The 2025 season was the Baltimore Ravens' 30th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 18th and final under head coach John Harbaugh. The Ravens failed to improve upon their 2024 record of 12–5 with their Week 6 loss to the Los Angeles Rams, starting the season 1–5 for the first time since 2015, and failed to match that record following their Thanksgiving Day loss to the Cincinnati Bengals. The Thanksgiving game was Baltimore's first since 2013. They were originally scheduled to play on Thanksgiving in 2020, but the game was postponed due to a COVID-19 outbreak. They missed the playoffs for the first time since 2021, and also suffered their first losing season since then, following their Week 18 loss to the rival Pittsburgh Steelers; a win would have clinched the division for the Ravens. This season would be the end of John Harbaugh’s coaching tenure in Baltimore as he was fired two days after the season ended.[1] Harbaugh compiled a 180–113 regular season record and a 13–11 record in the playoffs, winning Super Bowl XLVII against his brother Jim Harbaugh in the 2012 season and was named Coach of the Year in 2019.
This is the first season since 2011 without kicker Justin Tucker, who was the last Raven on the roster to have played for the team's 2012 Super Bowl championship team.[2] The Ravens released Tucker, who the NFL was investigating for allegations of inappropriate sexual conduct, on May 5.[3]
The 2025 Ravens notably struggled at home, with a 3–6 home record. Conversely, Baltimore performed moderately well on the road, having finished with a 5–3 road record.
During the season, Mark Andrews broke Derrick Mason's record for most receiving yards as a Raven with 5,952; the previous record was 5,777.
The Baltimore Ravens drew an average home attendance of 70,294, the 13th-highest of all NFL teams.[4]
Offseason
Free agents
| Position
|
Player
|
|
2025 team
|
Date signed
|
Contract
|
| WR
|
Nelson Agholor
|
UFA
|
|
|
|
| ILB
|
Chris Board
|
UFA
|
New York Giants
|
March 10, 2025
|
2 years, $5.7 million
|
| OG
|
Ben Cleveland
|
UFA
|
Baltimore Ravens
|
March 11, 2025
|
1 year, $1.17 million
|
| ILB
|
Malik Harrison
|
UFA
|
Pittsburgh Steelers
|
March 10, 2025
|
2 years, $10 million
|
| WR
|
Deonte Harty
|
UFA
|
|
|
|
| WR
|
Diontae Johnson
|
UFA
|
Cleveland Browns
|
April 28, 2025
|
1 year, $1.17 million
|
| QB
|
Josh Johnson
|
UFA
|
Washington Commanders
|
April 11, 2025
|
1 year, $1.42 million
|
| OT
|
Josh Jones
|
UFA
|
Seattle Seahawks
|
March 10, 2025
|
1 year, $4 million
|
| CB
|
Christian Matthew
|
RFA
|
|
|
|
| OG
|
Patrick Mekari
|
UFA
|
Jacksonville Jaguars
|
March 10, 2025
|
3 years, $37.5 million
|
| CB
|
Trayvon Mullen
|
UFA
|
|
|
|
| FB
|
Patrick Ricard
|
UFA
|
Baltimore Ravens
|
March 11, 2025
|
1 year, $2.87 million
|
| WR
|
Steven Sims
|
UFA
|
Seattle Seahawks
|
March 25, 2025
|
1 year, $1.17 million
|
| OT
|
Ronnie Stanley
|
UFA
|
Baltimore Ravens
|
March 8, 2025
|
3 years, $60 million
|
| CB
|
Brandon Stephens
|
UFA
|
New York Jets
|
March 10, 2025
|
3 years, $36 million
|
| DE
|
Brent Urban
|
UFA
|
Baltimore Ravens
|
August 2, 2025
|
TBD
|
| WR
|
Tylan Wallace
|
UFA
|
Baltimore Ravens
|
March 12, 2025
|
1 year, $2.1 million
|
| ILB
|
Kristian Welch
|
UFA
|
Green Bay Packers
|
March 28, 2025
|
1 year, $1.17 million
|
| CB
|
Tre'Davious White
|
UFA
|
Buffalo Bills
|
April 17, 2025
|
1 year, $3 million
|
| S
|
Ar'Darius Washington
|
RFA
|
Baltimore Ravens
|
April 21, 2025
|
1 year, $3.26 million
|
| RB
|
Owen Wright
|
ERFA
|
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
|
July 31, 2025
|
TBD
|
Signings
| Position
|
Player
|
Previous team
|
Date signed
|
Contract
|
| WR
|
DeAndre Hopkins
|
Kansas City Chiefs
|
March 11, 2025
|
1 year, $5 million
|
| LB
|
Jake Hummel
|
Los Angeles Rams
|
March 12, 2025
|
1 year, $1.2 million
|
| QB
|
Cooper Rush
|
Dallas Cowboys
|
March 16, 2025
|
2 years, $6.2 million
|
| CB
|
Chidobe Awuzie
|
Tennessee Titans
|
March 25, 2025
|
1 year, $1.25 million
|
| OT
|
Joseph Noteboom
|
Los Angeles Rams
|
May 3, 2025
|
1 year, $2 million
|
| CB
|
Jaire Alexander
|
Green Bay Packers
|
June 18, 2025
|
1 year, $4 million
|
| RB
|
D'Ernest Johnson
|
Jacksonville Jaguars
|
August 2, 2025
|
TBD
|
Extensions
Below are players who are under contract through 2025 and received a contract extension.
Releases
Retirements
| Position
|
Player
|
Date Retired
|
Years with the Ravens
|
Years in the NFL
|
| DT
|
Michael Pierce
|
March 12, 2025
|
7
|
9
|
Draft
Draft trades
- ^ Hamilton signed his fifth-year option for 1 year, $18.6 million for the 2026 season.
- ^ a b c d The Ravens traded a fourth-round (136th overall) and sixth-round selection (183rd overall) to the Tennessee Titans in exchange for a fifth-round (141st overall) and sixth-round selection (178th overall).
- ^ a b The Ravens traded a fifth-round selection (163rd overall) to the Carolina Panthers in exchange for a sixth-round selection (183rd overall) and WR Diontae Johnson.[6]
- ^ a b The Ravens traded a fifth-round (176th overall) and a 2026 sixth-round selection to the New York Jets in exchange for a sixth-round (186st overall) and 2026 fifth-round selection.
Staff
Coaching changes
Coaching notes
- ^ Taggart was promoted to assistant head coach but will also remain the teams running back coach.
