Bill Belichick explains why Malik Cunningham chose the Ravens over the Patriots
Few players, if any, in the history of the New England Patriots practice squad have gotten more attention that Malik Cunningham. His standout drive in the preseason left many wanting to see more of him at quarterback, as the Patriots worked to convert him to a wide receiver. Throughout the season, reports and statements from coaches seemed to indicate Cunningham’s quarterback work in Foxborough was minimal.
On Tuesday the Baltimore Ravens signed Cunningham off the Patriots’ practice squad to their 53-man roster, ending his time in New England. Cunningham is expected to work mostly if not exclusively as a quarterback with the Ravens – something that may have contributed to his decision to leave.
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To clarify the practice squad signing rules, players on any teams’ practice squads are – in a way – free agents. They’re eligible to sign with any other team at any time, assuming the new team is adding them to the 53-man active roster (players can’t be signed from one practice squad to another).
Just like regular free agents, practice squad players don’t have to sign with a team that offers them – they can remain on the practice squad of their current team if they want (although the bump to the 53-man roster almost always includes a significant raise). So in this instance, Cunningham chose to leave the Patriots for the Ravens.
On Wednesday morning, Bill Belichick was asked if the Patriots made a push to keep Cunningham in Foxborough. Based on his answer it sounds like if they did, that push didn’t come with any sort of increase in workload at quarterback.
“I think they sold him on the opportunity, the offense, he and Lamar [Jackson],” Belichick said, referencing the fact that Cunningham and Jackson already have a relationship from their time together in college at Louisville. Cunningham took over as the starter for the Cardinals when Jackson left for the NFL. Jackson was supportive of Cunningham on social media this summer during his strong start to training camp.
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“Certainly their offense suits Malik better than probably any other offense in the league does,” Belichick said, before adding the qualifier “as a quarterback, it does,” seemingly differentiating the Patriots’ approach of handling him primarily as a wide receiver.
Cunningham does project to have a chance to earn a backup quarterback role in Baltimore, if not this year then next year. Behind Jackson the Ravens currently have 37-year-old Josh Johnson and 25-year-old Tyler Huntley. Huntley has started games for the Ravens in the past when Jackson was hurt, but his contract is up at the end of the year. If the Ravens want to move on from him, Cunningham would be a logical fit as a backup on a very affordable UDFA contract. By signing him now, the Ravens can let him start learning their system early so he hits the ground running for spring practices and training camp next year.
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