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2024 Baltimore Ravens season

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2024 Baltimore Ravens season
OwnerSteve Bisciotti
General managerEric DeCosta
Head coachJohn Harbaugh
Home fieldM&T Bank Stadium
Results
Record7–4
Division place2nd AFC North
Uniform

The 2024 season is the Baltimore Ravens' 29th season in the National Football League (NFL) and their 17th under head coach John Harbaugh. They failed to improve on their 2023 record of 13–4, but they're still looking to match that record and defend their AFC North title.

The Ravens publicly announced that they would honor the 2024 season to the recently deceased Jacoby Jones, former wide receiver, and Joe D'Alessandris, former offensive line coach.[1][2]

The Ravens started 0–2 for the first time since 2015, but won five straight to get back over .500. With Lamar Jackson's 5 touchdown performance in the Ravens 5th win, the Ravens became the first team in NFL history with players winning Offensive Player of the Week over four consecutive weeks. Derrick Henry, weeks 4 and 6, Lamar Jackson, weeks 5 and 7.[3]

Offseason

[edit]

Free agents

[edit]
Position Player Tag 2024 team Date signed Contract
WR Nelson Agholor UFA Baltimore Ravens February 18, 2024 1 year, $3.75 million
WR Odell Beckham Jr. UFA Miami Dolphins May 3, 2024 1 year, $8.25 million
OLB Jadeveon Clowney UFA Carolina Panthers March 27, 2024 2 year, $20 million
RB Dalvin Cook UFA Dallas Cowboys August 28, 2024 1 year, $383,400
CB Ronald Darby UFA Jacksonville Jaguars March 13, 2024 2 year, $10 million
RB J. K. Dobbins UFA Los Angeles Chargers April 18, 2024 1 year, $1.6 million
WR Devin Duvernay UFA Jacksonville Jaguars March 13, 2024 2 year, $8.5 million
RB Gus Edwards UFA Los Angeles Chargers March 13, 2024 2 years, $6.5 million
LB Malik Harrison UFA Baltimore Ravens March 13, 2024 1 year, $2.74 million
QB Tyler Huntley UFA Cleveland Browns March 17, 2024 1 year, $1.29 million
QB Josh Johnson UFA Baltimore Ravens March 14, 2024 1 year, $1.38 million
DE Justin Madubuike UFA Baltimore Ravens March 5, 2024 4 years, $98 million
CB Arthur Maulet UFA Baltimore Ravens March 19, 2024 2 years, $4 million
C Sam Mustipher UFA Denver Broncos April 4, 2024 1 year, $1.13 million
LS Tyler Ott UFA Washington Commanders March 13, 2024 3 years, $4.39 million
LB Del'Shawn Phillips UFA Houston Texans March 13, 2024 1 year, $2.6 million
ILB Patrick Queen UFA Pittsburgh Steelers March 13, 2024 3 years, $41 million
OG John Simpson UFA New York Jets March 13, 2024 2 years, $18 million
S Geno Stone UFA Cincinnati Bengals March 13, 2024 2 years, $15 million
DE Brent Urban UFA Baltimore Ravens March 13. 2024 1 year, $1.37 million
OLB Kyle Van Noy UFA Baltimore Ravens April 4, 2024 2 years, $9 million
S Ar'Darius Washington RFA Baltimore Ravens March 13, 2024 1 year, $1.05 million
CB Daryl Worley UFA Baltimore Ravens July 23, 2024 1 year, 1.21 million
CB Rock Ya-Sin UFA San Francisco 49ers April 11, 2024 1 year, $1.29 million
OG Kevin Zeitler UFA Detroit Lions March 18, 2024 1 year, $6 million

Signings

[edit]
Position Player Previous team Date signed Contract
RB Derrick Henry[4] Tennessee Titans March 13, 2024 2 year, $16 million
ILB Chris Board New England Patriots March 19, 2024 1 year, $1.29 million
OT Josh Jones Houston Texans March 21, 2024 1 year, $1.79 million
CB Ka'dar Hollman Houston Texans March 22, 2024 1 year, $1.06 million
WR Deonte Harty Buffalo Bills April 10, 2024 1 year, $1.29 million
FS Eddie Jackson Chicago Bears July 19, 2024 1 year, 1.5 million
WR Anthony Miller Kansas City Chiefs August 11, 2024 1 year, 1.13 million