2025 Baltimore Ravens staff
|
|
Front office
- Owner – Steve Bisciotti
- President – Sashi Brown
- Executive vice president/general manager – Eric DeCosta
- Executive vice president – Ozzie Newsome
- Vice president of player personnel – George Kokinis
- Director of player personnel – Mark Azevedo
- Director of college scouting – Andrew Raphael
- Assistant director of college scouting – Joey Cleary
- Assistant director of pro personnel – Corey Frazier
- Vice president of football administration – Nick Matteo
- Senior personnel executive - Bobby Vega
- Vice president of research and development - David McDonald
- Director of learning and development - Steve Clagett
- Director of data and decision science - Derrick Yam
- Director of football systems - James Oncea
- Consultant – Pat Moriarty
- Assistant director of Coaching research – Ben Davis
- Senior director of football information – Megan McLaughlin
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
|
|
|
Defensive coaches
- Defensive coordinator – Zachary Orr
- Defensive line – Dennis Johnson
- Inside linebackers – Tyler Santucci
- Outside linebackers – Matt Robinson
- Assistant linebackers – Matt Pees
- Defensive backs – Donald D'Alesio
- Senior defensive assistant/secondary – Chuck Pagano
- Pass rush coach – Chuck Smith
- Defensive quality control – Brendan Clark
- Assistant to the head coach/defensive assistant – Megan Rosburg
Special teams coaches
- Baltimore Ravens coaching fellowship – DP Eyman
- Baltimore Ravens coaching fellowship – Prentice Gill
- Baltimore Ravens coaching fellowship – Ian Kolste
Strength and conditioning
- Strength and conditioning coordinator – Scott Elliott
- Assistant strength and conditioning – Kaelyn Buskey
- Assistant strength and conditioning – Kevin Hartman
- Strength and conditioning – Ron Shrift
- Strength and conditioning – Anthony Watson
- Applied sports science – Connor Gorny
- Director of high performance – Sam Rosengarten
|
Final roster
Trades
Preseason
Regular season
Schedule
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Game summaries
Week 1: Buffalo Bills 41, Baltimore Ravens 40
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- BAL – Derrick Henry 30-yard rush (Tyler Loop kick), 13:35. Ravens 10–7. Drive: 6 plays, 85 yards, 3:04.
- BAL – Lamar Jackson 10-yard rush (Tyler Loop kick), 9:47. Ravens 17–7. Drive: 4 plays, 69 yards, 2:16.
- BUF – Matt Prater 25-yard field goal, 2:50. Ravens 17–10. Drive: 13 plays, 63 yards, 6:57.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 49-yard field goal, 0:31. Ravens 20–10. Drive: 8 plays, 23 yards, 2:19.
- BUF – Matt Prater 43-yard field goal, 0:00. Ravens 20–13. Drive: 4 plays, 48 yards, 0:31.
Third quarter
- BAL – Zay Flowers 23-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 12:48. Ravens 27–13. Drive: 4 plays, 65 yards, 2:12.
- BUF – James Cook 2-yard rush (pass failed), 7:47. Ravens 27–19. Drive: 9 plays, 60 yards, 5:01.
- BAL – DeAndre Hopkins 29-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 1:09. Ravens 34–19. Drive: 3 plays, 68 yards, 1:33.
Fourth quarter
- BUF – Josh Allen 2-yard rush (pass failed), 12:51. Ravens 34–25. Drive: 8 plays, 84 yards, 3:18.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 46-yard rush (kick wide right), 11:42. Ravens 40–25. Drive: 4 plays, 65 yards, 1:09.
- BUF – Keon Coleman 10-yard pass from Josh Allen (Matt Prater kick), 3:56. Ravens 40–32. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 3:20.
- BUF – Josh Allen 1-yard rush (pass failed), 1:58. Ravens 40–38. Drive: 4 plays, 30 yards, 1:08.
- BUF – Matt Prater 32-yard field goal, 0:00. Bills 41–40. Drive: 9 plays, 66 yards, 1:26.
|
Top passers
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 14/19, 209 yards, 2 TD
- BUF – Josh Allen – 33/46, 394 yards, 2 TD
Top rushers
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 18 rushes, 169 yards, 2 TD
- BUF – James Cook – 13 rushes, 44 yards, TD
Top receivers
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 7 receptions, 143 yards, TD
- BUF – Keon Coleman – 8 receptions, 112 yards, TD
|
|
In a rematch of last season's AFC Divisional Playoffs, the Ravens squandered strong performances by running back Derrick Henry and receiver Zay Flowers, blowing a 40–25 lead in the fourth quarter as they lost to Josh Allen and the Bills, 41–40, on a 32-yard last-second field goal by Matt Prater. The Ravens were unable to overcome two three-and-outs and a Henry fumble on their last three drives, in addition to 250 passing yards and three touchdowns by Allen in the fourth quarter alone. With the loss, their first regular season loss in Buffalo since 2013, the Ravens started their season 0–1 for the second consecutive season. This was also the first time the Ravens started 0–1 in back-to-back seasons since 2015, as well as the first time an NFL team had lost after scoring 40 or more points and rushing for over 235 yards.[13] This was the first game to end in a 41–40 final score.
Week 2: Baltimore Ravens 41, Cleveland Browns 17
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 43-yard field goal, 3:06. Ravens 3–0. Drive: 8 plays, 24 yards, 3:39.
Second quarter
- BAL – Tylan Wallace 15-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 11:13. Ravens 10–0. Drive: 2 plays, 24 yards, 0:53.
- CLE – Andre Szmyt 38-yard field goal, 0:29. Ravens 10–3. Drive: 7 plays, 28 yards, 1:24.
Third quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 32-yard field goal, 12:26. Ravens 13–3. Drive: 7 plays, 51 yards, 2:34.
- BAL – Devontez Walker 2-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 10:09. Ravens 20–3. Drive: 4 plays, 5 yards, 1:20.
- CLE – Cedric Tillman 18-yard pass from Joe Flacco (Andre Szmyt kick), 5:02. Ravens 20–10. Drive: 11 plays, 71 yards, 5:07.
Fourth quarter
- BAL – Devontez Walker 24-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 13:26. Ravens 27–10. Drive: 10 plays, 66 yards, 6:36.
- BAL – Roquan Smith 64-yard fumble return (Tyler Loop kick), 8:18. Ravens 34–10.
