[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BlogPosting","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2019-baltimore-ravens-season-wikipedia\/#BlogPosting","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2019-baltimore-ravens-season-wikipedia\/","headline":"2019 Baltimore Ravens season – Wikipedia","name":"2019 Baltimore Ravens season – Wikipedia","description":"before-content-x4 24th season in franchise history after-content-x4 The 2019 Baltimore Ravens season was the franchise’s 24th in the National Football","datePublished":"2015-06-06","dateModified":"2015-06-06","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":100,"height":100},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2019-baltimore-ravens-season-wikipedia\/","wordCount":25795,"articleBody":" (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});before-content-x424th season in franchise history (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4The 2019 Baltimore Ravens season was the franchise’s 24th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 12th under head coach John Harbaugh. This was the team’s first season under general manager Eric DeCosta following the retirement of Ozzie Newsome.This season also marked the first year in which Terrell Suggs and Joe Flacco were not on the Ravens roster since 2002 and 2007, respectively, as Suggs left to join the Arizona Cardinals (later released and signed by the eventual Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs) and Flacco was traded to the Denver Broncos.[1]The Ravens started the season as the only NFL team with three former Heisman Trophy winners on their roster: Lamar Jackson, Mark Ingram II, and Robert Griffin III.[2]The Ravens were also the only NFL team to score at least 20 points in each of their games during the season.[3] and the only team to score on more than half of their drives.[4] By Week 13, the Ravens improved to 10\u20132 for the first time in franchise history and extended their winning streak to eight games, also a franchise (regular season) record. After a win against the Buffalo Bills, the Ravens won their ninth consecutive game and improved on their 10\u20136 record from 2018.[5] That win also clinched a second straight playoff berth for the team.[6] Quarterback Lamar Jackson became only the second quarterback in NFL history to run for over 1,000 yards, and the following week, he broke Michael Vick’s all-time single season quarterback rushing record during the game against the New York Jets. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4By Week 15, the Ravens had scored more points (430) in a single season than any other team in franchise history.[7] In Week 15, they clinched their second straight AFC North title with a 42\u201321 victory over the Jets.On December 17, the NFL announced the rosters of the 2020 Pro Bowl which included 12 Ravens, the most of any team in 2019.[8] On January 15, 2020, Orlando Brown Jr. was added to the Pro Bowl roster, which tied the 2007 Dallas Cowboys for the NFL record for most Pro Bowlers in a single season at 13. With a Week 16 win over the Cleveland Browns, the Ravens clinched the AFC #1 seed, gaining home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs, and broke 500 total points, both for the first time in franchise history.[9] The 28\u201310 Week 17 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers gave the Ravens their best record in franchise history, surpassing 2006. The Ravens finished the regular season with 3,296 rushing yards, the most by any team in NFL history during a season.[10] The Ravens became the first team in NFL history to average at least 200 passing yards and 200 rushing yards per game in the same season.[11] The Ravens outscored their opponents by 249 points, the highest point differential in the NFL in 2019.[12][13] On January 3, 2020, the Associated Press released its picks for the 2019 All-Pro Team.[14] QB Lamar Jackson, OT Ronnie Stanley, CB Marlon Humphrey, CB Marcus Peters, and K Justin Tucker were named to the first team and G Marshal Yanda was named to the second team. The five Ravens selected to the first team were the most of any NFL team.[15]In the playoffs, the Ravens were upset by the Tennessee Titans in the Divisional Round, 28\u201312.[16] Prior to their defeat, FiveThirtyEight had the Ravens as the favorite to win the Super Bowl since before Week 12.[17]Table of ContentsUndrafted free agents[edit]Final roster[edit]Preseason[edit]Schedule[edit]Regular season[edit]Schedule[edit]Game summaries[edit]Week 1: Baltimore Ravens 59, Miami Dolphins 10[edit]Week 2: Baltimore Ravens 23, Arizona Cardinals 17[edit]Week 3: Kansas City Chiefs 33, Baltimore Ravens 28[edit]Week 4: Cleveland Browns 40, Baltimore Ravens 25[edit]Week 5: Baltimore Ravens 26, Pittsburgh Steelers 23 (OT)[edit]Week 6: Baltimore Ravens 23, Cincinnati Bengals 17[edit]Week 7: Baltimore Ravens 30, Seattle Seahawks 16[edit]Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 37, New England Patriots 20[edit]Week 10: Baltimore Ravens 49, Cincinnati Bengals 13[edit]Week 11: Baltimore Ravens 41, Houston Texans 7[edit]Week 12: Baltimore Ravens 45, Los Angeles Rams 6[edit]Week 13: Baltimore Ravens 20, San Francisco 49ers 17[edit]Week 14: Baltimore Ravens 24, Buffalo Bills 17[edit]Week 15: Baltimore Ravens 42, New York Jets 21[edit]Week 16: Baltimore Ravens 31, Cleveland Browns 15[edit]Week 17: Baltimore Ravens 28, Pittsburgh Steelers 10[edit]Standings[edit]Division[edit]Conference[edit]Postseason[edit]Schedule[edit]Game summaries[edit]AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12[edit]League rankings[edit]Individual awards[edit]References[edit]External links[edit]Undrafted free agents[edit]Notes (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4The Ravens traded their second-round selection (No. 53 overall), along with their 2018 second- and fourth-round selections to the Philadelphia Eagles in exchange for the Eagles’ 2018 first- and fourth-round selections.The Ravens traded quarterback Joe Flacco to the Denver Broncos in exchange for the Broncos’ fourth-round selection (No. 113 overall).[18]The Ravens acquired an additional sixth-round selection in a trade that sent linebacker Kamalei Correa to the Tennessee Titans.The Ravens traded their seventh-round selection to the Jacksonville Jaguars in exchange for center Luke Bowanko.As the result of a negative differential of free agent signings and departures that the Ravens experienced during the 2018 free agency period, the team received one compensatory selection for the 2019 draft \u2014 a third-round selection (No. 102 overall) \u2013 to compensate for the loss of center Ryan Jensen.[19]The Ravens traded their first-round selection (No. 22 overall) to the Philadelphia Eagles in exchange for the Eagles’ 2019 first-, fourth-, and sixth-round selections [20]The Ravens traded their third rounder (No. 102) and their first two sixes (191, 193) to the Minnesota Vikings for their third rounder (No. 93)[21]Final roster[edit]Preseason[edit]Schedule[edit]NoteThe Ravens’ four preseason victories extended their preseason winning streak to 17 games.[22]Regular season[edit]Schedule[edit]The Ravens alternated home and away games every game of the season, becoming just the fourth team to do so since the NFL season expanded to 16 games in 1978.