BALTIMORE — Jonathan Ogden spent his entire 12-year career with the Baltimore Ravens, played in 11 Pro Bowls, won a Super Bowl ring and earned a berth in the Hall of Fame.
And Ozzie Newsome saw it all coming — long before Ogden made his debut as one of the finest offensive linemen in NFL history.
Newsome was in charge of the Ravens draft in 1996, the team's first season in Baltimore after moving from Cleveland. The Ravens desperately needed an impact player with the fourth overall selection, someone who could steer the transplanted franchise on a course to greatness.
"That was not a pick we wanted to end up three years later going, 'Good God Almighty, what the heck did we do?'" recalled David Modell, the son of then-owner Art Modell and a key front-office component. "That pick had to be good."
Nebraska running back Lawrence Phillips, a troubled but talented star, was an option. So was Ogden, a 6-foot-9 offensive tackle out of UCLA.
The day before the draft, Newsome made it clear: Ogden was the choice.
"Ozzie said, 'Jonathan Ogden will be a perennial Pro Bowl player, will play for this franchise for his career and will have a decent shot at going into the Hall of Fame,'" Modell said. "What a Babe Ruth call that was."
Ogden was the first player drafted by the Ravens, and Saturday he will formally become the team's first entrant into the Hall of Fame.