- BAL – DeAndre Hopkins 23-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 4:43. Ravens 41–10. Drive: 3 plays, 36 yards, 1:34.
- CLE – Dylan Sampson 8-yard pass from Dillon Gabriel (Andre Szmyt kick), 1:50. Ravens 41–17. Drive: 7 plays, 65 yards, 2:53.
|
Top passers
- CLE – Joe Flacco – 25/45, 199 yards, TD, INT
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 19/29, 225 yards, 4 TD
Top rushers
Top receivers
- CLE – Jerry Jeudy – 4 receptions, 51 yards
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 7 receptions, 75 yards
|
|
The Ravens faced their former quarterback Joe Flacco in Baltimore for the first time (the prior meeting was against the New York Jets on the road). After a sluggish first half, the Ravens dominated the second half and blew out the Browns 41–17. Baltimore's defense swarmed Flacco, who finished 25-of-45 for 199 yards with a touchdown, an interception, and a fumble, which was returned for a touchdown. Meanwhile, quarterback Lamar Jackson threw for 225 yards and four touchdowns.[14] With the win, the Ravens rebounded from the disappointing loss the previous week and improved to 1–1.
Week 3: Detroit Lions 38, Baltimore Ravens 30
Week 3: Detroit Lions at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- DET – David Montgomery 1-yard run (Jake Bates kick), 5:55. Lions 14–7. Drive: 18 plays, 98 yards, 10:48.
- BAL – Rashod Bateman 3-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 0:24. Tied 14–14. Drive: 4 plays, 49 yards, 0:32.
Third quarter
- BAL – Mark Andrews 14-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 8:51. Ravens 21–14. Drive: 11 plays, 73 yards, 6:09.
- DET – Amon-Ra St. Brown 18-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 5:13. Tied 21–21. Drive: 7 plays, 60 yards, 3:38.
Fourth quarter
- DET – Jahmyr Gibbs 4-yard run (Jake Bates kick), 14:55. Lions 28–21. Drive: 7 plays, 96 yards, 3:41.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 41-yard field goal, 9:40. Lions 28–24. Drive: 10 plays, 49 yards, 5:15.
- DET – Jake Bates 45-yard field goal, 6:35. Lions 31–24. Drive: 4 plays, -11 yards, 1:51.
- DET – David Montgomery 31-yard run (Jake Bates kick), 1:42. Lions 38–24. Drive: 7 plays, 70 yards, 2:42.
- BAL – Mark Andrews 27-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (pass failed), 0:29. Lions 38–30. Drive: 6 plays, 65 yards, 1:13.
|
Top passers
- DET – Jared Goff – 20/28, 202 yards, TD
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 21/27, 288 yards, 3 TD
Top rushers
- DET – David Montgomery – 12 rushes, 151 yards, 2 TD
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 12 rushes, 50 yards, TD
Top receivers
- DET – Amon-Ra St. Brown – 7 receptions, 77 yards, TD
- BAL – Mark Andrews – 6 receptions, 91 yards, 2 TD
|
|
For the first time in team history, the Ravens lost to the Lions at home, and it was also their first loss to them since 2005. Lamar Jackson was sacked seven times, and Derrick Henry had a critical lost fumble in the 4th quarter with the Ravens trailing 24–28, his third lost fumble in as many games. With the upset loss, the Ravens fell to 1–2 for the second consecutive season.
Week 4: Kansas City Chiefs 37, Baltimore Ravens 20
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- KC – Harrison Butker 23-yard field goal, 10:00. Ravens 7–6. Drive: 14 plays, 79 yards, 6:44.
- KC – JuJu Smith-Schuster 4-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 4:00. Chiefs 13–7. Drive: 5 plays, 56 yards, 2:46.
- KC – Isiah Pacheco 8-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 1:41. Chiefs 20–7. Drive: 6 plays, 40 yards, 1:16.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 43-yard field goal, 0:00. Chiefs 20–10. Drive: 5 plays, 29 yards, 0:26.
Third quarter
- KC – Tyquan Thornton 11-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 11:51. Chiefs 27–10. Drive: 6 plays, 65 yards, 3:09.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 32-yard field goal, 7:22. Chiefs 27–13. Drive: 8 plays, 56 yards, 4:29.
- KC – Harrison Butker 31-yard field goal, 1:06. Chiefs 30–13. Drive: 10 plays, 39 yards, 6:16.
Fourth quarter
- KC – Hollywood Brown 15-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 13:15. Chiefs 37–13. Drive: 4 plays, 24 yards, 1:06.
- BAL – Justice Hill 71-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 1:56. Chiefs 37–20. Drive: 3 plays, 86 yards, 1:33.
|
Top passers
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 14/20, 147 yards, TD, INT
- KC – Patrick Mahomes – 25/37, 270 yards, 4 TD
Top rushers
- BAL – Justice Hill – 3 rushes, 76 yards, TD
- KC – Xavier Worthy – 2 rushes, 38 yards
Top receivers
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 7 receptions, 74 yards
- KC – Xavier Worthy – 5 receptions, 83 yards
|
|
Baltimore entered the matchup against Kansas City without a total of six defensive starters. Baltimore scored the game’s first set of points with a touchdown to Justice Hill, but the team could never control the game. Backup quarterback Cooper Rush entered the game in the fourth quarter with Lamar Jackson suffering a hamstring injury.
With a poor performance against the Chiefs, the Ravens dropped to 1–3, their first such start since 2015. They fell to 1–6 against the Chiefs since 2018.
Week 5: Houston Texans 44, Baltimore Ravens 10
Week 5: Houston Texans at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- HOU – Ka'imi Fairbairn 50-yard field goal, 11:18. Texans 10–3. Drive: 10 plays, 37 yards, 5:40.
- HOU – Nico Collins 10-yard pass from C. J. Stroud (Ka'imi Fairbairn kick), 5:36. Texans 17–3. Drive: 6 plays, 41 yards, 3:46.
- HOU – Xavier Hutchinson 10-yard pass from C. J. Stroud (Ka'imi Fairbairn kick), 0:28. Texans 24–3. Drive: 8 plays, 77 yards, 3:32.
Third quarter
- HOU – Nick Chubb 27-yard run (Ka'imi Fairbairn kick), 11:33. Texans 31–3. Drive: 3 plays, 38 yards, 1:16.
- HOU – Ka'imi Fairbairn 57-yard field goal, 5:53. Texans 34–3. Drive: 7 plays, 32 yards, 3:31.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 1-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 2:41. Texans 34–10. Drive: 5 plays, 71 yards, 3:12.
