25th season in franchise history
The 2020 season is the Baltimore Ravens ' 25th in the National Football League and their 13th under head coach John Harbaugh . They failed to improve upon their franchise-best 14–2 regular season after suffering their third loss in Week 10 and were denied their third consecutive AFC North title following a loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 12. Following the postponement of the Week 12 game against the Pittsburgh Steelers , 2020 NFL season|NFL]] were criticized for siding with the Ravens.
Offseason
Players added
Players lost
2020 NFL Draft
Trades:
The Ravens traded a seventh-round selection to the Green Bay Packers in exchange for running back Ty Montgomery .[ 1]
The Ravens traded guard Alex Lewis to the New York Jets in exchange for a conditional seventh-round selection.[ 2]
The Ravens traded kicker/punter Kaare Vedvik to the Minnesota Vikings in exchange for Minnesota's fifth-round selection.[ 3]
The Ravens traded their sixth-round selection and offensive lineman Jermaine Eluemunor to the New England Patriots in exchange for New England's fourth-round selection.[ 4]
The Ravens traded their fourth-round selection and tight end Hayden Hurst to the Atlanta Falcons in exchange for Atlanta's second-round and fifth-round selections (55th and 157th overall).[ 5]
The Ravens traded the fifth-round selection they received from the Atlanta Falcons to the Jacksonville Jaguars in exchange for defensive end Calais Campbell .[ 6]
The Ravens traded their second- and fourth-round selections (60th and 129th overall) to the New England Patriots in exchange for New England's third-round selections (71st and 98th overall).[ 7]
The Ravens traded their seventh-round selection (225th overall) and the 2021 fifth-round pick they acquired from the Pittsburgh Steelers to the Minnesota Vikings in exchange for Minnesota's sixth- and seventh-round selections (201st and 219th overall).[ 8]
Undrafted free agents
Staff
Front office
Owner – Steve Bisciotti
President – Sashi Brown
Executive vice president/general manager – Eric DeCosta
Executive vice president – Ozzie Newsome
Vice president of player personnel – George Kokinis
Director of player personnel – Mark Azevedo
Director of college scouting – Andrew Raphael
Assistant director of college scouting – Joey Cleary
Assistant director of pro personnel – Corey Frazier
Vice president of football administration – Nick Matteo
Consultant – Pat Moriarty
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
Offensive coordinator – Todd Monken
Quarterbacks – Tee Martin
Director of football strategy/assistant quarterbacks – Daniel Stern
Running backs – Willie Taggart
Wide receivers – Greg Lewis
Tight ends – George Godsey
Offensive line – George Warhop
Assistant offensive line – Travelle Wharton
Run game coordinator – Travis Switzer
Offensive assistant – Danny Breyer
Offensive quality control – Adam Schrack
Offensive football analyst – Prentice Gill
Defensive coaches
Defensive coordinator – Zachary Orr
Senior advisor – Dean Pees
Defensive line – Dennis Johnson
Assistant defensive line/outside linebackers – Matt Robinson
Inside linebackers – Mark DeLeone
Secondary – Doug Mallory
Pass rush coach – Chuck Smith
Assistant to the head coach/defensive assistant – Megan Rosburg
Defensive quality control – Brendan Clark
Defensive football analyst – Noah Riley
Special teams coaches
Strength and conditioning
Director of high performance – Sam Rosengarten
Strength and conditioning coordinator – Scott Elliott
Assistant strength and conditioning – Kaelyn Buskey
Strength and conditioning intern – Kevin Hartman
Strength and conditioning – Ron Shrift
Strength and conditioning – Anthony Watson
→ Coaching staff
→ Front office
→ More NFL staffs
Current roster
Preseason
The Ravens' preseason schedule was announced on May 7, but was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic .[ 9]
Regular season
Schedule
The Ravens' 2020 schedule was announced on May 7, and is subject to change, pending developments in the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic .[ 9]
Notes
Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Networks and times for all games are subject to change as a result of flexible scheduling and potential cancelled and/or rescheduled games due to the COVID-19 pandemic .
Game summaries
Week 1: Baltimore Ravens 38, Cleveland Browns 6
Game information
First quarter
BAL – Mark Andrews 5-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 7:41. Ravens 7–0. Drive: 8 plays, 49 yards, 4:38.
BAL – Justin Tucker 41-yard field goal, 4:38. Ravens 10–0. Drive: 4 plays, 3 yards, 1:30.
