The Baltimore Ravens blog is reviewing the breakdown of snaps at each position for the 2014 season:
OFFENSIVE LINE (1,022 total snaps)
C Jeremy Zuttah 1,014 snaps (99.2 percent)
G Marshal Yanda 1,010 snaps (98.8 percent)
OT Rick Wagner 923 snaps (90.3 percent)
G Kelechi Osemele 892 snaps (87.2 percent)
OT Eugene Monroe 696 snaps (68.1 percent)
OT James Hurst 355 snaps (34.7 percent)
G John Urschel 210 snaps (20.5 percent)
OT Jah Reid 10 snaps (1 percent)
C Gino Gradkowski 8 snaps (1 percent)
In his first season with the Ravens, Zuttah finished with the second-most snaps on offense behind quarterback Joe Flacco, who played one more snap. Zuttah's 1,014 snaps were tied for seventh-most among NFL centers. Yanda, the only other Ravens lineman who had more than 1,000 snaps, has played in 99.4 percent of the Ravens' snaps over the past two seasons.
In his first year as a starter, Wagner missed only one snap before suffering a season-ending foot injury in Week 16. He played 795 more snaps than his rookie season. Osemele participated in the second-most snaps of his three-year career after missing two games with a knee injury.
Monroe played in the fewest snaps of any AFC North starting left tackle (288 fewer). He was sidelined four games with a knee injury and one regular-season game with an ankle injury. As a result, Hurst played in the second-most snaps of any Ravens rookie this season (behind first-rounder C.J. Mosley) despite going undrafted.
Urschel, a fifth-round pick, logged the third-most snaps of any Ravens rookie on offense, behind Hurst and tight end Crockett Gillmore. Reid, a third-round pick in 2011, played a combined 32 snaps the past two seasons while making a total of $1.2 million in 2013 and 2014. Gradkowski went from playing 100 percent of the snaps in 2013 to 1 percent in 2014 because the Ravens replaced him in the starting lineup with Zuttah.
For the snap-count analysis of the other Ravens' positions on offense, you can click here for quarterbacks, running backs, wide receivers and tight ends.
