Fourth quarter
- HOU – Jaylin Noel 4-yard pass from C. J. Stroud (Ka'imi Fairbairn kick), 13:48. Texans 41–10. Drive: 7 plays, 65 yards, 3:53.
- HOU – Ka'imi Fairbairn 34-yard field goal, 10:30. Texans 44–10. Drive: 4 plays, 5 yards, 1:40.
|
Top passers
- HOU – C. J. Stroud – 23/27, 244 yards, 4 TD
- BAL – Cooper Rush – 14/20, 179 yards, 3 INT
Top rushers
- HOU – Nick Chubb – 11 rushes, 61 yards, TD
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 15 rushes, 33 yards, TD
Top receivers
|
|
With Lamar Jackson out with that hamstring injury, Baltimore was thoroughly dominated throughout the game, being outplayed in all phases. On the opening drive, the Ravens allowed C. J. Stroud and the Texans to score their first offensive touchdown against them, having failed to score one in each of the previous three meetings.[15] The Ravens lost 44–10, ending a six-game winning streak against Houston and suffering their first home loss to the Texans in franchise history. The 34-point margin tied the worst home loss in Ravens history, equaling a 41–7 defeat to the New England Patriots in 2013.[16]
With the loss, the Ravens fell to 1–4, marking their worst start to a season since the 2015 season.[15]
Week 6: Los Angeles Rams 17, Baltimore Ravens 3
Week 6: Los Angeles Rams at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 37-yard field goal, 7:22. Ravens 3–0. Drive: 12 plays, 53 yards, 7:38.
Second quarter
- LAR – Joshua Karty 36-yard field goal, 9:50. Tied 3–3. Drive: 12 plays, 48 yards, 4:21.
Third quarter
- LAR – Kyren Williams 3-yard run (Joshua Karty kick), 11:52. Rams 10–3. Drive: 9 plays, 76 yards, 3:08.
- LAR – Tyler Higbee 8-yard pass from Matthew Stafford (Joshua Karty kick), 10:20. Rams 17–3. Drive: 2 plays, 21 yards, 0:40.
Fourth quarter
|
Top passers
- LAR – Matthew Stafford – 17/26, 181 yards, TD
- BAL – Cooper Rush – 11/19, 72 yards, INT
Top rushers
- LAR – Kyren Williams – 13 rushes, 50 yards, TD
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 24 rushes, 122 yards
Top receivers
- LAR – Tyler Higbee – 4 receptions, 40 yards, TD
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 6 receptions, 46 yards
|
|
After giving up nearly 40 points per game in their previous 3 games, the Ravens defense held the Rams to just 17 points. However, neither back-up quarterbacks Cooper Rush nor Tyler Huntley could generate any momentum as the offense floundered, scoring only 3 points.
With their fourth straight loss, their longest such streak since 2021, the Ravens fell to 1–5 for the first time since 2015.
Week 8: Baltimore Ravens 30, Chicago Bears 16
Week 8: Chicago Bears at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
- Date: October 26
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
- Game weather: Clear, 60 °F (16 °C)
- Game attendance: 70,045
- Referee: Shawn Smith
- TV announcers (CBS): Ian Eagle, J. J. Watt and Evan Washburn
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- CHI – Cairo Santos 32-yard field goal, 6:50. Bears 3–0. Drive: 13 plays, 64 yards, 8:10.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 39-yard field goal, 0:03. Bears 6–0. Drive: 11 plays, 61 yards, 4:31.
Second quarter
- BAL – Derrick Henry 2-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 8:15. Ravens 7–6. Drive: 12 plays, 62 yards, 6:48.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 42-yard field goal, 1:06. Ravens 10–6. Drive: 12 plays, 54 yards, 5:27.
Third quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 28-yard field goal, 10:05. Ravens 13–6. Drive: 8 plays, 56 yards, 4:55.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 32-yard field goal, 3:35. Ravens 16–6. Drive: 10 plays, 76 yards, 4:22.
Fourth quarter
- CHI – D'Andre Swift 2-yard rush (Cairo Santos kick), 12:22. Ravens 16–13. Drive: 11 plays, 83 yards, 6:13.
- BAL – Charlie Kolar 10-yard pass from Tyler Huntley (Tyler Loop kick), 8:13. Ravens 23–13. Drive: 2 plays, 9 yards, 0:47.
- CHI – Cairo Santos 47-yard field goal, 5:06. Ravens 23–16. Drive: 10 plays, 48 yards, 3:07.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 2-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 2:09. Ravens 30–16. Drive: 9 plays, 66 yards, 2:57.
|
Top passers
- CHI – Caleb Williams – 25/38, 285 yards, INT
- BAL – Tyler Huntley – 17/22, 186 yards, TD
Top rushers
- CHI – D'Andre Swift – 11 rushes, 45 yards, TD
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 21 rushes, 71 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
|
|
With the win, the Ravens snapped their 4 game losing streak to improve to 2–5 and they avoided their first 1–6 start since 2015.
Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 28, Miami Dolphins 6
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- BAL – Mark Andrews 20-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 14:10. Ravens 14–3. Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 3:26.
- MIA – Riley Patterson 43-yard field goal, 7:57. Ravens 14–6. Drive: 4 plays, 4 yards, 0:52.
Third quarter
- BAL – Charlie Kolar 3-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 8:09. Ravens 21–6. Drive: 11 plays, 68 yards, 6:51.
- BAL – Rashod Bateman 9-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 4:15. Ravens 28–6. Drive: 4 plays, 60 yards, 2:08.
Fourth quarter
|
Top passers
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 18/23, 204 yards, 4 TD
- MIA – Tua Tagovailoa – 25/40, 261 yards, INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
|
|
Lamar Jackson returned as the team's starting quarterback for the first time since exiting in Week 4 against the Kansas City Chiefs. Jackson completed 18-of-23 passes for 204 yards and four touchdowns, leading the Ravens to a rout of the Miami Dolphins. With the victory, the Ravens dominated on the road and improved their record to 3–5.[17]
Week 10: Baltimore Ravens 27, Minnesota Vikings 19
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- MIN – Aaron Jones 4-yard run (Will Reichard kick), 9:46. Vikings 7–0. Drive: 7 plays, 86 yards, 3:27.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 44-yard field goal, 4:25. Vikings 7–3. Drive: 11 plays, 42 yards, 5:21.
