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Ravens draft: And the final answer is ...

I ended last football season believing that the Ravens would use their first pick in the 2008 draft on a cornerback.

I've had some second thoughts although I still think it could work out that way.

For starters, I did not believe that the Ravens were prepared to commit to another high first-round pick for a quarterback.  I think otherwise now.  If Matt Ryan is available at No. 8, I agree with everyone else -- the Ravens will take him.  But I am equally firmly convinced that Ryan will be gone by then.  The Falcons (No. 3) are desperate for a new image for that franchise.  For them, this draft is about more than just re-stocking the shelves because they have to restore some credibility to that organization.  Even if the Falcons trade down, Ryan would probably be the prize for Atlanta's trade partner.  And if Ryan somehow slides to the Patriots (No. 7), New England will have plenty of suitors and they're going to ask for and probably get a ton for the privilege to draft the Boston College quarterback.

I know that defensive end Chris Long's name has come up but I believe he is also gone within the first five selections, so that rules him out.

I absolutely do not believe the Ravens will trade up because the price is going to be too high.  The Baltimore roster is way too thin to give away the draft picks it would take to move up and it would put new head coach John Harbaugh behind the eight ball right out of the gate.

With Ryan and Chris Long off the board, I agree with The Sun's Ravens beat writer Jamison Hensley, who has written in a fan Q&A that the Ravens would want to trade down.

Here's the problem -- who is the trade partner? What would be available at No. 8 that would compel another team to give up its own No. 1 and another high pick or picks to move into the Ravens' spot.  I just don't see the value there for this hypothetical trade partner.

And as you can see, we're talking about a lot of fast-talking on the telephone as the landscape changes moment-to-moment on a shorter clock, 10 minutes.

I think all this conspires to force the Ravens to use the No. 8, and if that's the spot they find themselves in without Ryan or Long there, I believe they'll take a cornerback.  Purely a guess on a name, the kid from Troy, Leodis McKelvin -- but one of the top corners.  If the Ravens do trade down and the Delaware QB Joe Flacco is there when their first chance comes up,  then I think they'll take Flacco followed by a corner.

That's my story and I'm stickin' to it.

Comments

Its a cliche. But, so true. You take the very best player available regardless of position!

Hi Bill- good points all. I think the Ravens will trade down a few spots in the first round. They will probably have to adjust their asking price though. I'd take another 2nd rounder to go down a few spots. Also, "equally firmly" may be gramatically correct, but it just doesn't read well. If you had to do it over again, would you still write it that way?:)
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Depends on how much time I had to do it. Again. Seriously, one of the differences in this medium is that the writing is much more conversational. It's more of a radio voice than a writing voice.
-- Bill O.

I agree and wouldn't mind the ravens trading down if they could add another 2nd or 3rd to draft Flacco in a later 1st and if he was there I would cosider WR Hardy next then the CB.. To help protect my future I might consider QB Dixon in a later rd. to be put on IR to grow for the next 2 years. If Flacco and dixon both progressed you could always get value back for one..

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About the blogger
Bill Ordine has been a reporter and editor for more than 25 years and during that time has covered Super Bowls, major murder trials, township zoning board meetings and bat mitzvahs. In his time with The Baltimore Sun, he has been an assistant city editor, pro football writer, poker columnist, enterprise sports reporter and now blogger -- which may indicate his editors have yet to find a job he can get right.
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