Jump to content
ExtremeRavens: The Sanctuary

ExtremeRavens

Administrator
  • Posts

    19,764
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Posts posted by ExtremeRavens

  1. Ravens tight end Mark Andrews was on his way from Baltimore to Phoenix on Thursday when he sprung into action.

    A woman on a Southwest Airlines flight bound for Andrews’ hometown was experiencing a medical emergency mid-flight when the Ravens star helped come to her rescue. According to Andrew Springs, a passenger on the flight, the doctor and nurse tending to the woman couldn’t find a strong pulse. Her blood pressure was extremely low, and she required oxygen to breathe.

    That’s when Andrews intervened.

    Andrews, 28, popped up from his aisle seat, Springs wrote on X (formerly Twitter), and asked if it could be her blood sugar, informing the doctor and nurse that he had a diabetic testing kit in his possession. Diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at age 9, Andrews monitors his blood sugar regularly.

    He then instructed the doctor and nurse on how to use the kit, the woman’s heart rate was stabilized and paramedics met the plane when it landed, according to Springs, a Maryland native who lives in Scottsdale, Arizona, and attended Sunday’s AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium.

    “Watching complete strangers spring into action to help save someone’s life is truly amazing,” wrote Springs, who also described the ordeal as “genuinely scary.”

    Andrews, a three-time Pro Bowl selection who’d just wrapped up his sixth season with the Ravens after the Kansas City Chiefs defeated Baltimore, 17-10, on Sunday, took little in the way of credit, however.

    “In addition to the fast-acting flight attendants, the real heroes are the nurse and doctor who also happened to be on the plane,” he said in a statement issued through the Ravens. “Thankfully they were able to provide thee woman the quick assistance she needed.”

    Andrews, who missed more than two months because of an ankle injury suffered during a Nov. 16 game against the Cincinnati Bengals, had 45 catches for 544 yards and six touchdowns this season.

    View the full article

  2. The Ravens didn’t wait long to find their replacement for Mike Macdonald.

    Baltimore announced Thursday that Zach Orr will take over as defensive coordinator. The 31-year-old spent the past two seasons as the team’s inside linebackers coach after serving as the Jacksonville Jaguars’ outside linebackers coach in 2021.

    The news comes a day after the Seattle Seahawks announced that Macdonald would be its new head coach.

    Orr, meanwhile, is a familiar face, and like Macdonald, has been on the fast track in his coaching career.

    After spending three seasons as a Ravens linebacker, Orr retired in 2016 because of a congenital neck/spine condition. He moved into coaching in 2017 and began with Baltimore as a defensive coaching analyst and was promoted to coaching and personnel assistant before leaving for the Jaguars in 2021.

    “Zach is a homegrown Raven in every way,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said in a statement. “His energy, intelligence, work ethic and strong communication skills have been on display since the day he joined our organization as a player in 2014.

    “From making our team as an undrafted rookie, to becoming an All-Pro linebacker, then later transitioning to an assistant coach who helped mentor multiple Pro Bowl defenders, Zach has excelled at every level of his football journey.

    “He knows our players and understands our standard as well as anyone. I’m confident that he is prepared to take on the challenge of continuing to develop our players and scheme as our next defensive coordinator.”

    This season under Orr, inside linebackers Patrick Queen and Roquan Smith had career years and became the only duo to post at least 130 tackles this season for a defense that led the league in sacks (60), takeaways (31) and points allowed per game (16.5). Smith was selected as an All-Pro for the second straight year as well as to the Pro Bowl, while Queen was selected to his first Pro Bowl this year.

    Over the past two seasons, the Ravens’ defense ranked in the top 10 in yards allowed per game (312.8), rushing yards allowed per game (100.8), passing yards allowed per game (212.1), points allowed per game (17.5), opponent third-down conversion percentage (35.7%), opponent red zone efficiency (43.8%) and takeaways (56).

    As a player, Orr signed with the Ravens as a 2014 undrafted rookie free agent from North Texas and played in 46 games over three seasons, racking up 163 tackles, one sack, eight tackles for loss, six passes defensed, three interceptions, one forced fumble and two fumble recoveries.

    A native of DeSoto, Texas, Orr’s father, Terry, was a tight end for the now-Washington Commanders (from 1986 to 1993), while his younger brother, Chris, is a former linebacker who played for the Carolina Panthers in 2020. His older brother, Terrance, is the offensive coordinator at Hebron High School in Carrollton, Texas, and his younger brother, Nick, played college football at TCU and spent time with the Chicago Bears in 2018.

    This story might be updated.

    View the full article

  3. For Mount St. Mary’s University students spending a Sunday afternoon at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore as the Ravens take on an NFL opponent is all in a day’s work.

    Those studying sport management can take advantage of a behind-the-scenes look at how events come together at the stadium by volunteering to take on jobs like ticket scanning, ushering or checking visitor credentials, said Professor Sarah Zipp, director for the sport management, undergraduate and master’s programs at Mount St. Mary’s.

    The gig often starts in the morning — the college is in Emmitsburg, so students have to leave before 7 a.m. on a Sunday so they can make it to Baltimore before kick-off. Then they stand on their feet all day before returning home often hours after the game ends.

    It’s not exactly glamorous. Well, not until Taylor Swift shows up and asks to take a picture with you. Then it’s an “extraordinary” and “once-in-a-lifetime” experience, according to four Mount St. Mary’s students who met the pop icon on Sunday.

    “We were all just starstruck,’ said Patrick Rankin, 21, a rising senior and president of the sport management club at Mount St. Mary’s, who volunteered to help at the game along with about a dozen other students, including his friends Lyla Kline, Katie Farrell and Andrea Cabrera Vargas.

