nfl draft
- Humphrey could develop into shut down cornerback
- Mike Preston writes that he has no problem with Joe Flacco not sending the Welcome Wagon to No. 1 pick Lamar Jackson, his eventual replacement with the Ravens.
- If you’re a Ravens fan looking for an NFC team to adopt, look no further than the Panthers.
- Lamar Jackson was hard to miss.
- Just one team in the AFC North — the Pittsburgh Steelers — made the NFL playoffs last season. Did the Ravens, Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland Browns do enough in the 2018 draft to reach the playoffs this season?
- Team-by-team selections in the 2018 NFL draft that ended Saturday.
- Quarterback Joe Flacco easily could have been listed under both winners and losers from the 2018 NFL draft.
- The Ravens made a bold move to set up their future when they drafted quarterback Lamar Jackson, and general manager Ozzie Newsome used a series of trades to improve the team's depth at key positions.
- Mike Preston gives Ozzie Newsome and the Ravens a solid grade for his farewell draft. See what they earned for the 2018 NFL draft.
- The Ravens have already made three picks on Day 3 of the NFL draft. Here are the picks they have left.
- Will players with local ties hear their names called on Day 3 of the NFL draft Saturday?
- While the Ravens were trading down and trading down, their AFC North opponents, the Browns, Bengals and Steelers, actually made some picks Friday. Here's how they did.
- Here's what you need to know about Ravens second-day draft picks Orlando Brown Jr. and Mark Andrews, both from Oklahoma.
- Former Good Counsel standout Dorian O'Daniel earned second-team All-Atlantic Coast Conference honors last season.
- The Ravens had two picks in the third round Friday on Day 2 of the NFL draft. See how our experts think they did.
- "You're always going to have people that like you and you're always going to have people that don't like you,” Ravens No. 1 pick Hayden Hurst said.
- Looking at what the Ravens did on Day 1 of the draft and what they could do on Day 2.
- After moving back from No. 16 in the NFL draft to No. 22, then dropping three more places to No. 25, the Ravens made a pick. Then they moved back into the first round and made the 32nd overall selection.
- When the Ravens traded back into the first round to pick Lamar Jackson on Thursday night, they not only acquired a quarterback of the future, they authored the ultimate tribute to Ozzie Newsome's draft skills.
- The Cleveland Browns had the first and fourth picks in the first round, while the Bengals and Steelers drafted much later. How did each team do on Day 1?
- Ozzie Newsome's final draft as general manager lands the Ravens tight end Hayden Hurst and quarterback Lamar Jackson in the first round. “It was masterful the way it came down in the draft room tonight,” Newsome said. “It was unbelievable.”
- Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson is already making things interesting.
- Maryland wide receiver DJ Moore was picked No. 24 overall by the Carolina Panthers, becoming the first Terp to be drafted in the opening round since wideout Darrius Heyward-Bey in 2009.
- South Carolina tight end Hayden Hurst, the Ravens' first first-round pick of the night, can work seam routes and has the speed to make catches downfield.
- In his final draft before he steps aside after the 2018 season, Ravens general manager Ozzie Newsome solidified the team at the position he once excelled at.
- Ten years after they made two trades within the first round before selecting quarterback Joe Flacco 18th overall in 2008, the Ravens reached a deal with the Buffalo Bills to move back in the first round.
- With every team on the clock and waiting for the first round of the NFL draft, we have 16 final thoughts as the Baltimore Ravens wait to pick at No. 16.
- Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Lamar Jackson of Louisville would certainly excite the fan base.
- The Ravens and the rest of the NFL are on the clock with the first round of the draft beginning Thursday night around 8. Here's who our reporters and editors see the Ravens taking at No. 16 in the first round.
- Here’s what you need to know about the three-day NFL draft and how involved the Ravens might be.
- The draft is considered weak in terms of high-end talent at wide receiver, tight end and tackle. Those just happen to be the Ravens' three biggest needs.
- Former players from each team will help make selections in rounds 2 and 3 of the NFL draft Friday.
- There is some uncertainty with who the Ravens will pick at No. 16. Here are five potential candidates.
- Ozzie Newsome could be setting the Ravens up this week for success as he prepares to step away from day-to-day operations of the Ravens.
- At No. 16 overall, “I don’t really feel like they’re in a very sweet spot,” former NFL lineman and current analyst Ross Tucker said.
- The Buccaneers are having a parrot deliver their selections Saturday. The Ravens went with two Baltimore institutions.
- The Ravens have been mum about their draft plans. We'll start to get some answers Thursday.
- Maryland wide receiver DJ Moore went from having no scholarship offers from FBS schools as a high school junior to being the Big Ten's leading wide receiver as a college junior last season.
- Through Wednesday, the day before the start of the three-day NFL draft, The Baltimore Sun will break down what the Ravens have at each position, the chance that they will add to it and what prospects could possibly be targeted with those picks. Today we’ll look at defensive linemen.
- Turner wasn't recruited out of Glen Burnie High, but he made sure that he got on the radar of top college programs.
- Through April 25, the day before the start of the three-day NFL draft, The Baltimore Sun will break down what the Ravens have at each position, the chance that they will add to it and what prospects could possibly be targeted with those picks. Today we’ll look at offensive linemen.
- Through April 25, the day before the start of the three-day NFL draft, The Baltimore Sun will break down what the Ravens have at each position, the chance that they will add to it and what prospects could possibly be targeted with those picks. Today we’ll look at running backs.
- Until April 25, the day before the start of the three-day NFL draft, The Baltimore Sun will break down what the Ravens have at each position, the chance that they will add to it and what prospects could possibly be targeted with those picks. Today we’ll look at quarterbacks.
- With Joe Flacco going into what could be his last season as the Ravens' franchise quarterback, the team might use a high draft pick on the sport's most important position for the first time in a decade.
- With the Ravens selecting at No. 16 in the first round and having a critical need at wide receiver, former NFL players on the league's website debated the issue of who is the best available wide receiver in the draft. The answers were fairly predictable.
- “Ozzie's just one of the greats,” Billick said of the Ravens' longtime general manager.
- The Ravens will have plenty of directions they can go with the 16th overall pick.
- The Ravens will have eight total picks in the NFL draft from April 26-28.
- It would be surprising if the Ravens are in the first-round quarterback market, but they should have a chance to take a shot at finding Joe Flacco's successor in the middle-to-later rounds.
- Relocated for a week to Indianapolis for the NFL scouting combine, Harbaugh begins analyzing draft prospects.