Sources: Ravens to release or trade Thomas - 3 minutes read
OWINGS MILLS, Md. -- The Baltimore Ravens are abruptly parting ways with seven-time Pro Bowl safety Earl Thomas two days after he punched fellow safety Chuck Clark, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Sunday.
Thomas, 31, was sent home Friday and never returned to the Ravens facility after his on-field altercation with Clark, the latest conflict Baltimore had with the seven-time Pro Bowl safety. This was the second fiery exchange with a teammate for Thomas, who confronted nose tackle Brandon Williams after a loss to Cleveland 11 months ago. Thomas had also missed or been late to several meetings throughout his 17 months in Baltimore, a source added.
The Ravens will release Thomas for conduct detrimental to the team or trade him, sources said. The Dallas Cowboys are the leading contender if he's released, per sources.
The Ravens wanted to split from Thomas so badly that they are willing to take a major financial hit and move forward without a proven replacement for him. Baltimore will take a $15 million salary cap hit for releasing or trading him, unless Baltimore is able to void his $10 million guaranteed salary this season for conduct detrimental to the team. If Baltimore can avoid paying him the guaranteed money, Thomas will count $5 million against the cap this season and $10 million next year.
Without Thomas, the Ravens are extremely young at free safety. DeShon Elliott, a 2018 sixth-round pick, is expected to step in for Thomas for now. The Ravens like his aggressiveness and upside, but Elliott has been limited to six games in two NFL seasons because of injuries.
This marks the second tumultuous divorce for Thomas. His nine years in Seattle ended with him extending a middle finger to Seahawks coach Pete Carroll while being carted off the field with a leg injury. A little over a year and a half ago, the Ravens were lauded for luring Thomas away from his verbal agreement with the Kansas City Chiefs and signing him to a four-year, $55 million deal, the largest given to a defensive player in franchise history.
Thomas reached the Pro Bowl in his first and only season in Baltimore, but he struggled mightily at times. He gave up on an 88-yard touchdown run by Cleveland Browns running back Nick Chubb in Week 4 and then got stiff-armed by Tennessee Titans running back Derrick Henry in the playoffs.
The breaking point came in team's fourth training camp practice of the year. After Thomas blew a coverage, Clark angrily ripped off his helmet and angrily threw it to the ground. Thomas then punched Clark, a source said. Both players were separated by teammates and coaches. It's unusual for two players in the same position group to fight.
That led to Baltimore moving on from one of its biggest stars three weeks before the start of the regular season.
Source: www.espn.com - NFL