Ravens in early contract talks with Ronnie Stanley and Marlon Humphrey

The Ravens are once again working to retain their own players early as they’re in contract talks with Ronnie Stanley, Marlon Humphrey

Under general manager Eric DeCosta, the Baltimore Ravens have been aggressive in retaining their own players. To the point where they’ve signed several players a full year before they’d hit free agency. With two star players set to hit free agency on the horizon, Baltimore once again isn’t messing around.

According to The Baltimore Sun’s Jonas Shaffer, Eric DeCosta told reporters at the NFL Scouting Combine the Ravens have already had talks with representatives for both cornerback Marlon Humphrey and left tackle Ronnie Stanley about long-term extensions.

We already speculated that Humphrey and Stanley would be targeted for early extensions given DeCosta’s philosophy about keeping the Ravens’ homegrown talent. DeCosta has worked to sign guys early, including nine players who would have hit free agency this offseason. It makes sense that the Ravens would want to be proactive with those two players as both will likely help reset the market at cornerback and offensive tackle when they finally sign their next deals.

Baltimore has already picked up Stanley’s fifth-year option, which will keep him in Baltimore through the 2020 season. At the combine, DeCosta said the Ravens picking up Humphrey’s fifth-year option was just a formality, locking him up through the 2021 season.

While DeCosta said the team is in discussions, I wouldn’t expect any deals to be imminent. With free agency set to start in the middle of March and a new CBA currently being worked on, contract values are likely going to jump up quite a bit this offseason. It would be wise for Humphrey and Stanley’s agents to at least wait that out in order to figure out their respective values. But it does show DeCosta’s drive to keep two key players from 2019’s 14-2 season.

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Ravens to pick up CB Marlon Humphrey’s 5th-year option

According to Baltimore Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta, picking up CB Marlon Humphrey’s 5th-year option for 2021 is just a formality.

The Baltimore Ravens have been one of the best teams in the NFL largely because of their ability to scout and draft good prospects. They continued that legacy by selecting cornerback Marlon Humphrey in the first round of the 2017 NFL Draft. Having finished up his third season in the league, Baltimore has to make a decision on whether they’ll pick up his fifth-year option this offseason.

Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta said it was just a formality at this point and that the team will exercise the option, according to Jeff Zrebiec of The Athletic.

All players selected in the first round have fifth-year options available to their respective teams. Given the weight of first-round selections in the draft, the fifth-year option allows teams to keep those valuable players around for another year. The downside is that fifth-year options end up being a really expensive single year, meaning that teams have to carefully figure out if a player is worth the extra cap hit.

Baltimore was expected to exercise Humphrey’s fifth-year option, making DeCosta’s proclamation not that shocking. Considering he became one of the NFL’s best cornerbacks last season, using the fifth-year option will give DeCosta and the Ravens a little more time to work on a contract extension before he’s set to hit free agency.

Humphrey earned his first Pro Bowl and All-Pro nominations for the 2019 season. While Humphrey didn’t have a ton of interceptions, he was the most consistent defensive player on the field for Baltimore and helped carry the Ravens’ defense for the first few weeks. Humphrey came up with several key plays at the right time, including a forced fumble and recovery on Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster in Week 5 that propelled Baltimore to an overtime win.

It’s unclear how much Humphrey’s fifth-year option will cost for the 2021 season but it’s expected to be a steep discount from what top cornerbacks make.

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