Players lost

[edit]
Position Player Reason 2024 team Date
OLB Tyus Bowser Released Seattle Seahawks March 13, 2024
OT Morgan Moses Traded New York Jets March 13, 2024

Draft

[edit]
2024 Baltimore Ravens draft
Round Selection Player Position College Notes
1 30 Nate Wiggins CB Clemson
2 62 Roger Rosengarten OT Washington
3 93 Adisa Isaac OLB Penn State
4 113 Devontez Walker WR North Carolina from NY Jets[A]
130 T. J. Tampa CB Iowa State
134 Traded to the NY Jets[A]
5 165 Rasheen Ali RB Marshall
6 206 Traded to the Cleveland Browns[B]
218 Devin Leary QB Kentucky from NY Jets[A]
7 228 Nick Samac C Michigan State from NY Jets[C]
250 Sanoussi Kane S Purdue

Draft trades

  1. ^ a b c Baltimore traded OT Morgan Moses and a 2024 fourth-round selection (134th overall) to the New York Jets for a 2024 fourth-round selection (112th overall) and a 2024 sixth-round selection (218th overall).[5]
  2. ^ Baltimore traded a 2024 sixth-round selection to the Cleveland Browns for a 2023 seventh-round selection.[6]
  3. ^ Baltimore traded safety Chuck Clark to the New York Jets in exchange for a seventh-round selection.[7]
2024 Baltimore Ravens undrafted free agents
Name Position College Ref.
Jelani Baker WR Limestone [8][9][10][11]
Beau Brade S Maryland
Jack Browning P San Diego State
Corey Bullock G Maryland
Tre'Darious Colbert DT Maryland
Chris Collier RB Lock Haven
Bump Cooper Jr. CB Oregon State
Darrian Dalcourt G Alabama
Joe Evans OLB Iowa
Ja'Mion Franklin DT Duke
DeAngelo Hardy WR North Central
Qadir Ismail WR Samford
Deion Jennings LB Rutgers
Emory Jones QB Cincinnati
Julian Pearl OT Illinois
Randen Plattner LS Kansas State
C.J. Ravenell DE Missouri Western
Yvandy Rigby LB Temple
Mike Rigerman TE Findlay
Tayvion Robinson WR Kentucky
Riley Sharp TE Oregon State
Darrell Simpson OT Tulsa
Jordan Toles S Morgan State
Dayton Wade WR Ole Miss
Tramel Walthour DE Georgia
Isaiah Washington WR Rutgers
Key
Made roster
Made practice squad
Did not make roster

Staff

[edit]

Coaching changes

[edit]
2023 Baltimore Ravens Staff Changes
Coach Position Reason left Replacement
Joe Hortiz[12] Director of player personnel Accepted job with Los Angeles Chargers N/A
Mike Macdonald[13] Defensive coordinator Accepted job with Seattle Seahawks Zach Orr[14]
Dennard Wilson[15] Defensive backs coach Accepted job with Tennessee Titans Doug Mallory[16]
Zach Orr[14] Inside linebackers coach Promoted to defensive coordinator Mark DeLeone[16]
Anthony Weaver[17] Defensive line coach Accepted job with Miami Dolphins Dennis Johnson[16]
Mike Devlin[18] Assistant offensive line coach Accepted job with Los Angeles Chargers Travelle Wharton[16]
Keith Williams[19] Assistant wide receivers coach Accepted job with New Orleans Saints N/A
David Blackburn[20] Director of college scouting Accepted job with Washington Commanders Andrew Raphael
Joe D'Alessandris[21] Offensive line coach Died George Warhop
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
  • Consultant – Pat Moriarty
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
  • Offensive coordinator – Todd Monken
  • Quarterbacks – Tee Martin
  • Director of football strategy/assistant quarterbacks – Daniel Stern
  • Running backs – Willie Taggart
  • Wide receivers – Greg Lewis
  • Tight ends – George Godsey
  • Offensive line – George Warhop
  • Assistant offensive line – Travelle Wharton
  • Run game coordinator – Travis Switzer
  • Offensive assistant – Danny Breyer
  • Offensive quality control – Adam Schrack
  • Offensive football analyst – Prentice Gill
 