[23]Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.Game summaries[edit]Week 1: Baltimore Ravens 59, Miami Dolphins 10[edit]Game informationFirst quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 10:34. Ravens 7\u20130. Drive: 8 plays, 89 yards, 4:26.BAL \u2013 Marquise Brown 47-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 8:37. Ravens 14\u20130. Drive: 1 plays, 47 yards, 0:09.BAL \u2013 Marquise Brown 83-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 4:17. Ravens 21\u20130. Drive: 3 plays, 90 yards, 1:29.Second quarterBAL \u2013 Willie Snead IV 33-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 13:49. Ravens 28\u20130. Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards, 3:23.MIA \u2013 Jason Sanders 54-yard field goal, 10:38. Ravens 28\u20133. Drive: 6 plays, 39 yards, 3:11.BAL \u2013 Miles Boykin 5-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 6:50. Ravens 35\u20133. Drive: 3 plays, 10 yards, 1:34.BAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 2-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 1:42. Ravens 42\u20133. Drive: 7 plays, 79 yards, 2:37.MIA \u2013 Preston Williams 6-yard pass from Ryan Fitzpatrick (Jason Sanders kick), 0:13. Ravens 42\u201310. Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 1:29.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Patrick Ricard 1-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 7:54. Ravens 49\u201310. Drive: 9 plays, 71 yards, 5:08.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 34-yard field goal, 0:22. Ravens 52\u201310. Drive: 9 plays, 68 yards, 5:25.Fourth quarterTop passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 17\/20, 324 yards, 5 TDMIA \u2013 Ryan Fitzpatrick \u2013 14\/29, 185 yards, TD, INTTop rushersBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II \u2013 14 rushes, 107 yards, 2 TDMIA \u2013 Kenyan Drake \u2013 4 rushes, 12 yardsTop receiversBAL \u2013 Marquise Brown \u2013 4 receptions, 147 yards, 2 TDMIA \u2013 DeVante Parker \u2013 3 receptions, 75 yardsThe Ravens scored a franchise-high 42 points in the first half and Lamar Jackson threw five touchdown passes with no interceptions and became the youngest quarterback to achieve a perfect passer rating.[24] All three of the Ravens’ Heisman Trophy winners (Jackson, Mark Ingram II and Robert Griffin III) were involved in scoring plays.The Dolphins gave up 49 yards on the first play from scrimmage and a total of 643 yards in the game, the most yards any Dolphins team has surrendered in a single game in franchise history. The 59 points were also the most surrendered by any Dolphins team in a regular season game.[25]Week 2: Baltimore Ravens 23, Arizona Cardinals 17[edit]Game informationFirst quarterSecond quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 33-yard field goal, 14:07. Ravens 10\u20133. Drive: 9 plays, 60 yards, 3:11.ARI \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 22-yard field goal, 8:31. Ravens 10\u20136. Drive: 13 plays, 83 yards, 5:36.BAL \u2013 Hayden Hurst 1-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 3:49. Ravens 17\u20136. Drive: 9 plays, 85 yards, 4:42Third quarterARI \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 21-yard field goal, 9:00. Ravens 17\u20139. Drive: 9 plays, 81 yards, 3:48.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 28-yard field goal, 14:56. Ravens 20\u20139. Drive: 16 plays, 70 yards, 9:04.ARI \u2013 David Johnson 1-yard run (Kyler Murray\u2013Keesean Johnson pass), 12:52. Ravens 20\u201317. Drive: 4 plays, 79 yards, 2:04.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 51-yard field goal, 8:56 Ravens 23\u201317. Drive: 9 plays, 42 yards, 3:56.Top passersARI \u2013 Kyler Murray \u2013 25\/40, 349 yardsBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 24\/37, 272 yards, 2 TDTop rushersARI \u2013 David Johnson \u2013 7 rushes, 14 yards, TDBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 16 rushes, 120 yardsTop receiversARI \u2013 Christian Kirk \u2013 6 receptions, 114 yardsBAL \u2013 Mark Andrews \u2013 8 receptions, 112 yards, TDLamar Jackson threw two touchdown passes, bringing him to seven through two games, setting a new franchise record for the most touchdown passes in the team’s first two games of a season.[26] Jackson also ran for a game high of 120 yards.[27] Former Ravens’ sack leader Terrell Suggs did not register a single sack against his former team.The Cardinals were able to drive the ball within the Ravens’ 5-yard line in each of the first three quarters, but the Ravens defense held them to a field goal each time.[28]Week 3: Kansas City Chiefs 33, Baltimore Ravens 28[edit]Game informationFirst quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 2-yard run (run failed), 4:24. Ravens 6\u20130. Drive: 14 plays, 84 yards, 6:30.Second quarterKC \u2013 LeSean McCoy 1-yard run (Harrison Butker kick), 14:18. Chiefs 7\u20136. Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 5:06.KC \u2013 Demarcus Robinson 18-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 7:52. Chiefs 14\u20136. Drive: 5 plays, 47 yards, 2:43.KC \u2013 Mecole Hardman 83-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (kick failed, wide left), 3:00. Chiefs 20\u20136. Drive: 3 plays, 96 yards, 1:27.KC \u2013 Harrison Butker 42-yard field goal, 0:05. Chiefs 23\u20136. Drive: 9 plays, 59 yards, 1:13.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 19-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 10:35. Chiefs 23\u201313. Drive: 9 plays, 75 yards, 4:25.KC \u2013 LeSean McCoy 14-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 2:07. Chiefs 30\u201313. Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards, 4:14.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 1-yard run (pass failed), 12:22. Chiefs 30\u201319. Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 4:45.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 39-yard field goal, 6:39. Chiefs 30\u201322. Drive: 10 plays, 59 yards, 4:01.KC \u2013 Harrison Butker 36-yard field goal, 4:36. Chiefs 33\u201322. Drive: 8 plays, 57 yards, 2:03.BAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson 9-yard run (pass failed), 2:01. Chiefs 33\u201328. Drive: 9 plays, 70 yards, 2:35.Top passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 22\/43, 267 yardsKC \u2013 Patrick Mahomes \u2013 27\/37, 374 yards, 3 TDTop rushersBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II \u2013 16 rushes, 103 yards, 3 TDKC \u2013 Darrel Williams \u2013 9 rushes, 62 yardsTop receiversBAL \u2013 Nick Boyle \u2013 4 receptions, 58 yardsKC \u2013 Mecole Hardman \u2013 2 receptions, 97 yards, TDThe Ravens started the game strong with a 14-play, 84-yard touchdown drive that included a critical fourth down conversion. The Ravens attempt at a two-point conversion failed, so the Ravens led 6\u20130. The Chiefs responded on their next possession with an 11-play, 75-yard touchdown drive that was aided by a Pernell McPhee roughing the passer penalty. The Chiefs took the lead, 7\u20136. The Ravens offense sputtered as the Chiefs added two more touchdowns, the second of which included an 83-yard touchdown pass from Patrick Mahomes to Mecole Hardman. The Chiefs added a field goal and led 23\u20136 at the half.The Ravens started the second half strong with an eight-play, 75-yard touchdown drive with all 75 yards gained on the ground. But the Chiefs responded with another touchdown. The Ravens then mounted a 13 play touchdown drive but failed for the second time in the game on a two-point conversion attempt, cutting the Chiefs’ lead to 30\u201319. After the teams exchanged field goals, the Ravens scored on a nine-play, 70-yard drive that ended with a Lamar Jackson 9-yard touchdown run, but again, the two-point conversion failed and the Chiefs ran out the clock.