Ravens OLB David Ojabo reveals he was rejected by team legend to wear old number

Ravens outside linebacker David Ojabo revealed that he was rejected by a team legend to wear his old college number

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When outside linebacker David Ojabo was drafted by the Baltimore Ravens in 2022 in the second round, he picked No. 90 as his jersey number. However, he was No. 55 at the University of Michigan in college, and wanted to see if he could get his old jersey back for his second NFL season.

Ojabo spoke to the media after the team’s second session of football school and talked about trying to get No. 55 in his possession. The number belonged to former Ravens great Terrell Suggs, who did not approve of Ojabo’s request to wear his number.

“[Terrell] Suggs is not letting me. (laughter – Reporter: “But you asked?”)“Yes, we had discussions. We got [owner Steve] Bisciotti involved a little bit. That’s above me. [Terrell Suggs] is a legend, so I’m going to stick with 90.” (Reporter: “So, you tried?”)“I tried. I had to try. I had to try. (laughter)But he’s not going for it.”

Stephen and Renee Bisciotti Foundation and Ravens to transform Hilton Recreation Center

The Stephen and Renee Bisciotti Foundation and the Ravens commit to transform the West Baltimore Hilton Recreation Center

The Baltimore Ravens have been known for not only their outstanding play on the field, but their work off of it as well. They are an extremely charitable organization, and that is shown by players, coaches, executives and more continuously giving back to the community when they can.

The most recent act of kindness from the franchise is that the Ravens as well as The Stephen and Renee Bisciotti Foundation have committed $20 million dollars to transform the Hilton Recreation Center.  The West Baltimore Hilton Recreation Center will now be known as the Baltimore Ravens Boys and Girls Club at Hilton Recreation Center.

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Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti gives thoughts on contract situation surrounding QB Lamar Jackson

Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti discussed the situation surround a potential extension with quarterback Lamar Jackson

The Baltimore Ravens have seen the potential extension of quarterback Lamar Jackson become a national media topic of conversation as the two sides have been unable to agree to a deal ever since the fifth-year player has become eligible for a second contract. It feels as if the two sides have interest in renewing their partnership, although the preferred timing of the deal seems to be different for both sides.

During the 2022 NFL owners meetings, Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti took questions from a small group of media members, and was asked about the possibility of Jackson not signing an extension this year. Bisciotti said in his response that Baltimore general manager Eric DeCosta can’t be the only one that continues to call and initiate the conversation.

Bisciotti also talked about the potential implications of new Cleveland Browns quarterback DeShaun Watson receiving a fully guaranteed $230 million contract.

Regardless of when and where Jackson signs his second contract, it will likely be up with the top quarterback contracts in the NFL, and he will have earned every penny of it. At this point, Jackson will play under the fifth-year option, and if a deal isn’t signed after 2022 the former University of Louisville star could be looking at a year or two of receiving the franchise tag.

Ravens sign HC John Harbaugh to three-year extension

The Ravens have signed head coach John Harbaugh to a three-year contract extension

The Baltimore Ravens have seen plenty of success under head coach John Harbaugh ever since he took over in 2008. He’s amassed a record of 137-88 in the regular season as well as an 11-8 record to go with one Super Bowl championship.

At the 2022 owner’s meetings, Baltimore owner Steve Bisciotti announced that head coach Harbaugh has signed a new three-year extension.  With this extension, Harbaugh is under contract until 2025.  The Super Bowl-winning coach has proven that he can adapt to change and is truly a player’s coach.

Harbaugh has put together many accomplishments as the head man in Baltimore. His teams have always seemed to keep games close, and the Ravens have only had two seasons with a losing record with Harbaugh at the helm over his 14 years with the team. As long as Harbaugh is the head coach of the Ravens, they have a chance to be special year in and year out.

Where does the Texans’ McNair’s winning percentage rank among comparable NFL owners?

The Houston Texans are still amid frustrating times. Where does the McNair family’s winning percentage compare to comparable NFL owners?

Houston sports fans will be forever grateful to the McNair family for brining the NFL back to Space City.

However, the Texans’ recent struggles, coupled with 19 seasons and nary an AFC Championship Game appearance, have fans feeling sour about the direction of the franchise.