Defensive coaches
  • Defensive coordinator – Zachary Orr
  • Senior advisor – Dean Pees
  • Defensive line – Dennis Johnson
  • Assistant defensive line/outside linebackers – Matt Robinson
  • Inside linebackers – Mark DeLeone
  • Secondary – Doug Mallory
  • Pass rush coach – Chuck Smith
  • Assistant to the head coach/defensive assistant – Megan Rosburg
  • Defensive quality control – Brendan Clark
  • Defensive football analyst – Noah Riley
Special teams coaches
Strength and conditioning
  • Director of high performance – Sam Rosengarten
  • Strength and conditioning coordinator – Scott Elliott
  • Assistant strength and conditioning – Kaelyn Buskey
  • Strength and conditioning intern – Kevin Hartman
  • Strength and conditioning – Ron Shrift
  • Strength and conditioning – Anthony Watson

Coaching staff
Front office
More NFL staffs

Current roster

[edit]
Quarterbacks (QB)

Running backs (RB)

Wide receivers (WR)

Tight ends (TE)

Offensive linemen (OL)

Defensive linemen (DL)

Linebackers (LB)

Defensive backs (DB)

Special teams

Practice squad

Reserve


As of November 21, 2024. Rookies in italics.

53 active, 7 reserve, 16 practice squad (+2 exempt)

Trades

[edit]
2024 Baltimore Ravens trades
Team Received Compensation Date
Carolina Panthers WR Diontae Johnson
2025 NFL draft 6th round selection
2025 NFL draft 5th round selection[A] October 29[22]
Los Angeles Rams CB Tre'Davious White
2027 NFL draft 7th round selection
2026 NFL draft 7th round selection November 5[23]

Preseason

[edit]
Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Recap
1 August 9 Philadelphia Eagles L 13–16 0–1 M&T Bank Stadium Recap
2 August 17 Atlanta Falcons W 13–12 1–1 M&T Bank Stadium Recap
3 August 24 at Green Bay Packers L 7–30 1–2 Lambeau Field Recap

Regular season

[edit]

Schedule

[edit]
Week Date Time (ET) Opponent Result Record Venue TV Recap
1 September 5 8:40 p.m.[B] at Kansas City Chiefs L 20–27 0–1 Arrowhead Stadium NBC Recap
2 September 15 1:00 p.m. Las Vegas Raiders L 23–26 0–2 M&T Bank Stadium CBS Recap
3 September 22 4:25 p.m. at Dallas Cowboys W 28–25 1–2 AT&T Stadium Fox Recap
4 September 29 8:20 p.m. Buffalo Bills W 35–10 2–2 M&T Bank Stadium NBC Recap
5 October 6 1:00 p.m. at Cincinnati Bengals W 41–38 (OT) 3–2 Paycor Stadium CBS Recap
6 October 13 1:00 p.m. Washington Commanders W 30–23 4–2 M&T Bank Stadium CBS Recap
7 October 21 8:15 p.m. at Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 41–31 5–2 Raymond James Stadium ESPN/ABC Recap
8 October 27 1:00 p.m. at Cleveland Browns L 24–29 5–3 Huntington Bank Field CBS Recap
9 November 3 1:00 p.m. Denver Broncos W 41–10 6–3 M&T Bank Stadium CBS Recap
10 November 7 8:15 p.m. Cincinnati Bengals W 35–34 7–3 M&T Bank Stadium Prime Video Recap
11 November 17 1:00 p.m. at Pittsburgh Steelers L 16–18 7–4 Acrisure Stadium CBS Recap
12 November 25 8:15 p.m. at Los Angeles Chargers SoFi Stadium ESPN/ABC
13 December 1 4:25 p.m. Philadelphia Eagles M&T Bank Stadium CBS
14 Bye
15 December 15 1:00 p.m. at New York Giants MetLife Stadium CBS
16 December 21 4:30 p.m. Pittsburgh Steelers M&T Bank Stadium Fox
17 December 25 4:30 p.m. at Houston Texans NRG Stadium Netflix
18 January 4/5 TBD Cleveland Browns M&T Bank Stadium TBD

Notes

  • Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
  • The network and time for Week 15 is subject to change as a result of flexible scheduling.
  • The date, time and network for Week 18 will be finalized at the end of Week 17.