[29]Week 4: Cleveland Browns 40, Baltimore Ravens 25[edit]Week Four: Cleveland Browns at Baltimore Ravens\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalBrowns73141640Ravens0731525at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MarylandGame informationFirst quarterSecond quarterBAL \u2013 Miles Boykin 9-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 1:55. Tied 7\u20137. Drive: 7 plays, 58 yards, 3:40.CLE \u2013 Austin Seibert 24-yard field goal, 0:08. Browns 10\u20137. Drive: 10 plays, 81 yards, 1:47.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 41-yard field goal, 11:15. Tied 10\u201310. Drive: 8 plays, 62 yards, 3:45.CLE \u2013 Nick Chubb 14-yard run (Austin Seibert kick), 9:41. Browns 17\u201310. Drive: 3 plays, 75 yards, 1:34.CLE \u2013 Nick Chubb 2-yard run (Austin Seibert kick), 0:53. Browns 24\u201310. Drive: 8 plays, 74 yards, 5:18.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Andrews 8-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Mark Ingram II run), 9:51. Browns 24\u201318. Drive: 14 plays, 75 yards, 6:02.CLE \u2013 Nick Chubb 88-yard run (pass failed), 9:35. Browns 30\u201318. Drive: 1 play, 83 yards, 0:16.CLE \u2013 Austin Seibert 43-yard field goal, 6:56. Browns 33\u201318. Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards, 1:19.CLE \u2013 Dontrell Hilliard 1-yard run (Austin Seibert kick), 2:14. Browns 40\u201318. Drive: 6 plays, 39 yards, 3:07.BAL \u2013 Willie Snead IV 50-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 0:30. Browns 40\u201325. Drive: 5 plays, 79 yards, 1:44.Top passersCLE \u2013 Baker Mayfield \u2013 20\/30, 342 yards, TD, INTBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 24\/34, 247 yards, 3 TD, 2 INTTop rushersCLE \u2013 Nick Chubb \u2013 20 rushes, 165 yards, 3 TDBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II \u2013 12 rushes, 71 yardsTop receiversCLE \u2013 Jarvis Landry \u2013 8 receptions, 167 yardsBAL \u2013 Willie Snead \u2013 2 receptions, 61 yards, TDThe Browns opened the scoring in the first quarter with a Baker Mayfield touchdown pass to Ricky Seals-Jones. However, the Ravens responded with a Lamar Jackson touchdown pass to Miles Boykin to tie the game at 7\u20137. An Austin Seibert field goal gave the Browns a 10\u20137 lead at halftime. In the second half, Nick Chubb had an 88-yard touchdown run to extend the Browns’ lead just two plays after the Ravens had cut the score to 24\u201318. A Dontrell Hilliard touchdown run extended the Browns’ lead to 40\u201318. The Ravens added a touchdown to make the final score 40\u201325.Week 5: Baltimore Ravens 26, Pittsburgh Steelers 23 (OT)[edit]Week Five: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234OTTotalRavens10706326Steelers7673023at Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaDate: October 6Game time: 1:00\u00a0p.m. EDTGame weather: Rain, 70\u00a0\u00b0F (21\u00a0\u00b0C)Game attendance: 64,037Referee: Walt AndersonTV announcers\u00a0(CBS): Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts, and Evan WashburnRecap, Game BookGame informationFirst quarterSecond quarterBAL \u2013 Marquise Brown 11-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 11:21. Ravens 17\u20137. Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 6:20.PIT \u2013 Chris Boswell 41-yard field goal, 4:39. Ravens 17\u201310. Drive: 4 plays, \u22127 yards, 2:03.PIT \u2013 Chris Boswell 29-yard field goal, 0:00. Ravens 17\u201313. Drive: 3 plays, 14 yards, 0:33.Third quarterPIT \u2013 James Conner 1-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 3:42. Steelers 20\u201317. Drive: 10 plays, 87 yards, 4:40.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 26-yard field goal, 11:39. Tied 20\u201320. Drive: 12 plays, 67 yards, 7:03.PIT \u2013 Chris Boswell 33-yard field goal, 2:37. Steelers 23\u201320. Drive: 6 plays, 30 yards, 3:28.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 48-yard field goal, 0:10. Tied 23\u201323. Drive: 9 plays, 45 yards, 2:27.OvertimeBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 46-yard field goal, 5:26. Ravens 26\u201323. Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards, 2:01.Top passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 19\/28, 161 yards, TD, 3 INTPIT \u2013 Mason Rudolph \u2013 13\/20, 131 yards, TDTop rushersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 14 rushes, 70 yardsPIT \u2013 James Conner \u2013 14 rushes, 55 yards, TDTop receiversBAL \u2013 Willie Snead IV \u2013 4 receptions, 51 yardsPIT \u2013 JuJu Smith-Schuster \u2013 7 receptions, 75 yards, TDThe Ravens’ 12 game winning streak started in Pittsburgh. They went up 3\u20130 with a Justin Tucker 27-yard field goal, then made it 10\u20130 after a 4-yard touchdown by Mark Ingram II. The Steelers pulled it back to 10\u20137 after Mason Rudolph found JuJu Smith-Schuster for a 35-yard touchdown pass. In the second quarter, the Ravens increased their lead as Marquise Brown caught an 11-yard pass from Lamar Jackson. A pair of Chris Boswell field goals from 41 and 29 yards made it 17\u201313 going into halftime. In the third quarter, Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph was knocked unconscious after being hit by Brandon Carr and Earl Thomas. With backup quarterback Devlin Hodges at the helm, the Steelers took the lead in the third quarter with a James Conner 1-yard touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Ravens tied it up at 20 apiece with a Tucker 26-yard field goal. The Steelers retook the lead on a 33-yard Boswell field goal. The Ravens forced overtime when Tucker hit a 48-yard field goal with 10 seconds left in regulation. In overtime, after a fumble by Smith-Schuster, Tucker kicked the game-winning 46-yard field goal.Week 6: Baltimore Ravens 23, Cincinnati Bengals 17[edit]Week Six: Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalBengals730717Ravens1433323at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MarylandGame informationFirst quarterCIN \u2013 Brandon Wilson 92-yard kickoff return (Randy Bullock kick), 14:48. Bengals 7\u20130. Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, 0:12.BAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson 21-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 11:28. Tied 7\u20137. Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 3:20.BAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 4:01. Ravens 14\u20137. Drive: 10 plays, 66 yards, 6:07.Second quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 40-yard field goal, 14:48. Ravens 17\u20137. Drive: 8 plays, 57 yards, 3:02.CIN \u2013 Randy Bullock 22-yard field goal, 0:36. Ravens 17\u201310. Drive: 7 plays, 35 yards, 0:49.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 49-yard field goal, 0:02. Ravens 20\u201310. Drive: 13 plays, 60 yards, 6:58.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 21-yard field goal, 3:46. Ravens 23\u201310. Drive: 18 plays, 83 yards, 9:46.CIN \u2013 Andy Dalton 2-yard run (Randy Bullock kick), 1:28. Ravens 23\u201317. Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 2:18.Top passersCIN \u2013 Andy Dalton \u2013 21\/39, 235 yards, INTBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 21\/33, 236 yardsTop rushersCIN \u2013 Alex Erickson \u2013 1 rush, 17 yardsBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 19 rushes, 152 yards, TDTop receiversThe Bengals scored first when Brandon Wilson returned a kickoff 92 yards for a touchdown. The Ravens however took the lead with a Lamar Jackson 21-yard touchdown to tie the game at 7\u20137 followed by Mark Ingram’s 1-yard touchdown run. In the second quarter, the Ravens made it 17\u20137 with a Justin Tucker 40-yard field goal. The Bengals followed with a Randy Bullock 22-yard field goal, to make it 17\u201310 at halftime. In the third quarter, the Ravens got a Tucker 49-yard field goal to make it 20\u201310, the quarter’s only score. In the fourth quarter Tucker kicked a 21-yard field goal, and the Bengals scored on an Andy Dalton 2-yard touchdown. The Bengals’ onside kick attempt failed, so the Ravens recovered the ball and ran out the clock. Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson became the first player in the Super Bowl era to throw for more than 200 yards and run for more than 150 yards in a regular season game.[30]Week 7: Baltimore Ravens 30, Seattle Seahawks 16[edit]Game informationFirst quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 25-yard field goal, 10:19. Ravens 3\u20130. Drive: 8 plays, 77 yards, 4:41.Second quarterSEA \u2013 Tyler Lockett 8-yard pass from Russell Wilson (Jason Myers kick), 14:46. Seahawks 7\u20133. Drive: 11 plays, 83 yards, 6:00.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 28-yard field goal, 11:06. Seahawks 7\u20136. Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 3:40.SEA \u2013 Jason Myers 34-yard field goal, 7:35. Seahawks 10\u20136. Drive: 9 plays, 59 yards, 3:31.BAL \u2013 Marcus Peters 67-yard interception return (Justin Tucker kick) 5:00. Ravens 13\u201310.SEA \u2013 Jason Myers 31-yard field goal, 0:02. Tied 13\u201313. Drive: 14 plays, 79 yards, 4:58.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson 8-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 1:20. Ravens 20\u201313. Drive: 11 plays, 57 yards, 5:26.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 22-yard field goal, 3:47. Ravens 23\u201313. Drive: 13 plays, 86 yards, 9:00.BAL \u2013 Marlon Humphrey 18-yard fumble return (Justin Tucker kick), 3:37. Ravens 30\u201313.SEA \u2013 Jason Myers 35-yard field goal, 1:49. Ravens 30\u201316. Drive: 9 plays, 63 yards, 1:48.Top passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 9\/20, 143 yardsSEA \u2013 Russell Wilson \u2013 20\/41, 241 yards, TD, INTTop rushersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 14 rushes, 116 yards, TDSEA \u2013 Chris Carson \u2013 21 rushes, 65 yardsTop receiversBAL \u2013 Miles Boykin \u2013 2 receptions, 55 yardsSEA \u2013 Tyler Lockett \u2013 5 receptions, 61 yards, TDFive days after becoming a Raven, Marcus Peters intercepted a pass from Russell Wilson and returned it for a 67-yard pick six. Peters’ interception was Wilson’s first of the season, and Wilson’s first interception in his last 207 pass attempts.[31] The interception gave the Ravens a 13\u201310 lead but the Seahawks tied the game 13\u201313 by the end of the first half. Late in the fourth quarter, with the Ravens nursing a 10-point lead, the Ravens defense scored its second touchdown of the game as Marlon Humphrey returned a Seahawks fumble for 18 yards and a touchdown and put the game on ice.Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 37, New England Patriots 20[edit]Week Nine: New England Patriots at Baltimore Ravens\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalPatriots0137020Ravens10771337at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MarylandGame informationFirst quarterBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson 3-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 8:13. Ravens 7\u20130. Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 6:40.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 39-yard field goal, 2:29. Ravens 10\u20130. Drive: 11 plays, 54 yards, 5:20.Second quarterBAL \u2013 Gus Edwards 12-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 14:06. Ravens 17\u20130. Drive: 3 plays, 77 yards, 1:35.NE \u2013 Mohamed Sanu 4-yard pass from Tom Brady (Nick Folk kick), 12:02. Ravens 17\u20137. Drive: 4 plays, 20 yards, 0:39.NE \u2013 Nick Folk 22-yard field goal, 3:41. Ravens 17\u201310. Drive: 6 plays, 15 yards, 2:48.NE \u2013 Nick Folk 19-yard field goal, 0:08. Ravens 17\u201313. Drive: 8 plays, 81 yards, 1:35.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Marlon Humphrey 70-yard fumble return (Justin Tucker kick), 12:21. Ravens 24\u201313.NE \u2013 James White 1-yard run (Nick Folk kick), 8:03. Ravens 24\u201320. Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 4:18.Fourth quarterTop passersNE \u2013 Tom Brady \u2013 30\/46, 285 yards, TD, INTBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 17\/23, 163 yards, TDTop rushersNE \u2013 James White \u2013 9 rushes, 38 yardsBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II \u2013 15 rushes, 115 yardsTop receiversThe Ravens hosted the unbeaten Patriots for the teams’ first meeting since 2016, handing New England its first loss since Week 15 of the previous season as Baltimore rushed for 210 yards.[32] On the game’s first drive, the Ravens converted twice on 3rd down. Seven of the Ravens plays in the first drive were runs by Lamar Jackson, Mark Ingram II, and Gus Edwards. On a crucial third down, the Patriots had held and the Ravens would have been forced to try a field goal but a neutral zone infraction by Shilque Calhoun gave the Ravens a first down which led to a 3-yard rushing touchdown by quarterback Lamar Jackson. On the Patriots’ first possession, Tom Brady threw three straight incomplete passes, which led to a punt. The next drive the Patriots held the Ravens to a field goal. The Patriots, however had to punt again after Brady was sacked by Patrick Onwuasor. With a 10\u20130 lead, the Ravens started the second quarter with another long drive, highlighted by a 53-yard run by Ingram and a 12-yard touchdown run by Gus Edwards. The Ravens then forced another Patriots three-and-out but Cyrus Jones muffed the punt and the Patriots got the ball back at the Baltimore 20-yard line, which led to a Brady to Mohamed Sanu touchdown. The Patriots added two field goals and ended the half trailing only by four, 17\u201313.On the Patriots’ first drive in the third quarter, the Ravens forced a Julian Edelman fumble which was returned 70 yards by Marlon Humphrey for a touchdown extending the Ravens lead to 24\u201313. The Patriots answered with a 4-yard rushing touchdown by James White. The Ravens then mounted an eight-minute, 14-play drive ending with a 5-yard pass to Nick Boyle to make the lead 30\u201320. In the fourth quarter, Earl Thomas intercepted a Brady pass and the Ravens mounted another 14 play drive ending with a Jackson 1-yard rushing touchdown, making the lead 37\u201320.Marlon Humphrey’s 70-yard fumble return was the longest fumble return in Ravens history.[33] Also, Nick Boyle’s touchdown was the first of his career.