CLE – David Njoku 1-yard pass from Baker Mayfield (kick failed), 1:41. Ravens 10–6. Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 2:57.
Second quarter
BAL – J. K. Dobbins 3-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 2:53. Ravens 17–6. Drive: 10 plays, 99 yards, 5:48.
BAL – Mark Andrews 9-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 0:06. Ravens 24–6. Drive: 7 plays, 69 yards, 0:35.
Third quarter
BAL – Willie Snead IV 19-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 7:48. Ravens 31–6. Drive: 6 plays, 50 yards, 3:23.
Fourth quarter
BAL – J. K. Dobbins 2-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 13:00. Ravens 38–6. Drive: 4 plays, 20 yards, 2:00.
Top passers
CLE – Baker Mayfield – 21/39, 189 yards, TD, INT
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 20/25, 275 yards, 3 TD
Top rushers
CLE – Kareem Hunt – 13 rushes, 72 yards
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 7 rushes, 45 yards
Top receivers
Lamar Jackson went 20 for 25 for 275 yards and 3 touchdowns and was named AFC Offensive Player of the Week.[ 12] With the 38–6 win, the Ravens became the first team in NFL history to win three consecutive season openers by 30 points or more[ 13] and the only NFL team to have scored at least 20 points in their last 24 regular season games.
Week 2: Baltimore Ravens 33, Houston Texans 16
Week 2: Baltimore Ravens at Houston Texans – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Ravens
3
17
3 10 33
Texans
0
10
0 6 16
at NRG Stadium , Houston, Texas
Game information
First quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 32-yard field goal, 1:14. Ravens 3–0. Drive: 12 plays, 73 yards, 6:57.
Second quarter
BAL – Patrick Ricard 1-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 12:55. Ravens 10–0. Drive: 4 plays, 34 yards, 2:05.
HOU – Darren Fells 10-yard pass from Deshaun Watson (Kaʻimi Fairbairn kick), 9:45. Ravens 10–7. Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 3:10.
BAL – Justin Tucker 39-yard field goal, 5:31. Ravens 13–7. Drive: 9 plays, 58 yards, 4:14.
BAL – L. J. Fort 22-yard fumble return (Justin Tucker kick), 5:16. Ravens 20–7.
BAL – Kaʻimi Fairbairn 44-yard field goal, 0:00. Ravens 20–10. Drive: 7 plays, 63 yards, 1:06.
Third quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 47-yard field goal, 6:24. Ravens 23–10. Drive: 14 plays, 60 yards, 8:36.
Fourth quarter
HOU – Kaʻimi Fairbairn 35-yard field goal, 14:47. Ravens 23–13. Drive: 14 plays, 58 yards, 6:37.
BAL – Mark Ingram 30-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 11:58. Ravens 30–13. Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 2:49.
HOU – Kaʻimi Fairbairn 45-yard field goal, 8:13. Ravens 30–16. Drive: 10 plays, 49 yards, 3:45.
BAL – Justin Tucker 20-yard field goal, 3:44. Ravens 33–16. Drive: 13 plays, 71 yards, 4:29.
Top passers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 18/24, 204 yards, TD
HOU – Deshaun Watson – 25/36, 275 yards, TD, INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
The Ravens defense dominated the Texans, sacking Watson 4 times, with one interception and one fumble returned for a touchdown. Houston was limited to 51 yards total rushing, compared to the Ravens' 230 yards.
Week 3: Kansas City Chiefs 34, Baltimore Ravens 20
Week 3: Kansas City Chiefs at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Chiefs
6
21
0 7 34
Ravens
3
7
3 7 20
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
Game information
First quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 26-yard field goal, 9:20. Ravens 3–0. Drive: 11 plays, 67 yards, 5:40.
KC – Patrick Mahomes 3-yard run (kick failed), 6:43. Chiefs 6–3. Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 2:37.
Second quarter
KC – Anthony Sherman 5-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 12:52. Chiefs 13–3. Drive: 13 plays, 68 yards, 6:20.
BAL – Devin Duvernay 93-yard kickoff return (Justin Tucker kick), 12:40. Chiefs 13–10.
KC – Tyreek Hill 20-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 6:40. Chiefs 20–10. Drive: 6 plays, 73 yards, 3:26.
KC – Mecole Hardman 49-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 1:48. Chiefs 27–10. Drive: 7 plays, 84 yards, 2:51.
