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Ravens QBs coach doesn’t think contract talks will distract Lamar Jackson; players separated in scuffle | NOTES

Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson doesn’t have a contract extension yet, and that doesn’t seem to bother him.

Just ask his quarterbacks coach.

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“I don’t think it’ll be a distraction,” James Urban said in a virtual news conference Wednesday, after the Ravens’ second open practice of organized team activities. “We have an unbelievable front office. I know that they have plans. They’re in great hands, and they’ll handle all that business side. We’re just trying to get better and continue growing and improving every aspect of our game and his game. So that’s all we’re doing. I don’t worry about that. I don’t think he worries about it. He seems to be the same old guy that he is all the time. So I don’t really have many concerns there.”

Jackson is signed through the 2022 season, but he’s eligible for a long-term extension this offseason. In Jackson’s first comments since the 2020 season ended, the 2019 NFL Most Valuable Player said last week that he “would love to be here forever,” and general manager Eric DeCosta said in May that the Ravens would “work tirelessly to get a deal done.”

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Jackson, whose contract will take up $3 million in salary cap space in 2021 and $23 million in 2022, is in line for the biggest contract in team history. Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott’s new deal is worth $40 million annually, behind only Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes’ megadeal ($45 million), and Jackson could eclipse that total.

For now, though, Jackson and the Ravens offense are “chasing everything,” Urban said. Jackson had several standout throws at Wednesday’s voluntary practice, though he also had the session’s only interception.

“Especially this time of year, I want growth everywhere,” Urban said. “I want growth in terms of footwork. I want growth in terms of throwing mechanics. I want growth in terms of operating some of the at-the-line adjustments, those kinds of things. I think that’s the natural progression. A guy who plays at a very high level and then you just continue to grow his game.”

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