Although founder Bob McNair was awarded an NFL team in 1999, the franchise did not begin its first official season until 2002. Since 2000, there have been 10 ownership changes in the NFL, providing an extensive enough body of data to compare to how the McNairs have fared with the Texans.

Here is a list of where the McNairs rank among similar owners, categorized by winning percentage.

Falcons hire away Ravens’ scout to be new assistant director of college scouting

The Baltimore Ravens will have even more vacancies to fill this offseason as the Atlanta Falcons hired scout Dwuane Jones away

The Baltimore Ravens not only have to fill some coaching vacancies, they’ll need to fill at least one front-office position as well. According to Jason Butt of AJC Sports and the team’s website, the Atlanta Falcons have hired Ravens midwest scout Dwuane Jones as their assistant director of college scouting.

The Falcons are in the middle of retooling their entire front office and coaching staff. The team fired bh general manager Thomas Dimitroff and coach Dan Quinn after an 0-5 start to the season. The Falcons have since hired Arthur Smith as their new coach and Terry Fontenot as the new general manager, but now the truly hard work comes in building out the rest of the front office and coaching staff.

The Ravens have been a popular spot for teams to hire coaches and front-office personnel over the years. Just this offseason, Baltimore has seen three defensive coaches and one offensive coach get hired away while several others have been interviewed for positions elsewhere. While the Ravens have been pretty good about being able to successfully fill their coaching vacancies, the scouting department has been another story.

Baltimore has been one of the best teams in the draft since the franchise was created in 1996. Though there’s a long list of successful picks, there was a stretch at the end of Ozzie Newsome’s tenure as general manager where the Ravens stumbled frequently and had many more notable misses than hits. In 2018 during the transition from Newsome to Eric DeCosta at general manager, owner Steve Bisciotti attributed some of those failings to Baltimore’s inability to refill the front office with experienced scouts.

“When we lost those scouts, we didn’t necessarily go out and hire equal scouts to replace them, and I think that was a mistake,” Bisciotti said at his season-ending press conference in Feb. 2018. “I think that in retrospect you can say that you can’t lose those three scouts with 30 years of experience between the three of them and then hire 25-year-olds that are ready to give it the old try.

“I think that it shows that we have not done a very good job of filling in senior people with senior people. That’s something we are going to address starting right now and hopefully rebuild that on the fly, because we can’t wait for 25-year-olds to get as good as Joe Douglas was at 36.”

Jones has been a scout in the NFL — with the New Orleans Saints and Ravens — for nearly 16 years. He joined Baltimore’s front office in 2016 and as the team’s midwest scout, Jones is obviously tied to the Ravens’ selection of quarterback Lamar Jackson in the 2018 NFL draft. Replacing him will be a tall task for DeCosta and the rest of Baltimore’s front office.

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Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti ranks No. 154 among Forbes’ 400 richest Americans

Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti ranks among the very richest Americans and the ninth-richest NFL owner.

If you’re looking for a loan, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti might be your guy. In Forbes’ latest ranking of the 400 richest Americans, Bisciotti sits at No. 154 with an estimated value of $4.6 billion. He’s risen two spots on the list from last year and has grown his wealth $900,000,000 since 2016, according to Forbes. Bisciotti is among the richest NFL owners, coming in ninth behind such behemoths as Jerry Jones and Robert Kraft.

Bisciotti built his fortune in the staffing industry. Bisciotti founded Aerotek, now Allegis Group, in 1983 along with Jim Davis. Aerotek’s started as a staffing company based around aeronautics, engineering and light industrial jobs and has grown exponentially since then.

While Bisciotti’s fortune was made elsewhere, he’s certainly not hurting by owning the Ravens. The team was worth an estimated $2.7 billion as of last year, according to Forbes. Bisciotti paid just $600 million ($275 million for 49% of the team in 2000 and the other 51% for $325 million in 2004) for the team from then-owner Art Modell.

Bisciotti has used his fortune for good, especially recently. During the coronavirus pandemic, Bisciotti has donated more than $1 million to the Maryland Food Bank. Bisciotti has also been committed to social justice reform in Baltimore, using his foundation to donate $1 million to various local charities as decided by the players.

