2020 NFL Pro Bowl: Which Ravens should be selected

The Baltimore Ravens sit atop the NFL and with the 2020 Pro Bowl rosters to drop tonight, several players should get recognized for it.

The NFL is set to announce the 2020 Pro Bowl roster later this evening. And with the Baltimore Ravens sitting at 12-2 and leading several respective positions in fan voting, it got me wondering which players should actually make their way into the Pro Bowl this season?

Of course, the ultimate hope is Baltimore has to have all their players turn down the event as they prepare for Super Bowl LIV. But regardless, this is a golden opportunity for many players to get their very first Pro Bowl nod and for some others to continue their streak. So let’s take a look at the 13 Ravens players I believe should be selected to the 2020 Pro Bowl.

QB Lamar Jackson

Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

A Pro Bowl appears to be nothing more than a formality at this stage. Jackson led every NFL player in fan votes by a wide margin. And given his MVP-caliber season on top of it, Jackson not making the cut would be worthy of a headline all its own.

But just in case anyone is unsure why Jackson should get a Pro Bowl nod, Neil Dutton went through all the Ravens franchise records Jackson has already set. Add to it breaking Michael Vick’s single-season rushing record, leading the league in touchdown passes, TD% and QBR seems like good enough reasons by themselves for Jackson to get his first Pro Bowl nomination.

Which Jets player would you most want on the Ravens’ roster?

A look at the undisputed star of the Jets defense and a player that would be an asset were he a member of the Baltimore Ravens roster

The New York Jets come to M&T Bank today to take on the Baltimore Ravens in Week 15. It’s a game that looks like a bloodbath waiting to happen on the surface but that doesn’t mean New York is devoid of talent.

When looking over the Jets’ roster, they have quite a few key players but just haven’t managed to put it all together yet. Partially due to an injury report that looks more like a league transaction list than an individual team’s game status and partially due to the team still figuring out all the parts in between their stars.

But one player stands out above the rest and is a player that would look good in purple. In fact, it’s one player that could very well end up in Baltimore next season given how the Jets were shopping him earlier this season.

New York, for reasons best known only to themselves, were entertaining trade offers for safety Jamal Adams prior to the deadline. He remained with the team, but the Ravens were among the teams interested in making a deal. If they were open to the idea during the season, it makes sense they’ll draw more offers in the offseason.

Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images

This is Adams’ third season with the Jets after they spent the sixth-overall pick on him in the 2017 NFL Draft. He was fairly quiet as a rookie but has stepped up in a big way in the last two campaigns. He has 18 passes defended in his last 28 games along with two interceptions. One of these he took all the way for a touchdown. This season he has also improved his play in pass coverage too.

In 2018, he was allowing 55% of passes sent in his direction to completed for an average of 12.3 yards per completion and 6.8 yards per target. This year, he’s allowing only 51.7% of the passes to be completed, at a 9.2 YPC and 4.8 YPT average.

Adams has also been used more to apply pressure on the quarterback this year, with 65 blitzes in 12 games compared to 69 in 16 a year ago. This usage has seen him rack up 6.5 sacks this season, the most among all safeties. Adams has become a much surer tackler too. In 2018, 9.4% of his tackle attempts were missed. This year he knocked this average down to 4.5%.

Adams is likely to be missing on Thursday night as he nurses a foot injury. It’s possible then that he has already played his last game for the Jets, especially if teams show a renewed interest in trading for him this offseason. But don’t be terribly shocked if Baltimore is among those calling New York to see if they can make a deal happen as they look to bolster their secondary further thanks to an expected large amount of cap space available.

The Ravens have got by at safety with Earl Thomas, Chuck Clark, and Anthony Levine ever since Tony Jefferson and DeShon Elliott were lost for the season in October.

Clark has shown vast improvement after a shaky rookie season in which he gave up 11 receptions for 123 yards and three touchdowns in pass coverage. But Adams offers so much versatility in both pass and rush defense that a defensive mind like coordinator Wink Martindale would probably think all his Christmases had come at once if Baltimore were to land him.

The asking price is still likely to be high, but maybe Adams’ disenchantment with the Jets could force them to accept a more palatable offer. Adams was angry that the Jets had seemingly gone behind his back in shopping him.  Adams and Thomas together, in concert with Marcus Peters and Marlon Humphrey at cornerback, would make the Ravens’ secondary one to be rightly feared.

Pete Carroll could see Quandre Diggs’ potential at free safety

Defensive back guru Pete Carroll struck again when he saw Quandre Diggs’ potential to play free safety, a move that paid off for Seattle.

When all is said and done, the legacy of Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll will be his ability to create elite secondaries. The Legion of Boom was a perfect combination of late round draft steals and Carroll’s simple, yet difficult to stop, defensive schemes.

Although the LOB is long gone, the Seahawks are already proving they can still pack a punch in the secondary, and a big part of that success recently has been the team’s acquisition of Quandre Diggs.

Diggs was acquired from the Lions, along with a seventh round pick, for a fifth rounder. He was having a rather pedestrian year with Detroit, playing primarily strong safety. He had previous experience as a nickel back as well, but Carroll saw what few (if any) others saw: how his skill set would translate into a cover-3 free safety in his defense.

“I thought you could see it,” Carroll said of Diggs’ potential at free safety. “There’s indications that you can see over his time playing, that he’s just a really good, natural football player. He makes good decisions, he goes for stuff, and he’s aggressive. There’s guys that I’ve coached before – and you guys have seen how Earl [Thomas] played, and if you go back to Troy Polamalu and those guys – they have a different mentality than some other players. They look for the opportunity to for it and they trust themselves because they’ve done it before, and they’ve had the experience. I’ve tried to tell you guys about that, and he is one of those guys.”

Diggs may not be the player that Earl Thomas is, but he certainly possesses that same mentality, aggressiveness and high football IQ that made Thomas the catalyst of Seattle’s Legion of Boom.

Carroll’s ability to see that in an opposing player, who was playing a different position, is a skill that has helped him maintain a solid defensive backfield for the entirety of his career, even when they churn through players at the highest level.

Diggs is next in line for the Seahawks, and while Carroll won’t divulge too much of his secrets, it’s very clear he has a high affinity for Diggs’ play so far.

“He’s not the biggest, the fastest; he’s just a really good football player and he’s tough as hell,” Carroll continued. “It shows up in numbers of ways, it’s not just any one aspect. He’s playing well across the board; fitting in on the run, making his hits in the passing game, and defending the ball down the field. I think we’re lucky to have him.”

Diggs and the Seahawks will head to Carolina to take on the Panthers in their final road game of the season on Sunday, Dec. 15 at 10:00 a.m. PT.

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Former Texas Longhorns Quandre Diggs and Earl Thomas share rare distinction

Former Texas Longhorn football players Quandre Diggs and Earl Thomas share rare distinction in the NFL

Earl Thomas and Quandre Diggs are two stud safeties who made their way through Texas. Thomas was the leader of the famed “Legion of Boom,” a moniker given to the Seattle Seahawks’ dominant secondary that consisted of Thomas, Richard Sherman, and Kam Chancellor.

Earl Thomas has since moved on and is currently the starting free safety for the Baltimore Ravens. Seattle replaced one Longhorn with another when they acquired safety Quandre Diggs from the Detroit Lions.

Since then, Diggs has become the first player with three interceptions in his first four games with the Seahawks since – you guessed it – Earl Thomas.

In his two years at Texas, Thomas made 97 total tackles and had 8 interceptions, two of which he returned for touchdowns. Diggs spent four years at Texas and totaled 220 tackles, 5.5 sacks, 11 interceptions, and 3 forced fumbles.

In the NFL, both Thomas and Diggs are impact players whose contributions don’t always show up in the stat sheet. Despite that, both are known playmakers and the statistics back it up.

Earl Thomas finally got his first sack but a soft personal foul call took it away

Well, that’s disappointing.

My colleague Steven Ruiz often calls Earl Thomas “an alien,” because for so long he was able to patrol so much of the field and make one of the most formidable defenses of all time so formidable. Now he’s figuring out how to play in a completely different system for the Ravens, one where he’s asked to start closer to the line, and thriving.

Now in his tenth season, Thomas, for all he’s accomplished, has never had a solo sack. In fact, he didn’t get credit for a half sack until this year (which probably says something about how strictly Pete Carroll stuck to his scheme with the Legion of Boom.)

But today Thomas got clear on a blitz and leveled Buffalo’s Josh Allen, jarring the ball loose. It was fitting: Of course Earl Thomas’ first sack would be a strip sack. And then a flag came in, for personal foul.

Uh. Yeah. We’ve certainly written our fair share of posts here decrying the type of hits that generally lead to personal foul calls … and this is not one of them. The visual of Thomas putting both hands on Allen’s helmet and shoving it down is not great for a league that protects QBs, but it’s not like he had much other recourse. He was being pushed by 340-pound Brandon Williams, who either was going for the fumble or had lost his balance in the scrum.

It’s a bad call, as this Ravens employee attests.

Send Earl Thomas on more blitzes, Ravens. Let him avenge this call.

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Boomer Esiason accuses Jerry Jones of tampering, sabotaging Jets’ relationship with Jamal Adams

Boomer Esiason went on ESPN’s Rich Cimini’s podcat and accused Jerry Jones of tampering with the Jets’ relationship with Jamal Adams.

The past 48 hours haven’t been kind to Jerry Jones.

First, the Dallas Cowboys owner saw his team embarrassed on Thursday Night Football against a shorthanded, inferior Bears team. On Friday morning, Jones was subsequently bumped from a radio spot after continuously cursing on air.

Now, Jones is being accused of tampering and attempting to sabotage the Jets’ relationship with Jamal Adams, by none other than ex-Jets quarterback Boomer Esiason.

Esiason appeared on the Flight Deck Podcast with ESPN’s Rich Cimini and flat out accused Jones of attempting to tamper with multiple safeties. Not just Adams, but Earl Thomas too.

“I don’t trust Jerry Jones,” Esiason said. “He recruits players that are under contract with other teams by leaking potential trades to the media. That’s just plain wrong. He did it with Earl Thomas when he was with the Seattle Seahawks and I believe he did it with Jamal Adams and the Jets. It put the Seahawks and the Jets in a bad spot. Then the players react because they’re emotional and they don’t get it. Suddenly social media is all over them.”

Esiason accused Jones of leaking reports that the Jets were shopping Adams to the media. The Jets have said that they were merely listening to offers, which reportedly included ones from the Cowboys. With that information in circulation, Adams became upset and took to social media to show his displeasure. The Jets were forced to do damage control and have now since amended a strained relationship.

If what Esiason is asserting is correct, the NFL may have to investigate his claims.

This is what the current NFL policy on anti-tampering is:

“The purpose of the NFL Anti-Tampering Policy, as it applies to tampering with players, is to protect member clubs’ contract and negotiating rights, and, at the same time, to allow the intra-League competitive systems devised for the acquisition and retention of player talent (e.g., college draft, waiver system, free-agent rules under an operative collective bargaining agreement) to operate efficiently.”

The last time the NFL cracked down on tampering was back in 2015. The NFL disciplined the Kanas City Chiefs for a violation of the Anti-Tampering Policy relating to improper contact during the 2015 “Negotiating Period” with prospective unrestricted free agent Jeremy Maclin, then under contract with the Philadelphia Eagles.

Because of those impermissible contacts, Kansas City forfeited its third-round pick in the 2016 NFL draft and its sixth-round pick in the 2017 NFL draft and paid a fine of $250,000. In addition, head coach Andy Reid was fined $75,000, while GM John Dorsey was fined $25,000.

A similar penalty could be on the horizon for Jones if the NFL is looking to make an example out of him.

Baltimore’s Earl Thomas is certain that the Ravens will be in the Super Bowl this year

“When the Super Bowl comes, whoever we play, they’re going to be in trouble.”

The Baltimore Ravens are the toast of the NFL after their impressive win over the Los Angeles Rams on Monday night.

And rightly so, as quarterback Lamar Jackson continues to do ridiculously awesome things every time he steps on the field.

This week they host the 10-1 San Francisco 49ers in what some are calling a possible Super Bowl preview, even though the Ravens currently have the second best record in the AFC.

Ravens safety Earl Thomas was asked Wednesday if he thought it was a Super Bowl preview and he said, according to ESPN:

“You think the 49ers are going to the Super Bowl? It could be. Let’s see… When the Super Bowl comes, whoever we play, they’re going to be in trouble.”

While the Ravens did beat the you-know-what out of the Patriots a few weeks ago, you gotta think New England will have something to say about this in January.

Thomas’ former teammate Richard Sherman, who now plays for the 49ers, had some thoughts on Thomas’ statement:

This game Sunday should be a fun. Just wish it was in primetime, instead of 1 p.m. on Sunday.

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Ravens S Earl Thomas: Texans coach Bill O’Brien didn’t believe I still wanted to play football

Baltimore Ravens safety Earl Thomas says Houston Texans head coach Bill O’Brien questioned his will to keep playing football during free agency.

The Houston Texans had money to spend in the 2019 free agency period. They also had a need at safety after watching Tyrann Mattieu, Kareem Jackson and Andre Hal (retirement) leave the team.

Fortunately, one of the best safeties of the decade, Earl Thomas, became available. Quarterback Deshaun Watson took notice of that, as the two share the same agent, suggested to Bill O’Brien that the team sign the Texas native with a Hall of Fame resumé.

O’Brien didn’t seem too interested.

On a call with Thomas, O’Brien questioned the safety’s will to still to play football.

He was at the rodeo at the time,” Thomas told Dan Pompei of The Athletic. “Our conversation was not what I thought it was going to be. It was him not believing I still wanted to play football.”

It wasn’t as if O’Brien didn’t have some questions about Thomas. After all, the Super Bowl champion safety broke his left leg in Week 4 of the 2018 season. It was the second time in the past three seasons that his season had ended with a broken leg. Signing Thomas to the Texans would mean spending some of the offseason rehabilitating the injury while the 30-year-old integrated with the team.

Eventually, Thomas signed with the Baltimore Ravens to the tune of $55 million over four years. The Texans chose the affordable Tashaun Gipson, who signed a three-year, $22.5 million deal, shortly after they lost out on retaining Mathieu, who signed a three-year contract with the Kansas City Chiefs.

How the Ravens fixed their defense and became the NFL’s best team

John Harbaugh wants you to think nothing changed, but the Ravens actually made signficant alterations — and they worked.

Expectations were high for the Baltimore Ravens heading into the 2019 season. We expected the offense to look … different in Year 2 of the Lamar Jackson era, but “different” doesn’t always mean better and you would have been totally justified in wondering if this new-fangled offense, which John Harbaugh said would “revolutionize” the NFL, was good enough to help the team get back to the Super Bowl.

Eleven weeks into the season, we can safely say Harbaugh’s hype was warranted. The Jackson-led offense, which is in fact unlike anything we’ve seen in the NFL, ranks third in offensive DVOA and, along with its quarterback, seems to be getting better every week. The Texans were the latest in Jackson’s destruction tour of the NFL. The MVP candidate tossed four touchdowns, averaged 9.3 yards per attempt and added another 87 yards on the ground in a 41-7 romp over the Texans.

While those 41 points jump off the screen, don’t overlook the seven spot. That was no fluke. Baltimore’s defense was just as impressive as its offense, and that’s been the case for the last month or so. In fact, since the trade for Marcus Peters before Week 7, the Ravens have had the NFL’s best defense, per Football Outsiders’ DVOA.

The Ravens having one of the NFL’s best defenses is not necessarily a surprise. That was the preseason expectation. But after a rough start to the season and a few key injuries, those expectations were tempered as excitement for the offense grew. After four weeks, the Ravens had plummeted to 29th in defensive DVOA and were coming off a 40-25 loss to a struggling Browns team. This was one week after a lifeless defensive display in Kansas City. I’ll let defensive coordinator Don “Wink” Martindale explain how bad that performance was…

“I lost four pounds this week,” Martindale said, via Penn Live, “because I watched it three times and threw up all three times.”

Those two losses — Baltimore’s only losses of the season — were a low point for the defense but they can also be considered a turning point. The losses forced Martinadale to make changes in order to address the unit’s two biggest issues: (1) A glaring lack of pass rush, and (2) poor communication in the secondary.

After the seven-sack performance against the Texans, we can say those issues have been ironed out. Baltimore didn’t give up any huge plays and the pass rush put Deshaun Watson under duress all afternoon. Harbaugh was asked about the improved pass rush and what had changed since the slow start to the season. He wasn’t entirely forthcoming…

Sorry, Harbs, but that’s not really true. Changes were made after that Cleveland made. Changes had to be made after that game because the Ravens pressured Baker Mayfield on only three of his 32 dropbacks.

Baltimore wasn’t getting home with a traditional four-man rush and that was exacerbating issues in the secondary. So Martindale did the sensible thing and start calling more blitzes. A lot more blitzes, in fact. In that Week 4 loss to Cleveland, the Ravens had blitzed only 10 times. The following week, that number jumped to 16. In the game after that, Baltimore blitzed 30 times! Since Week 4, the team’s blitz rate has not been below 40.5% in any game.

Martindale is unafraid as a play-caller. He will send a blitz in any situation and he isn’t afraid to crowd the line of scrimmage against spread sets, either. He’s also not dumb. A lot of the pre-snap looks he throws at a quarterback are more daunting than what follows after the snap. The aim is to maintain a numbers advantage in coverage while getting the offensive line to slide one way so the Ravens can send a blitz from the opposite direction.

This is how every blitz would play out in Martindale’s ideal world…

The Ravens have seven potential blitzers near the line of scrimmage. Brady makes a miscalculation, thinking the two defensive backs, Chuck Clark and Earl Thomas, will drop into coverage. He calls for a half-slide protection to his right (yellow in the diagram below), which leaves the left guard and tackle, plus the back, to protect his blindside.

But Martindale has Matt Judon (99) and Tyus Bowser (54) dropping into coverage leaving three Pats linemen responsible for one pass rusher to the left side. On the other side, the Ravens are sending four against only three blockers, creating a free rusher. So, Martindale has created a two-on-one in coverage to the top of the screen, a four-on-three to the bottom of it and a four-on-three in the rush.

It’s as if there are 13 defenders out there.

In order to accommodate the more aggressive approach upfront, Martindale has had to make changes on the backend. That started with the season-ending injury to strong safety Tony Jefferson. Since Jefferson went down, Earl Thomas has been playing closer to the line of scrimmage. At the beginning of the season, he was lining up where he’d typically line up in Seattle’s defense — about 15 yards from the line of scrimmage.

Now he’s playing at a 10-yard depth, where he’s closer to the ball and better able to disrupt intermediate route concepts, as he does here before looking to stop a scrambling Watson.

That positional shift has helped Thomas immensely. He was perfectly suited for the role of centerfield safety in Seattle’s defense but that deep positioning did limit his play-making opportunities. That’s no longer the case, and Thomas is now a more disruptive force, and I’d even go as far as to say he’s a more valuable player now than he ever was in Seattle because of it.

Even when Thomas isn’t line up in centerfield, he still has the range to defend that area of the field, as Brady found out in the Ravens’ 37-20 win over the previously undefeated Patriots.

With Thomas playing closer to the line of scrimmage, the Ravens have called more two-deep safety coverages in to give him more help deep. Per Sports Info Solutions, Baltimore’s usage of those coverage has nearly tripled since Week 4, jumping from about 10% in September to 28% over the rest of the season. That strategic shift has coincided with a vastly improved pass defense. After Kyler Murray, Patrick Mahomes and Baker Mayfield averaged 0.33 Expected Points Added per attempt against the Ravens in Weeks 2 through 4, opponents are averaging -0.31 per attempt since, and that includes games against Brady, Watson and Russell Wilson.

Good X’s and O’s are important but not nearly as important as having the right players to execute them. After losing Tavon Young and Jimmy Smith to injury, the Ravens did not have those players early on in the season. Outside of Marlon Humphrey, the young cornerback group was not playing well and, worse, was not communicating well either, which led to an infuriating number of coverage busts. This one against the Chiefs was particularly ugly and came after a banged-up Humphrey had to leave the game.

A few weeks later, the Ravens swung a trade for Marcus Peters. Then Smith returned in time for the Patriots game. All of a sudden, the cornerback position became a strength for the Ravens and Martindale was tasked with getting all four of his corners — Humphrey, Peters, Smith and Brandon Carr — on the field at once. His solution was a bit unorthodox and, ironically, similar to the strategy the Chargers used to beat the Ravens in last year’s playoffs. Martindale moved Carr to safety and asked safety Chuck Clark to play dime linebacker. Peters and Smith would play outside corner (for the most part) and Humphrey would take the biggest threat in the slot. Add in Thomas, and that’s six good coverage players the Ravens can throw at you in this dime package.

Since the Peters acquisition, the Ravens’ dime defense has defended 74 passing attempts. Opponents are averaging -0.38 expected points added per attempt. Some context: The Jets passing game is averaging -0.26 EPA per attempt, which ranks 32nd in the NFL.

As the numbers show, it hasn’t taken long for this rejiggered secondary to gel, which has also helped the pass rush. This snap from the Houston game shows how cohesive this unit has become from front to back.

You can see players working in tandem all over the field. First, let me direct your attention to the bottom of the screen, where Clark and Humphrey seamlessly switch responsibilities when DeAndre Hopkins runs a slant and the back heads directly for the flat. You can even see Clark pointing it out…

In the middle of the field, you have Bowser and LB Josh Bynes — another midseason pickup — bracketing the tight end…

To the top of the screen, Peters has the outside receiver until he sees the slot receiver run a quick out. Peters is responsible for that so he passes the vertical route off to Carr deep…

Thomas also plays this smartly. When Watson’s movement pulls Clark off Hopkins, he recognizes it and tails the Texans star. But he doesn’t over pursue him and stays on top of the route because he knows he has Peters lurking on the sideline, ready to undercut the over route should Watson target it…

There’s nowhere for Watson to go and he’s forced to eat a sack. A defensive coordinator could not ask for more. I’m sure this is the vision Martindale had for his defense when the season began. It just took a couple months, a handful of schematic adjustments and some smart midseason acquisitions to make it happen.

Lamar Jackson and Ravens offense have received a lot of the love this season, and rightfully so, but all of a sudden, Baltimore also has one of the league’s best defenses. It might be the best defense outside of New England. But with the Patriots offense sputtering and Baltimore’s offense doing whatever the opposite of sputtering is, it’s getting harder to deny: The Ravens are the best team in the NFL.

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Seahawks’ recent 1st-round picks continuing to struggle

The Seattle Seahawks are 8-2 despite a trio of struggling first-round picks.

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Seattle Seahawks general manager John Schneider has proven to be excellent at finding high-quality NFL players in the later rounds of the draft, and his recent trades have paid off handsomely as well.

However, if there is one area of weakness for Schneider and his staff, it is in the first round.

Earl Thomas and Bruce Irvin were two of Schneider’s earliest first-round picks, and while both of them were extremely successful, the first round has not gone well for Schneider and company since then.

The Seahawks have only made three picks in the first round since Irvin: tackle Germain Ifedi (2016), running back Rashaad Penny (2018) and defensive end L.J. Collier (2019). In 2017, they traded their first-round selection to the Falcons in a draft-pick swap.

While Ifedi has gradually improved, his issues with penalties and struggles in pass protection have been well documented over the past few years. The team declined to give him a fifth-year option, potentially bringing an end to his Seahawks tenure after this season.

Penny is in his second NFL season, and he has already fallen out of favor in Seattle’s run game. Chris Carson dominated the last two seasons, and Penny has struggled to find his footing in the league. He has carried the ball just 36 times for 167 yards and one touchdown on the year, and got benched in Week 10 against the 49ers after just three snaps, one of which included a fumble.

As long as Carson is in tow, Penny’s role will likely be limited to a change-of-pace back — not what you want out of a first-round pick.

Lastly, Collier was selected late in the first round of the 2019 draft. He suffered an ankle injury during training camp, which caused him to miss the entire preseason and has slowed his development.

Collier has been a healthy inactive for a handful of games and has only played a total of 69 defensive snaps, recording two solo tackles.

While there’s still time for Collier, and potentially Penny, to develop into big-time contributors, it’s clear Schneider excels at finding great players in the later rounds and not as often in Round 1.

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