10:15 a.m.

Team meeting; Coach Harbaugh started, "We chase everything here, every detail, every step, everything we do. The results are that we play the best we can play, right? Leave a mark. Leave a legacy. Whether it's practice or in a game, be special. Later in life, when people look at video of how you did things, the way you practiced, the way you played, coaches and players can look at what you produced and say, 'He set the standard. This is how you should do it.' … What I see in the weight room, what I see with our conditioning, we are setting standards. We are building something special. … Chase everything. That creates habit. … And, play fast. We fly to the ball on defense, don't we? We attack on offense."Harbs then showed a couple of plays and drills from the previous day's OTA. The first was a 70-yard touchdown completion from Flacco to wide receiver Breshad Perriman. "That's what we're going to do on offense. Big plays!" He then looked at Pees and asked: "What happened on the back end there, Dean?" Pees said: "We fixed it this morning, Coach. Already addressed it." Next play was Williams blowing by center Ryan Jensen to disrupt the offense. "Great play, Brandon. Ryan, what did you see?" Jensen, currently battling John Urschel for the starting center spot, offered: "I guessed, Coach, instead of setting properly and using my technique."Finally, Harbs showed a clip of two very large defensive linemen – Brent Urban and Kaufusi – exploding into a sled and then turning and running into each other. The room erupted with laughter. Harbs: "Who's at fault here?" Immediately, Urban raised his hand, "That's my bad. I went the wrong way." Urban is still sporting a black eye from the head-to-head collision.Harbs then called Coach Cullen to the front of the room. The defensive line coach addressed one of the "five fights teams face every day: Division from Within." I think most of Joe's comments should be kept private by the team. But he highlighted that teams that win trust each other, "have each other's backs. They don't let jealousies or people from the outside, like reporters, separate us. If your side of the ball is going well, and the other isn't, don't let someone separate us. Don't answer a reporter who asks if you're disappointed with the offense or defense. That doesn't help us win." Cullen then gave examples from the 2016 season when the offense carried the day, and we won, and then he named examples of the opposite when our defense or special teams made the difference. "It's easy to point the finger. Don't be that teammate. We don't play the 'Blame Game' here. … In sports, on teams, in your family and in business, the ones that do the best take ownership of what they do, and they trust their partners to do the same. We're a brotherhood in this room. We have each other's backs."