branden albert
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- Ravens cornerback Jimmy Smith to play Sunday against Miami Dolphins
- [UPDATE] Marshal Yanda and Kamar Aiken return to Ravens practice on Thursday
- [UPDATE] Cornerback Jimmy Smith returns to Ravens practice on Wednesday
- Coach John Harbaugh opened his Monday news conference by mentioning that former tight end Konrad Reuland, 29, is in the intensive care unit at the UCLA Medical
- The Eugene Monroe contract extension looks bad now. But it was the right move at the time.
- Five stats that stand out before Sundays' Ravens-Dolphins game, including tidbits on the Ravens pass rush, the many uses of Jarvis Landry, and the Dolphins' struggles against No. 1 receivers.
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- As the Ravens (7-5) square off with the Miami Dolphins (7-5) on Sunday at Sun Life Stadium, here¿s Baltimore Sun reporter Aaron Wilson¿s checklist of things to keep an eye on.
- With six winnable games remaining after bye week, Baltimore Ravens have control of their playoff destiny.
- As Michael Oher returns with Titans, the Ravens' decision to let him walk and go with Rick Wagner appears to have paid off
- They had more salary cap space than usual and a host of needs, but the Ravens stuck to the free-agent plan that had served them well in the past.
- About 30 minutes after the market opened at 4 p.m., the Ravens fulfilled their top free-agent priority agreeing to terms with left tackle Eugene Monroe on a five-year, $37.5 million deal, according to a league source.
- Baltimore Ravens remain patient with Eugene Monroe deal and as a result, come out with a good deal.
- The Ravens have agreed to a long-term deal with Eugene Monroe, their left tackle.
- Negotiations between the Ravens and offensive tackle Eugene Monroe are heating up and sources predict a deal will get done today barring any unanticipated snags.
- Eugene's Monroe's status looms large as free agency opens and the Ravens prepare to lose several kept players from the organization.
- The Ravens have maintained dialogue with offensive tackle Eugene Monroe and there's still optimism contract could still get hammered out, according to league sources.
- The NFL's annual free-agency spending spree officially gets underway Tuesday, with the Ravens in a slightly different position than in the recent past.
- As free agency beckons, the Ravens are in a position to be more aggressive than usual, and they'll probably have to be to find an accomplished left tackle.
- Now that the Ravens have decided not to designate offensive tackle Eugene Monroe as their franchise player, negotiations between the two sides are slated to continue.
- Accustomed to picking late in the first round of the NFL draft during an impressive run of five consecutive postseason appearances, the Ravens will have a selection inside the first 20 picks of the draft for the first time since 2008.
- The NFL offseason heats up on Tuesday when the free agency period begins and the NFL draft will take place next month. In anticipation of those events, blogger and reporter Matt Vensel will look at six key positions the Ravens might address in free agency and the NFL draft in the days leading up to the start of free agency. Today, he looks at offensive tackles.
- Baltimore Ravens left offensive tackle is a pending unrestricted free agent
- No Limit owner David Barron has worked on cars for Baltimore Ravens players Ray Rice, Ed Reed, Lardarius Webb.
- Many people know him as Branden Albert, the starting left tackle of the Kansas City Chiefs. But to many students, teachers and administrators at Glen Burnie High School, where he spent his junior and senior years, Albert is a role model who hasn't let stardom get to his head.
- Every morning, Monday through Friday, blogger Matt Vensel will hook you up with reading material -- mostly on the Ravens but with some other Baltimore sports stuff, too -- to skim through as you slug down coffee and slack off at the start of your workday. That way he'll have an excuse to do the same to start his workday, too.
- In their last three games, the Ravens allowed opponents to gain just 2.7 yards per carry, which partially explains why teams have resorted to exploiting them through the air. But Sunday at Arrowhead Stadium, Jamaal Charles and the Kansas City Chiefs, who rank second in the NFL in rushing, hope to seriously test the notion that the Ravens have tightened up in the trenches.
- Five miles separate the workplaces of Brad Wilson and Ken Johnson.
- The Kansas City Chiefs have released former Ravens offensive tackle Jared Gaither. The 6-foot-9 left tackle signed with the Chiefs this summer after he and the Ravens parted ways. He was active for 10 games this season, but was a backup to Chiefs starter Branden Albert.