Game summaries

[edit]

Week 1: Kansas City Chiefs 27, Baltimore Ravens 20

[edit]

NFL Kickoff Game

Week 1: Baltimore Ravens at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Ravens 7 3 01020
Chiefs 7 6 7727

at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri

Game information

Following several mistakes in the 2nd quarter, including a fumble, turnover on downs, a missed field goal, as well as multiple illegal formation penalties, the Ravens fell behind 13–10 to the Chiefs at halftime.[25] After getting the ball down 27–20, Lamar Jackson and the Ravens marched to the Chiefs 10-yard line, but on the final play of the game, while initially ruled a touchdown, a replay revealed Isaiah Likely's toe was out of bounds, thus giving the Chiefs the victory.[26]

With the loss, the Ravens began the season 0–1.

Week 2: Las Vegas Raiders 26, Baltimore Ravens 23

[edit]
Week 2: Las Vegas Raiders at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Raiders 0 6 71326
Ravens 3 6 7723

at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland

Game information

The Ravens blew two 10-point leads and were upset by the Raiders 26–23. It was the second consecutive season that the Ravens were upset by Gardner Minshew-led teams and dropped their record to 0–2 for the first time since 2015.

Week 3: Baltimore Ravens 28, Dallas Cowboys 25

[edit]
Week 3: Baltimore Ravens at Dallas Cowboys – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Ravens 14 7 7028
Cowboys 3 3 01925

at AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas

Game information

The Ravens raced out to a 28–6 3rd quarter lead behind two rushing touchdowns by Derrick Henry, a rushing touchdown by Lamar Jackson, and a receiving touchdown by Rashod Bateman. After a missed field goal by Justin Tucker in the fourth quarter, the Cowboys scored 19 unanswered points to close the gap to 28–25, but the Ravens were able to run out the final 2:53 to preserve their first victory of the season.

Week 4: Baltimore Ravens 35, Buffalo Bills 10

[edit]
Week 4: Buffalo Bills at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bills 3 0 7010
Ravens 7 14 7735

at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland

  • Date: September 29
  • Game time: 8:20 p.m. EDT
  • Game weather: Cloudy, 68 °F (20 °C)
  • Game attendance: 70,636
  • Referee: Alan Eck
  • TV announcers (NBC): Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth and Melissa Stark
  • Recap, Game Book
Game information

Derrick Henry had an 87-yard touchdown run on the Ravens’ first offensive play en route to a 35–10 rout of the previously 3–0 Buffalo Bills. Henry finished with 199 rushing yards and the aforementioned touchdown while also having 3 receptions for 10 yards and a touchdown. His performance won him the AFC Offensive Player of the Week award. With the win, the Ravens got back to .500 at 2–2.

Week 5: Baltimore Ravens 41, Cincinnati Bengals 38

[edit]
Week 5: Baltimore Ravens at Cincinnati Bengals – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34OTTotal
Ravens 7 7 717341
Bengals 0 17 714038

at Paycor Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio

Game information

In a shootout overtime thriller, the Ravens overcame three 2nd half 10-point deficits to outlast the Bengals 41–38. Lamar Jackson accounted for 403 yards and four passing touchdowns and was named AFC offensive player of the week for his performance. Justin Tucker tied the game at 38-all with less than two minutes left with a 56-yard field goal after Marlon Humphrey intercepted Joe Burrow on the previous drive. The Bengals had a chance to win in overtime after a fumble by Jackson, but Evan McPherson missed a 53-yard field goal. Derrick Henry, who had 92 yards rushing and a touchdown in the game, then had a 51-yard rush to the Bengals 6-yard line and Tucker kicked a 24-yard field goal to win the game for the Ravens. The victory improved the Ravens record to 3–2.