Third quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 42-yard field goal, 6:13. Chiefs 27–13. Drive: 12 plays, 55 yards, 6:43.
Fourth quarter
BAL – Nick Boyle 5-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 14:55. Chiefs 27–20. Drive: 6 plays, 49 yards, 3:02.
KC – Eric Fisher 2-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 8:14. Chiefs 34–20. Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 6:41.
Top passers
KC – Patrick Mahomes – 31/42, 385 yards, 4 TD
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 15/28, 97 yards, TD
Top rushers
Top receivers
This loss snapped a 14-game regular season winning streak dating back to week 4 of last season ; it also dropped Jackson's record as a starter to 0–3 against Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs.
Week 4: Baltimore Ravens at Washington Football Team – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Ravens
7
14
7 3 31
Washington
0
10
0 7 17
at FedExField , Landover, Maryland
Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
BAL – Lamar Jackson 50-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 9:56. Ravens 14–0. Drive: 3 plays, 56 yards, 1:30.
WAS – Antonio Gibson 2-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 4:41. Ravens 14–7. Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 5:15.
BAL – Mark Andrews 25-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 1:49. Ravens 21–7. Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 2:52.
WAS – Dustin Hopkins 43-yard field goal, 0:00. Ravens 21–10. Drive: 3 plays, 12 yards, 0:30.
Third quarter
BAL – Mark Andrews 22-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 8:42. Ravens 28–10. Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 6:18.
Fourth quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 46-yard field goal, 5:16. Ravens 31–10. Drive: 10 plays, 64 yards, 6:19.
WAS – Dwayne Haskins 1-yard run (Dustin Hopkins kick), 2:05. Ravens 31–17. Drive: 4 plays, 42 yards, 1:24.
Top passers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 14/21, 193 yards, 2 TD, INT
WAS – Dwayne Haskins – 32/45, 314 yards
Top rushers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 7 rushes, 53 yards, TD
WAS – Antonio Gibson – 13 rushes, 46 yards, TD
Top receivers
Lamar Jackson threw for 193 yards and 2 touchdowns, rushed for 52 yards and 1 touchdown making him the fastest player in NFL history to reach 5,000 yards passing and 2,000 yards rushing.[ 14]
Week 5: Baltimore Ravens 27, Cincinnati Bengals 3
Week 5: Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Bengals
0
0
0 3 3
Ravens
10
7
3 7 27
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
Game information
First quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 46-yard field goal, 10:40. Ravens 3–0. Drive: 6 plays, 52 yards, 2:07.
BAL – Mark Andrews 5-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 0:40. Ravens 10–0. Drive: 15 plays, 62 yards, 7:19.
Second quarter
BAL – Marquise Brown 2-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 14:56. Ravens 17–0. Drive: 2 plays, 31 yards, 0:24.
Third quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 39-yard field goal, 2:36. Ravens 20–0. Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 3:32.
Fourth quarter
BAL – Patrick Queen 53-yard fumble return (Justin Tucker kick), 8:21. Ravens 27–0.
CIN – Randy Bullock 38-yard field goal, 0:32. Ravens 27–3. Drive: 14 plays, 55 yards, 7:49.
Top passers
CIN – Joe Burrow – 19/30, 183, INT
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 19/37, 180, 2 TD, INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
CIN – Tee Higgins – 4 receptions, 62 yards
BAL – Marquise Brown – 6 receptions, 77 yards, TD
Baltimore's defense dominated the matchup, sacking rookie Bengals' QB Joe Burrow seven times and allowing just 3 points in a blowout win. It also was the Ravens' fourth straight win over the Bengals.
Week 6: Baltimore Ravens 30, Philadelphia Eagles 28
Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 46-yard field goal, 12:08. Ravens 17–0. Drive: 5 plays, 35 yards, 2:00.
Third quarter
PHI – J. J. Arcega-Whiteside fumble recovery in end zone (run failed), 7:17. Ravens 17–6. Drive: 2 plays, 86 yards, 0:53.
BAL – Lamar Jackson 37-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 4:25. Ravens 24–6. Drive: 5 plays, 63 yards, 2:52.
Fourth quarter
PHI – Jason Croom 3-yard pass from Carson Wentz (Carson Wentz–Greg Ward pass), 13:32. Ravens 24–14. Drive: 12 plays, 81 yards, 3:04.
