WESTMINSTER, Md. —
Thirteen seasons later, Ray Lewis isn't much
different from the 21-year-old rookie who played
middle linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens with
his own brand of passion and enthusiasm.
At the first full-team practice Friday under Ravens
first-year coach John Harbaugh, Lewis directed the
defence and sprinted toward running backs as if it was
the middle of October. He even took the time to offer
some fatherly advice to rookie running back Ray Rice,
who dared try to juke a tackle before Lewis planted him
in the ground.
"I told him, 'If you see me in the hole, bouncing
around sometimes works. But in this business it
doesn't. North and south wins, never go east and
west,"' Lewis said.
Who can blame Rice for trying to avoid Lewis, a
nine-time Pro Bowler and one of the best linebackers in
the NFL?
"Not one of the best. The best," insisted defensive
co-ordinator Rex Ryan, now in his 10th season with
Baltimore. "I just know he was the best when I got here
and he's the best now. Still."
The Ravens went 5-11 last season, but it sure wasn't
Lewis's fault. He led the team in tackles for the 10th
time and was the focal point on the only defence in the
league that did not allow a 100-yard rusher. He missed
the last two games with a finger injury, but says his
33-year-old body has never felt better and that the
experience he's gained over the past 12 years have only
served to make him better.
"Old is a lot of wisdom and a lot of knowledge, and if
you take care of your body the way I take care of my
body, you can play as long as you want," he said.
Opposing quarterbacks and running backs who believe
Lewis might have lost a step after playing in 162 games
have been extended an open invitation to venture into
the middle of the Baltimore defence.
"Most of the time they're trying to get away from me,"
Lewis said with a chuckle.
Lewis was drafted in the first round by the Ravens in
1996, the team's first year of existence, along with
offensive tackle Jonathan Ogden. While Ogden watched
from the sideline Friday after announcing his
retirement last month, Lewis zipped through the
two-hour practice with the zeal of a kid trying to make
the team.
Not that it came as any surprise to his coaches and
teammates. Lewis loves playing football, and will never
take it easy on the field - even during a
seven-on-seven drill under the hot summer sun. Because
if he doesn't try his hardest, then Lewis won't
maintain the high standard he sets for himself.
"The amazing thing is, he keeps coming out here every
single year trying to get better," Ryan said. "I think
that's why he maintains such a high level of play."
Lewis long ago earned the respect of his teammates. He
is the unquestioned leader of the defence, and not
merely through leading by example. His feet are always
in motion, and so is his mouth.
"He's still the same guy who tells us whether to look
for a run or a pass, still the same guy who talks it up
before the snap," tackle Kelly Gregg said. "You'd think
in your 13th training camp you'd sort of slow down, but
not Ray. He runs the show."
Harbaugh, a former assistant with the Philadelphia
Eagles, got a taste of Lewis' enthusiasm during
minicamp. Seeing the linebacker in shoulder pads at
training camp made Harbaugh appreciate how sweet it is
to have Lewis on his side.
"It's great to have an opportunity to coach a football
team that Ray Lewis is on," he said. "Just watching
practice today, you can see why he's one of the
all-time greats and a first-ballot Hall of Famer, and
why he believes he's got of football left in him.
Because he does."
It seems hard to imagine that someone who has played in
all those games for all those years can still be
effective at a position that requires speed, agility
and a rock-hard body. Then again, who says there's an
age limit for an athlete to play like a champion?
"They said Michael Strahan was old, but he beat every
tackle in front of him and won a Super Bowl. That's
what I appreciate about me and all the other guys I
see, whether it's Kevin Garnett or Ray Allen (of the
NBA champion Boston Celtics)," Lewis said. "I think age
is for everybody else who's done it before and still
wants to do it - or someone who doesn't want to pay you
a whole lot of money."
Lewis is signed through the 2008 season. If the Ravens
expect to bring up his advancing years when negotiating
a new contract, Lewis will simply tell them that he's a
better player now than when he accepted his last deal
in 2003.
"Anytime you can be healthy at this point in your
career, you're like, 'I don't ever want to be 25 or 26
because I know too much right now and I'm way past
where I was,"' he said. "So now, coming into camp is
more fun for you because you're in the best shape of
your life and know how to take care of your body way
better than when you were younger.
"Now you can really appreciate the game."
(ap.com)