Lamar Jackson Franchise Tag: Why QB Is Likely To Stay With Ravens
Lamar Jackson Franchise Tag: Why QB Is Likely To Stay With Ravens

The pressure was nothing for Lamar Jackson.

The Ravens quarterback, who was among the NFL odds leaders to win MVP early in 2022, caught a shotgun snap against the Bills when the Ravens were already leading 14-3 in the first quarter.

Jackson stood tall and diagnosed the play. Data says he's a dynamic pocket passer, and he was ready to prove it.

He had only a second before a Bills pass rusher shed a block and had a clear path to Jackson. He juked forward, forcing the defender to whiff on a potential sack, then scrambled out of the pocket. This was all while keeping his eyes downfield.

When another defender bolted toward Jackson, threatening to end the play, he released the ball just before taking a jarring hit.

Data and almost every other metric will tell you Jackson isn't bad at evading opponents, either.

The ball landed gently in the hands of running back J.K. Dobbins, who gained a first down and put the Ravens well within the red zone.

Jackson has sparked the Ravens' offense in myriad ways. And yet they don't seem willing to commit to him, or at least for the amount of money the quarterback is seeking.

Lamar Jackson-Ravens News

The Ravens used a non-exclusive franchise tag on Jackson on Tuesday, March 7.

That means Jackson is scheduled to make $32.4 million in 2023, which would be in the top five among all NFL players next season. But that could change soon if he finds a more long-term solution.

What's a Non-Exclusive Franchise Tag?

A non-exclusive franchise tag is a one-year deal that must be at least the greater of two totals: 120% of the player's salary the previous year or the average of the top-five cap hits at that player's position.

A player on a non-exclusive franchise tag can work out a deal with other teams, but the original club can match that offer. If that franchise declines to give an equal contract, then it will receive two first-round draft picks.

Why Lamar Jackson Stays in Baltimore

The Ravens and Jackson probably aren't making much progress in their contract negotiations if the team is willing to use a non-exclusive franchise tag.

In many ways, Jackson is worth being paid like one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL. He was the league MVP in 2019, and he was fantastic in several ways in 2022.

No doubt should linger about Jackson's rushing prowess. He was second in DYAR and DVOA among quarterbacks in that aspect, as he had 921 effective rushing yards while playing 12 games.

But Jackson is also a standout passer, and not just on short throws. He was tied for third among quarterbacks with 20% of the most attempts with a 66.7% completion rate on throws between 10 and 19 yards, according to Pro Football Focus.'

He had four touchdowns and no interceptions on such passes. He was also first with a 12.5% big-time throw rate in that area.

Only 42.6% of Jackson's throws were 0-9 yards, which was 29th in the league. Via PFF, Jackson was ninth in big-time throw percentage but 63rd in turnover-worthy play percentage.

This all means Jackson was aggressive, and it paid off. He was accurate downfield.

In the second week of the season against the Dolphins, Jackson threw for 318 yards, three touchdowns and zero picks while completing 21 of 29 passes. He also ran for 119 yards and a score on nine attempts.

Jackson showcased in that contest he can stand tall in the pocket, lean on protection and dissect a defense on one snap and take a run-option play 80 yards to the house the next.

What Jackson can do as a passer, or as a quarterback for that matter, shouldn't be in doubt.'

  
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