BAL – Justin Tucker 55-yard field goal, 10:01. Ravens 27–14. Drive: 7 plays, 38 yards, 3:31.
BAL – Justin Tucker 46-yard field goal, 7:12. Ravens 30–14. Drive: 4 plays, 2 yards, 2:07.
PHI – Travis Fulgham 18-yard pass from Carson Wentz (Carson Wentz–J. J. Arcega-Whiteside pass), 3:48. Ravens 30–22. Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 3:24.
PHI – Carson Wentz 1-yard run (run failed), 1:55. Ravens 30–28. Drive: 4 plays, 71 yards, 1:16.
Top passers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 16/27, 186 yards, TD
PHI – Carson Wentz – 21/40, 213 yards, 2 TD
Top rushers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 9 rushes, 108 yards, TD
PHI – Miles Sanders – 9 rushes, 118 yards
Top receivers
BAL – Marquise Brown – 4 receptions, 57 yards
PHI – Travis Fulgham – 6 receptions, 75 yards, TD
After taking a 17–0 halftime lead, Baltimore survived a furious second-half rally from the Eagles, stopping a two-point conversion , recovering the ensuing onside kick , and getting a first down in the final two minutes to earn their third straight win, and their first ever road win over the Eagles.
Week 8: Pittsburgh Steelers 28, Baltimore Ravens 24
Week 8: Pittsburgh Steelers at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Steelers
7
0
14 7 28
Ravens
7
10
0 7 24
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
BAL – Gus Edwards 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 7:24. Ravens 14–7. Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards, 5:18.
BAL – Justin Tucker 51-yard field goal, 0:00. Ravens 17–7. Drive: 15 plays, 59 yards, 3:44.
Third quarter
PIT– Eric Ebron 18-yard pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Chris Boswell kick), 13:21. Ravens 17–14. Drive: 2 plays, 21 yards, 0:43.
PIT – James Conner 1-yard run (Chris Boswell kick), 5:38. Steelers 21–17. Drive: 10 plays, 77 yards, 6:10.
Fourth quarter
BAL – Marquise Brown 3-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 11:56. Ravens 24–21. Drive: 8 plays, 53 yards, 3:58.
PIT– Chase Claypool 8-yard pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Chris Boswell kick), 7:29. Steelers 28–24. Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards, 4:27.
Top passers
PIT – Ben Roethlisberger – 21/32, 182 yards, 2 TD
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 13/28, 208 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT
Top rushers
PIT – James Conner – 15 rushes, 47 yards
BAL – J. K. Dobbins – 15 rushes, 113 yards
Top receivers
With the loss, the Ravens fell to 5–2 and lost to the Steelers for the first time since week 9 of the 2018 season . It was also Jackson's first career loss to the Steelers since taking over as starter.[ 15]
Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 10
Week 9: Baltimore Ravens at Indianapolis Colts – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Ravens
7
0
7 10 24
Colts
7
3
0 0 10
at Lucas Oil Stadium , Indianapolis, Indiana
Date : November 8Game time : 1:00 p.m. ESTGame weather : Sunny, 76 °F (24 °C) (retractable roof open)Game attendance : 12,200Referee : Adrian HillTV announcers (CBS) : Ian Eagle, Charles Davis and Evan WashburnRecap , Game Book
Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
IND – Rodrigo Blankenship 43-yard field goal, 0:45. Colts 10–7. Drive: 11 plays, 68 yards, 4:38.
Third quarter
BAL – Gus Edwards 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 5:43. Ravens 14–10. Drive:10 plays, 54 yards, 5:15.
Fourth quarter
BAL – Lamar Jackson 9-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 11:08. Ravens 21–10. Drive: 14 plays, 75 yards, 8:23.
IND – Justin Tucker 48-yard field goal, 2:08. Ravens 24–10. Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards, 2:12.
Top passers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 19/23, 170 yards
IND – Philip Rivers – 26/44, 227 yards, INT
Top rushers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 13 rushes, 58 yards, TD
IND – Jordan Wilkins – 11 rushes, 39 yards
Top receivers
After losing a tough game at home to the Steelers the previous week, the Ravens looked to bounce back against the Colts. The Ravens offense was limited to 55 yards of total offense in the first half, the fewest since Lamar Jackson took over as the Ravens quarterback in 2018, and trailed the Colts 10–7 going into halftime. In the second half, the Ravens scored 17 unanswered points while the defense forced a turnover, a punt and 2 turnover on downs against the Colts. With the win, the Ravens improved to 6–2. This was also the franchise's first ever road win in Indianapolis.
