Kane Republican

Lamar Jackson says he has requested trade from Ravens

- By Noah Trister AP Sports Writer

Lamar Jackson said Monday he has requested a trade from the Baltimore Ravens, saying the team “has not been interested in meeting my value."

In a series of tweets, the star quarterbac­k said he requested a trade as of March 2. On March 7, the Ravens put the nonexclusi­ve franchise tag on Jackson and said they were still hopeful they could reach a long-term deal with him.

“As of March 2nd I requested a trade from the Ravens organizati­on for which the Ravens has not been interested in meeting my value,” Jackson said on

Twitter. “Any and everyone that's has met me or been around me know I love the game of football and my dream is to help a team win the super bowl.”

Jackson may not need a trade to join a new team. The nonexclusi­ve franchise tag allows him to negotiate with other clubs. However, it also gives Baltimore a chance to match any agreement he makes. The decision to make the trade request public may be an attempt to deter the Ravens from matching another team's offer — or an attempt to spur more interest among other teams by declaring that he wants out of Baltimore.

If Jackson makes a deal with another team and the Ravens don't match, that team would owe Baltimore two first-round draft picks.

Ravens coach John Harbaugh spoke extensivel­y about Jackson on Monday at the league's owners meetings in Phoenix.

“I haven't seen the tweet. That's an ongoing process,” Harbaugh said. “I'm following it very closely, just like everybody else is here, and looking forward to a resolution. I'm excited, thinking about Lamar all the time, thinking about him as our quarterbac­k. We're building our offense around that idea.”

Jackson was the 2019 NFL MVP. His passing and running ability make him one of the game's biggest stars. At age 25, he already is one of six quarterbac­ks in NFL history with 10,000 yards passing and 4,000 rushing.

Jackson has been hurt at the end of the past two seasons, and the Ravens haven't reached the AFC championsh­ip game with him. If he remains with Baltimore, he'll have a new coordinato­r. The Ravens hired Georgia's Todd Monken for that position after the end of last season.

Harbaugh said he anticipate­s Jackson being Baltimore's quarterbac­k at the start of next season.

“You've got to plan for all the contingenc­ies for sure,” Harbaugh said. “But I'm pretty fired up about Lamar Jackson. I mean, Lamar

Jackson is a great player. Lamar came back in great shape last year. He's fired up to play. That's the Lamar that I'm looking forward to seeing. Can't wait to get back on the grass and go to work, and I'm confident that's going to happen.”

Harbaugh tried to stay upbeat about the prospects of Jackson's return. If Jackson does come back and play this season on Baltimore's $32.4 million franchise tag, it could certainly be an awkward situation, and the coach will have his work cut out for him trying to soothe any hard feelings.

“Nothing's changed in terms of the relationsh­ips, how we feel about Lamar, how we want to build our team," Harbaugh said.

Jackson does not have an agent. In a memo sent to teams last week and obtained by The Associated Press, the NFL management council said a person who is not an NFLPAcerti­fied agent may be contacting clubs and attempting to persuade them to negotiate with Jackson. The memo reminded teams that, under the collective bargaining agreement, if a player is representi­ng himself, an offer sheet can only be negotiated with that player.

Jackson said on Twitter the person in question never tried to negotiate for him.

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