[34] This was also the Ravens’ first win over the Patriots since the 2012 AFC Championship game in Gillette Stadium. Lamar Jackson became the first second year or rookie quarterback to defeat the Patriots since 2013.Week 10: Baltimore Ravens 49, Cincinnati Bengals 13[edit]Week Ten: Baltimore Ravens at Cincinnati Bengals\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalRavens141421049Bengals0100313at Paul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati, OhioDate: November 10Game time: 1:00\u00a0p.m. ESTGame weather: Sunny, 56\u00a0\u00b0F (13\u00a0\u00b0C)Game attendance: 45,918Referee: Scott NovakTV announcers\u00a0(CBS): Kevin Harlan, Rich Gannon, and Jay FeelyRecap, Game BookGame informationFirst quarterSecond quarterCIN \u2013 Randy Bullock 42-yard field goal, 13:34. Ravens 14\u20133. Drive: 10 plays, 52 yards, 5:20.BAL \u2013 Mark Andrews 17-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 9:28. Ravens 21\u20133. Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 4:06.BAL \u2013 Marcus Peters 89-yard interception return (Justin Tucker kick), 3:42. Ravens 28\u20133.CIN \u2013 Tyler Eifert 6-yard pass from Ryan Finley (Randy Bullock kick), 0:26. Ravens 28\u201310. Drive: 10 plays, 70 yards, 3:16.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson 47-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 8:08. Ravens 35\u201310. Drive: 3 plays, 64 yards, 1:25.BAL \u2013 Marquise Brown 20-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 5:13. Ravens 42\u201310. Drive: 4 plays, 33 yards, 1:28.BAL \u2013 Tyus Bowser 33-yard fumble return (Justin Tucker kick), 2:14. Ravens 49\u201310.Fourth quarterCIN \u2013 Randy Bullock 39-yard field goal, 2:29. Ravens 49\u201313. Drive: 10 plays, 38 yards, 5:42.Top passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 15\/17, 223 yards, 3 TDCIN \u2013 Ryan Finley \u2013 16\/30, 167 yards, TD, INTTop rushersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 7 rushes, 65 yards, TDCIN \u2013 Joe Mixon \u2013 30 rushes, 114 yardsTop receiversBAL \u2013 Marquise Brown \u2013 4 receptions, 80 yards, TDCIN \u2013 Tyler Boyd \u2013 6 receptions, 62 yardsThe Ravens scored first when Lamar Jackson found Mark Andrews on a 2-yard touchdown pass. It was 14\u20130 after a Mark Ingram II 1-yard touchdown run. In the second quarter, the Bengals got a Randy Bullock 42-yard field goal; but the Ravens then pulled away as Jackson found Andrews again on a 17-yard touchdown pass to make it 21\u20133. Marcus Peters then returned an interception 89 yards for a touchdown to make it 28\u20133. The Bengals came within 18 points at halftime when Ryan Finley found Tyler Boyd on a 6-yard touchdown pass. The Ravens scored three more touchdowns to open the second half. First, Jackson ran for one from 47 yards out, then Jackson found Marquise Brown for a 20-yard touchdown pass, and then Tyus Bowser returned a fumble 33 yards for a touchdown.With the win, the Ravens won five consecutive regular season games for the first time since 2006 and also had a season sweep of the Bengals for the first time since 2011. Lamar Jackson finished with his second perfect passer rating on the season, making him the second player in NFL history to perform the feat.[35]Week 11: Baltimore Ravens 41, Houston Texans 7[edit]Week Eleven: Houston Texans at Baltimore Ravens\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalTexans00077Ravens014131441at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MarylandDate: November 17Game time: 1:00\u00a0p.m. ESTGame weather: Cloudy, 44\u00a0\u00b0F (7\u00a0\u00b0C)Game attendance: 70,731Referee: Alex KempTV announcers\u00a0(CBS): Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts, and Evan WashburnRecap, Game BookGame informationFirst quarterSecond quarterBAL \u2013 Seth Roberts 15-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 9:17. Ravens 7\u20130. Drive: 10 plays, 90 yards, 5:46.BAL \u2013 Mark Andrews 18-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 2:14. Ravens 14\u20130. Drive: 7 plays, 70 yards, 4:22.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 25-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 11:33. Ravens 21\u20130. Drive: 6 plays, 78 yards, 3:27.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 34-yard field goal, 6:52. Ravens 24\u20130. Drive: 6 plays, 52 yards, 2:49.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 46-yard field goal, 1:30. Ravens 27\u20130. Drive: 6 plays, 11 yards, 3:14.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 12-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 9:50. Ravens 34\u20130. Drive: 8 plays, 71 yards, 4:52.HOU \u2013 Carlos Hyde 41-yard run (Ka’imi Fairbairn kick), 7:10. Ravens 34\u20137. Drive: 5 plays, 77 yards, 2:40.BAL \u2013 Gus Edwards 63-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 4:01. Ravens 41\u20137. Drive: 5 plays, 87 yards, 3:09.Top passersHOU \u2013 Deshaun Watson \u2013 18\/29, 169 yards, INTBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 17\/24, 222 yards, 4 TDTop rushersHOU \u2013 Carlos Hyde \u2013 9 rushes, 65 yards, TDBAL \u2013 Gus Edwards \u2013 8 rushes, 112 yards, TDTop receiversHOU \u2013 DeAndre Hopkins \u2013 7 receptions, 80 yardsBAL \u2013 Mark Andrews \u2013 4 receptions, 75 yards, TDJackson threw four touchdowns in the game, becoming the first quarterback in Ravens franchise history to throw four or more touchdowns in a game multiple times during the regular season.[36] Jackson also rushed for 86 yards during the victory over the Texans making him the only quarterback in NFL history to rush for more than 60 yards in seven consecutive games.[37]Week 12: Baltimore Ravens 45, Los Angeles Rams 6[edit]Game informationFirst quarterBAL \u2013 Marquise Brown 6-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 7:47. Ravens 7\u20130. Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 5:48.BAL \u2013 Marquise Brown 18-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 1:31. Ravens 14\u20130. Drive: 7 plays, 61 yards, 3:49.Second quarterLAR \u2013 Greg Zuerlein 42-yard field goal, 9:45. Ravens 14\u20133. Drive: 15 plays, 61 yards, 6:46.BAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 4:42. Ravens 21\u20133. Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 5:03.LAR \u2013 Greg Zuerlin 46-yard field goal, 1:55. Ravens 21\u20136. Drive: 6 plays, 48 yards, 2:47.BAL \u2013 Willie Snead 7-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 0:12. Ravens 28\u20136. Drive: 7 plays, 61 yards, 3:49.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 7-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 9:46. Ravens 35\u20136. Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 5:14.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Willie Snead 7-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 14:43. Ravens 42\u20136. 17 plays, 78 yards, 9:04.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 34-yard field goal, 6:35. Ravens 45\u20136. Drive: 11 plays, 48 yards, 6:01.Top passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 15\/20, 169 yards, 5 TDLAR \u2013 Jared Goff \u2013 26\/37, 212 yards, 2 INTTop rushersBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II \u2013 15 rushes, 111 yards, TDLAR \u2013 Todd Gurley \u2013 6 rushes, 22 yardsTop receiversThe Ravens became the fourth team in the 21st century to score touchdowns on their first six drives in a game.[38] During the game, Lamar Jackson became the first player in NFL history to rush for at least 1,500 yards and pass for more than 3,000 yards in his first two seasons. Jackson’s five touchdown passes made him the NFL’s first player with that many touchdown passes in a Monday Night Football debut and the youngest player ever (22 years old) with multiple five touchdown passing games. The Ravens also won seven straight games for the first time since their 2000 Super Bowl-winning season.