Second quarter
- MIN – Will Reichard 49-yard field goal, 10:56. Vikings 10–3. Drive: 7 plays, 26 yards, 3:59.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 28-yard field goal, 1:11. Vikings 10–6. Drive: 10 plays, 68 yards, 5:36.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 30-yard field goal, 0:02. Vikings 10–9. Drive: 4 plays, 63 yards, 0:28.
Third quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 22-yard field goal, 10:19. Ravens 12–10. Drive: 6 plays, 67 yards, 2:22.
- BAL – Justice Hill 1-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 8:02. Ravens 19–10. Drive: 6 plays, 23 yards, 2:11.
- MIN – Will Reichard 43-yard field goal, 2:16. Ravens 19–13. Drive: 7 plays, 29 yards, 2:39.
Fourth quarter
|
Top passers
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 17/29, 176 yards, TD
- MIN – J. J. McCarthy – 20/42, 248 yards, TD, 2 INT
Top rushers
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 20 rushes, 75 yards
- MIN – J. J. McCarthy – 5 rushes, 48 yards
Top receivers
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 4 receptions, 75 yards
- MIN – Jalen Nailor – 5 receptions, 124 yards, TD
|
|
The Ravens defeated the Vikings in what marked Lamar Jackson’s 100th regular-season start.[18] The win also gave Baltimore its first road victory against Minnesota in franchise history, and John Harbaugh recorded at least one win in every current NFL city.[19][20]
Week 11: Baltimore Ravens 23, Cleveland Browns 16
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 25-yard field goal, 4:55. Ravens 3–0. Drive: 15 plays, 72 yards, 7:41.
- CLE – Andre Szmyt 30-yard field goal, 0:00. Tied 3–3. Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 4:55.
Second quarter
- CLE – Andre Szmyt 30-yard field goal, 8:44. Browns 6–3. Drive: 4 plays, 0 yards, 1:32.
- CLE – Devin Bush Jr. 23-yard interception return (Andre Szmyt kick), 7:43. Browns 13–3.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 1-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 4:17. Browns 13–10. Drive: 6 plays, 63 yards, 3:26.
- CLE – Andre Szmyt 46-yard field goal, 0:58. Browns 16–10. Drive: 8 plays, 42 yards, 3:19.
Third quarter
Fourth quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 24-yard field goal, 14:06. Browns 16–13. Drive: 5 plays, 63 yards, 1:56.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 44-yard field goal, 4:59. Tied 16–16. Drive: 10 plays, 54 yards, 5:50.
- BAL – Mark Andrews 35-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 2:31. Ravens 23–16. Drive: 4 plays, 44 yards, 2:01.
|
Top passers
Top rushers
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 18 rushes, 103 yards, TD
- CLE – Quinshon Judkins – 17 rushes, 59 yards
Top receivers
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|
Although the Ravens entered the game as more than a touchdown favorite, the Browns led for much of the game. After tying the game at 16–16 with two field goals in the fourth quarter, Mark Andrews ran for a 35-yard go-ahead touchdown on a trick play on 4th-and-1 with 2:31 remaining, giving the Ravens the lead. The Browns attempted to make a comeback drive, but turned the ball over on downs after failing to convert a 4th-and-5 from the Baltimore 25-yard line with 0:57 remaining, securing the victory for Baltimore. This marked the Ravens’ first sweep of the Browns since the 2020 season, improving Baltimore's record to 5–5 on the year and 39–15 all-time against Cleveland. The Ravens also spoiled Shedeur Sanders’ debut; he finished 4-of-16 with an interception and a 13.5 passer rating after coming into the game in the third quarter due to Dillon Gabriel suffering an injury. He was also sacked twice as the Browns went scoreless in the second half.[21]
Mark Andrews also became the Ravens’ career leader in receiving yards (5,806) during the game, surpassing wide receiver Derrick Mason’s previous franchise record of 5,777.[22]
Week 12: Baltimore Ravens 23, New York Jets 10
Week 12: New York Jets at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
- Date: November 23
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Cloudy, 54 °F (12 °C)
- Game attendance: 70,029
- Referee: Clete Blakeman
- TV announcers (CBS): Andrew Catalon, Charles Davis, Jason McCourty and AJ Ross
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
Third quarter
- BAL – Derrick Henry 2-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 8:49. Ravens 10–7. Drive: 11 plays, 74 yards, 6:11.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 2-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 3:33. Ravens 17–7. Drive: 7 plays, 42 yards, 3:05.
Fourth quarter
- NYJ – Nick Folk 42-yard field goal, 14:41. Ravens 17–10. Drive: 9 plays, 36 yards, 3:52.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 35-yard field goal, 1:35. Ravens 20–10. Drive: 9 plays, 58 yards, 5:08.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 27-yard field goal, 0:41. Ravens 23–10. Drive: 4 plays, 2 yards, 1:00.
|
Top passers
- NYJ – Tyrod Taylor – 17/28, 222 yards, TD, INT
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 13/23, 153 yards
Top rushers
- NYJ – Breece Hall – 16 rushes, 44 yards
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 21 rushes, 64 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
- NYJ – Breece Hall – 4 receptions, 75 yards
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 5 receptions, 57 yards
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Derrick Henry rushed for 64 yards on 21 carries, including two two-yard third-quarter touchdowns, as the Ravens overcame a sluggish start on offense in the first half to beat the Jets 23–10.[23] With their fifth straight win, the Ravens improved to 6–5, the first time they had been over .500 this season, and moved into first place in the AFC North as the Pittsburgh Steelers lost to the Chicago Bears that same day.
Week 13: Cincinnati Bengals 32, Baltimore Ravens 14
Thanksgiving Day games
Week 13: Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
| Game information
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|
First quarter
- CIN – Evan McPherson 31-yard field goal, 9:39. Bengals 3–0. Drive: 10 plays, 51 yards, 5:21.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 28-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 6:33. Ravens 7–3. Drive: 7 plays, 69 yards, 3:06.
Second quarter
- CIN – Evan McPherson 42-yard field goal, 11:24. Ravens 7–6. Drive: 11 plays, 29 yards, 5:09.
- CIN – Evan McPherson 24-yard field goal, 2:36. Bengals 9–7. Drive: 11 plays, 74 yards, 5:46.
- CIN – Evan McPherson 33-yard field goal, 0:10. Bengals 12–7. Drive: 4 plays, 4 yards, 0:18.
