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- The Ravens have lost at least one prime-time home game.
- No doubt, there are a lot of people in the NFL offices and at ESPN who are wondering what the schedule makers were thinking when they decided to put the Ravens and Cleveland Browns together on Monday Night Football in late November.
- Wide receiver Chris Matthews, who caught his first ever touchdown in the Super Bowl last year, wants to work his way off the Ravens practice squad quickly.
- Barring a dramatic turnaround in Baltimore and total collapses elsewhere, the Ravens aren't likely to be a serious player in the AFC postseason picture over the final six weeks of this season. That might knock them out of two primetime games at M&T Bank Stadium.
- The Ravens started a week of heavy roster maneuvering by adding wide receiver Chuck Jacobs to active roster and waiving Joe Morgan.
- The NFL says the Ravens should have won Sunday's game, but that just makes the loss even more galling since there is no room for corrective action
- Before Ravens' fans ultimately decided to blame the officials, they had focused their frustration on Elvis Dumervil, but that was misguided.
- Star-less defense continues to work wonders for Towson football
- Of the Ravens' eight remaining opponents, only one has a winning record and five of those eight games are at M&T Bank Stadium, where the Ravens were once nearly unbeatable.
- The Pentagon and National Guard paid professional sports teams to publicly honor soldiers at sporting events, according to a Senate oversight report released Wednesday that labeled the practice "inappropriate and frivolous."
- There's seemingly no surefire recipe for success in building an NFL secondary, but one thing could become abundantly clear when the Ravens face the Arizona Cardinals. The Cardinals have found a formula that works for them, while the Ravens haven't.
- On the evening of Feb. 3, 2013, the Ravens and San Francisco 49ers met to decide NFL supremacy. On Sunday afternoon, the two teams play again, hoping to stave off 2015 irrelevance. Staying on the NFL mountaintop has proven difficult for both organizations since Super Bowl XLVII. Retirements, free-agent departures and injuries have whittled away talented and deep rosters. There have been off-field issues and on-field deficiencies. After engaging in a classic shootout on the sports' biggest stage,
- New Ravens cornerback Shareece Wright grew up playing with Jimmy Smith in high school, and joined the Ravens on his recommendation.
- Tucker has missed just once, from 50 yards against the Cincinnati Bengals, in 11 attempts this year.
- Ravens coach John Harbaugh said Wednesday that some NFL rules are too complex.
- The Ravens' 0-3 start has put the blame game in full effect, with fingers pointing in a variety of directions.
- New England Patriots president Jonathan Kraft sounds like a man who is enjoying the Ravens' winless start.
- A look at the offense, defense, special teams and intangibles ahead of the Ravens' game in Oakland against the Raiders.
- Ravens special teams coordinator Jerry Rosburg confirmed on Thursday that Steve Smith Sr. will remain the Ravens' primary punt returner, maintaining that the wide receiver is the team's best option in that role.
- As he's been throughout the preseason, defensive tackle Carl Davis was the standout of the Ravens' rookie class in Week One against the Denver Broncos.
- With one week in the books, we¿re going to lean on reputation a bit and not go crazy dropping teams a dozen spots in the Week 2 edition of the Sports Blitz power rankings.
- Cornerback Jimmy Smith's presence gives this year's team a leg up on the team that limped through the postseason last season with a porous pass defense after it lost Smith during what seemed like a surefire Pro Bowl season.
- The Ravens and Broncos remember their 2013 season-opening matchup, but they dismissed its significance as the Ravens prepare to open another season of lofty expectations in the Mile-High City against the Broncos.
- The 20th regular season in Ravens history will be challenging in more ways than one.
- 2015 season predictions for the Baltimore Ravens from ESPN, Grantland, Sports Illustrated, and more.
- The Ravens are Sports Illustrated's pick to win Super Bowl 50.
- "We feel like at this time, Kirk Cousins gives us the best chance to win," coach Jay Gruden said.
- Rookie Darren Waller is the kind of big wide receiver the Baltimore Ravens have long lusted after. Can he develop into a force in the NFL?
- Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco said he's paying attention to the other quarterback contracts being passed out around the NFL.
- In celebration of their 20th season in Baltimore, the Ravens will celebrate the careers of one player in each of their 10 home dates in 2015.
- For all the angst about Matt Schaub's play in training camp, he wouldn't be in Baltimore Sun reporter Jeff Zrebiec's top five of players/issues to be concerned about if he was a Ravens official.
- Ravens officials have denied on several occasions that they tipped the Indianapolis Colts off about issues that they had with the air pressure of game balls during their AFC divisional playoff matchup with the New England Patriots, but documents released Tuesday suggest otherwise.
- Walker officially passed his physical Saturday, clearing him to participate in training camp after the Ravens' rookie class reported Wednesday.
- There seems to be a consensus among football pundits leaguewide: The Ravens, who annually lose veteran talent and replace it with young and unproven players, will again enter the season as one of the better teams in the AFC, and in good position to make the playoffs for the seventh time in head coach John Harbaugh's eight seasons.
- Tickets for the Ravens home games at M&T Bank Stadium will go on sale Tuesday at 10 a.m., the team announced Monday.
- The Ravens have a tough schedule. So does everybody else in their division.
- Distraught after breaking his leg during a May rookie minicamp, Ravens undrafted cornerback Julian Wilson was fearing the worst while being carted off the practice field.
- The Ravens were 10-6 last season and were just seconds away from the AFC title game, but there are plenty of areas where they can get better.
- The path to the NFL is never easy, but it was especially difficult for Douglas McNeil III (New Town). After attending four different colleges and playing in the Arena Football League, McNeil played on the Seattle Seahawks' practice squad before signing a reserve-futures deal with the team this winter. Now, he is ready to help out the community in which he grew up. McNeil is holding his IDream Youth Football Camp on Saturday at New Town High School from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.
- Chris Hasbrouck resigned as St. Mary's coach to accept the position of head varsity boys coach, wellness instructor and student adviser at Episcopal High in Bellaire, Texas.
- Since being cut after last season and later re-signed to a two-year, $4.65 million contract, Canty doesn't envision his status being any different this year.
- Gino Gradkowski went from the Ravens' starting center to an afterthought. Now, he's in line to start for the Denver Broncos and make his regular-season debut against his old team.
- Clemson is expected to interview Maryland coach John Szefc for its vacant baseball coaching job, a report says.
- The Ravens' road preseason game against the Philadelphia Eagles is gaining extra attention.
- Under new offensive coordinator Marc Trestman, Forsett could emerge as even more of a pass-catching threat out of the backfield.
- When the Ravens drafted Texas Southern cornerback Tray Walker in the fourth round, they understood that he was in demand in the middle rounds.
- The Ravens have placed rookie cornerback Julian Wilson on injured reserve.
- The Ravens have waived/injured cornerback Julian Wilson.