Paid Advertisement

Prize addition of Ravens' offseason considered opting out of 2020 campaign

8

Paid Advertisement

Podcast Audio Vault

8
8

Paid Advertisement

Screen Shot 2020 08 07 at 5.04.51 PM

The prize addition of the Ravens’ offseason contemplated not suiting up this season.
Five-time Pro Bowl defensive end Calais Campbell has asthma and welcomed a new baby with his wife earlier this year. The 33-year-old also serves on the NFL Players Association executive committee that helped negotiate rules and protocols to navigate what’s expected to be the most unique season in league history. In other words, he faces higher stakes both personally and professionally than many players weighing the risks and challenges of playing football in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The excitement of being traded from Jacksonville to a legitimate Super Bowl contender aside, the 6-foot-8, 300-pound pondered opting out of the 2020 campaign.
“I definitely considered it — you have to. You can’t play football with this [pandemic] going on and not think about the risk you’re going to put on yourself and your family,” Campbell said. “Going through that process, I realized talking to the doctors and just setting up the protocols and everything we have to do to keep each other safe, I feel like the risks were mitigated as much as we can.
“You can’t get rid of the risks all the way, but we definitely lowered the percentage of catching it based off of the protocols we put in place. For me, I feel like that was enough.”
The Ravens are happy Campbell felt that way after sending a 2020 fifth-round pick to the Jaguars in March to acquire the services of the gentle giant with 88 career sacks under his belt. The 2008 second-round pick from Miami was named the Walter Payton Man of the Year last season, deserving recognition for his efforts to serve others away from the field.
Wanting to improve both their run defense and pass rush, the Ravens identified Campbell as a special piece to help them get over the hump on the field and in the locker room after their shocking playoff exit against Tennessee last January. Despite the obvious challenges created by the pandemic, Campbell’s transition to his new team has been a smooth one.
“It’s been great. He’s a leader. He’s already a leader,” head coach John Harbaugh said. “He knows structures of defenses — there’s nothing he hasn’t seen before. He needs to learn terminology; he’s doing that seamlessly.”
Calling coordinator Wink Martindale “a defensive genius” in a Friday conference call, Campbell wants to be a dynamic chess piece for the Baltimore front with the ability to play inside or on the edge. With coaches telling the veteran they want him to have the best season of his career, Campbell says he’s aiming for at least 15 sacks, which would eclipse his career-high 14 1/2 in 2017. A championship would mean even more to the 13th-year standout, who made it to the Super Bowl as a rookie with Arizona in 2008 and wants another shot.
But the threat of the virus is the dark cloud hanging over both Campbell and Baltimore’s championship hopes. He plans to try out the protective face shield developed to help decrease the odds of virus transmission on the field, but playing in the trenches simply isn’t conducive to social distancing.
Some level of risk will be there for someone with asthma, the same condition that prompted former Ravens defensive tackle Michael Pierce to opt out of the 2020 season last week.
“I don’t know how bad that’s going to affect me. I think it’s more moderate than it is severe,” said Campbell about his asthma and the potential impact of catching the virus. “I’ve been able to play football at a high level, and I haven’t really had any real issues or anything. To me, I feel like I should be fine.”

Share the Post:
8

Paid Advertisement

Right Now in Baltimore

Tickets to all the games when you win big

Tickets to all the games when you win big

It happens once a year and the winners have 20 years to soak in the purple glory of the Maryland Lottery Ravens Scratch-off promotion and this year's winner will be crowing about cheering at the games for two decades. As the season turns, John Martin of The Maryland Lottery gives Nestor the fast play to the new Home Run Riches and the next calendar for pro sports here in Baltimore begins now.
Bringing fresh air to our sports coverage with a century of real local HVAC and plumbing experience

Bringing fresh air to our sports coverage with a century of real local HVAC and plumbing experience

Everyone knows that it's our local sponsors and businesses and real humans here in Baltimore that keep up powered up and running over the past three decades. So when Zach Dermer called Nestor to help him with the funny HVAC smells in his place, The Comfort Guys at Farner & Dermer came to fix the issues and then signed up their family business to be a part of what we do best: local chats, Baltimore sports and connecting folks with real problems to professionals who have been solving them for over a century and through five generations. Oh, and they love the Orioles and Ravens, too!
A Baltimore "birds" past and present with John Eisenberg

A Baltimore "birds" past and present with John Eisenberg

He came to Baltimore 40 years ago and became the venerable columnist at The Sun and then an insider with the Baltimore Ravens but his present passion was rooted in a late 21st century book on the history of Orioles baseball. Author John Eisenberg returns to school Nestor on Birdland lore and the future Bird Tapes of past glories. From Jesse Minter to Craig Albernaz, our mentor is always on point and separating fact from opinion.
8
8
8

Paid Advertisement

Scroll to Top
Verified by MonsterInsights