Third quarter
- CIN – Tanner Hudson 14-yard pass from Joe Burrow (Evan McPherson kick), 7:22. Bengals 19–7. Drive: 10 plays, 61 yards, 5:26.
- BAL – Keaton Mitchell 18-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 3:59. Bengals 19–14. Drive: 7 plays, 68 yards, 3:23.
- CIN – Andrei Iosivas 29-yard pass from Joe Burrow (Evan McPherson kick), 0:15. Bengals 26–14. Drive: 8 plays, 68 yards, 3:44.
Fourth quarter
- CIN – Evan McPherson 52-yard field goal, 9:25. Bengals 29–14. Drive: 47 plays, 19 yards, 3:29.
- CIN – Evan McPherson 41-yard field goal, 1:06. Bengals 32–14. Drive: 6 plays, 13 yards, 3:06.
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Top passers
- CIN – Joe Burrow – 24/46, 261 yards, 2 TD
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 17/32, 246 yards, INT
Top rushers
- CIN – Chase Brown – 15 rushes, 78 yards
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 10 rushes, 60 yards, TD
Top receivers
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The Ravens played a sloppy game and were absolutely dominated, committing four fumbles, including two by Lamar Jackson. Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow, making his return after suffering a turf toe injury in Week 2, threw for 261 yards and two touchdowns, contributing to a Ravens loss.[24]
This was the Ravens' first Thanksgiving loss, making the Houston Texans the only team in the NFL with at least two Thanksgiving wins without a loss. It was also Baltimore's first since Thanksgiving game since 2013. They were originally scheduled to play on Thanksgiving in 2020, but the 2020 game was postponed due to a COVID-19 outbreak.
The game was also the most-watched Thanksgiving night game in NFL history with an average of 28.4 million viewers across NBC, Peacock, and Telemundo.
Week 14: Pittsburgh Steelers 27, Baltimore Ravens 22
Week 14: Pittsburgh Steelers at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
- Date: December 7
- Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Cloudy, 44 °F (7 °C)
- Game attendance: 70,544
- Referee: Alex Moore
- TV announcers (CBS): Jim Nantz, Tony Romo and Tracy Wolfson
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 36-yard field goal, 10:58. Ravens 3–0. Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 4:02.
- PIT – Aaron Rodgers 1-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 7:13. Steelers 7–3. Drive: 8 plays, 65 yards, 3:45.
Second quarter
- PIT – Chris Boswell 23-yard field goal, 10:39. Steelers 10–3. Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 4:46.
- PIT – Kenneth Gainwell 6-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 6:05. Steelers 17–3. Drive: 6 plays, 36 yards, 3:16.
- BAL – Lamar Jackson 6-yard run (kick failed), 0:16. Steelers 17–9. Drive: 13 plays, 60 yards, 5:49.
Third quarter
- PIT – Chris Boswell 28-yard field goal, 10:57. Steelers 20–9. Drive: 8 plays, 50 yards, 4:03.
- BAL – Isaiah Likely 4-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 7:35. Steelers 20–16. Drive: 6 plays, 71 yards, 3:22.
- PIT – Jaylen Warren 38-yard pass from Aaron Rodgers (Chris Boswell kick), 3:30. Steelers 27–22. Drive: 6 plays, 80 yards, 4:05.
Fourth quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 28-yard field goal, 13:43. Steelers 27–19. Drive: 10 plays, 54 yards, 4:47.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 36-yard field goal, 7:10. Steelers 27–22. Drive: 9 plays, 50 yards, 4:09.
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Top passers
- PIT – Aaron Rodgers – 23/34, 284 yards, TD
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 19/35, 219 yards, TD, INT
Top rushers
- PIT – Kenneth Gainwell – 4 rushes, 15 yards, TD
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 25 rushes, 94 yards
Top receivers
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|
A controversial moment occurred when Isaiah Likely caught a pass from Lamar Jackson with both hands in the end zone, with both feet down. As he was about to take another step with his right foot, Steelers’ cornerback Joey Porter Jr. knocked the ball free. The play was initially ruled a touchdown but was later overturned to an incomplete pass. The Ravens eventually turned the ball over on downs.[25]
The next day, Ravens guard Ben Cleveland was suspended for 3 games for violating the NFL's substance abuse policy.[26]
Week 15: Baltimore Ravens 24, Cincinnati Bengals 0
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- BAL – Rasheen Ali 30-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 4:35. Ravens 7–0. Drive: 5 plays, 79 yards, 2:59.
- BAL – Zay Flowers 28-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 0:23. Ravens 14–0. Drive: 5 plays, 80 yards, 0:42.
Third quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 27-yard field goal, 9:05. Ravens 17–0. Drive: 6 plays, 60 yards, 2:44.
Fourth quarter
|
Top passers
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 8/12, 150 yards, 2 TD, INT
- CIN – Joe Burrow – 25/39, 225 yards, 2 INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 3 receptions, 68 yards, TD
- CIN – Ja'Marr Chase – 10 receptions, 132 yards
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|
The Ravens entered the game hoping to avenge their 32–14 Thanksgiving defeat to the Bengals. The Ravens would do so, as they never once trailed, and held the Bengals scoreless. The Ravens recorded their first shutout win since beating the Tennessee Titans 21–0 in the 2018 season. Also with the win, the Ravens improved to 7–7, and keeping their playoff hopes alive while ending those of the Bengals.[27]
Week 16: New England Patriots 28, Baltimore Ravens 24
Week 16: New England Patriots at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
- Date: December 21
- Game time: 8:20 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Clear, 40 °F (4 °C)
- Game attendance: 70,709
- Referee: Brad Rogers
- TV announcers (NBC): Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth, and Melissa Stark
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- NE – Hunter Henry 1-yard pass from Drake Maye (Andres Borregales kick), 11:17. Tied 7–7. Drive: 10 plays, 68 yards, 5:26.
- NE – Andres Borregales 45-yard field goal, 5:39. Patriots 10–7. Drive: 9 plays, 48 yards, 4:42.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 36-yard field goal, 1:03. Tied 10–10. Drive: 11 plays, 47 yards, 4:36.
Third quarter
- NE – Andres Borregales 41-yard field goal, 7:43. Patriots 13–10. Drive: 6 plays, 32 yards, 2:55.
- BAL – Zay Flowers 18-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 4:35. Ravens 17–13. Drive: 6 plays, 65 yards, 3:08.
Fourth quarter
- BAL – Derrick Henry 2-yard run (Tyler Loop kick), 12:50. Ravens 24–13. Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 4:03.
