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Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Regrading the 2022 NFL Draft
PFF honors Ravens legends in a way that perfectly captures their dominance
Baltimore is in a class of their own.
By Matt Sidney | May 19, 2025
The Baltimore
Ravens have had tons of talented players rock the purple and black in the
franchise's 30 seasons as a member of the National Football League. From Hall
of Famers and All-Pros to breakout stars and draft-day gems, this is a team
that’s built its identity on finding value and turning talent into culture.
Pro Football Focus' Jonathon Macri reinforced that point with its
latest All-2000s roster, a list highlighting the best players of the past
25 seasons. The roster wasn’t assembled based on name recognition—although the
names are pretty recognizable. It leaned on PFF’s game-by-game grading system,
identifying the highest-performing players since 2000.
And what do you know? The Ravens showed up big time, placing five
players on or around the list—more than every other team not named the New
England Patriots, and further proof that Baltimore knows how to scout, develop,
and sustain greatness as well as anyone.
Five Ravens
players make PFF's All-2000s team
Derrick Henry | Running
Back
It only took one season in Baltimore for Derrick Henry to vault to
the top of PFF’s running back rankings. His 2024 campaign was the best-graded
of his career, and per Macri, it gave him the highest career PFF grade
(96.8) of any RB in history. Henry averaged a ridiculous 6.0 yards per
carry and led the league in rushing grade (93.5), powering an offense that
scored a franchise-record 62 touchdowns. Henry parlayed his success into
a two-year, $30 million deal this offseason.
Marshal Yanda | Right Guard
Across 13 seasons in
Baltimore, Yanda defined consistency and dominance. His 93.6 career PFF grade
makes him the only guard to rank top-five in overall, run-blocking, and
pass-blocking grades. He allowed one sack over his best pass-blocking season
(2016) and was never below a 72.2 grade for a single year. Simply put: a wall.
Ray Lewis | Linebacker
Though Lewis’ career began before PFF’s full grading system,
his dominance still shows up in the data. His 91.4 overall grade in 2009 was
the best among linebackers that season and remains tied for the third-highest
of all time at the position. Lewis remains the Ravens’ emotional cornerstone.
Lewis is a Hall of Famer and widely regarded as the best linebacker in the
modern era.
Ed Reed | Safety
Like Lewis, Ed Reed only played part of his career under PFF’s
lens, but what they captured was special. His 93.4 coverage grade in 2009 was
the third-best ever for a safety, and his 19.3% forced incompletion rate ranks
second among all safeties graded since 2006. You didn’t throw his way unless
you liked to live on the edge. To no one's surprise, Reed is in the HoF with
Lewis, a fitting ending for a duo that terrorized opposing offenses for years.
Eric Weddle | Saftey
(honorable mention)
While he made the list as an honorable mention, Weddle was
deservedly included in the exercise. He may not have played his whole career in
Baltimore, but his three-season stint from 2016–2018 was incredibly productive.
He earned three Pro Bowl nods and anchored a top-tier defense with smarts,
consistency, and elite communication. He remains one of the most respected
veterans the Ravens ever signed.
Thursday, March 27, 2025
Katie Smith returns home to Ohio State, helps Buckeyes enjoy the process
Michael Arace
Columbus Dispatch
March 22, 2025
Ohio State, a No. 4 seed
in the NCAA women's basketball tournament, will face No. 5 Tennessee in a
second-round game at 8 p.m. Sunday at Value City Arena. No doubt, fans of Ohio
State and Tennessee sports are thinking about a recent meeting between these
institutions of higher learning: On Dec. 21, the Buckeyes eviscerated the
Volunteers 42-17 in the first round of the College Football Playoff;
the Buckeyes went on to win the national championship.
Katie Smith, who joined Ohio State
coach Kevin McGuff's staff in November, can recall another meeting, on
a similarly big stage, between the Buckeyes and Volunteers: On March 18, 1996,
in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, Tennessee rolled Ohio State 97-65;
the Lady Vols went on to win the national championship.
