OWINGS MILLS, Md. — Pro Bowl cornerback Darius Slay was, as he put it, almost a different bird this offseason.

On his “Big Play Slay” podcast, Slay revealed that he nearly joined the Baltimore Ravens before re-signing with the Philadelphia Eagles.

“I was almost — this close — a Baltimore Raven. This close,” said Slay, holding up two fingers close together. “But I wanted to be an Eagle. I stayed an Eagle because I know we were going to figure something out.”

It looked like Slay was parting ways with the Eagles last month. Slay, 32, was granted permission to seek a trade before the start of free agency, according to ESPN’s Dianna Russini, and he was then expected to get released two weeks ago. But he was never cut and instead signed a three-year, $42 million deal with the Eagles.

The Ravens are looking for a starting cornerback because Marcus Peters is a free agent.

“The Baltimore Ravens were the first team that called,” Slay said. “They offered just what I wanted. I said, ‘If the Eagles do that, I’m going to stay an Eagle.’ It was nice now. I was almost a Raven.”

Slay, who had been entering the final year of contract, was a key part of an Eagles defense that led the league in pass defense (179.8 yards per game), helping Philadelphia to a 14-3 regular-season mark en route to an appearance in Super Bowl LVII.

A five-time Pro Bowl selection, Slay has 26 interceptions, 133 passes defended and 533 tackles in his career.

Source link

You May Also Like

AIG Women’s Open: Dame Laura Davies targeting St Andrews send-off after Walton Heath withdrawal

Dame Laura Davies has made 43 consecutive AIG Women’s Open appearances and…

Which NFL teams are most, least analytics-advanced? We surveyed 21 team staffers

The Cleveland Browns are still the most analytically advanced organization in the…

Bulls’ LaVine (foot) on track to return within week

Tim Bontemps, ESPNJan 2, 2024, 06:35 PM ET PHILADELPHIA — Chicago Bulls…

The Women’s World Cup has produced some big moments. These are some of the highlights & lowlights

SYDNEY — The Women’s World Cup is taking shape with shocks and…