Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsSaturday, June 20, 2026

Why did the Ravens’ deal with wide receiver Ryan Grant fall through?

Did the Ravens fail Ryan Grant’s physical because of buyer’s remorse?

NFL: Denver Broncos at Washington Redskins
NFL: Denver Broncos at Washington Redskins
Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

The Baltimore Ravens need help at wide receiver and seemed to find that Tuesday by agreeing to a deal with free agent Ryan Grant. But just two days later, the deal — an eyebrow-raising four-year, $29 million contract with $14.5 million guaranteed — was voided because Grant failed a physical.

Grant, 27, never missed a game in his four years in Washington, including a full 16-game season in 2017 with 45 receptions for 573 yards and four touchdowns. So a failed physical came out of left field and drew speculation that it may have been a case of buyer’s remorse for the Ravens.

He eventually landed with the Indianapolis Colts a week later, instead. Grant signed a one-year, $5 million deal after he passed the team’s physical.

Why do the Ravens say Grant was released?

Ravens team doctors flagged a nagging ankle problem for Grant that slowed him during the 2017 season but never sidelined him. According to general manager Ozzie Newsome, it was not something the team expected to find.

“I did not get the results of Ryan’s physical until about 4 o’clock yesterday and some consultations between our doctors and other doctors around the country just to make sure,” Newsome said. “They came back that he did not pass the physical. It’s not a football decision. It’s a medical decision that I had no control over.”

And so the Ravens moved forward without Grant.

Related

Grant’s agent says the ankle is a non-issue

A few times during the 2017 season, Grant popped up on the Washington injury report. He dealt with a concussion, a calf injury and then eventually an ankle problem in December. None cost him any playing time and he passed the team’s postseason physical.

So the Ravens apparently found an issue that nobody else — including the Colts and Raiders — seem to have much problem with:

Grant wouldn’t be a free agent much longer as he found another team that is more comfortable with his ankle than the Ravens were.

Why is there speculation the Ravens acted shady?

Baltimore didn’t have any reason to screw over Grant. If the team didn’t want to pay him, it didn’t need to sign him.

But giving Grant a deal that was worth more than $7 million per season was a little pricy for a player who still hasn’t cracked 100 receptions or 1,000 receiving yards in his career. The Ravens need receiver help, but the price tag was more than a little surprising.

So the conspiracy theories connect dots and say the failed physical could be a case of Baltimore changing its mind and wanting out of a hastily made decision. Especially when it coincided with the Oakland Raiders’ release of Michael Crabtree, who signed with the Ravens on Friday.

Newsome insists the Ravens would’ve been interested in bringing in Crabtree, regardless.

“As I stated early on, we were going to change the faces in our wide receiver room,” the Ravens GM said Friday. “If we would have signed Ryan [Grant], we still would have pursued Michael Crabtree.”

Newsome insists the decision to nullify the contract wasn’t made by football decision makers but by doctors. We may never know how true that really is.

Want more Ravens news?

Get news, analysis and more.

Visit Baltimore Beatdown!
See More:

More in NFL

NFL
WNFC championship game airing Sunday, June 21st from Ford Center in FriscoWNFC championship game airing Sunday, June 21st from Ford Center in Frisco
NFL

The Women’s National Football Conference Championship will air on ESPN2 this weekend.

By RJ Ochoa
From SBNationExternal Link
Which fictional quarterback would you have lead your team?Which fictional quarterback would you have lead your team?
From SBNationExternal Link
By James Dator
NFL
Best bets for 2026 NFL Offensive Rookie of the YearBest bets for 2026 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year
NFL

There are some good longer-shot options on offensive side of ball for the NFL’s Rookie of the Year.

By Bill Williamson
NFL
Brendan Sorsby is a rare chance to get a top QB cheap, and these teams should go inBrendan Sorsby is a rare chance to get a top QB cheap, and these teams should go in
NFL

This is a no-brainer for some NFL teams.

By James Dator
NFL
Fernando Mendoza has great respect for the Raiders that came before himFernando Mendoza has great respect for the Raiders that came before him
NFL

Fernando Mendoza has great respect for the Raiders that came before him

By RJ Ochoa
NFL
Brendan Sorsby intends to enter NFL Supplemental Draft, per reportsBrendan Sorsby intends to enter NFL Supplemental Draft, per reports
NFL

Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby is entering the NFL Supplemental Draft, per reports

By Mark Schofield