Despite insider report, NFL owners not waiting on Jerry Jones to speak out

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is one of the NFL’s leaders, but he’s taken a sudden backseat in using his powerful voice to speak out for change.

With every passing hour of silence from the big office at The Star in Frisco, the message being relayed only grows louder. It’s been 17 days since the first protest in Minneapolis, and Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has yet to make any statement regarding the current social injustice movement in America.

The Cowboys organization released a video statement promising ongoing conversation, but the man who runs the highest-profile team in all of sports doesn’t appear in it. The league has announced monetary support– albeit a microdrop in their lake-sized financial bucket- to fight systemic racism. And while many players and coaches from around the league have participated in marches and rallies in cities across the country, team owners have been largely missing in action on the ground.

On Thursday, a media insider suggested that other NFL owners have maintained silence on the issue directly because of the example being set by Jones.

Read that again.

As incendiery a headline as that makes, it’s not entirely factual. The truth, however, may be even more damning for the man who runs America’s Team.

ESPN’s Dianna Russini appeared on the network’s show Get Up and recapped her findings after a Players Coalition meeting that took place on Wednesday. The meeting was held virtually, and, according to Russini, began with a request for all media members to exit so that the meeting could be “a safe space” for all to talk freely.

While the GMs, coaches, and players who were present- representing several major sports besides the NFL- talked about education and community outreach, what didn’t come up, per se, was owners’ roles in the current movement or their responsibility to speak out, Russini told host Mike Greenberg.

But one NFL head coach Russini debriefed after the meeting told her:

“Everything falls in line with Jerry Jones. All eyes are on him. He’s the most vocal owner in the league. And not only is he the most vocal leader, but there are numerous owners that listen to him. He mentors them. What Jerry does, they do. And until he makes that move, the dominoes can’t start falling.”

 

“It’s not pulling them like it is the rest of the country,” San Francisco 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman said of the league’s owners. Sherman went on to single out Jones for his silence in the wake of nationwide protests.

Even former Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant- who is lobbying for a return to the league and has targeted Dallas as a preferred destination- called out his ex-employer in a tweet for not lending his powerful voice to any protests.

Russini’s source similarly believes that what Jones does or doesn’t do is apparently the bellwether for the league’s other owners. But, as the facts bear out, rather than allowing themselves to simply be “dominoes” waiting for a nudge from Jones, a not-insignificant number of NFL owners have stepped out and spoken up on their own.

Tennessee Titans owner Amy Adams Strunk delivered an impassioned statement on Thursday, announcing, “Hearts, minds and institutions need to change throughout our country. Those who face racism need to be heard, and more importantly, understood by those who haven’t listened before.”

Strunk shed light on some of the Titans’ ongoing efforts and concluded her statement by declaring: “I support our players using peaceful protests and their platforms to advance us as a nation. I would encourage those who haven’t thought about these issues before to understand the pain, anger and frustration of the black community. Black lives matter. We should all agree on that.”

As NFL journalist Paul Kuharsky notes, the Titans owner isn’t the first or the only league owner who isn’t waiting around for Jones. “We’d seen or heard statements from at least 10 NFL owners, 32 percent of them,” before Strunk released her statement, according to Kuharsky.

On May 30, San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York said in a tweet, “Before we are able to realize impactful change, we must first have the courage and compassion as human beings to come together and acknowledge the problem: black men, women, and children and other oppressed minorities continue to be systemically discriminated against.”

On May 31, Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis told ESPN regarding his players, “If they have something to say, I’ll stand beside them. I won’t stand behind them; I’ll stand beside them. And if there’s something I don’t know, I’m happy to listen to them. We’ve got to find a solution.”

On June 1, New Orleans Saints owner Gayle Benson said in a statement, “Our goal will be to advocate for issues of change when and where we are able to in black and brown communities. Hopefully our work will be a model for others. They will have my full support.”

On June 1, Chicago Bears owner George H. McCaskey said, “We must do more than wring our hands and hope it doesn’t happen again… Through our voice, our actions and our resources, it is our obligation to lead.”

On June 1, Cleveland Browns owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam promised, “We must work together to elevate our efforts and our actions to ensure that we can be a positive and productive change agent off the field.”

