OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) -The Baltimore Ravens are doing more than merely
fighting for jobs at their first mandatory minicamp under new coach John
Harbaugh.
They're fighting each other, too.
Nearly all 85 players in camp were involved in a squabble Saturday that
began when offensive tackle Oniel Cousins and defensive tackle Amon Gordon
threw punches after running back Allen Patrick was taken down hard on a burst
up the middle. All the players surged toward the middle of the field, and it
was nearly two minutes before peace was restored.
"Guys are competing, so tempers flare a little bit," Harbaugh said.
Later during practice, which was held indoors because of rain, defensive
backs Corey Ivy and Frank Walker came to blows during a blocking drill.
"Don't grab me, man!" Ivy yelled.
After the players were separated, veteran cornerbacks Chris McAlister and
Samari Rolle spoke with Walker, who signed as a free agent during the offseason
after playing with Green Bay in 2007.
"Chill out, man," Rolle said. "There's too much at stake."
For the first time in a decade, the Ravens are conducting a minicamp without
Brian Billick, who was fired in January after a nine-year run. There are jobs
at stake and a new offense to learn under Cam Cameron, which has fueled
emotions at the three-day camp that started Friday. The players aren't wearing
pads, but there's plenty of hitting going on - much of it after the whistle.
"Man, it's intense out there," tight end Todd Heap said. "Everybody's
trying to learn what's going on and everybody's a little bit on edge."
In a way, that's how Harbaugh likes it. Seeing two players fight on the
practice field is nothing new, but to have the rest of the team join the fray
is a sight not often seen on the football field. Yet none of the coaches
immediately sought to restore peace, and defensive coordinator Rex Ryan was
actually laughing as he stood in the background.
Ryan is one of the few holdovers from the Billick regime. He worked with
Harbaugh years ago at the University of Cincinnati, and knows that Baltimore's
new head coach won't let things get too crazy.
"He's always in control. When it's not going his way, he'll get it going
his way," Ryan said. "That's part of it right now. I think there are a lot of
people that are anxious and uncertain. We want it to be chaos. That's what
John's talked about. You look at the tempo of our offense, the way we're
setting things up and the different things we're doing under Cam. It's just
new. It's more pressure on everybody."
Pressure is trying to rebound from a 5-11 season, which is exactly what the
Ravens are attempting to do. Throw in the uncertainty of playing for a new
coach, an undetermined depth chart and the fatigue that comes from practicing
twice a day, and just about anything can happen.
"You go 5-11, guess what? You'd better be intense," defensive end Trevor
Pryce said. "It doesn't matter who the coach is. You have to develop a sense
of urgency at 5-11. You have to earn the right to have a calm and relaxing
offseason, and you can't do that at 5-11."
Pryce, however, can't condone the fighting. Not while teams like the New
England Patriots and New York Giants are using their minicamps to build on
successful seasons.
"Go ahead, wrestle each other, pull each other's facemasks, yeah, great,
wonderful, have fun. Now we gotta go play the Patriots. They won 18 straight
football games. The Giants won the Super Bowl. Do we really have to prove we're
all men?" Pryce said. "If we can get all this out of the way now, scrapping
and being undisciplined and 80 men jumping in a pile together, fine. So now
we've proved I'm tough, you're tough, hooray, we're all tough. Are we a good
football team? What's more important, proving you're tough or proving we're a
good football team? That's how I look at it."
Pryce said he was laughing at his teammates as they piled together in the
middle of the field. It wasn't funny to Cousins and Gordon, but afterward they
seemed at peace with each other.
"At the end of the day, we're teammates," Cousins said.
"We settled it like men," Gordon insisted. "No hard feelings."
Harbaugh liked the show of emotion, but doesn't expect to see a similar show
anytime soon.
"We had a good practice. Our guys are competitive, they like football, it's
going to happen," he said. "I think as they realize the tempo of the practice
is going to stay the same, it will probably happen less and less. They're a
feisty bunch."
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