[39] Jackson was also named the AFC Player of the Month for the month of November.Week 13: Baltimore Ravens 20, San Francisco 49ers 17[edit]Week Thirteen: San Francisco 49ers at Baltimore Ravens\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234Total49ers773017Ravens7100320at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MarylandGame informationFirst quarterSecond quarterBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 11:58. Ravens 14\u20137. Drive: 13 plays, 84 yards, 7:15.SF \u2013 Raheem Mostert 40-yard run (Robbie Gould kick), 9:12. Tied 14\u201314. Drive: 5 plays, 75 yards, 2:46.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 30-yard field goal, 1:58. Ravens 17\u201314. Drive: 13 plays, 63 yards, 7:14.Third quarterSF \u2013 Robbie Gould 32-yard field goal, 3:37. Tied 17\u201317. Drive: 14 plays, 66 yards, 8:26.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 49-yard field goal, 0:00. Ravens 20\u201317. Drive: 12 plays, 34 yards, 6:25.Top passersSF \u2013 Jimmy Garoppolo \u2013 15\/21, 165 yards, TDBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 14\/23, 105 yards, TDTop rushersSF \u2013 Raheem Mostert \u2013 19 rushes, 146 yards, TDBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 16 rushes, 101 yards, TDTop receiversSF \u2013 Kendrick Bourne \u2013 3 receptions, 42 yardsBAL \u2013 Mark Andrews \u2013 3 receptions, 50 yards, TDThe 49ers opened the game with a touchdown on their first possession, which was the first time on the season that the Ravens had allowed an opponent a touchdown on the first drive.[41] On the following drive, 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo was sacked and lost a fumble. Two plays later, the Ravens scored on a 20-yard pass from Lamar Jackson to Mark Andrews. This was the 48th touchdown of the season and the most touchdowns by any Ravens team in franchise history.[42] After a 49ers punt, Jackson orchestrated a 13-play drive culminating with him running the ball in from the 1-yard line for a touchdown. The 49ers answered with a touchdown, but the Ravens countered with a field goal and the half ended with the Ravens up by three. In the opening drive of the second half, Jackson was stripped of the ball by 49ers safety Marcell Harris at the 49ers’ 20-yard line. The 49ers then completed a 14-play drive lasting almost eight-and-a-half minutes, but were forced to kick a field goal which tied the game at 17. Neither team could score in the fourth quarter until the 6:28 mark when the Ravens drove the ball down to the 49ers’ 31 where Justin Tucker kicked a 49-yard game-winning field goal as time expired. With the win, the Ravens improved to 10\u20132 for the first time in franchise history and extend their winning streak to 8 games, also a franchise record.[43] The Ravens were also the only AFC North team to defeat all four of their NFC West opponents in 2019.Week 14: Baltimore Ravens 24, Buffalo Bills 17[edit]Week Fourteen: Baltimore Ravens at Buffalo Bills\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalRavens377724Bills063817at New Era Field, Orchard Park, New YorkDate: December 8Game time: 1:00\u00a0p.m. ESTGame weather: Windy, 43\u00a0\u00b0F (6\u00a0\u00b0C)Game attendance: 69,134Referee: Shawn SmithTV announcers\u00a0(CBS): Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts, and Evan WashburnRecap, Game BookGame informationFirst quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 36-yard field goal, 4:56. Ravens 3\u20130. Drive: 8 plays, 27 yards, 4:20.Second quarterBAL \u2013 Nick Boyle 3-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 13:31. Ravens 10\u20130. Drive: 5 plays, 24 yards, 2:25.BUF \u2013 Stephen Hauschka 36-yard field goal, 8:20. Ravens 10\u20133. Drive: 11 plays, 55 yards, 5:11.BUF \u2013 Stephen Hauschka 47-yard field goal, 0:25. Ravens 10\u20136. Drive: 7 plays, 20 yards, 1:33.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Hayden Hurst 61-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 13:34. Ravens 17\u20136. Drive: 3 plays, 75 yards, 1:26.Fourth quarterBUF \u2013 Stephen Hauschka 48-yard field goal, 11:26. Ravens 17\u20139. Drive: 7 plays, 51 yards, 2:08.BAL \u2013 Willie Snead 4-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 9:49. Ravens 24\u20139. Drive: 9 plays, 51 yards, 5:02.BUF \u2013 Cole Beasley 4-yard pass from Josh Allen (Josh Allen\u2013Cole Beasley pass), 7:00. Ravens 24\u201317. Drive: 7 plays, 78 yards, 2:49.Top passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 16\/25, 145 yards, 3 TD, INTBUF \u2013 Josh Allen \u2013 17\/39, 146 yards, TDTop rushersTop receiversBAL \u2013 Hayden Hurst \u2013 3 receptions, 73 yards, TDBUF \u2013 Dawson Knox \u2013 1 reception, 37 yardsLamar Jackson became the second ever quarterback behind Michael Vick to reach 1,000 rushing yards.[44] The Ravens improved to 11\u20132 for the first time in franchise history and extend their winning streak to nine games, also a franchise record.[45] Also, a light moment in an otherwise competitive game occurred in the third quarter when some pages from Ravens special teams coach Randy Brown’s playbook blew onto the field and Bills cornerback Tre’Davious White retrieved them. When the referee noticed that White was actually examining the pages, he ran over to White and snatched them from him.[46]Week 15: Baltimore Ravens 42, New York Jets 21[edit]Week Fifteen: New York Jets at Baltimore Ravens\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalJets0701421Ravens13814742at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MarylandGame informationFirst quarterSecond quarterNYJ \u2013 Jamison Crowder 4-yard pass from Sam Darnold (Sam Ficken kick), 13:27. Ravens 13\u20137. Drive: 8 plays, 63 yards, 4:23.BAL \u2013 Mark Andrews 1-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Mark Ingram II run), 9:43. Ravens 21\u20137. Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 3:44.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Marquise Brown 24-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 5:09. Ravens 28\u20137. Drive: 2 plays, 24 yards, 0:11.BAL \u2013 Seth Roberts 33-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 0:58. Ravens 35\u20137. Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards, 2:58.Fourth quarterNYJ \u2013 B. J. Bello 14-yard return of blocked punt (kick failed, wide right), 12:07. Ravens 35\u201313.BAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 10-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 9:58. Ravens 42\u201313. Drive: 5 plays, 44 yards, 2:09.NYJ \u2013 Jamison Crowder 18-yard pass from Sam Darnold (Sam Darnold\u2013Robby Anderson pass), 7:35. Ravens 42\u201321. Drive: 4 plays, 64 yards, 2:23.Top passersNYJ \u2013 Sam Darnold \u2013 18\/32, 218 yards, 2 TD, INTBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 15\/23, 212 yards, 5 TDTop rushersNYJ \u2013 Le’Veon Bell \u2013 21 rushes, 87 yardsBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 8 rushes, 86 yardsTop receiversNYJ \u2013 Jamison Crowder \u2013 6 receptions, 90 yards, 2 TDBAL \u2013 Seth Roberts \u2013 3 receptions, 66 yards, TDLamar Jackson threw 5 touchdown passes and broke the NFL record for rushing yards by a quarterback in a season as the Ravens won the AFC North title.