QB Lamar Jackson reports to Ravens facility ahead of training camp

QB Lamar Jackson reports to Ravens facility ahead of training camp
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Any speculation as to whether quarterback Lamar Jackson will hold out of Ravens training camp until he signs a contract extension was seemingly put to rest Thursday.

The 2019 NFL Most Valuable Player arrived at the Ravens’ facility in Owings Mills five days before veterans are expected to report for training camp.

Jackson, who is in the final year of his rookie contract, was absent for voluntary organized team activities but appeared at mandatory minicamp, where he would not commit to participating in training camp nor playing in Week 1 without a contract extension.

“It’s part of the conversation,” Jackson said last month.

With a recent video of Jackson at the team’s facility, however, it appears he will be in attendance for the first day of practice Wednesday.

Jackson, who was named to his second Pro Bowl after passing for 2,882 yards with 16 touchdowns and 13 interceptions and rushing for 767 yards and two scores in an injury-shortened 2021 season, will make $23 million guaranteed this year after the Ravens picked up his fifth-year option last April.

According to Spotrac, Jackson’s calculated market value based on age, contract status and statistical production is five years, $215.6 million with an annual salary of $43.1 million, which would make him one of the highest-paid players in the league.

That number could increase after ESPN reported Thursday that quarterback Kyler Murray, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2019 NFL draft, and the Arizona Cardinals agreed to a five-year contract extension worth $230.5 million with $160 million guaranteed. His deal will average $46.1 million per season — the second-highest annual salary in the NFL behind only Green Bay Packers star Aaron Rodgers ($50.3 million) — and keep him in Arizona through the 2028 season.

In February, Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta said the team was moving at “Lamar’s pace” in contract negotiations. Ravens officials have said they remain committed to signing Jackson to a long-term extension, but if a deal cannot be reached, the team is expected to place the franchise tag on the 2018 first-round pick next year.

This season, the non-exclusive franchise tag — which allows a player to negotiate a deal with another team — is $29.7 million for quarterbacks. That number could rise to about $34 million if the salary cap increases by 15% in 2023. The exclusive franchise tag, which is based on the average salaries of the five highest-paid players at that position, is expected to be around $45 million in 2023.

Jackson, who is representing himself without an agent, has kept his negotiations with the Ravens private. When he was asked repeatedly about his contract during minicamp, Jackson simply said, “we’re having conversations.”

Even though Jackson said he doesn’t worry about other players’ contracts, Murray’s deal adds to the intrigue of whether Jackson will be the next star quarterback to receive a big payday.

There’s also the question of whether Jackson will participate in practice next week. His next move could be a training camp “hold-in.”

Under the NFL’s latest collective bargaining agreement, ratified in 2020, players who refuse to attend training camp face stiff penalties. Teams are required to fine players who aren’t on rookie contracts $50,000 per day for absences. (That would include Jackson, who’s set to play on a fifth-year option.) Because training camp technically runs from a team’s mandatory reporting date through the Sunday before its first regular-season game, holdouts can cost veterans over $2 million.

With little recourse, players in search of a new deal have shown up to training camp. Pittsburgh Steelers outside linebacker T.J. Watt attended every training camp practice last summer but didn’t fully participate, sometimes working with Pittsburgh’s strength and conditioning coaches instead of competing in team drills. Just days before the Steelers’ self-imposed contract deadline of the season opener, he signed a four-year extension worth $112 million — including $80 million guaranteed — that made Watt the NFL’s highest-paid defender.