super bowl xlvii
- Brian Billick and Haloti Ngata are the 19th and 20th individuals honored as noteworthy contributors to the franchise.
- The Ravens have signed Pernell McPhee, 30, who was one of the top outside linebackers still available.
- The Ravens' 2019 schedule starts off relatively easy. Then it gets difficult, and fast.
- Ravens officials bid farewell Wednesday to longtime quarterback Joe Flacco and linebackers C.J. Mosley and Terrell Suggs.
- He said after the Ravens’ playoff loss to the Los Angeles Chargers that he “would love to be a Raven for life."
- Now that he's reportedly headed to the Denver Broncos in a trade, here's a look at Joe Flacco's five most memorable games as Ravens quarterback.
- The Ravens have reportedly agreed in principle to trade longtime starting quarterback Joe Flacco to the Denver Broncos, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
- The Ravens' odds to win the next Super Bowl are the 11th-best.
- Reed joined former teammates Jonathan Ogden and Ray Lewis as he breezed to election in the first year he was eligible.
- With Reed one day away from his likely election to the Hall of Fame, we’re bringing back this March 2013 blog post on “The most Ed Reed-est plays in Ed Reed history.”
- “This is not an individual award,” said Reed, who's set to be elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday afternoon.
- From quarterback Lamar Jackson to kicker Justin Tucker, here are the 10 most pivotal figures in the franchise as the Ravens look to 2019 and beyond.
- Under Harbaugh’s previous contract, he was set to become a highly coveted coaching free agent after the 2019 season.
- The Ravens signed John Harbaugh to a new a four-year contract Thursday, but I wonder if there is a buyout clause for one or two of the final years.
- Ravens coach John Harbaugh became the subject of possible trade speculation as his team made a playoff push before reportedly nearing a contract extension Saturday.
- The last time the Ravens made a statement about head coach John Harbaugh’s contract status was Dec. 21, the night before the team played the Los Angeles Chargers in California.
- Former Maryland coach Gary Williams indicated that there was nothing personal about Ray Lewis' preference in the Ravens wild card game.
- Backup quarterback and Super Bowl XLVII MVP Joe Flacco said his absence from the second half of Sunday’s 23-17 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers was part of the plan, but is not sure what the future holds for him.
- Joe Flacco likely will spend his final home game at M&T Bank Stadium on the sidelines, but no one should ever forget what he has done for the Ravens franchise.
- Harford County businesses prepare for Sunday, when the Baltimore Ravens play for the wild card berth in the 2019 NFL playoffs, starting a possible trek to the Super Bowl.
- Here’s the challenge for Baltimore media: Cover these sessions with Joel Fitzgerald with the same intensity and resources as you do the Ravens this week. Getting the right person in the job of police commissioner is more important than whether or not the Ravens beat the Chargers Sunday. Really.
- It is the unwritten rule that almost everyone seems to accept as fact: If John Harbaugh’s Ravens do not make the playoffs, he will be fired as head coach. That might be true, but with a caveat: If the Ravens get into the playoffs and lose ugly in the first round, Harbaugh could be fired, too.
- “Yeah, I saw it,” John Harbaugh said of a noncall on the final play of the game. “I think you guys should write what you see. You want us to get up here and criticize the officiating. You saw the officiating all day."
- Washington Redskins tackle Trent Williams practiced Monday and has been fully cleared after being taken to the hospital in an ambulance following the team’s game at Dallas on Thanksgiving Day.
- Cincinnati just became the first team in NFL history to allow more than 500 yards in three straight games.
- Joe Flacco appeared to injure his hip during the Ravens’ first drive in their 23-16 loss Sunday to the Pittsburgh Steelers,
- From the seat of the Cadillac DeVille convertible that he and Mayor Catherine Pugh rode in, Ray Lewis grinned wide and waved to passersby as Ravens fans chanted and marching bands played ahead.
- Reed is in his first year of eligibility along with tight end Tony Gonzalez, linebacker London Fletcher and cornerback Champ Bailey.
- When Lamar Jackson was taken No. 32 overall in the draft this year, Ozzie Newsome acknowledged they were “building for the future” with the Heisman Trophy winner. But, he added, “In order for us to win this year, we need Joe Flacco.”
- John Harbaugh is still the coach and Joe Flacco still the quarterback, but for the first time in their tenure, hints of sweeping change loom over one of the most stable franchises in the NFL.
- Despite his link to a certain Super Bowl-winning quarterback who plays for the Ravens, Tom Flacco is trying to win the starting quarterback job at Towson on his own merits.
- Ray Lewis said he felt like a little kid, engaging with past greats of the NFL the day before his induction to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He promised a lengthy, emotional speech on Saturday night.
- There was a power outage at Super Bowl XLVII, and not just when the Louisiana Superdome’s lights blacked out for 30 minutes shortly after halftime.
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- “Life now, I don’t think it’s about what I did,” Ray Lewis said recently. “I think it’s about where I’m going."
- Ray Lewis is entering the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2018. Could fellow former Raven and Miami Hurricane Ed Reed, with whom he shared an uncommon passion for studying the sport and excelling at it, follow him in 2019?
- Rookie fullback Christopher Ezeala was assigned to his favorite NFL team, the Ravens, after a tryout of European players.
- A look at each season Ray Lewis played for the Ravens and the five years since he retired, culminating in his selection to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
- It hasn't been that long since a championship parade was held in Baltimore, but it's been more than 25 years for D.C. Maryland teams and schools hit social media to congratulate the Caps on their first Stanley Cup.
- “I've thought about suicide. I've thought about ending it all,” said former Ravens running back Jamal Lewis, who last played in the NFL in 2009.
- Terrell Suggs spent nearly an hour Tuesday evening answering questions from fans, and he made it clear that he sees himself in Baltimore beyond the 2018 season.
- Former Ravens safety Matt Elam hasn't played in the NFL since 2016. He might get another chance.
- Exactly 10 years after drafting quarterback Joe Flacco, a decision that contributed to one of the best stretches in franchise history and the organization’s second Super Bowl championship, the Ravens hope they found his successor.
- The Indiana tight end is expected to be taken on the second day of the draft, capping a remarkable story of perseverance and brotherly love.
- On Twitter Friday, Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco announced that he and wife Dana had their fifth child last week.
- With Ravens decision makers reportedly being questioned under oath Thursday as part of Colin Kaepernick’s collusion grievance against the NFL and Robert Griffin III agreeing to a one-year deal Wednesday, it could mark the end of the team’s connection to the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback.
- Former Ravens tight end Dennis Pitta has sold his Baltimore County home after listing two months earlier.
- Former Ravens receiver Torrey Smith held his seventh annual charity game at Royal Farms Arena on Saturday and had a chance to reunite with some former Super Bowl-winning teammates there.
- Ozzie Newsome and the Ravens front office responded quickly to the Ryan Grant fallout, signing Michael Crabtree to a three-year deal Friday after the veteran receiver spent the day at the Under Armour Performance Center meeting with team officials.
- With Ryan Grant likely out of the picture, the Ravens have turned their attention to recently released Oakland Raiders wide receiver Michael Crabtree.