[47] Mark Andrews caught his eighth touchdown of the season, breaking a franchise record for most touchdowns by a Ravens tight end in a single season, previously held by Todd Heap.[48]Week 16: Baltimore Ravens 31, Cleveland Browns 15[edit]Game informationFirst quarterSecond quarterCLE \u2013 Demetrius Harris 1-yard pass from Baker Mayfield (kick failed, wide left), 11:53. Browns 6\u20130. Drive: 9 plays, 45 yards, 5:19.BAL \u2013 Mark Andrews 39-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 1:18. Ravens 7\u20136. Drive: 2 plays, 63 yards, 0:32.BAL \u2013 Mark Andrews 14-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 0:09. Ravens 14\u20136. Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 0:46.Third quarterBAL \u2013 Mark Ingram II 12-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 7:36. Ravens 21\u20136. Drive: 13 plays, 69 yards, 7:24.CLE \u2013 Austin Seibert 47-yard field goal, 3:25. Ravens 21\u20139. Drive: 10 plays, 46 yards, 4:11.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 31-yard field goal, 11:32. Ravens 24\u20139. Drive: 12 plays, 62 yards, 6:53.CLE \u2013 Odell Beckham Jr. 3-yard pass from Baker Mayfield (pass failed), 8:01. Ravens 24\u201315. Drive: 9 plays, 75 yards, 3:31.BAL \u2013 Justice Hill \u2013 18-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 3:39. Ravens 31\u201315. Drive: 8 plays, 84 yards, 4:22.Top passersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 20\/31, 238 yards, 3 TDCLE \u2013 Baker Mayfield \u2013 20\/33, 192 yards, 2 TD, INTTop rushersBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 17 rushes, 103 yardsCLE \u2013 Nick Chubb \u2013 15 rushes, 45 yardsTop receiversBAL \u2013 Mark Andrews \u2013 6 receptions, 93 yards, 2 TDCLE \u2013 Jarvis Landry \u2013 7 receptions, 74 yardsThe Browns held the Ravens scoreless for the first 28 minutes of the game while they took a 6\u20130 lead. But with less than two minutes remaining in the half Lamar Jackson hit Mark Andrews with 2 touchdown passes and the Ravens took a 14\u20136 lead into the locker room at half-time.In the second half, Jackson tossed another touchdown, this time to Mark Ingram II and then the Ravens running game sealed the victory with Mark Ingram II and Justice Hill rushing touchdowns. Lamar Jackson’s touchdown pass to Mark Andrews in the second quarter broke the Ravens single-season touchdown pass record with 34, a record previously held by Vinny Testaverde.[49] With the win, the Ravens clinched home-field advantage for the entire AFC playoffs.The Ravens defense limited the league’s top rusher, Cleveland running back Nick Chubb, to 45 yards; his lowest output of the 2019 season.[50] Chubb had gashed the Ravens’ defense for 165 yards and 3 touchdowns in their week 4 match-up. On the day after the Ravens’ victory over the Browns, and due to the Ravens’ having clinched home-field advantage, head coach John Harbaugh announced that quarterback Lamar Jackson, guard Marshal Yanda, safety Earl Thomas III and defensive tackle Brandon Williams will be inactive for the Week 17 game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Harbaugh also announced that running back Mark Ingram II will not play; allowing him to recover from the calf injury he sustained in the Browns game.[51]Week 17: Baltimore Ravens 28, Pittsburgh Steelers 10[edit]Week Seventeen: Pittsburgh Steelers at Baltimore Ravens\u00a0\u2013 Game summaryPeriod1234TotalSteelers073010Ravens61001228at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MarylandDate: December 29Game time: 4:25\u00a0p.m. ESTGame weather: Rain, 46\u00a0\u00b0F (8\u00a0\u00b0C)Game attendance: 70,695Referee: Bill VinovichTV announcers\u00a0(CBS): Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts, and Evan WashburnRecap, Game BookGame informationFirst quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 45-yard field goal, 7:56. Ravens 3\u20130. Drive: 11 plays, 40 yards, 7:04.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 22-yard field goal, 2:40. Ravens 6\u20130. Drive: 9 plays, 61 yards, 4:24.Second quarterPIT \u2013 Benny Snell 4-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 12:50. Steelers 7\u20136. Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:50.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 22-yard field goal, 1:10. Ravens 9\u20137. Drive: 9 plays, 56 yards, 4:06.BAL \u2013 Justice Hill 8-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 0:21. Ravens 16\u20137. Drive: 4 plays, 23 yards, 0:24.Third quarterPIT \u2013 Chris Boswell 26-yard field goal, 9:55. Ravens 16\u201310. Drive: 7 plays, 26 yards, 3:21.Fourth quarterBAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 47-yard field goal, 13:29. Ravens 19\u201310. Drive: 8 plays, 34 yards, 4:13.BAL \u2013 Jordan Richards fumble recovery in end zone (Justin Tucker kick), 4:36. Ravens 26\u201310.BAL \u2013 Penalty on Devlin Hodges enforced in end zone for a safety, 4:21. Ravens 28\u201310.Top passersPIT \u2013 Devlin Hodges \u2013 9\/25, 95 yardsBAL \u2013 Robert Griffin III \u2013 11\/21, 96 yards, INTTop rushersPIT \u2013 Benny Snell \u2013 18 rushes, 91 yards, TDBAL \u2013 Gus Edwards \u2013 21 rushes, 130 yardsTop receiversOn a rain-soaked field, with Robert Griffin III at quarterback, the Ravens kept the ball on the ground for their first drive. The drive covered 40 yards, took 7 minutes off the clock and culminated with a 45-yard Justin Tucker field goal. After the Ravens defense forced a three-and-out, the Ravens offense, highlighted by a Gus Edwards 38-yard run, drove down the field again, this time settling for a Tucker 22-yard field goal. The Steelers took the lead early in the second quarter after a Benny Snell 4-yard touchdown run. The Ravens regained the lead, 9\u20137, with another Tucker field goal with 1:10 remaining in the half. The Ravens got the ball back with 54 seconds left in the half when Matthew Judon sacked Steelers quarterback Devlin Hodges forcing him to fumble. Justice Hill’s 8-yard touchdown run capped a 23-yard drive for the Ravens, who ended the half with a 16\u20137 lead. After the teams exchanged field goals, the Ravens defense, late in the fourth quarter, stripped the ball from Steelers punter Jordan Berry and recovered it in the end zone for a touchdown. On the next Steelers possession the Ravens were awarded 2 points after Devlin Hodges was called for intentional grounding in the end zone, making the final score 28\u201310 Ravens.[52]With the win, the Ravens finished the season with a franchise best 14\u20132 record surpassing their 13\u20133 campaign in 2006. They also swept the Steelers for the first time since the 2015 season.Standings[edit]Division[edit]Conference[edit]#TeamDivisionWLTPCTDIVCONFSOSSOVSTKDivision leaders1Baltimore RavensNorth1420.8755\u2013110\u20132.494.484W122[a]Kansas City ChiefsWest1240.7506\u201309\u20133.510.477W63[a]New England PatriotsEast1240.7505\u201318\u20134.469.411L14Houston TexansSouth1060.6254\u201328\u20134.520.488L1Wild Cards5Buffalo BillsEast1060.6253\u201337\u20135.461.363L26Tennessee TitansSouth970.5633\u201337\u20135.488.465W1Did not qualify for the postseason7Pittsburgh SteelersNorth880.5003\u201336\u20136.502.324L38[b][c]Denver BroncosWest790.4383\u201336\u20136.510.406W29[c][d][e]Oakland RaidersWest790.4383\u201335\u20137.482.335L110[b][d][e]Indianapolis ColtsSouth790.4383\u201335\u20137.492.500L111[b][d]New York JetsEast790.4382\u201344\u20138.473.402W212[f]Jacksonville JaguarsSouth6100.3752\u201346\u20136.484.406W113[f]Cleveland BrownsNorth6100.3753\u201336\u20136.533.479L314[g]Los Angeles ChargersWest5110.3130\u201363\u20139.514.488L315[g]Miami DolphinsEast5110.3132\u201344\u20138.484.463W216Cincinnati BengalsNorth2140.1251\u201352\u201310.553.406W1Tiebreakers[h]^ a b Kansas City finished ahead of New England based on head-to-head victory.^ a b c Denver finished ahead of Indianapolis and NY Jets based on conference record. Division tiebreak was initially used to eliminate Oakland (see below).^ a b Denver finished ahead of Oakland based on conference record.^ a b c Oakland and Indianapolis finished ahead of NY Jets based on conference record.^ a b Oakland finished ahead of Indianapolis based on head-to-head victory.^ a b Jacksonville finished ahead of Cleveland based on record against common opponents. Jacksonville’s cumulative record against Cincinnati, Denver, NY Jets, and Tennessee was 4\u20131, compared to Cleveland’s 2\u20133 cumulative record against the same four teams.^ a b LA Chargers finished ahead of Miami based on head-to-head victory.^ When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL’s rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest ranked remaining team from each division.Postseason[edit]Schedule[edit]The Ravens clinched a playoff berth following their Week 14 win over the Buffalo Bills. They clinched the AFC North division following their Week 15 win over the New York Jets, guaranteeing at least one home playoff game. They clinched home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs with their Week 16 victory against the Cleveland Browns.[53]Game summaries[edit]AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12[edit]Game informationFirst quarterSecond quarterTEN \u2013 Kalif Raymond 45-yard pass from Ryan Tannehill (Greg Joseph kick), 14:45. Titans 14\u20130. Drive: 1 play, 45 yards, 0:08.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 49-yard field goal, 5:52. Titans 14\u20133. Drive: 12 plays, 59 yards, 5:21.BAL \u2013 Justin Tucker 22-yard field goal, 0:00. Titans 14\u20136. Drive: 14 plays, 91 yards, 2:32.Third quarterTEN \u2013 Corey Davis 3-yard pass from Derrick Henry (Greg Joseph kick), 6:54. Titans 21\u20136. Drive: 6 plays, 81 yards, 3:01.TEN \u2013 Ryan Tannehill 1-yard run (Greg Joseph kick), 4:16. Titans 28\u20136. Drive: 6 plays, 20 yards, 2:28.Fourth quarterTop passersTop rushersTEN \u2013 Derrick Henry \u2013 30 rushes, 195 yardsBAL \u2013 Lamar Jackson \u2013 20 rushes, 143 yardsTop receiversTitans running back Derrick Henry accounted for most of the Tennessee offense, accounting for 205 of their 300 total yards. Meanwhile, Baltimore racked up 530 yards, but their three turnovers and four failed fourth-down conversion attempts proved too much to overcome. As a result, Baltimore became the first number 1 seed in the playoffs to lose to the number 6 seed since the New England Patriots lost to the New York Jets in 2010.[54][55]On the Ravens’ first drive of the game, Lamar Jackson threw a pass that bounced off the hands of Mark Andrews and was intercepted by safety Kevin Byard, who returned it 31 yards, with an unnecessary roughness penalty against Jackson for a horse-collar tackle adding another 15 yards and giving Tennessee a first down on the Ravens’ 35-yard line.[56] Henry then carried the ball 4 times for 22 yards on an 8-play drive that ended with Ryan Tannehill’s 12-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jonnu Smith, who made a leaping one-handed catch in the back of the end zone. After getting the ball back, Baltimore drove to a 4th-and-1 on their own 45-yard line.[55] Jackson attempted to convert with a quarterback sneak, but he was tackled by linebacker David Long Jr. for no gain on the last play of the first quarter. On the next play, Tannehill gave the team a 14\u20130 lead with a 45-yard touchdown pass to Kalif Raymond.[54] Following a punt from each team, Jackson completed a 30-yard pass[56] to Marquise Brown and a 16-yard pass to Andrews, setting up Justin Tucker’s 49-yard field goal to make the score 14\u20133. Then after a Titans punt, Jackson completed a 26-yard pass to Seth Roberts, as well as two completions to Brown for gains of 16 yards and 38 yards on a 91-yard drive. Tucker finished it off with a 22-yard field goal as time expired in the half, making the score 14\u20136 at halftime.Baltimore took the second half kickoff and drove to a 4th-and-1 on the Titans’ 18-yard line. Jackson again tried to convert with a run, but was stopped for no gain by linebacker Harold Landry. Two plays later on 3rd and 1, Henry took a handoff through the middle and ran for a 66-yard gain, to the Ravens’ 6-yard line. Then when faced with 3rd and goal from the 3-yard line, Henry took a direct snap out of wildcat formation and threw a jump pass to Corey Davis for a touchdown.[55] This gave Tennessee a 21\u20136 lead and made Henry the first running back to throw a touchdown pass in the postseason since Allen Rice in the 1987 season.[57] On the first play of the Ravens’ next possession, defensive end Jurrell Casey forced a fumble while sacking Jackson,[56] which Jeffery Simmons recovered for Tennessee on the Baltimore 20-yard line. From there, the Titans drove to a 28\u20136 lead, scoring on a 6-play drive that ended with Tannehill’s 1-yard touchdown run.[55] Baltimore responded with a drive to the Titans’ 36-yard line, only to lose the ball again with a Jackson pass that was intercepted by safety Kenny Vaccaro. After forcing Tennessee to punt, the Ravens finally managed to score a touchdown, moving the ball 83 yards in 10 plays, the longest a 27-yard run by Jackson. Jackson finished the drive with a 15-yard touchdown pass to tight end Hayden Hurst, but his subsequent two-point conversion pass was incomplete, keeping the score at 28\u201312. Tennessee’s defense then pinned down Baltimore for the rest of the game, forcing a turnover on downs on the Ravens’ final two possessions.Henry finished the game with 30 carries for 195 yards,[58] while also catching two passes for 7 yards and throwing a 3-yard touchdown pass. He became the first player to rush for over 180 yards twice in the same postseason.[59] Jackson completed 31 of 59 passes for 365 yards and a touchdown, with two interceptions,[58] while also rushing 20 times for 143 yards.[55] This made him the first quarterback to throw for 300 yards and rush for 100 yards in a playoff game.[54][60] His top receiver was Brown, who caught seven passes for 126 yards.League rankings[edit]At the end of 2019 regular season[61][62]CategoryTotal yardsYardsper gameNFL rankPassing offense3225201.627thRushing offense3296*206.01stTotal offense6521407.62ndPassing defense3315207.26thRushing defense149493.45thTotal defense4809300.64th* NFL recordPower rankingsSourceWeek 1Week 17Final rankNFL.com[63]11th1st1stESPN[64]17th1st1stCBS Sports[65]16th1st1stNBC Sports[66]8th1st1stSports Illustrated[67]17th1st1stUSA Today[68]19th1st1stIndividual awards[edit]References[edit]^ “Broncos trade for Ravens QB Joe Flacco”. NFL.com. 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Retrieved December 4, 2019.External links[edit] (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4"},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2019-baltimore-ravens-season-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"2019 Baltimore Ravens season – Wikipedia"}}]}]