On June 1, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti vowed, “I have asked a group of former and current Ravens players to decide which organizations should receive proceeds from the $1 million donation we are making today.”

On June 2, Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie tweeted, in part, “At times, I have too many words. At times, I have no words. But silence is not an option.”

On June 2, Buffalo Bills owners Terry and Kim Pegula spoke out: “We stand with and will continue to work with those dedicated to eradicating racism and inequality. We stand with those peacefully protesting. We stand against those who are motivated by hatred and violence.”

On June 2, Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay quoted Martin Luther King Jr. via Twitter: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

On June 3, Houston Texans owner Cal McNair said in a posted tweet, “This has been a pervasive and mostly silent problem for the past 400-plus years… I believe that these injustices cannot continue.”

On June 3, Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shad Khan said in a released statement, “As a member of the NFL family, I recognize I have a unique opportunity to address inequity wherever it is present, expand opportunity for all who seek it, and seek justice for all who deserve it. I take that responsibility seriously.”

As of June 12, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has yet to say a word.

His is the flagship team of the league, and the most valuable sports franchise on the planet. His fanbase reaches every corner of the globe. One from-the-heart statement from him into the nearest microphone would surely have ripple effects throughout the NFL, the sports world, the country, and beyond.

Russini’s head coach source was right. All eyes are, in fact, on Jones. And yes, what Jerry does, other owners invariably do as well.

Jones had the chance to be the undisputed leader within the NFL’s ownership by speaking out immediately. The Cowboys could have been the example and set the tone for other franchises to follow. Instead, more than a third of the other owners have beaten Jones to the punch. At this point in the story, Jones risks being barely more than a follower in the middle of the pack who did way too little, way too late.

The only thing worse is continuing to do nothing at all.

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Bisciotti foundation donates $1 million to MD Food Bank amid COVID-19 crisis

As Maryland continues their social distancing regulations in order to combat the coronavirus pandemic, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti and his wife Renee are looking to help those in need. The Stephen and Renee Bisciotti Foundation was …

As Maryland continues their social distancing regulations in order to combat the coronavirus pandemic, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti and his wife Renee are looking to help those in need. The Stephen and Renee Bisciotti Foundation was thanked on Twitter by the Maryland Food Bank for donating $1 million.

This isn’t the first time the foundation has donated during the pandemic either. The Bisciottis previously donated $250,000 each to four non-profit charities, including the Maryland Food Bank, back in March.

The donations will help those less fortunate keep up as people shelter in place. While many have been stockpiling food and water through the pandemic, not everyone has the financial ability to do so, or even ensure regular meals. The Maryland Food Bank and their partners are expanding efforts to fight against food insecurity as more people lose income and the ability to keep their pantries well stocked during the pandemic. The Maryland Food Bank has also distributed grab-and-go meals as schools being closed has meant many kids don’t have access to school-provided food.

10 reasons Ravens fans should be excited about the future

A look at the reasons why spirits should be high in Baltimore and their tradition as one of the best franchises in football will continue.

I know it can be disheartening when a team with one of the best seasons in franchise history –maybe even NFL history if you count all the records broken — suffers an unexpected and somewhat uncharacteristic loss at the hands of a seemingly lesser team. But for the Baltimore Ravens, all is certainly not lost after the 2019 season.

Sure, every season is a proverbial question mark before it eventually takes shape, even for the most successful NFL franchises when you account for all the variables. But the Ravens have a lot to be excited about heading into what is typically an uncertain future.

Let’s take a look at 10 reasons why spirits should be high in Baltimore and their tradition as one of the best franchises in football will continue.

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Lamar Jackson

We have to start with the NFL’s most electric quarterback. It’s hard not to be excited about the future with the prospect of Jackson leading the offense in Baltimore for years to come.

In only his second year, Jackson seemingly defied all the odds, all the naysayers, and all the NFL records on his way to an unprecedented season and MVP honor.

Even though he has yet to win a playoff game, what Jackson accomplished this season — passing for over 3,000 yards, rushing for the new league record by a quarterback, and leading the league in touchdown passes — was nothing short of remarkable. His losses in the postseason are only fueling his desire to win and ultimately fulfill his promise of hoisting the Lombardi Trophy in Baltimore.