That
game from another era, played on Tennessee's home court in Knoxville, was the
last of Smith's college playing career. Saturday, after a presumably spirited
workout at Value City Arena, she took a moment to reflect. She conjured 1996,
when she scored 29 points against Tennessee, to no avail. She conjured 1993,
the end of her freshman season, when she led the Buckeyes to the Final Four.
She had 28 points in the championship game, to no avail – Sheryl Swoopes scored 47
to lead Texas Tech to an 84-82 victory. It was the closest OSU ever got to an
NCAA women's basketball title.
Smith and Swoopes and the late Pat
Summitt, who coached Tennessee to eight national titles, are all enshrined in
the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame.
Ultimate
success is the product of many things, including caprice.
"That '93 team was
such a great team," Smith said. "As I went on to play professionally,
I came to realize that those opportunities don't come around very often."
Is that
a strange thing to say, coming from a woman who won two ABL titles (with the Columbus Quest), two WNBA
titles and three Olympic gold medals as a player? No, it's not.
"It's
also on the coaching side," she said. "When you have a special team
and you have a talented team, you don't take it for granted – because it's
super, super hard to get back to a championship, let alone win it. We try to
pass this along to our players. We pick our spots. Jacy (Sheldon), her run to
the Elite Eight, that is tough to do. Winning is hard. That's why I have so
much respect for UConn, and what Tennessee has done. Teams that win all the
time, man, that's not easy."
Sheldon,
whose regular job involves playing the point for the WNBA's Connecticut
Sun, came aboard McGuff's staff with Smith in November. Sheldon played on an
Ohio State women's team that advanced to the Elite Eight in 2023, when the
Buckeyes upset UConn in the Sweet Sixteen before bowing to Virginia
Tech.
Ohio
State has made it as far as the Elite Eight just four times – in 1985, under
Tara VanDerveer; in 1986 and 1993, under Nancy Darsh; and two years ago.
McGuff, in his 12th season, has gotten the Buckeyes into the tournament seven
times. He has had some terrific players and excellent teams. His Buckeyes have
gone to three Sweet 16s and, as mentioned, one Elite Eight. But scanning a
ticket to the Final Four, man, that's hard.
Last year, the Buckeyes
had a No. 2 seed and visions of a deep run. They were upset on their home
court by No. 7 Duke in the second round.
Smith
said her fondest basketball memory dates back to her senior year of high
school, when she and Logan made it to the 1992 OHSAA Division I
championship game and lost in front of a packed house at St. John Arena,
to Pickerington.
"Those
teammates," she said, "they're still all my best buds."
Remember, Smith is one of the most
decorated female athletes in America. What is she talking about
here? It's about a core philosophy of McGuff's that Smith has always embraced.
"I
want these players when they leave Ohio State to say, 'I had a great college
experience,'" Smith said. "Whether it's winning or losing,
championships or no championships, I still want them to be like, 'I had such a
great time, and built relationships, and I played basketball.' That's what we
as a staff want, so that's where my heart will always be. Because the game
gives you so much.
"A
whole life has been given to me because of basketball. It's amazing, because
whether it's the pros or here, you want them to have success in their own
right, whatever that means, and then make sure they have a good time as they
come to work every day."
Last fall, Smith was serving as the top
assistant for Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve. They had a special team. They
lost a best-of-five, WNBA Finals in Game 5. They lost to the New York Liberty,
a team Smith served as head coach until her contract wasn't renewed in 2020.
Losing to the Liberty stung personally, but that's not her main takeaway.
"You
want the players to have success," she said. "I hope against
Tennessee, we have great energy and I hope we do it together. Whatever happens
after that, you just want to feel good about whatever you did, that you gave it
your all. Yeah, you're going to make mistakes, you're going to do whatever, but
you want to feel good about the effort and the togetherness. After that, we'll
see what happens."
Smith
came home to spend more time with her aging parents and add a touch of normalcy
to her life with her wife and two children. She's looking forward to spending
an entire summer in Ohio. But there's a bit of work left in the spring.
Ohio
State vs. Tennessee tips off at 8 p.m., with a trip to the Sweet Sixteen on the
line.
marace@dispatch.com
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