
A day after Lamar Jackson pleaded for Baltimore Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta to “go get” cornerback Jaire Alexander, DeCosta made the college reunion happen.
The Ravens announced Wednesday that they have signed the former Louisville and Green Bay Packers corner.
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Baltimore inked Alexander to a one-year, $4 million deal, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, who reported that Alexander can earn up to $2 million more in incentives.
The Packers released Alexander on June 9. That marked the end of his seven-season run in Green Bay, a stretch that included a pair of second-team All-Pro and Pro Bowl nods: one in 2020 and another in 2022.
Alexander was taken by the Packers with the 18th overall pick in the 2018 draft. At his best, and healthiest, he earned the reputation as one of the top corners in the NFL. But it’s impossible to live up to that reputation when injuries get in the way, and, unfortunately for Alexander, they’ve done just that.
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Alexander has played 16-plus games in one season the last four years.
In 2021, a shoulder injury limited him to four appearances. In 2023, he played in just seven games because of back and shoulder issues. It was more of the same in 2024, with Alexander taking the field in only seven games due to a knee problem.
He signed a four-year, $84 million extension with the Packers in 2022. That deal set Alexander up to make more than $16 million in 2025. Green Bay reportedly offered him a restructured deal in May, one that would have resulted in a pay cut, but that never got done, and the Packers ended up releasing Alexander.
Alexander, though, is still 28 years old and two seasons removed from a standout 2022 campaign, during which he picked off five passes, defended a total of 14, and, according to Pro Football Focus, posted an impressively-low missed tackle rate (9.5%).
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He spent three college seasons with Jackson, now a two-time NFL MVP.
Alexander and Jackson shared the field at Louisville from 2015-17. In the second of those three seasons, Jackson won the Heisman Trophy. The dual-threat quarterback was ultimately scooped up by the Ravens with the No. 32 overall pick in the 2018 draft, 14 picks after Alexander.
Baltimore selected a pair of cornerbacks in the sixth round of this year’s draft, Western Michigan’s Bilhal Kone and Rutgers’ Robert Longerbeam. Alexander will join them and the rest of a Ravens’ secondary that’s striving for a strong 2025 after the team gave up the second-most passing yards in the league last season.
This news was originally published on this post .
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