Week 6: Baltimore Ravens 30, Washington Commanders 23

[edit]
Week 6: Washington Commanders at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Commanders 3 7 31023
Ravens 3 14 10330

at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland

Game information

In an unexpected marquee game of the week, Lamar Jackson outdueled Jayden Daniels with the help of Derrick Henry, who was named the AFC Offensive Player of the Week, as the Ravens defeated the Commanders 30–23 to improve to 4–2. Jackson and Henry accounted for 495 total yards and three touchdowns as the Ravens scored on five consecutive drives (3 TDs and 2 FGs) before running out the final 2:48 to end the game. Zay Flowers also had career day with 9 receptions for 132 yards in just the first half (he was not targeted in the 2nd half). With this win over the Commanders, the Ravens set an NFL record as the first team to post six straight games with at least 150 yards and one touchdown through the air and one on the ground.[27] The win also moved Lamar Jackson to 22-1 vs NFC teams, a mark that stands as the best by a quarterback versus an opposing conference in NFL history.[28]

Week 7: Baltimore Ravens 41, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 31

[edit]
Week 7: Baltimore Ravens at Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Ravens 0 17 17741
Buccaneers 10 0 02131

at Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Florida

Game information

Buccaneers QB Baker Mayfield looked sharp and the Ravens defense seemed to have no answer as the Bucs dominated the 1st quarter taking the early 10–0 lead. However, the next two quarters belonged to the Ravens as they scored 34 unanswered points with Ravens QB Lamar Jackson, who was named the AFC Offensive Player of the Week, tossing four touchdowns and the Ravens defense stiffened with two interceptions by CB Marlon Humphrey, although Humphrey was forced out of the game with a knee injury on his second interception.[29] Jackson added another touchdown pass in the 4th quarter to Derrick Henry, who also rushed for 169 yards in the game, to open up a 41–18 lead with 6:32 remaining. The Bucs tried to make a furious rally in garbage time, but the deficit was too much to overcome as the Ravens won 41–31. With the win, the Ravens improved to 5–2.

Week 8: Cleveland Browns 29, Baltimore Ravens 24

[edit]
Week 8: Baltimore Ravens at Cleveland Browns – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Ravens 0 10 7724
Browns 3 3 14929

at Huntington Bank Field, Cleveland, Ohio

Game information

This loss snapped the Ravens five-game winning streak, dropping their record to 5–3.

Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 41, Denver Broncos 10

[edit]
Week 9: Denver Broncos at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Broncos 0 10 0010
Ravens 7 17 14341

at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland

  • Date: November 3
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: Clear, 57 °F (14 °C)
  • Game attendance: 71,051
  • Referee: Adrian Hill
  • TV announcers (CBS): Jim Nantz, Tony Romo and Tracy Wolfson
  • Recap, Game Book
Game information

QB Lamar Jackson recorded his 4th career perfect-passer rating, tying him for the most all time, in a 41–10 blowout against the number 3 defense in the league. With the win, the Ravens improved to 6–3.

Week 10: Baltimore Ravens 35, Cincinnati Bengals 34

[edit]
Week 10: Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bengals 7 7 71334
Ravens 0 7 72135

at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland

Game information

The Ravens swept the Bengals for the second year in a row with a 35–34 win. With the win, the Ravens improved to 7–3. QB Lamar Jackson had the best fourth quarter performance of his career, throwing for 197 yards, three touchdowns, and a perfect passer rating in the final quarter as he rallied the Ravens from a 14-point deficit. He also became the only player in NFL history with five touchdown passes and no interceptions in the fourth quarter against an opponent in a single season. [30]

Week 11: Pittsburgh Steelers 18, Baltimore Ravens 16

[edit]
Week 11: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Ravens 0 7 3616
Steelers 3 6 6318

at Acrisure Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Game information

The Ravens lost their fourth consecutive game against the Steelers, dropping their record to 7–4 and giving the Steelers control of the AFC North.

Week 12: at Los Angeles Chargers

[edit]
Week 12: Baltimore Ravens at Los Angeles Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Ravens 0 0 000
Chargers 0 0 000

at SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, California

  • Date: November 25
  • Game time: 8:15 p.m. EST/5:15 p.m. PST
  • Game weather: TBD (fixed roof)
  • Referee: Carl Cheffers
  • TV announcers (ESPN/ABC/ESPN+): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and Lisa Salters
  • Preview

League rankings

[edit]

As of Week 11:

Category Total yards Yards per game NFL rank
(out of 32)
Passing offense 2,781 252.8 2nd
Rushing offense 1,950 177.3 1st
Total offense 4,731 440.1 1st
Passing defense 3,130 284.5 32nd
Rushing defense 852 77.5 2nd
Total defense 3,982 362.0 29th

Source: ProFootballReference.com[31]

Standings

[edit]