- NE – Kyle Williams 37-yard pass from Drake Maye (Drake Maye–Rhamondre Stevenson pass), 9:01. Ravens 24–21. Drive: 7 plays, 73 yards, 3:49.
- NE – Rhamondre Stevenson 21-yard run (Andres Borregales kick), 2:07. Patriots 28–24. Drive: 9 plays, 89 yards, 2:55.
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Top passers
- NE – Drake Maye – 31/44, 380 yards, 2 TD, INT
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 7/10, 101 yards
Top rushers
- NE – Rhamondre Stevenson – 8 rushes, 51 yards, TD
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 18 rushes, 128 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
- NE – Stefon Diggs – 9 receptions, 138 yards
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 7 receptions, 84 yards
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At the end of the half, Lamar Jackson was taken out of the game with a back injury and was later ruled out.[28] In the fourth quarter, Derrick Henry rushed for a touchdown to give the Ravens a 24–13 lead. However, that was the last time Henry touched the ball. Patriots quarterback Drake Maye then rallied the Patriots, throwing two touchdown passes to give New England a 28–24 lead. On Baltimore’s next drive, Zay Flowers fumbled, and the Patriots ran out the clock to secure the win. With the loss, Baltimore fell to 7–8 (2–2 against the AFC East) and finished 3–6 at home. This also marked the 17th time the Ravens blew a multi possession lead since 2008.
Week 17: Baltimore Ravens 41, Green Bay Packers 24
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- BAL – Derrick Henry 1-yard rush (Tyler Loop kick), 13:13. Ravens 14–7. Drive: 13 plays, 74 yards, 7:31.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 22-yard field goal, 7:10. Ravens 17–7. Drive: 8 plays, 30 yards, 4:10.
- BAL – Tyler Loop 34-yard field goal, 3:36. Ravens 20–7. Drive: 6 plays, 14 yards, 2:46.
- GB – Malik Willis 22-yard rush (Brandon McManus kick), 1:24. Ravens 20–14. Drive: 5 plays, 76 yards, 2:12.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 3-yard rush (Tyler Loop kick), 0:10. Ravens 27–14. Drive: 7 plays, 65 yards, 1:14.
Third quarter
- GB – Brandon McManus 24-yard field goal, 9:10. Ravens 27–17. Drive: 11 plays, 68 yards, 5:50.
- GB – Malik Willis 11-yard rush (Brandon McManus kick), 2:02. Ravens 27–24. Drive: 7 plays, 86 yards, 2:59.
Fourth quarter
- BAL – Zay Flowers 10-yard pass from Tyler Huntley (Tyler Loop kick), 10:10. Ravens 34–24. Drive: 12 plays, 85 yards, 6:52.
- BAL – Derrick Henry 25-yard rush (Tyler Loop kick), 1:56. Ravens 41–24. Drive: 10 plays, 68 yards, 5:00.
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Top passers
- BAL – Tyler Huntley – 16/20, 109 yards, TD
- GB – Malik Willis – 18/21, 288 yards, TD
Top rushers
- BAL – Derrick Henry – 36 rushes, 216 yards, 4 TD
- GB – Malik Willis – 9 rushes, 60 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 4 receptions, 30 yards, TD
- GB – Christian Watson – 5 receptions, 113 yards, TD
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Derrick Henry recorded one of his best performances of the season, rushing for a career-high 216 yards on 36 carries and scoring four touchdowns to lead the Ravens to a victory over the Packers. With the upset win, the Ravens improved to 8–8 while finishing 3–1 against the NFC North and 3–2 against the NFC overall.
Following the Steelers' loss to the Browns on Sunday, the outcome set up a winner-take-all matchup in the season finale to determine the AFC North champion.[29]
Week 18: Pittsburgh Steelers 26, Baltimore Ravens 24
Week 18: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers – Game summary
at Acrisure Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Date: January 4
- Game time: 8:20 p.m. EST
- Game weather: Cloudy, 25 °F (−4 °C)
- Game attendance: 65,400
- Referee: Shawn Smith
- TV announcers (NBC): Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth and Melissa Stark
- Recap, Game Book
| Game information
|
|
First quarter
Second quarter
- BAL – Tyler Loop 40-yard field goal, 13:33. Ravens 10–0. Drive: 6 plays, 23 yards, 3:09.
- PIT – Chris Boswell 57-yard field goal, 8:52. Ravens 10–3. Drive: 8 plays, 36 yards, 4:41.
Third quarter
- PIT – Connor Heyward 1-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 8:23. Tied 10–10. Drive: 12 plays, 67 yards, 6:37.
- PIT – Chris Boswell 25-yard field goal, 4:28. Steelers 13–10. Drive: 6 plays, 19 yards, 2:57.
Fourth quarter
- BAL – Zay Flowers 50-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 8:42. Ravens 17–13. Drive: 4 plays, 71 yards, 2:10.
- PIT – Kenneth Gainwell 2-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 3:49. Steelers 20–17. Drive: 8 plays, 60 yards, 4:53.
- BAL – Zay Flowers 64-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Tyler Loop kick), 2:20. Ravens 24–20. Drive: 3 plays, 73 yards, 1:29.
- PIT – Calvin Austin III 26-yard pass from Aaron Rodgers (kick failed), 0:55. Steelers 26–24. Drive: 6 plays, 65 yards, 1:25.
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Top passers
- BAL – Lamar Jackson – 11/18, 238 yards, 3 TD, INT
- PIT – Aaron Rodgers – 31/47, 294 yards, TD
Top rushers
Top receivers
- BAL – Zay Flowers – 4 receptions, 138 yards, 2 TD
- PIT – Kenneth Gainwell – 8 receptions, 64 yards
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Despite a late rally, Tyler Loop missed the game-winning field goal when time expired, which denied the Ravens a chance to win a third straight AFC North title. As a result, the Ravens were swept by the Steelers and eliminated from playoff contention while having their first losing season since 2021. Baltimore ended their season at 8–9 (3–3 against the AFC North) and 5–3 on the road. Two days after the loss, head coach John Harbaugh was fired.[30]
Standings
Division
Conference
Individual awards
Regular season
Notes
- ^ a b Denver finished ahead of New England based on common games (Denver 6–0 to New England 5–1 against: Cincinnati, Las Vegas, NY Giants, NY Jets and Tennessee).
- ^ a b Houston finished ahead of Buffalo based on head-to-head victory.
