OWINGS MILLS, Md. _ A flight from Pittsburgh to Baltimore takes about an hour, the drive a little more than four.
The Los Angeles Rams are not expecting holdout defensive tackle Aaron Donald to make the trip by Tuesday.
That is the deadline for last season's NFL defensive player of the year to report without losing a year of accrued service toward becoming an unrestricted free agent.
"I don't think anything's going to change with that in the near future," Rams coach Sean McVay said Monday after a joint practice with the Baltimore Ravens. "I've had a little bit of dialogue with Aaron and we're hopeful that we'll get something done.
"But I don't think there's any realistic deal to kind of that Aug. 7 being a date that changes really anything.
"But you never know. And things remain the same.
"I'm looking forward to trying to connect with him later (Monday) and we'll see where we're at."
If Donald does not report, he could become a restricted free agent in 2019, although that point is generally considered moot because the Rams can still control him for as many as three seasons with the franchise tag.
Donald, in the fifth year of a rookie deal that will pay him about $6.9 million this season, is thought to be seeking an extension that would not only make him the NFL's highest-paid defensive player, but also put him among the league's highest-paid players.
Asked if it would be a surprise if Donald showed up Tuesday, McVay said, "It would be. Yeah, I'd be surprised."
Last year, Donald sat out training camp and reported on the eve of the season opener.
The Rams excused the $40,000-a-day fines he accrued for sitting out training camp and preseason games.
Donald's absence from a mandatory June minicamp could cost him $60,000.
He also could be accruing $40,000-a-day fines during camp.
As a player who is scheduled to play under a fifth-year option, he also could be fined $430,750 _ the equivalent of a regular-season game check _ for each preseason game he misses.
The Rams could again excuse the fines and wipe the slate clean if he reports.
Donald's teammates did not sound overly concerned.
"We've talked about it from time to time but, I mean, we don't focus on it," quarterback Jared Goff said. "We're here with the guys we've got here, but we'd love to have Aaron as soon as it gets done."
Defensive lineman Michael Brockers said that he had not contacted Donald recently but was confident Donald was preparing on his own.
"I know he's working. I know he's grinding," Brockers said, adding, "Doing everything possible where he's in shape when he comes here.
"So, that's all I can look forward to. Whenever he gets here he's ready to roll."