This season was supposed to be David Ojaboβs chance to boom, to show he can bring that extra jump the pass rush has been looking for. Instead, his season has ended with surgery to repair a partially torn ACL, coach John Harbaugh said Monday.
He is expected to be ready for training camp next season at the latest. Ojabo, according to Harbaugh, wanted to play through the injury but was advised against it by doctors.
βDavidβs going to be a great player in this league,β Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, who coached Ojabo at Michigan, said. βHeβs going to have a great career. Obviously, you feel for him, the way that his career has started. Heβs dealing with adversity right now, so he needs our support, and he has it. But heβs going to have a great career, and heβs going to recover. Heβll be back, ready to roll, next year. I have full confidence in that.β
The outside linebacker was the Ravensβ second-round pick in the 2022 NFL Draft. They had hoped he would come in and bolster a Ravens pass rush that was robust last year, finishing sixth in the NFL, but was filled with aging players and saw little impact from the outside linebackers. Thirty-three-year-old outside linebacker Justin Houston had 9.5 sacks, but outside of him, the other top-five sack leaders on the Ravens were not outside linebackers, despite the teamβs investment in the position with their past few drafts.
Ojaboβs rookie year was limited due to injury β he tore his Achilles tendon in the predraft process and only played in two games. But after a strong offseason, he came to camp ready for a breakout season after putting on βgood weightβ while maintaining his explosiveness. He proved he could be disruptive, consistently pressuring the quarterback in joint practices with the Washington Commanders.
Once the season arrived, Ojabo started the season off with a sack against the Houston Texans, but his impact was limited over the next two games. Then he left the game against the Indianapolis Colts in Week 3 with what was described as an ankle injury.
The next day, Harbaugh was vague in his update, saying : βDavid [Ojabo]βs being evaluated there. So, he has the ankle issue. Weβll see where itβs at.β
The following Monday, Harbaugh was once again reticent to address Ojaboβs situation, describing him as still under evaluation. He did say that if Ojabo decided to have surgery, his season would be over.
βThere are decisions that have to be made that he has to make, in terms of how he wants to approach the injury issue that he has,β Harbaugh said. βI think thatβs still private and his concern.β
Ojabo addressed the situation himself while the team was in London. He grew up in Scotland, so he spoke about how nice it was to have family to lean on as he rehabbed an injury that, as of yet, had βno timetable.β Even so, he promised βIβll be back.β
For the next three weeks, there were no changes in the situation, but Harbaugh said he thought thereβd be an announcement βsoonβ on Nov. 6.
Meanwhile, the Ravens started to see some production from unexpected sources. A late free-agent signing, Jadeveon Clowney, and a midseason free agent signing, Kyle Van Noy, have pushed the outside linebackers back into the top-five on the team in sacks. Clowney is second on the team with 7.5, while Van Noy has six.
At 32 and 30, respectively, Van Noy and Clowney arenβt the answer to the Ravensβ concerns about the future of the pass rush. Odafe Oweh, a 2021 first-round selection, worked through an early season ankle injury and has registered four sacks in eight games β while narrowly missing on several chances to add to that total.
Owehβs friend, Ojabo, however, will not be coming back from his ankle injury, suffered two weeks later. Instead, his season ends at three games, one sack and five tackles, and he will need another big offseason to once again try to prove heβs part of the Ravens pass-rushing future.



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