ESPN came away liking the Ravens’ offseason, but one AFC North rival earned even stronger marks.
That’s the kind of fine distinction that shows up every summer when national outlets hand out offseason grades. It’s a useful snapshot of how a front office’s work is being viewed in the moment, even if it has little to do with what actually happens once the regular season kicks off.
In ESPN’s latest report cards, Seth Walder gave Baltimore a B. That puts the Ravens in a crowded middle tier alongside the Detroit Lions, Jacksonville Jaguars, Carolina Panthers, New Orleans Saints, Denver Broncos and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Steelers checked in at C+, while the Bengals landed at C.
The bigger surprise for Baltimore came inside the division. Walder placed the Cleveland Browns ahead of the Ravens, one of eight teams to finish above them.
He credited Baltimore for navigating what he described as one of the league’s most turbulent offseasons. The Ravens replaced longtime head coach John Harbaugh with Jesse Minter. They also made noise by adding Trey Hendrickson, then kept working on the pass rush by bringing back veteran defensive lineman Calais Campbell.
Walder also backed Baltimore’s choice not to match the Raiders’ huge deal for Tyler Linderbaum, saying the price had simply climbed too high.
The Browns, meanwhile, were praised for trading Myles Garrett, though ESPN did not agree with their decision to move on from offensive tackle Tytus Howard.
Even with Baltimore finishing behind Cleveland in this exercise, the larger picture hasn’t changed much. The Ravens are still being treated as one of the AFC’s top contenders.
And around Baltimore, that’s nothing new. Eric DeCosta has never been building for June.
He’s building for January.
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