The Ravens were never going to let Zay Flowers drift toward uncertainty, and their decision to pick up his fifth-year option proves it. The price, about $27.3 million for 2027, is steep, but Baltimore was still right to make the move.
The Baltimore Ravens officially signed third-round WR Ja’Kobi Lane to a four-year rookie contract. The Ravens have nearly signed their entire 2026 draft class: Lane, 21, was three-year starter at USC and an Honorable Mention All-Big Ten as a junior.
The Ravens still have an eventful offseason ahead of them. Top stories heading into the month of May include Baltimore signing undrafted free agent quarterbacks
The Baltimore Ravens wasted little time getting to work on their top 2026 NFL Draft prospect, Penn State guard Olaivavega Ioane. The team announced the
Every NFL team tries to build a dynasty and win Super Bowls, but only a select few in NFL history have found such consistency. Over the next five years, these are the teams that have the best chance at ultimate success.
There’s logic behind why the Baltimore Ravens didn’t go for a center, and the front office has made its reasoning clear. Even so, that doesn’t address the area where Lamar Jackson could use more stability up front.
Offense is the name of the game in the modern NFL, and offensive play callers have never been more creative. Here's a look at the top NFL play-callers from 1-32 early in the 2022 season.
After waiting until the seventh round of the 2026 NFL Draft to select an interior defensive lineman with the second-to-last of their 11 picks, it felt like a forgone conclusion that the Baltimore Ravens would be turning to the veteran free agent market to address and further bolster the position properly.
Can Seattle keep it going? Will there be any further separation in the middle of the pack? And will things get even worse for struggling traditional powers like Green Bay? Let’s get to the games.
Baltimore can explain why it skipped center, and the explanation is reasonable. The problem is that reasonableness does not change the part of the offensive line where Lamar Jackson most needs clean operation.
The Baltimore Ravens must have felt incomplete on the defensive front following the 2026 NFL Draft. The Ravens finished the 2025 season with the ninth-best PFF grade in run defense, the fifth-best in tackling, but the third-worst pass-rushing grade across the NFL.
The Ravens have lost a slew of players to John Harbaugh already. It’s been one of the national storylines to this NFL offseason, frankly, and not just a local one.
With Tyler Linderbaum joining the Las Vegas Raiders in free agency, the Baltimore Ravens are in need of a center. However, they weren’t able to land one in the 2026 NFL Draft.
The early-round picks get most of the headlines, but the later rounds are where championships are often built. These 25 late-round picks from the 2026 draft have a chance to make impacts as rookies and beyond.
New Baltimore Ravens head coach Jesse Minter is going to have a lot of pieces to work with in the 2026 NFL season. On Thursday, the Ravens added another key piece, with veteran defensive end and six-time Pro Bowler Calais Campbell signing a one-year deal with Baltimore.
Six-time NFL Pro Bowler Calais Campbell is returning to the Baltimore Ravens on a one-year deal, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported on Thursday. Campbell played with the franchise from 2020-22, one of the stops in his storied NFL career.
When a team doubles down on a position group in fairly rapid succession, and it does it a few times in one draft and not at the positions you most expected, it warrants further examination.
Diego Pavia and Lamar Jackson will be teammates on the Baltimore Ravens, at least for a period of time. That might prove awkward for Pavia in light of some of the things he has said in the past.
The Ravens entered the 2026 NFL Draft with a big need at center after losing Tyler Linderbaum to the Ravens. They exited the draft without snaring a clear
The Baltimore Ravens got a lot better in several key areas of the roster during the 2026 NFL Draft after making 11 picks over the course of the annual three-day event this past weekend.
I’m not going to get in a lather about the Ravens owner taking ownership of their final pick in the fifth round. In the grand scheme of things that give me considerable pause about this front office – as presently constructed - coming close to winning a Super Bowl, it’s incredibly low down the list.
The dust has settled around the NFL after a hectic weekend of drafting and rookie free agent signings, and a big roster shakeup is due for all 32 teams.
We need to begin this exercise by establishing something first. When a team with more glaring immediate roster needs than it’s had in years, is loaded with 11 picks, and it’s a stretch to get to three names in this category, that’s odd.
It took 22 years. Ravens majority owner Steve Biscotti selected his first rookie in an NFL Draft this past weekend. Biscotti once said in a 2006 Ravens media guide that he "wasn't much of a high school athlete", but played many sports growing up as a kid.
Ex-UConn quarterback Joe Fagnano signed a three-year contract with the Baltimore Ravens as an undrafted free agent. UConn confirmed his signing on Tuesday.
Quarterback Diego Pavia is set to attend Baltimore Ravens minicamp this weekend after becoming the first Heisman finalist to go undrafted since former Northern Illinois Huskies QB Jordan Lynch in 2014.
Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti did more for his team’s draft prep than prepare his checkbook. Ravens GM Eric DeCosta revealed on Sunday that Bisciotti was in charge of making one of the team’s selections in the 2026 NFL draft.