Week 10: New England Patriots 23, Baltimore Ravens 17
Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
BAL – Willie Snead 6-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 14:54. Ravens 7–0. Drive: 13 plays, 94 yards, 8:04.
NE – Rex Burkhead 7-yard pass from Cam Newton (Nick Folk kick), 11:46. Tied 7–7. Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 3:08.
BAL – Justin Tucker 24-yard field goal, 5:32. Ravens 10–7. Drive: 11 plays, 69 yards, 6:14.
NE – Rex Burkhead 24-yard pass from Jakobi Meyers (kick failed, wide left), 1:02. Patriots 13–10. Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:30.
Third quarter
NE – Cam Newton 4-yard run (Nick Folk kick), 13:17. Patriots 20–10. Drive: 4 plays, 75 yards, 1:43.
NE – Nick Folk 20-yard field goal, 6:24. Patriots 23–10. Drive: 7 plays, 35 yards, 3:16.
BAL – Willie Snead 18-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 0:08. Patriots 23–17. Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 6:16.
Fourth quarter
Top passers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 24/34, 249 yards, 2 TD, INT
NE – Cam Netwon – 13/17, 118 yards, TD
Top rushers
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 11 rushes, 55 yards
NE – Damien Harris – 22 rushes, 121 yards
Top receivers
BAL – Jakobi Meyers – 5 receptions, 59 yards
NE – Willie Snead – 5 receptions, 64 yards, 2 TD
Week 11: Tennessee Titans 30, Baltimore Ravens 24 (OT)
Week 11: Tennessee Titans at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 OT Total
Titans
7
3
3 11 6 30
Ravens
3
11
7 3 0 24
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
Date : November 22Game time : 1:00 p.m. ESTGame weather : Cloudy, 53 °F (12 °C)Game attendance : 0Referee : Alex Kemp TV announcers (CBS) : Jim Nantz, Tony Romo, and Tracy WolfsonRecap , Gamebook
Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
BAL – Justin Tucker 27-yard field goal, 11:05. Titans 7–6. Drive: 7 plays, 13 yards, 3:03.
BAL – J. K. Dobbins 2-yard run (Lamar Jackson –J. K. Dobbins pass), 5:17. Ravens 14–7. Drive: 9 plays, 60 yards, 4:08.
TEN – Stephen Gostkowski 40-yard field goal, 0:48. Ravens 14–10. Drive: 14 plays, 53 yards, 4:29.
Third quarter
BAL – Mark Andrews 31-yard pass from Lamar Jackson (Justin Tucker kick), 9:34. Ravens 21–10. Drive: 7 plays, 74 yards, 3:52.
TEN – Stephen Gostkowski 40-yard field goal, 5:33. Ravens 21–13. Drive: 8 plays, 53 yards, 4:01.
Fourth quarter
TEN – Stephen Gostkowski 22-yard field goal, 11:12. Ravens 21–16. Drive: 12 plays, 81 yards, 5:34.
TEN – A. J. Brown 14-yard pass from Ryan Tannehill (Ryan Tannehill rush), 2:18. Titans 24–21. Drive: 10 plays, 90 yards, 5:25.
BAL – Justin Tucker 29-yard field goal, 0:15. Tied 24–24. Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 2:03.
Overtime
TEN – Derrick Henry 29-yard run, 5:21. Titans 30–24. Drive: 6 plays, 73 yards, 2:37.
Top passers
TEN – Ryan Tannehill – 22/31, 259 yards, 2 TD, INT
BAL – Lamar Jackson – 17/29, 186 yards, TD, INT
Top rushers
TEN – Derrick Henry – 28 rushes, 133 yards, TD
BAL – J. K. Dobbins – 15 rushes, 70 yards, TD
Top receivers
TEN – Corey Davis – 5 receptions, 113 yards
BAL – Mark Andrews – 5 receptions, 96 yards, TD
Week 12: Pittsburgh Steelers 19, Baltimore Ravens 14
Week 12: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Ravens
7
0
0 7 14
Steelers
6
6
0 7 19
at Heinz Field , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Date : [ B] Game time : 3:40 p.m. ESTGame weather : Sunny, 37 °F (3 °C)Game attendance : 0Referee : Ronald TorbertTV announcers (NBC) : Mike Tirico , Cris Collinsworth, and Michele TafoyaRecap , Gamebook
Game information
First quarter
PIT – Joe Haden 14-yard interception return (kick failed), 6:57. Steelers 6–0.
BAL – Gus Edwards 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 5:17. Ravens 7–6. Drive: 4 plays, 16 yards, 2:24.
Second quarter
PIT – Chris Boswell 25-yard field goal, 11:50. Steelers 9–7 . Drive: 12 plays, 73 yards, 5:17.
PIT – Chris Boswell 27-yard field goal, 4:27. Steelers 12–7 . Drive: 13 plays, 65 yards, 5:14.
Third quarter
Fourth quarter
Top passers
BAL – Trace McSorley – 2/6, 77 yards, TD
PIT – Ben Roethlisberger – 36/51, 266 yards, TD, INT
Top rushers
Top receivers
BAL – Marquise Brown – 4 receptions, 85 yards, TD
PIT – Eric Ebron – 7 receptions, 54 yards
Week 13: vs. Dallas Cowboys
Week 13: Dallas Cowboys at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter
1
2
3 4 Total
Ravens
0
0
0 0 0
Texans
0
0
0 0 0
at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
Standings
Division
Conference
#
Team
Division
W
L
T
PCT
DIV
CONF
SOS
SOV
STK
Division leaders
1
Kansas City Chiefs
West
14
2
0
.875
4–2
10–2
.465
.464
L1
2
Buffalo Bills
East
13
3
0
.813
6–0
10–2
.512
.471
W6
3
Pittsburgh Steelers
North
12
4
0
.750
4–2
9–3
.475
.448
L1
4[ a]
Tennessee Titans
South
11
5
0
.688
5–1
8–4
.475
.398
W1
Wild Cards
5[ b] [ c]
Baltimore Ravens
North
11
5
0
.688
4–2
7–5
.494
.401
W5
6[ c] [ d]
Cleveland Browns
North
11
5
0
.688
3–3
7–5
.451
.406
W1
7[ a] [ b] [ d]
Indianapolis Colts
South
11
5
0
.688
4–2
7–5
.443
.384
W1
Did not qualify for the postseason
8
Miami Dolphins
East
10
6
0
.625
3–3
7–5
.467
.347
L1
9
Las Vegas Raiders
West
8
8
0
.500
4–2
6–6
.539
.477
W1
10[ e]
New England Patriots
East
7
9
0
.438
3–3
6–6
.527
.429
W1
11[ e]
Los Angeles Chargers
West
7
9
0
.438
3–3
6–6
.482
.344
W4
12
Denver Broncos
West
5
11
0
.313
1–5
4–8
.566
.388
L3
13
Cincinnati Bengals
North
4
11
1
.281
1–5
4–8
.529
.438
L1
14
Houston Texans
South
4
12
0
.250
2–4
3–9
.541
.219
L5
15
New York Jets
East
2
14
0
.125
0–6
1–11
.594
.656
L1
16
Jacksonville Jaguars
South
1
15
0
.063
1–5
1–11
.549
.688
L15
Tiebreakers [ f]
^ a b Tennessee finished ahead of Indianapolis based on division record.
^ a b Baltimore finished ahead of Indianapolis based on head-to-head victory. Division tiebreaker used to eliminate Cleveland (see below).
^ a b Baltimore finished ahead of Cleveland based on head-to-head sweep.
^ a b Cleveland finished ahead of Indianapolis based on head-to-head victory.
^ a b New England finished ahead of the LA Chargers 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.
League rankings
after Week 2 of the 2020 regular season [ 16] [ 17]
Category
Total yards
Yards per game
NFL rank
Passing offense
517
172.3
32nd
Rushing offense
499
166.3
5th
Total offense
1016
338.7
23rd
Passing defense
806
268.7
26th
Rushing defense
321
107
10th
Total defense
1,127
375.5
19th
* NFL record
Power rankingsSource
Week 1
Current Week
NFL.com[ 18]
2
3
ESPN[ 19]
2
4
CBS Sports[ 20]
6
6
NBC Sports[ 21]
3
6
Sports Illustrated[ 22]
2
7
USA Today[ 23]
2
4
Individual awards
Notes
^ a b c The Ravens' home game vs. the Pittsburgh Steelers , originally scheduled during Week 7 (October 25), was moved to Week 8 (November 1), which was the original bye week for both teams. The scheduling change was made due to a COVID-19 outbreak within the Tennessee Titans ' organization that forced the Steelers–Titans game, originally scheduled during Week 4, to be moved to Week 7.[ 10]
^ a b c d The Ravens' away game vs. the Pittsburgh Steelers , originally scheduled for November 26 on Thanksgiving, was moved to November 29 then December 1, and then finally . The scheduling change was made due to a COVID-19 outbreak within the Ravens' organization as seven players tested positive. This forced the Ravens' Week 13 game vs. the Dallas Cowboys , originally scheduled for Thursday Night Football on December 3, to be pushed back to .[ 11]
References
^ Hensley, Jamison (October 30, 2018). "Packers trade Ty Montgomery to Ravens for 2020 draft pick" . ESPN.com . Retrieved January 4, 2020 .