Division

[edit]
AFC North
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Pittsburgh Steelers 8 3 0 .727 1–1 5–2 252 186 L1
Baltimore Ravens 7 4 0 .636 2–2 4–4 334 271 L1
Cincinnati Bengals 4 7 0 .364 1–2 2–5 297 296 L2
Cleveland Browns 3 8 0 .273 2–1 3–3 186 267 W1

Conference

[edit]
Seed Team Division W L T PCT DIV CONF SOS SOV STK
Division leaders
1 Kansas City Chiefs West 9 1 0 .900 3–0 5–1 .509 .474 L1
2 Buffalo Bills East 9 2 0 .818 3–0 7–2 .470 .430 W6
3 Pittsburgh Steelers North 8 3 0 .727 1–1 5–2 .436 .471 L1
4 Houston Texans South 7 4 0 .636 3–0 5–1 .500 .413 W1
Wild cards
5 Los Angeles Chargers West 7 3 0 .700 2–1 5–2 .448 .324 W4
6 Baltimore Ravens North 7 4 0 .636 2–2 4–4 .504 .493 L1
7 Denver Broncos West 6 5 0 .545 1–2 2–4 .509 .349 W1
In the hunt
8 Indianapolis Colts South 5 6 0 .455 1–3 4–4 .526 .404 W1
9 Miami Dolphins East 4 6 0 .400 1–2 3–4 .457 .286 W2
10 Cincinnati Bengals North 4 7 0 .364 1–2 2–5 .504 .244 L2
11[a] Cleveland Browns North 3 8 0 .273 2–1 3–3 .466 .515 W1
12[a][b] New York Jets East 3 8 0 .273 1–2 3–5 .530 .375 L2
13[b] New England Patriots East 3 8 0 .273 1–2 2–5 .383 .344 L1
14[c] Tennessee Titans South 2 8 0 .200 0–1 2–4 .567 .333 L2
15[c] Las Vegas Raiders West 2 8 0 .200 0–3 2–6 .533 .455 L6
16 Jacksonville Jaguars South 2 9 0 .182 1–1 2–4 .583 .364 L4
Tiebreakers[d]
  1. ^ a b Cleveland wins tie break over NY Jets based on conference record. Division tie break was initially used to eliminate New England (see below).
  2. ^ a b NY Jets wins tie break over New England based on common record.
  3. ^ a b Tennessee wins tie break over Las Vegas based on conference record.
  4. ^ When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest ranked remaining team from each division.

Individual awards

[edit]

