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2026 Offseason Thread

Young qbs don’t need starter reps, Diego pavia can fuck off fr.

The young guys getting reps with their starting qb however, is a different story. And just for cultural purposes, the franchise qb being there matters.

Tom Brady didn’t start skipping OTAs until he was 18 years and 6 super bowls deep. Peyton manning basically never skipped them his whole career. Pat Mahomes doesn’t skip them.

The dudes with real championship DNA do not skip voluntary OTAs, they don’t even consider it voluntary, they consider it necessary to set the standard for the team that they lead. It’s not even about optics, it’s about being with your team as many times as the league allows, being a master instead of a journeyman, making it all second nature.

It’s a few days out of the entire year.
I get it but that's not how it works. Most of the vets are taking a few reps and sitting on the sidelines watching for the bulk of these sessions.

I'm not excusing it but this is also so low impact in the grand scheme of things that it doesn't really matter. Him missing these sessions is not the difference between an MVP season or a shit season.
 
Fine with that concept.
I'm not an optics person. If I were, I'd ask the question... are my peers, who both individually and definitely as a team, perform better than me, doing things that I'm not doing?
Mahomes shows up to voluntary OTAs. So does Josh Allen. They both have super high attendance in all phases of the voluntary OTA program. Lamar routinely misses most of the voluntary offseason program. Not sure it's really an issue this year, because he's expected back very soon. Just suggesting that, historically, it hasn't helped up well to the optics side of things.

Something isn't everything, and something isn't nothing.
I think you loosely hit it... it's an optics thing. It doesn't look good. But the biggest impact to him missing these sessions is on his wallet, not his on field play.
 
I get it but that's not how it works. Most of the vets are taking a few reps and sitting on the sidelines watching for the bulk of these sessions.

I'm not excusing it but this is also so low impact in the grand scheme of things that it doesn't really matter. Him missing these sessions is not the difference between an MVP season or a shit season.
We aren’t chasing mvp seasons are we? I thought we were chasing a Super Bowl.

While your competition is taking every opportunity to get just a little bit better as a unit, our qb is choosing not to, every single offseason, and when those other guys guys are calm and collected and playing as a unit in January, our guy is jacked up and emotional, trying to force plays, and losing to those same guys who are showing up every opportunity they get.

Every time a rival franchise qb shows up to voluntary OTAs and Lamar stays home, that rival has either lessened the gap(if they’re behind us) or furthered the gap(if they’re already ahead of us). It might be small, but it’s real.
 
We aren’t chasing mvp seasons are we? I thought we were chasing a Super Bowl.

While your competition is taking every opportunity to get just a little bit better as a unit, our qb is choosing not to, every single offseason, and when those other guys guys are calm and collected and playing as a unit in January, our guy is jacked up and emotional, trying to force plays, and losing to those same guys who are showing up every opportunity they get.

Every time a rival franchise qb shows up to voluntary OTAs and Lamar stays home, that rival has either lessened the gap(if they’re behind us) or furthered the gap(if they’re already ahead of us). It might be small, but it’s real.
Again, I get it, but that's much more optics than anything of real substance.
 
We aren’t chasing mvp seasons are we? I thought we were chasing a Super Bowl.

While your competition is taking every opportunity to get just a little bit better as a unit, our qb is choosing not to, every single offseason, and when those other guys guys are calm and collected and playing as a unit in January, our guy is jacked up and emotional, trying to force plays, and losing to those same guys who are showing up every opportunity they get.

Every time a rival franchise qb shows up to voluntary OTAs and Lamar stays home, that rival has either lessened the gap(if they’re behind us) or furthered the gap(if they’re already ahead of us). It might be small, but it’s real.
It’s not all about Lamar being there to improve his play, it’s about building relationships and trust that pushes the team towards becoming a well oiled machine that performs at its best when it counts the most.
 
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Young qbs don’t need starter reps, Diego pavia can fuck off fr.

The young guys getting reps with their starting qb however, is a different story. And just for cultural purposes, the franchise qb being there matters.

Tom Brady didn’t start skipping OTAs until he was 18 years and 6 super bowls deep. Peyton manning basically never skipped them his whole career. Pat Mahomes doesn’t skip them.

The dudes with real championship DNA do not skip voluntary OTAs, they don’t even consider it voluntary, they consider it necessary to set the standard for the team that they lead. It’s not even about optics, it’s about being with your team as many times as the league allows, being a master instead of a journeyman, making it all second nature.

It’s a few days out of the entire year.
Shit you do got a point here
 

Ravens practice report: Injury scare, interception and medicine balls highlight OTAs


Jonas Shaffer
5/19/2026 6:35 p.m. EDT
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Baltimore Ravens quarterback Tyler Huntley (5) hands the ball off to running back Derrick Henry (22) during organized team activities Tuesday. (Ulysses Muñoz/The Banner)

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As practice wound down and the heat pressed on, Ravens players, coaches and staffers clumped together near the edge of a practice field Tuesday afternoon.

It had been another steamy workout, almost two hours in mid-90s heat. And now coach Jesse Minter was bringing out ... medicine balls. With the team split into offense and defense, the goal was simple: Hurl the ball as far as possible — farther than the teammate next to you.

Rookie wide receiver Elijah Sarratt outdistanced rookie cornerback Chandler Rivers. Then rookie tight end Josh Cuevas beat second-year outside linebacker Kaimon Rucker. In the third and final round, rookie guard Vega Ioane edged rookie outside linebacker Zion Young.

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Minter, who at his introductory news conference had underscored the Ravens’ need to “be at our best when our best is needed,” said he ends every practice with a period that reflects that ethos.

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Ravens tight end Mark Andrews runs drills with teammates Tuesday. (Ulysses Muñoz/The Banner)
On Monday, the Ravens’ first day of organized team activities, they got into a “plank” position for two minutes, testing their core strength. On Tuesday, the losing team in each round was punished with pushups.

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How different are the Ravens after a seismic offseason? Answers are coming as OTAs kick off.

How different are the Ravens after a busy offseason? Just wait for OTAs.

May 18, 2026
“Right now, you can’t really do the football competition, and so I thought it would be something different, something fun,” Minter said. “I try to get guys to not know what’s about to happen and answer the bell when their number’s called, and it’s as simple as that. That’s really all we’re trying to get done with that and make it fun, have the guys pull for each other. I love the energy there.”

The competition made for some spirited moments. Left tackle Ronnie Stanley was the offense’s most vocal player during the competition, chiding the defense after each win. Quarterback Tyler Huntley rubbed it in after the sweep, looming over some defenders as they did pushups. And rookie wide receiver Ja’Kobi Lane punctuated Ioane’s win with a backflip.

“The guys love it,” running back Derrick Henry said. “It’s something different. It gives us a chance to compete against each other and do things together. I think [Minter] just adds a new aspect to the practice and the vision he has for us, and what he sees that will help us get better.”

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Injury scare​

Henry hasn’t missed a game in his two Pro Bowl seasons with the Ravens. But a collision near the line of scrimmage Tuesday cast a pall, if briefly, over his 2026.

After knocking knees with a teammate in an 11-on-11 drop-back — “live” contact during OTAs is prohibited, but accidents do happen — Henry fell to the grass and grabbed his knee. He remained on the ground as some players knelt around him and an athletic trainer walked over.

After about a minute, Henry got up under his own power and started walking back to the offensive sideline without any help. He rejoined team drills minutes later.

“The ground felt like a bed for a little while,” Henry joked. “And I saw you [reporters] all looking hot and bored, so I was like, ‘I need to give them something to tweet and write about.’”

End zone​


  • Cornerback Robert Longerbeam, who missed his rookie season after suffering a knee injury midway through training camp, had the Ravens’ best highlight Tuesday. Late in practice, he broke on a pass from quarterback Skylar Thompson, stepped in front of tight end Mark Andrews and ran his interception back 35-plus yards for a touchdown. Longerbeam also helped force an incompletion earlier with tight coverage on Sarratt, who was running a crossing pattern.
  • Wide receivers Dayton Wade, a practice squad member last year, and Xavier Guillory, who re-signed with the team in April after being cut last summer, had the afternoon’s best catches. Wade made a tough diving catch over the middle, managing to keep the ball off the grass as he fell. Guillory had his own diving highlight near the end of practice, beating tight coverage on a pass over the middle from rookie cornerback Lardarius Webb Jr.
  • Kicker Tyler Loop, whose rookie season ended with a missed 44-yard field goal as time expired in a Week 18 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers, was 6-for-6. With rookie punter Ryan Eckley holding, he made kicks from 25, 33, 38, 43, 48 and 63 yards, though his final try was negated by a presnap penalty.
  • Presnap penalties popped up throughout practice, including a false start on Andrews and an offside on outside linebacker Trey Hendrickson. Both had to leave the field for a play after the infractions.
  • Even with quarterback Lamar Jackson absent, wide receiver Zay Flowers looked like the best skill player on the field, getting open regularly on intermediate routes and freezing defenders with his open-field jukes. Wide receiver Devontez Walker also had a handful of catches early in practice.
  • Wide receiver LaJohntay Wester, who struggled with his hands in training camp last year, couldn’t bring in a pass on an out-breaking route. Cornerback Marquise Robinson had him closely guarded.
  • Tight ends Matt Hibner and Cuevas and fellow rookies Sarratt and Lane were all active in the passing game. Sarratt showed good open-field vision on a couple of catches, while Lane earned a few targets during scrambles. His best catch came after Huntley threaded a pass down the seam, just beating converging inside linebackers Roquan Smith and Trenton Simpson.
  • Young was one of the draft’s best run defenders, but the second-round pick appeared to lose his leverage on one big run. Lined up over left tackle Diego Pounds, an undrafted rookie who was expected to be a Day 3 pick, Young gave up ground as he engaged the block and soon found himself out of position, clearing a hole for running back Rasheen Ali.
  • The voices of some Ravens assistant coaches rose above the rest during practice. Special teams coordinator Anthony Levine Sr. was especially vocal — and prone to onomatopoeia — as he exhorted his players during one drill to play with a requisite level of physicality. And offensive line coach Dwayne Ledford, whom guard John Simpson praised for his teaching of “the smallest little details,” shouted out his line before one play in team drills for how smoothly they broke the huddle.
 

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No. Just figuring out the guy that fits the best based on athletic ability and communication (the whole OTA having a large impact thing is overblown) and feel he's their best option right now, so want to keep him working with the guys he's most likely going to be working with as of now.

would be surprised if he's not the guy heading into training camp
as i say, when i did the deeper dive recently with the coaches film, he was clearly the top guy for me from the available candidates

definitely helps that the reason he hasnt been a starter at C is because he's been stuck behind a quality veteran his whole career (and the team that drafted him has already tried to retain him twice)
 
It’s not all about Lamar being there to improve his play, it’s about building relationships and trust that pushes the team towards becoming a well oiled machine that performs at its best when it counts the most.
Exactly. It becomes second nature to just perform, the pressure is alleviated because yall put in the work together at every phase
 
If lamar showed up to these OTAs Loop makes that kick because the power of friendship
Why do the qbs who have that championship mentality in their DNA show up to every voluntary OTA? The proof is in the pudding, it matters, the guys who beat Lamar every January show up to these things, the guys who win super bowls show up to these things.
 
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