to play due to the bone bruise in his foot. And now news Tyler Huntley has tested positive for COVID-19 and will miss the battle for first place in the division.

The next quarterback up? How about Josh Johnson, who signed a contract 10 days ago.

To say Johnson is well-traveled would be the understatement of the season.

ESPN.com with some more information on the situation in Baltimore:

Lamar Jackson hasn’t practiced in two weeks after injuring his ankle in a 24-22 loss in Cleveland on Dec. 12. Chris Streveler, the Ravens’ practice squad quarterback, was placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list on Thursday.

Jackson, who is listed as questionable, might have to be active because Baltimore is so thin at quarterback. Punter Sam Koch has long been considered the Ravens’ emergency quarterback.

Tyler Huntley reminds of Lamar Jackson on wild scramble

Tyler Huntley shows Lamar Jackson isn’t the only Raven QB who can scramble

The Baltimore Ravens saw Lamar Jackson go out with an ankle injury in the first half against Cleveland on Sunday.

Forgive the Browns’ defense if they thought the elusive quarterback had returned in the third quarter.

However, this scramble was not Jackson but rather backup Tyler Huntley, who showed moves the Heisman winner from Louisville usually displays.

The play was good for 13 yards while it seemed like Huntley ran for many more than that.

Ravens’ Marlon Humphrey lost for season after tearing pec

Ravens’ star CB Marlon Humphrey is done for the season due to a torn pec

The Baltimore Ravens suffered a jarring loss Monday the day after they lost a tough game.

The AFC North leaders revealed star cornerback Marlon Humphrey has torn a pec and is out for the season.

Coach John Harbaugh addressed the issue Monday with the media.

Harbaugh had said Sunday his decision to go for a 2-point conversion after closing within 20-19 of the Pittsburgh Steelers in the final seconds was due to having no cornerbacks left to play.

The conversion failed when Mark Andrews was unable to reel in a pass from Lamar Jackson.

Lamar Jackson, Mark Andrews combine for pair of amazing pass plays

Lamar Jackson and Mark Andrews hit the Browns with the ol’ 1-2

The second half is different than the first for Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens.

Jackson, who threw three interceptions in the first 30 minutes, first found enough time to look down the field for tight end Mark Andrews.

Despite being interfered with, the tight end came down with the pass, which was good for 39 yards.

And for an encore, Jackson once again showed his bewildering ability to extend a play and found Andrews wide-open in the end zone for six points.

The ball was on the 13-yard line when it was snapped. Jackson backpedaled all the way to the 35 before releasing the touchdown thrown.

Amazing.

How the Dolphins upended the Ravens with Cover-0 (and other things)

The Dolphins upset the Ravens on Thursday night with a definitive defensive performance. Did they give a “blueprint” to stop Lamar Jackson?

Every upset has its own anatomy. In the case of the Dolphins’ 22-10 win over the Ravens on Thursday night, the defense was the thing, and it allowed the now 3-7 Dolphins to look far superior to the 6-3 Ravens on that side of the ball. Specifically, it was a series of Cover-0 concepts — no deep safeties, man coverage, and blitz looks that not only kept Lamar Jackson tied to the pocket, but often turned into coverage drops that Jackson found tough to anticipate.

Jackson finished the game with 26 completions on 43 attempts for 238 yards, one touchdown, one interception, and a passer rating of 73.8. He was sacked four times, and was pressured on 19 of his 53 dropbacks. When under pressure, per Pro Football Focus, Jackson completed five of 13 passes for 50 yards, one touchdown, one late desperation interception (the first regular-season pick he’s thrown in the red zone in his career), and a passer rating of 45.4. Through the first nine weeks of the season, Jackson had completed 36 of 75 passes under pressure for 517 yards, four touchdowns, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 77.5, so it wasn’t just pressuring Lamar. There were other things afoot.

How different was the game plan put together by Miami defensive coordinator Josh Boyer? Per Next Gen Stats, safeties Jevon Holland and Brandon Jones were all over the field, and they blitzed at a rate Next Gen Stats had never seen before.

So, this wasn’t just about the usual Cover-0 “blitz or die” plan — there was a lot more going on.  And it wasn’t the first time the Dolphins under Boyer and head coach Brian Flores had upended a dynamic offense with a young quarterback with a ton of Cover-0 looks that morphed into other things. Ask the Rams of Sean McVay and Jared Goff about that.

Anatomy of a Play: How the Dolphins beat Jared Goff with Cover-0 pressure

In this game, Jackson was pressured on 20 of his dropbacks, the most he’s faced in his career. And the Dolphins sent defensive back blitzes on 24 of Jackson’s dropbacks, which was also the most he’s faced in his career. When Jackson is pressured 15 or more times this season, the 6-3 Ravens are 0-3. The Ravens had two plays of 20 or more yards in this game — they had averaged 5.5 per game before. Per NFL research, the Ravens scored fewer than 14 points for the first time in their last 53 games. Their 52-game streak with 14 or more points was the second-longest such streak since 1940.

