Maxx Crosby’s almost-move to Baltimore reads less like a transaction log and more like a story that changed its mind halfway through. One moment, he was turning a new page, the next he was on a flight back to Las Vegas, the future he’d briefly imagined already dissolving behind him.
Maxx Crosby’s Failed Ravens Trade Leaves Raiders GM John Spytek Holding the Present
It started with conviction. The kind that comes with two first-round picks and a handshake agreement that feels, at least on the surface, inevitable. Crosby arrived in Baltimore on March 9, the city waiting with a new locker room, new goals.
Then came the physical. The MRI. The pause.
And just like that, the deal came undone. Officially, the Ravens cited medical concerns, which did not fit neatly into the timeline. Baltimore had already reviewed his medicals before agreeing to the trade, so when the decision flipped after the in-person evaluation, confusion ensued.
Nevertheless, back in Las Vegas, the situation required something more nuanced than a press release, and recently, Raiders GM John Spytek spoke about Crosby and their relationship.
“My relationship with Maxx since I’ve gotten here has been great,” Spytek said. “We had a lot of conversations throughout the season, at the end of the season obviously, through the offseason and obviously we were presented with a difficult decision to make. Things have a way of going a certain way and working out the way they’re supposed to. We welcomed him like he never left, because he really never did.”
#Raiders GM John Spytek took the high road in his first public comments on the Maxx Crosby situation:
“Things have a way of working out the way they’re supposed to. We welcome him like he never left — because he really never did.”
(via @Raiders, @JTTheBrick) pic.twitter.com/BGEH3dJ9lz
— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) March 26, 2026
Of course, in the NFL, “back” doesn’t always mean permanent.
Crosby’s message, “I’m a Raider. I’m back,” made it apparent where he stood. But around the league, curiosity hasn’t faded. Teams are still checking in, still quietly measuring whether the door might open again.
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The Raiders, meanwhile, aren’t rushing to define the ending. Their asking price remains high, a signal that if Crosby were to move, it wouldn’t be for anything less than something transformative. And that hesitation from other teams, the pause after seeing Baltimore step back, has created a kind of stalemate.
So for now, everything exists in that in-between space. Crosby remains a consistent defensive force, fresh off a 95.3 score on the PFSN NFL EDGE Impact Metric, still capable of anchoring a defense and shaping a locker room.

