Donte' Stallworth
- WR
- ,
- 44
- 200 lbs
- 6' 0"
- 7
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Carroll County Times
·Jul 06, 2010 · 11:33 AM EDT
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Nothing livens up a preseason game like a fake punt, especially if it works.
Baltimore Ravens third-year safety Haruki Nakamura took a direct snap on fourth-and-6 and juked his way 51 yards - all the way to the 1 - in the second quarter to set up the only touchdown scored by either first-team offense in Saturday night's 23-3 win over the Washington Redskins.
The bit of trickery added entertainment value to a typical August game that lacked polish and gave both coaches plenty to work on before the regular season starts in three weeks.
The Redskins had two starters leave the game with knee problems. Fullback Mike Sellers hurt his left knee while blocking on a running play, and free safety Kareem Moore sprained his right knee trying to catch up to Nakamura on the fake punt play.
Moore's injury appears to be the most severe, and he'll have an MRI on Sunday. Sellers also said his knee was sore, but that he would be "all right."
Meanwhile, Donovan McNabb emerged from the locker room after halftime with a large wrap around his lower left leg and ankle. By then, he was already finished for the night.
McNabb said he was "just a little sore" and that he expected to play next week against the New York Jets .
Left tackle Trent Williams, the No. 4 overall draft pick, left with a bruised elbow but said he was fine.
McNabb had an erratic night for the Redskins (1-1), completing 11 of 26 passes for 206 yards and a bad-decision interception thrown deep into double coverage. He frequently threw behind receivers and was often pressured and hit by a blitzing Ravens defense.
Larry Johnson got the start at running back and showed nothing to indicate he has any chance of overtaking Clinton Portis for the job. Johnson gained only 4 yards on eight carries, missed a blitz pickup that resulted in an intentional grounding call on McNabb, bobbled a pass at least a half-dozen times before dropping it, and lost the ball after tripping over his own man on a running play - it wasn't called a fumble because he was ruled down by contact.
The Ravens' first-team defense was solid for the most part, except when it allowed three big third-down conversions on the game's opening drive. Cornerback Fabian Washington, playing his first game since tearing a ligament in his left knee last season, ended the drive by breaking up a pass at the goal line, forcing the Redskins to settle for a field goal.
Joe Flacco went 9 for 16 passes for 72 yards for the Ravens (2-0).
Ray Rice ran for 17 yards, but dropped the ball on two of his three carries - one of the fumbles was technically credited to Flacco, and the Ravens recovered both.
Two other promising drives were stopped by mistakes: a false start on left tackle Michael Oher, and a fumble by Donte' Stallworth.
Wide receiver Kelley Washington, who played with the Ravens last season but wasn't re-signed after the team traded for Anquan Boldin and signed free agent Donte' Stallworth, has joined the Philadelphia Eagles, according to several reports.
Washington played in 15 regular-season games for the Ravens, starting two. He had 34 catches for 431 yards and two touchdowns. Even better than his catches were his celebrations after each one.
He proved to be a reliable slot receiver, not afraid to go over the middle to make a catch, and was especially dangerous on third down. Washington was also a valuable member of the special teams.
Washington adds depth to the Philadelphia roster, but Philadelphia is deep at receiver and he's highly unlikely to make a major fantasy impact.
Free-agent wide receiver Terrell Owens isn't expected to join the Ravens this season, agent Drew Rosenhaus said on ESPN's NFL Live on Friday.
"The Ravens are not one of the teams that I would bank on at this time, nor are we having any discussions with them," Rosenhaus said. "I wouldn't bank on seeing Terrell in a Ravens uniform."
The Ravens appear set at wide receiver with Anquan Boldin, Derrick Mason, Donte' Stallworth, Mark Clayton and rookie David Reed.
Rosenhaus said the Ravens had expressed interest in Owens early in free agency.
"Before they acquired Anquan Boldin and re-signed Derrick Mason, [general manager] Ozzie Newsome had been in touch with me about Terrell Owens," Rosenhaus said.
The Ravens traded for Owens in March 2004 before the wide receiver successfully got it rescinded. Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs, who was in studio for the same NFL Live show, said Owens has changed since that time.
Suggs also said Owens could "absolutely" could fit into Ravens locker room. "I talked to T.O. on several occasions, and I would love to have him as a teammate," Suggs said.
Rosenhaus said he is in conversations with five teams about Owens. One new team has "aggressively entered the picture," according to Owens' agent.
"It's really picking up," Rosenhaus said, "and this isn't just agent rhetoric. I'm very encouraged as of late."
He added, "I'm very optimistic that Terrell will have multiple options to choose from between now and the start of most training camps."
Baltimore Ravens veteran wide receiver Derrick Mason predicts a high-scoring offense this fall to work in tandem with a dominating defense.
One year removed from ranking ninth in the league in scoring offense with a 24.4 average, Mason told the Sporting News, "We have a good shot to score 25-35 points a game."
Even with the addition of Anquan Boldin and Donte' Stallworth, that doesn't necessarily mean the Ravens are going to throw the football significantly more this season since offensive coordinator Cam Cameron emphasizes handing off to Pro Bowl running back Ray Rice.
"We'll still be a run-first team and pass the ball off our success there," Mason said. "That's the kind of offense that wins in December and January."
Derrick Mason should receive plenty of looks from Joe Flacco given that Anquan Boldin is now lining up across the field.
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