Ravens head coach John Harbaugh was not amused.

“That’s something they’ve done all year,” Harbaugh said of the safety blitzes. “We worked on it all week. We didn’t have a good enough plan for it, you know, as a group, and we didn’t execute well with the plan we had.”

Well, yeah, but this was a case of the Dolphins throwing the ice cream factory at the Ravens from a DB blitz perspective.

If you’re wondering why Ravens offensive coordinator Greg Roman didn’t have a plan to attack Miami’s Cover-0 stuff when it started, one reason could be that the Dolphins, with all the talk about zero blitzes, didn’t show one defined defensive profile in this game. They weren’t playing zero all the time, and when they did, they threw all kinds of stuff at Jackson with it. They had either a single high safety, or a two-safety look spun to single-high, on their first seven defensive snaps.

The Ravens caught a delay of game penalty on the first Cover-0 look. The next play, third-and-9 from the Miami 28-yard line, had Jackson overthrowing receiver Sammy Watkins in the end zone. Watkins had defensive back Justin Coleman beaten downfield for the touchdown, but because Miami brought three defensive backs on the backside blitz, and safety Jevon Holland was the free blitzer, Jackson couldn’t make the connection. You could easily argue that this was a touchdown if Watkins reached for the ball, but the effect on Jackson and the offense was obvious.

“Actually, you know, I was hot [blitzed],” Jackson said of this playa, nd whether Watkins could and should have brought it in. “I was hot. And I had to throw the ball in the air and give him a chance. But, you know, if he’s not sitting with the back in the backfield, it would probably be hard to try to track the ball, if I’m just throwing it up trying to make something happen. So, nah, I didn’t talk to him about it.”

The Dolphins played Cover-3 on the first play of Baltimore’s next drive, a quick screen to receiver Devin Duvernay for 11 yards, and they stayed with that strategy for the next few plays. The next time we saw Cover-0 in an aggressive fashion (Miami played some of what I would call “soft” Cover-0 with four defenders across 7-10 yards off the ball in man/match coverage) was the last play of the first quarter. It was third-and-5 from the the Baltimore 28-yard line, Holland followed from defensive right to left, lined up as a blitzer again, and did a great job of tying pressure to coverage. Once again, Jackson wasn’t sure what was going on, and the result was a sack split by Jaelan Phillips and Andrew Van Ginkel.

From there, as ESPN’s Matt Bowen pointed out, the Dolphins were able to be creative with their blitzes and coverages because they were so good at showing one thing and moving to another. The match element was crucial to the success of the overall plan.

The obvious question, and it was extended to Jackson after the game, was whether this provided any sort of “blueprint” for defenses down the road to shut the Ravens down, and how the Ravens should counter that.

“Play our game. You know, do us. Do our thing. We’ll be good. There were some plays we left on the field, some things we left on the field. Little mishaps. Just be us. That’s it.”

Per Sports Info Solutions, Jackson faced more Cover-0 than any other quarterback in Weeks 1-9, and he wasn’t great against it — five completions in 15 attempts on 16 dropbacks for 28 yards, 12 air yards, no touchdowns, no interceptions, and a sack. The Dolphins were tied with the Chiefs in Weeks 1-9 with a league-high 20 snaps of Cover-0 in pass defense, allowing 11 completions for 150 yards, one touchdown, and one interception.

No matter how you run it, Cover-0 is a boom-or-bust defense by its very nature. It’s an adjunct concept, not a staple. There are other teams that play it well in small spurts, but I don’t think there’s a message around the league now that you can negate Lamar Jackson by running a ton of Cover-0. This was just as much or more about the Ravens facing a defense that is used to throwing different things at an offense out of it, and succeeding far past its season-long rate in this particular game.

Ravens’ radio broadcast interrupted: ‘I’m a veteran and I’m looking for a drink’

A bizarre moment during the Baltimore Ravens’ radio broadcast on Sunday

An interesting moment in the Cincinnati Bengals-Baltimore Ravens game on Sunday.

Fans listening to the broadcast on WBAL were treated to color analyst Obafemi “Femi” Ayanbadejo interrupting play-by-play man Gerry Sandusky,

“Wh-wh-wh-wh-what are you doing?! What are you doing?!

What followed was an awkward silence.

The broadcasters explained they weren’t questioning what the Ravens or Bengals were doing on the field.

Rather, a woman tried to climb into the broadcast booth.

Sandusky relayed what the misguided woman said.

“I’m a veteran and I’m looking for a drinking.”

Ayanbadejo offered: “I don’t serve drinks at the game. I might make some cocktails at home. But this is not the right time or place.”

Give a listen: