Ravens QB Jackson unanimous pick for NFL MVP
Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson went from being the last pick in the first round of the 2018 NFL draft to being recognized as the league’s top player 21 months later.
Not bad for this season’s most surprising and thrilling playmaker.
Jackson was unanimously named the NFL Most Valuable Player on Saturday night, delivering the ultimate stiff-arm to critics who wondered whether he could play quarterback in this league.
Jackson received all 50 votes from media members to join Tom Brady (2010) as the only unanimous choices for the award.
At 22 years, 356 days old at the end of the regular season, Jackson became the third-youngest player to win the award. Only Hall of Fame running back Jim Brown, who was honored as NFL MVP in 1957 and 1958, was younger than Jackson.
“It feels good when you can make those people eat their words,” Jackson said Saturday.
In his first full season as an NFL starting quarterback, Jackson redefined the game’s most important position, becoming the first player in league history to produce over 3,000 yards passing and 1,000 yards rushing in a single season. He frustrated defenses with his blazing speed and strong arm, leading the NFL with 36 touchdown passes and setting the league mark for rushing yards by a quarterback with 1,206.
Jackson sent a message with a soaring, 83-yard touchdown strike to Marquise “Hollywood” Brown in the season opener in Miami. He took control of the team in Seattle, where he urged coach John Harbaugh to go for it on fourth down and powered his way for a crucial 8-yard touchdown run. He then stamped himself as the MVP favorite with a 47-yard touchdown run in Cincinnati during which he unleashed a jaw-dropping spin move.
With a playful smile and a stone-cold competitive streak, Jackson outplayed Brady, Russell Wilson and Deshaun Watson while backing up Harbaugh’s preseason declaration that Baltimore’s offense would revolutionize the game.
He inspired “MVP” chants at home, as well at road stadiums, and sparked the catchphrase “Big Truss” to become the mantra for the NFL’s best team in the regular season. But Jackson and Baltimore suffered a 28-12 upset loss to the Tennessee Titans in the AFC divisional round.
“I’m still young,” Jackson said. “I’ve still got a lot of work to do. I’m not really trying to dwell on what I just did. If I win a Super Bowl, you’ll probably see a lot more emotion.”
Jackson is not just the first Ravens player to capture the NFL MVP award, he is the first Baltimore player in 16 years to receive a single vote (Jamal Lewis and Ray Lewis).
“He comes to work every single day, and football is No. 1 in his life,” Pro Bowl guard Marshal Yanda said. “Some guys that come through, they like what the game gives them, but they don’t necessarily like the game all the time. This kid loves football.”
During the regular season, Jackson was virtually unstoppable, orchestrating the NFL’s highest-scoring offense. He recorded one of the best seasons ever by an NFL quarterback with his ability to shred defenses by juking defenders or throwing darts to the end zone — and sometimes doing both on the same play.
Jackson is the first quarterback since 1940 to be the leading rusher on a team that finished the regular season with the best record, according to Elias Sports Bureau research. He is also the only quarterback to top the NFL in touchdown passes and finish in the top 10 in the league in rushing yards (he was sixth).
To put his season in perspective, take a look at this:
• There have been 654 instances of a player rushing for 1,000 yards in a season.
• There have been 126 instances of a player throwing 30 touchdown passes in a season.
• There is only one instance of a player achieving both feats in the same season: Jackson in 2019.
“He’s an elite athlete,” Bengals coach Zac Taylor said. “He’s one of the rarest I’ve seen in person.”
While he was deemed the MVP front-runner for the second half of the season, Jackson represented one of the biggest question marks in the 2018 draft. Some analysts wondered whether Jackson should switch positions. A scout for the Los Angeles Chargers even asked Jackson at the NFL combine that year whether he was going to participate in wide receiver drills. An anonymous ACC coach told Sports Illustrated that Jackson “has no shot at playing quarterback in the NFL.”
Concerns with his accuracy, pocket awareness and reliance on running caused Jackson to fall to the No. 32 pick in the first round (and fifth quarterback selected). As a rookie, Jackson guided the Ravens to the AFC North title after taking over for the injured Joe Flacco around the midway point of the season.
But Jackson did most of his damage with his legs, which fueled skepticism whether he could ever become a legitimate passer in the NFL. In June, Jackson’s odds of winning NFL MVP were 60-1, the same as Jameis Winston‘s and Marcus Mariota‘s.
In the 2019 opener, Jackson threw five touchdown passes and recorded a perfect passer rating (158.3) in a 59-10 victory in Miami. Asked if he had silenced the doubters, Jackson famously responded, “Not bad for a running back.”
Jackson has a way of proving doubters wrong, and doing so at a record pace.
At Louisville, Jackson became the youngest to win the Heisman Trophy.
As a rookie in 2018, he became the youngest quarterback to start an NFL playoff game.
This past season, Jackson became the youngest quarterback to start in the Pro Bowl.
And on Saturday he became the youngest quarterback to win NFL MVP.
“There’s been a lot of doubt going on, you know, me being a running back [or] a receiver,” Jackson said. “That came when I got to the league. I got a great organization with me … those guys all believed in me.”
Jackson headlined a big night for Baltimore. Harbaugh became the first NFL Coach of the Year in Ravens history, and offensive coordinator Greg Roman received the Assistant Coach of the Year award. Harbaugh guided the Ravens to a team-record 14 wins and the franchise’s first top seed.
The Ravens became the first team to capture MVP and Coach of the Year in the same season since the Carolina Panthers in 2015 (Cam Newton and Ron Rivera).
“If people aren’t laughing at you, you know your dreams aren’t big enough,” Harbaugh said. “And people were laughing at us a little bit, That was kind of tough to bite your tongue sometimes. But to let Lamar and the guys prove it is the most rewarding part.”
The New Orleans Saints‘ Michael Thomas edged out Jackson by two votes to become the second wide receiver to earn the Offensive Player of the Year award, joining Jerry Rice (1987 and 1993). Thomas set a single-season league record with 149 receptions this season.
New England Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore became the sixth cornerback to win Defensive Player of the Year and the first since Charles Woodson in 2009. Gilmore, whose six interceptions tied for the NFL lead and whose 20 passes defensed topped the league, is the first Patriots player to win this award.
“Each and every week, I feel like I’m going against the best receivers every game, and I was able to shut them down as much as I can,” Gilmore said. “That’s tough being on an island, tough playing a lot of man-to-man coverage each and every week, but I feel like I did that every week.”
The top two picks in last year’s draft lived up to the hype as Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray was named Offensive Rookie of the Year and San Francisco 49ers defensive end Nick Bosa was awarded Defensive Rookie of the Year. Murray joined Newton as the only rookies to total over 3,500 yards passing and 500 yards rushing, and Bosa recorded nine sacks. It’s the fourth time the top two picks in the draft won Offensive and Defensive Rookie awards, per Elias Sports Bureau research.
The Comeback Player of the Year award was given to Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill, who beat out 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo by one vote.
“It’s an honor you never want to be up for, but it’s an honor to be recognized,” Tannehill said. “You had to overcome a lot of adversity. To get this point, it’s special.”
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.