BALTIMORE — The AFC North just got violently physical. The NFL legal tampering period officially opened Monday at noon, but the Baltimore Ravens refused to wait. General Manager Eric DeCosta pulled off a massive blockbuster, sending two first-round draft picks to the Las Vegas Raiders in exchange for five-time Pro Bowl defensive end Maxx Crosby. As the frenzy of NFL Free Agency 2026 begins, Bleacher Report analysts Brent Sobleski, Gary Davenport, Kris Knox, and Maurice Moton are actively grading the chaotic fallout.
The Price of a Pass Rush
Baltimore desperately needed a spark. After limping to an 8-9 record and missing the 2025 playoffs, the Ravens’ defense managed a miserable 30 total sacks—their lowest output in 15 years. Opposing quarterbacks sat comfortably in the pocket all season. DeCosta saw the vulnerability and struck hard. The front office shipped the No. 14 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft and a 2027 first-round pick to Las Vegas.
Crosby brings immediate chaos to the line of scrimmage. He racked up 69.5 sacks and 164 quarterback hits over his seven years with the Raiders. The 28-year-old edge rusher plays with a relentless, punishing style that fits perfectly into the historic identity of Baltimore’s defense. The stadium shakes when a premier edge rusher gets home on third down, and the Ravens just bought the best engine on the market to make that happen.
“Maxx is an elite player. I’ve been very upfront from the start… we’re in the business of having really good players on the team, and we need a lot more of them. It’s hard to build a great team without elite players.”
— John Spytek, Raiders General Manager (via the NFL Scouting Combine)
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Ravens inherited a heavy financial burden. Crosby currently carries a massive $30.7 million salary cap hit for the 2026 season. Baltimore entered the week with roughly $22 million in cap space, meaning the front office must actively restructure contracts before the new league year officially begins on Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET. Expect the Ravens to instantly negotiate a financial reset with Crosby, converting base salary into signing bonuses to clear immediate room.
For the Raiders, this move signals a complete teardown. Armed with the No. 1 overall pick and now the No. 14 pick, Las Vegas controls the early hours of the draft. They traded their emotional leader to stock the war room for their incoming franchise quarterback.
Baltimore, however, is built to win right now. Pairing Crosby with Roquan Smith and Kyle Hamilton gives new head coach Jesse Minter a terrifying defensive core. The path to the AFC Championship goes through Kansas City and Cincinnati, and the Ravens just loaded up to hunt premier quarterbacks.

