After agreeing to a pay cut last offseason, Ronnie Stanley delivered a strong campaign and set himself up for a healthy free agent market. The Pro Bowl left tackle wound up re-signing with the Ravens before the start of the league year, however, a move he spoke about on Monday.
“I was going to give Baltimore the best bargain that I would offer to any other team,” Stanley said (via ESPN’s Jamison Hensley). “That being said, I wanted to be happy with what I’m making and make sure I’m getting the value that I deserve.”
The former No. 6 pick has spent his entire career in Baltimore, and his tenure is set to continue on a three-year, $60MM pact. $44MM of that total is guaranteed and will be paid out across the 2025 and ’26 seasons, a notable amount and one not far from the top of the left tackle market. Stanley could very well have landed a more lucrative deal with an outside suitor given the nature of the free agent class, but he added he never reached the point of seriously considering such a move (h/t Jeff Zrebiec of The Athletic).
Stanley inked a five-year, $98.75MM extension in 2020, but ankle and knee injuries kept him sidelined for extended stretches while playing out that pact. The Notre Dame product played only six games in 2020 and one the following year. Questions related to his durability remained after he missed another 10 contests from 2022-23. As this past campaign showed, though, the former All-Pro is still capable of playing at a high level when on the field. Team and player will hope his fully healthy campaign in 2024 will be repeated moving forward.
Baltimore selected Roger Rosengarten in the second round of last year’s draft as a potential Stanley successor in the future. He wound up operating as the Ravens’ right tackle starter last year, and that setup is in place to continue for the time being. If the Ravens are to duplicate last year’s success on offense (No. 1 yards, No. 3 in scoring), Stanley – who turns 31 tomorrow – will no doubt play a key role up front.
Many of the remaining O-line dominoes around the league have fallen during the opening days of free agency, although a number of teams still face questions at the position right now. Stanley would have addressed the blindside for a team prepared to make a sizable offer, but his comments confirm such a scenario was never in the cards.