^ Cimini, Rich; Hensley, Jamison (August 5, 2019). "Jets trade for Ravens' Lewis to buoy offensive line" . ESPN.com . Retrieved January 4, 2020 .
^ Hensley, Jamison (August 11, 2019). "Ravens trade kicker Vedvik to Vikings for pick" . ESPN.com . Retrieved March 18, 2020 .
^ Bergman, Jeremy (August 28, 2019). "Patriots trade for Ravens OL Jermaine Eluemunor" . NFL.com . Retrieved January 4, 2020 .
^ Patra, Kevin (March 16, 2020). "Falcons trade for TE Hayden Hurst after losing Hooper" . NFL.com . Retrieved March 16, 2020 .
^ Shook, Nick (March 15, 2020). "Jaguars to trade Calais Campbell to Ravens for fifth" . NFL.com . Retrieved March 15, 2020 .
^ Buckley, Clint (April 24, 2020). "Josh Uche goes No. 60 to Patriots in 2020 NFL Draft trade" . 247sports.com . Retrieved April 24, 2020 .
^ Gates, Christopher (April 25, 2020). "2020 NFL Draft Trades: Minnesota Vikings make deal with Baltimore Ravens" . Daily Norseman .
^ a b Shook, Nick (July 27, 2020). "Roger Goodell writes letter to NFL fans as training camps start across U.S." NFL . Retrieved July 27, 2020 .
^ "Week 7 and Week 8 Schedule Changes" . NFL Communications . October 2, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2020 .
^ "Ravens-Steelers game moved from Thursday to Sunday" . NFL . November 25, 2020. Retrieved November 25, 2020 .
^ a b Gordon, Grant. "Lamar Jackson, Russell Wilson among Week 1 Players of the Week" . nfl.com . National Football League. Retrieved 16 September 2020 .
^ "Ravens nab another NFL record with season-opening landslide win vs. Browns" . nbcsports.com . NBC Sports Washington. Retrieved 14 September 2020 .
^ Hensley, Jamison. "Ravens' Lamar Jackson fastest in NFL history to 5K yards passing, 2K rushing" . espn.com . espn. Retrieved 4 October 2020 .
^ "Steelers vs. Ravens score: Pittsburgh stays undefeated after rallying to beat Baltimore" . CBSSports.com . Retrieved 1 November 2020 .
^ "NFL Stat Leaders 2020 (team)" . ESPN. Retrieved 30 December 2019 .
^ "Team statistics" . nfl.com . The National Football League. Retrieved 31 December 2019 .
^ "NFL Power Rankings, Week 5: Bills are the real deal" . www.nfl.com .
^ "Week 5 NFL Power Rankings: 1-32 poll, plus playoff chances for every team" . ESPN.com . October 6, 2020.
^ "NFL Week 5 Power Rankings: Browns and Colts surge into top 10, two New York teams at the bottom" . CBSSports.com .
^ "NFL Power Rankings 2020: Week 5 standings for all 32 teams" . RSN .
^ "NFL power rankings: Packers take No. 2, Giants looking for wins - Sports Illustrated" . www.si.com .
^ "NFL power rankings after Week 4" . www.usatoday.com .
^ Gordon, Grant. "Cardinals QB Kyler Murray, Steelers WR Chase Claypool among Players of the Week" . National Football League. Retrieved 14 October 2020 .
^ Oyefusi, Daniel. "Ravens DE Calais Campbell named Week 6 AFC Defensive Player of the Week" . baltimoresun.com . Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 21 October 2020 .
External links
Franchise Stadiums Key personnel Culture Lore Rivalries Division championships (7) Conference championships (2) League championships (2) Current league affiliations