
The only appropriate response to center ![]()
Everybody, how about a hand?
After playing high-level NFL football for 15 years, earning six Pro Bowl selections along the way, Birk finally experienced the sensation of Super Bowl confetti falling on his shoulders earlier this month. He had put off his retirement a year ago to take one more crack at getting to the top, and lo and behold, he did. It’s the perfect way to go out.
Birk deserves it.
A father of six and recent Walter Payton Man of the Year Award winner, he is smart, funny and level-headed, a community-oriented, hands-on family man as well as a top player; quite simply one of the classiest people ever to put on the Ravens’ uniform.
He even walked away the right way Friday, as a certified adult would, by using his announcement to call attention to a community reading center at an elementary school his foundation supports.
Some fans probably aren’t sorry to see him go because he is 36, no longer a Pro Bowl player and the Ravens can use the salary cap space he is saving them (reportedly $2.05 million) by retiring. But that’s misguided logic. Birk’s departure, while fitting and appropriate, doesn’t help the Ravens; it diminishes them. It’s something else for them to overcome as they set out to try to win another title in 2013.
The Ravens like the tenacity and intelligence of his heir apparent, ![]()
But either way, Birk will be missed.
When asked recently what enabled the Ravens to win in the end this season, General Manager Ozzie Newsome identified leadership as an especially crucial factor. Birk was a major part of that in his subtle way.
"Life without Matt Birk is going to be a very Difficult challenge," tackle ![]()
Think about it: Signed as a free agent before the 2009 season, Birk never missed a game in
He was brought in to fill a hole, and he filled it without fail for the life of his first contract with the team and the first year of a second deal. How many free agent signees can say that?
No doubt about it, Birk goes down as one of the Ravens’ best signings ever.
He was the quarterback of the line, the one who called the blocking schemes, working in tandem with ![]()
He played well this season – as well as at any time in his
Toward the end of his final season, with typical self-effacement, Birk contrasted his possible pending retirement with that of his more heralded teammate.
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Funny stuff, as usual. But in the Ravens’ locker room, where Birk was known best around here, they know better than to soft-pedal the departure of such a valued and valuable teammate.
They know it’s a big deal, but also beautiful, a moment that warrants applause.