- ^ a b Indianapolis finished ahead of Baltimore based on conference record (Indianapolis 6–6 to Baltimore 5–7).
- ^ a b Cincinnati finished ahead of Kansas City based on conference record (Cincinnati 5–7 to Kansas City 3–9).
- ^ a b c Las Vegas finished ahead of NY Jets and Tennessee based on conference record (Las Vegas 3–9 to NY Jets 2–10 and Tennessee 2–10).
- ^ a b NY Jets finished ahead of Tennessee based on strength of victory (NY Jets .373 to Tennessee .275).
References
- ^ Zrebiec, Jeff (January 7, 2026). "Ravens fire head coach John Harbaugh after 18 seasons". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 7, 2026.
- ^ Walker, Childs (May 14, 2025). "The sublime rise and dramatic fall of Justin Tucker". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved May 18, 2025.
- ^ "Ravens release kicker Justin Tucker after 13 seasons as NFL investigates allegations of improper conduct". NFL.com. May 5, 2025. Retrieved May 5, 2025.
- ^ "2025 NFL Attendance Data". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved March 6, 2026.
- ^ a b c "Ravens, Cowboys, Dolphins each get 4 compensatory draft picks". ESPN.com. Associated Press. March 11, 2025. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ^ Brown, Clifton (October 29, 2024). "Ravens to Trade for Panthers Wide Receiver Diontae Johnson". BaltimoreRavens.com. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
- ^ Mink, Ryan (May 4, 2025). "Ravens Sign 17 Undrafted Rookie Free Agents". Baltimore Ravens. Retrieved August 14, 2025.
- ^ Mink, Ryan (February 21, 2025). "Ravens Announce Coaching Additions And Updates". Baltimore Ravens. Retrieved August 14, 2025.
- ^ Alfano, Jon (January 29, 2025). "Ravens Part Ways With Longtime Assistant". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved January 30, 2025.
- ^ Mink, Ryan. "Ravens Trade Odafe Oweh to Los Angeles Chargers". baltimoreravens.com. Ravens. Retrieved October 7, 2025.
- ^ Mink, Ryan. "Ravens Trade Jaire Alexander to Eagles". baltimoreravens.com. Ravens. Retrieved November 2, 2025.
- ^ Robertson, Justin. "Ravens Trade for Outside Linebacker Dre'Mont Jones". baltimoreravens.com. Ravens. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
- ^ "Wild NFL Week 1 stats: Bills snap this 717-game losing streak by NFL teams with shocking win over Ravens". CBSSports.com. September 8, 2025. Retrieved September 8, 2025.
- ^ "Ravens dismantle Joe Flacco, Browns in 41-17 bounce-back win". The Baltimore Sun. Alden Global Capital. September 14, 2025. Retrieved October 15, 2025.
- ^ a b "Stroud throws for 4 touchdowns as the Texans blow out the battered Ravens 44-10". ESPN. Associated Press. October 5, 2025. Archived from the original on October 7, 2025. Retrieved October 7, 2025.
- ^ Young, Blair (October 6, 2025). "Houston Texans dominate injury-depleted Ravens in 44-10 blowout". WBALTV. Archived from the original on October 8, 2025. Retrieved October 8, 2025.
- ^ "Lamar Jackson torches Miami with 4 TD passes in return from injury and Ravens rout Dolphins 28-6". ESPN. Associated Press. October 31, 2025. Archived from the original on November 4, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
- ^ Knox, Geoffrey A (November 10, 2025). "Lamar Jackson eclipses another milestone, 100 starts for his Ravens career". Ravens Wire. USA Today. Archived from the original on November 11, 2025. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
- ^ "Ravens win 3rd straight game, get 3 takeaways to take down gaffe-prone Vikings 27-19". ESPN. Associated Press. November 9, 2025. Archived from the original on November 11, 2025. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
- ^ "Baltimore Ravens vs. Minnesota Vikings". The Football Database.
- ^ Reedy, Joe (November 16, 2025). "Browns QB Shedeur Sanders has a rough NFL debut after relieving the injured Dillon Gabriel". Associated Press. Archived from the original on November 19, 2025. Retrieved November 19, 2025.
- ^ Brown, Clifton (November 17, 2025). "Mark Andrews Keeps Coming Like a Force of Nature". Baltimore Ravens. Archived from the original on November 19, 2025. Retrieved November 19, 2025.
- ^ "Week 12: New York Jets at Baltimore Ravens | Baltimore Ravens – baltimoreravens.com". www.baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved February 2, 2026.
- ^ Young, Blair (November 28, 2025). "Turnovers cost Ravens as Burrow and Bengals end winning streak, 32-14". WBAL. Retrieved December 4, 2025.
- ^ Baca, Michael (December 7, 2025). "League says Ravens TE Isaiah Likely lost control of ball before third step on overturned TD". NFL. Archived from the original on December 14, 2025. Retrieved December 14, 2025.
- ^ "Ravens guard Ben Cleveland suspended 3 games for violating NFL's Substances Abuse Policy". Fox 45. December 8, 2025.
- ^ Zrebiec, Jeff (December 15, 2025). "In dominating Bengals, Ravens sent a clear message that they're not done just yet". The Athletic. The New York Times Company. Retrieved December 17, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Gordon, Grant (December 21, 2025). "Ravens QB Lamar Jackson exits loss to Patriots after suffering back injury". NFL.com. Retrieved December 24, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Wacker, Brian (December 28, 2025). "Ravens to play Steelers for AFC North title on 'Sunday Night Football'". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved December 31, 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ "John Harbaugh out as Ravens coach". Fox 45. January 6, 2026.
- ^ "FedEx Air & Ground Awards". NFL.com. The National Football League. Retrieved September 15, 2025.
- ^ "FedEx Air & Ground Players of the Week". NFL.com. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
- ^ Alper, Josh. "Roquan Smith named the AFC defensive player of the week". nbcsports.com. NBC Sports. Retrieved November 13, 2025.
- ^ "Rookies of the Month". profootballref.com. Pro Football Reference. Retrieved October 30, 2025.
- ^ Gordon, Grant. "Ravens QB Lamar Jackson, Bears TE Colston Loveland highlight Players of the Week". NFL.com. the National Football League. Retrieved November 5, 2025.
- ^ Gordon, Grant. "Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence, Falcons TE Kyle Pitts highlight Players of the Week". NFL.com. the National Football League. Retrieved December 17, 2025.
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| League championships (2) | |
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