As Bill Belichick and Pete Carroll leave their longtime posts, John Harbaugh is the second-longest tenured NFL coach with his current team. And atop the AFC with a path to another Super Bowl, he's shown at 61 he can change with the times.
This is not to revel in people losing their jobs. But any one of these Black Monday casualties might have been saved had their organizations tried to take a big swing for Jackson.
Columnist Gregg Doyel recently pointed out how Maryland fans chant “air ball!” as a sign of their boorishness. That might seem like a dusty take, but let’s face it: We all have something that makes us want to yell, “Get off my lawn!”
Against San Francisco and Miami, who boast some of the most feared weapons in the NFL, the Ravens have come out on top with unheralded playmakers and blue-collar grinders.
Former Ravens seventh-round pick Zach Sieler has been featured on HBO's “Hard Knocks” for his impressive underdog story, and a few Baltimore vets are cheering him on.
The smoke-and-mirrors act of this year’s Ravens defense has been led by coordinator Mike Macdonald. Can Baltimore hold onto him as the NFL head coaching carousel starts spinning?
The MVP debate between the Ravens and 49ers quarterbacks has many quaint facets, but Jackson's ability to be an offense unto himself should give him a leg up.
The real negotiations are just warming up. The critical piece John Angelos has fought for — the right to develop adjacent public lots and potentially mint money — will play out over the next four years.
Lamar Jackson's physical, escape-artist style makes a fan base frayed by injury concerns nervous, but letting him do it his way is the only path to the transcendent play that could lead Baltimore to the Super Bowl.
The Baltimore Ravens will get started next year on spending hundreds of millions of state funds on renovations to M&T Bank Stadium. The Orioles remain years away.
The NBA wants to make the IST a big thing for political and existential reasons. That shouldn’t take away from creating a new tournament worth winning and celebrating.
Orioles fans were titillated by the report that billionaire David Rubenstein is "in talks" to acquire the team — a surprising sentiment coming off a 101-win season. How did we get here?