OWINGS MILLS, Md. -- In the wake of the trade fiasco that left the Baltimore Ravens without an extra fourth-round draft pick and the Chicago Bears facing accusations about their competence and integrity, the Ravens remain disappointed in how their NFL counterparts handled the situation.
The Bears refused to give the Ravens a draft pick after NFL commissioner Roger Goodell recommended they do so, but didn't make it a mandatory directive.
Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti called the league to complain and has expressed disappointment in the McCaskey family that owns the Bears.
"I cant imagine why they would be so opposed to doing this," Ravens coach John Harbaugh said Saturday. "I thought Steve said it well. Youre talking about your reputation. Youre talking about how you do business. The McCaskeys are the McCaskeys. They are the NFL. I really think if they were making the decision, Im pretty sure their fourth-round pick wouldnt be worth the history of their reputation.
"It seems like thats what disappointed Steve. You make a deal. You say you have a deal. Its one thing to come back and say you have no deal. Its another thing to say you have a deal for two minutes and weve called it in. Im not sure what Ozzie [Newsome] is supposed to do. He thinks its a technical snafu. So, it should be able to get resolved. How hard would it be to pick up the phone and call it in if they don't have it yet It's pretty hard to understand. .. We do stand on our integrity."
The Bears and Ravens were discussing a trade where they would have sent their 29th overall pick and a fourth-rounder to the Ravens in exchange for the 26th overall pick of the first round.
The Ravens wound up getting the player they wanted, Colorado cornerback Jimmy Smith, with the 27th pick after they were passed by the Kansas City Chiefs who took wide receiver Jonathan Baldwin.
Bears general manager Jerry Angelo has apologized for the gaffe.
"The only thing I am going to say is they have rules when you do something wrong, Angelo told Chicago reporters. Not when people make mistakes. A mistake was made. No rule was broken, So, lets just make that clear here. We made the proper amends from our part and certainly there was no intent other than to do the best we could and it just didnt work out.
Angelo said he's not worried about whether this incident will harm his reputation, or if it will make the Ravens not want to deal with him in the future.
"There isnt anybody in this room that hasnt made a mistake," Angelo said. "We made an honest mistake. No more than that. There was total transparency. You make your apologies and we did and if there are consequences, you accept those consequences and then you move on. So be it. It wont be my last.
Believe me, I am going into my 31st year in this league. There has been a hell of a lot worse that has been done, believe me, on the clock and there have been things out there documented so lets not get into judging souls here. If there is something that needs to be done, I trust the league will do their due diligence and so be it.
Newsome hasn't criticized the Bears publicly.
And Newsome said he's moving on: "It's the end of the story."
NationalFootballPost wrote: