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2023 NFL Midseason Exec Awards: QB Dominates MVP Voting, and It’s Not Patrick Mahomes

Winners for Offensive Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, Offensive Rookie of the Year, Defensive Rookie of the Year, Coach of the Year and Executive of the Year.

Sometimes by midseason you have a good idea of who the NFL’s MVP will be, and 2019 was one of those years.

That fall, Lamar Jackson’s first as a full-time starting quarterback in Baltimore, it seemed like the Ravens’ second-year dynamo was doing something jaw-dropping or historic (or both) every week. By the end of that season, any doubt had been erased. Jackson became the second player to win the AP’s award unanimously.

Jackson hasn’t set social media ablaze this year with his highlights or seized the talk-radio conversation as often as he did four years ago. But as for the respect he’s getting across the league? I can say for a fact that it’s as resounding as ever.

Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson

An AFC exec on Jackson: “His ability to put stress on teams in the passing game now is huge—and in the past it was just O.K. In my opinion, if [the Ravens] lost him, they’d crash and burn.”

On Wednesday and Thursday, I ran my annual awards midseason poll with execs across the NFL. Every year I send the ballots to GMs, assistant GMs, vice presidents, directors of player personnel and pro scouting directors—the people charged with having eyes on the whole league during the season.

This year, 39 ballots were returned. I was expecting a close race for MVP based on how the season has gone, but that was not the case. Jackson received 23 votes, while the next highest vote-getter had five.

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And the explanations I got from voters for Jackson being the best player in the NFL were pretty resounding.

“Best, most dominant player, playing at the highest level, at the most important position,” texted one AFC executive.

“For me, he’s the best player on a top team playing the toughest position in sports,” texted another AFC exec. “His ability to put stress on teams in the passing game now is huge—and in the past it was just O.K. In my opinion, if [the Ravens] lost him, they’d crash and burn.”

“He just makes it so tough to defend him,” a fourth AFC exec said. “Throwing it better, their pass game has improved, and then you can do everything right—and he runs for it.”

“This is the best he has thrown the ball since his 2019 MVP year,” texted an AFC GM. “I think [Todd] Monken was a fantastic hire and he has implemented a passing game that accentuates Lamar’s strengths without taking away any of his improvisational ability.”

“It’s confidence—he just looks like he’s playing with it, he’s playing really comfortable with himself, “ texted an NFC exec. “I don’t know if it’s the contract resolution or Monken or both. But he’s a dynamic player that’s also been extremely consistent. Health obviously [is a factor]. He’s simply putting the ball in the end zone as a passer and runner, and he’s very clean operating their passing game.”

The numbers do tell the story.

He’s running the ball 9.3 times per game, down from 11.7 in 2019. At his current pace, he’ll rush for a little more than 800 yards—still a huge number for a quarterback, but not close to the 1,206 he had in his first MVP season. He is on pace for more rushing touchdowns (10) this year than he had that year (seven).

On the flip side, he’s averaging more than 28 pass attempts per game, by far a career high, while completing 71.5% of his passes—which is more than 5% above his previous high. And if he finishes with 3,690 yards passing for the season, he’ll have thrown for more than 500 yards than he ever has in his pro career. While his touchdowns passes are down, his three interceptions put him on track for a career low, too.

The bottom line: As that second AFC exec explained it, the Ravens (7–2) have a couple of times—against Detroit and Seattle—looked like the NFL’s best team. And that’s due to Jackson, who is held in high regard by Ravens’ folks as well as rival teams.

And with that, let’s dive into our 2023 NFL Midseason Exec Awards …