Regular season

[edit]
Recipient Award(s)
Derrick Henry Week 4: AFC Offensive Player of the Week[32]
Week 4: FedEx Ground Player of the Week[33]
Week 6: AFC Offensive Player of the Week[34]
Week 10: NFLPA Community MVP[35]
Lamar Jackson Week 5: AFC Offensive Player of the Week[36]
Week 7: AFC Offensive Player of the Week[37]
Week 10: AFC Offensive Player of the Week[38]
October: AFC Offensive Player of the Month[39]
Kyle Van Noy September: AFC Defensive Player of the Month[40]
Nate Wiggins Week 5: NFLPA Community MVP[41]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ If Johnson leaves Baltimore in the offseason, the Ravens will receive a compensatory pick.
  2. ^ a b The game was initially scheduled for 8:20 pm but got delayed due to lightning.[24]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Sidney, Matt (September 3, 2024). "Ravens to wear new helmet decal honoring Jacoby Jones and Joe D'Alessandris". Ebony Bird. Retrieved September 4, 2024.
  2. ^ Alfano, Jon (August 27, 2024). "Ravens Dedicate Season to Jacoby Jones, Joe D'Alessandris". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved September 4, 2024.
  3. ^ Brown, Clifton. "Lamar Jackson Makes History Winning Weekly Award". baltimoreravens.com. the Baltimore Ravens. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
  4. ^ Mink, Ryan (March 12, 2024). "Ravens Land Derrick Henry". Baltimore Ravens. Retrieved March 12, 2024.
  5. ^ Mink, Ryan. "Ravens Trade Morgan Moses to Jets". baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  6. ^ Brown, Clifton. "Ravens Trade Into Seventh Round to Select USC Guard Andrew Vorhees". baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved April 29, 2023.
  7. ^ Mink, Ryan. "Ravens Trade Chuck Clark to Jets". baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  8. ^ Brown, Clifton. "Ravens Announce 22-Member Undrafted Rookie Class". baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved May 3, 2024.
  9. ^ Mink, Ryan. "Ravens Sign Fifth QB Emory Jones, DE C.J. Ravenell". baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved May 7, 2024.
  10. ^ Ryan, Matt. "Ravens Sign WR Qadir Ismail, Son of Super Bowl XXXV Champion". baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved May 20, 2024.
  11. ^ Brown, Clifton. "Ravens Make Several Roster Moves". baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved August 12, 2024.
  12. ^ "Los Angeles Chargers Agree to Terms with Joe Hortiz as General Manager". chargers.com. January 30, 2024. Retrieved January 30, 2024.
  13. ^ "Mike Macdonald Leaves for Seahawks". baltimoreravens.com. January 31, 2024. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  14. ^ a b "Ravens Hire Zachary Orr as New Defensive Coordinator". baltimoreravens.com. February 1, 2024. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  15. ^ "Titans Hire Nick Holz as Offensive Coordinator, Dennard Wilson as Defensive Coordinator". TennesseeTitans.com. February 5, 2024. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  16. ^ a b c d "Ravens Announce Four Coaching Hires". baltimoreravens.com. February 26, 2024. Retrieved February 26, 2024.
  17. ^ "Dolphins Name Weaver Defensive Coordinator". miamidolphins.com. February 3, 2024. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
  18. ^ "Los Angeles Chargers Announce Coaching Staff Additions". chargers.com. February 14, 2024. Retrieved February 14, 2024.
  19. ^ "Keith Williams to Join Saints Coaching Staff". baltimoreravens.com. February 20, 2024. Retrieved February 20, 2024.
  20. ^ "David Blackburn Named Washington Commanders Director of Player Personnel". baltimoreravens.com. May 22, 2024. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
  21. ^ "Ravens offensive line coach Joe D'Alessandris dies at 70". nytimes.com. August 25, 2024. Retrieved August 25, 2024.
  22. ^ Patra, Kevin. "Panthers sending WR Diontae Johnson to Ravens in trade". NFL.com. NFL. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  23. ^ Hensley, Jamison. "Rams trading CB Tre'Davious White to Ravens, sources say". ESPN.com. ESPN. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
  24. ^ Ravens-Chiefs opener to NFL season delayed by 20 minutes after storm passes through Kansas City, AP News, September 5, 2024
  25. ^ The Ravens halftime verdict, New York Times, September 5, 2024
  26. ^ Chiefs vs. Ravens score, takeaways: Defending champs survive late rally by Lamar Jackson and Co., win opener, CBS Sports, September 6, 2024
  27. ^ Phoenix, Kyle. "Late for Work: Ravens Have the NFL's Most 'Dangerous' Offense". baltimoreravens.com. The Baltimore Ravens. Retrieved October 16, 2024.
  28. ^ Mink, Ryan. "Lamar Jackson Says the Game Is Slowing Down for Him". baltimoreravens.com. the Baltimore Ravens. Retrieved November 6, 2024.
  29. ^ Goodall, Fred (October 21, 2024). "Lamar Jackson throws for 281 yards, 5 TDs to lead streaking Ravens to 41-31 victory over Buccaneers". AP News. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
  30. ^ Hensley, Jamison. "Lamar Jackson rallies Ravens with career-best fourth quarter". espn.com. ESPN. Retrieved November 8, 2024.
  31. ^ "2024 NFL Standings & Team Stats". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved September 16, 2024.
  32. ^ Gordon, Grant. "Ravens RB Derrick Henry, Lions QB Jared Goff highlight Players of the Week". NFL.com. NFL. Retrieved October 7, 2024.
  33. ^ "FedEx Air & Ground Awards". NFL.com. The National Football League. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
  34. ^ Gordon, Grant. "Ravens RB Derrick Henry, Buccaneers RB Sean Tucker highlight Players of the Week". NFL.com. NFL. Retrieved October 16, 2024.
  35. ^ Mink, Ryan. "Baltimore's Derrick Henry Named Week 10 NFLPA Community MVP". nflpa.com. NFLPA. Retrieved November 8, 2024.
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