    Rankin was working an NFL football game at the stadium for the third time this season, he said. And while he and his friends were aware it was likely that Swift would attend the AFC championship game pitting the Ravens against the Kansas City Chiefs, their expectations of actually seeing the superstar were pretty low.

    “I thought that we would have a chance to possibly see Taylor on the big screen,” he said, referring to the jumbotrons at either end of the stadium.

    Farrell, 21 and a longtime Swift fan, said she thought it would be cool to “be in the same vicinity as Taylor Swift.”

    At the beginning of the fourth quarter, the students had finished scanning tickets at Gate A and were waiting for instructions on their next task. One of the security managers came over and told them they would be escorting family members of the Kansas City Chiefs down onto the field so that if the Chiefs won, the loved ones could celebrate with the players.

    The students checked family members’ credentials and then escorted them to an entrance to the field, where they all waited. Swift was not part of the group, at first. But a few minutes later, she came down on an elevator with her security team and the family of her boyfriend, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce.

    “So the elevator opens and Taylor Swift is in the back,” said Cabrera Vargas, who was stationed with Kline near the elevators. “It felt like a movie scene. … She was very tall so we could see her directly. She had her red lipstick on and her bangs.”

    “I’m not a die hard fan,” Cabrera Vargas, 22, said. “But at that moment I was.”

    While Swift joined family and friends on the field for the celebration, the students stayed back in the basement area, waiting and watching.

    ‘We were all excited,” said Farrell, a senior majoring in human services. “I was tearing up because, you know, it’s like my dream to meet her. She’s the biggest pop star on the planet.”

    The students said they were told not to take any pictures and they followed that rule strictly. That is until Swift, on her way back up to the suite, noticed the students standing there — barely hanging onto their composure and some making the universal Swift fan heart symbol.

    Farrell said Swift “started waving to us! ‘Hi guys, how are you?'” before coming over to her group.

    “I think she could also tell that, like, we were big fans,” said Kline, 22, a senior fine arts major who missed out on seeing the sold-out Eras Tour in the U.S. last year and instead is headed to Europe to see the show. “I got tickets to see Swift’s concert in France this summer. … and I got a chance to tell her that. She was extremely excited … she like couldn’t believe it when I told her.”

    Swift then asked the four students if they wanted to take a picture with her.

    With shaking hands, Cabrera Vargas grabbed her phone and snapped a single picture of the group.

    “The angle of that picture — I always take pictures like that,” said Cabrera Vargas. “So my friends have told me that it was destined to happen since I was preparing for this moment. Because everyone said that the picture turned out great.”

    Still, Cabrera Vargas wasn’t certain she actually got the shot. So she checked her phone.

    “By the time I looked down and looked up she was already walking into the elevator,” said the senior business marketing major from Silver Spring. “It was very, very quick.”

    Even so, Cabrera Vargas is grateful she and her friends got to meet Swift. “It made me think that things that seem impossible are definitely possible.”

    While Zipp organizes the volunteer groups for game days and other events like the Preakness Stakes, she doesn’t always attend with her students. A lifelong Chiefs fan who hails from Kansas City, Zipp decided to watch Sunday’s game from home.

    “I am, yes, indeed, kicking myself a little bit for that.”

    View the full article

  4. The Ravens lost the AFC championship, lost their director of player personnel and now lost their defensive coordinator.

    Bouncing back from a difficult defeat on the field is one thing. Replacing the people who helped construct one of the best rosters in the NFL and a historically great defense is another. Of course, having the staff of a successful team plundered is business as usual in the NFL.

    But what does losing Joe Hortiz, who was named general manager of the Los Angeles Chargers earlier this week, and Mike Macdonald, who takes over as the head coach of the Seattle Seahawks, mean for Baltimore?

    Consider: Hortiz had been with the Ravens since 1998, steadfastly working his way up through the organization, and Macdonald since 2014, save for the one season he spent in 2021 as Michigan’s defensive coordinator. Continuity is a hallmark of success in the NFL, and the Ravens, who were not caught off-guard by the departures, took a hit losing both, especially since it’s likely just the beginning. Never mind having a roster that is rife with unrestricted free agents, most of whom were key contributors to a team that had the league’s best regular-season record.

    Under Macdonald, Baltimore also had a dominant defense this season, becoming the first team in the modern era of the NFL to lead the league in sacks (60), takeaways (31) and points allowed per game (16.1).

    That just scratches the surface, too. The Ravens were also first in passing yards allowed per play, first in rushing touchdowns allowed per game and second in overall yards allowed per play. Over the past two seasons under Macdonald, Baltimore’s defense ranked in the top five in scoring, total yards, rushing yards, red zone touchdown rate and third-down conversion rate.

    It wasn’t just the gaudy numbers the Ravens put up, it was how they achieved them.

    Baltimore generated 143 quarterback pressures this season. That was just the 16th highest total in the league, but the Ravens also blitzed just 21.9% of the time, the eighth-lowest rate in the NFL. Only four teams — the Cleveland Browns, San Francisco 49ers, New York Jets and Houston Texans — generated more pressures with a lower blitz rate, and three of them made the playoffs, including the 49ers, who are in the Super Bowl.

    Macdonald achieved that success by disguising his rushes, sometimes rushing linebackers and dropping defensive linemen into coverage and rushing a cornerback off the edge, among other things, as a way to create chaos and confusion without using more than four rushers.

    Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald (left) and head coach John Harbaugh watch play against the Tennessee Titans.
    Karl Merton Ferron/The Baltimore Sun
    Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, left, and coach John Harbaugh look on during a game in 2022. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    Even in Sunday’s AFC title game against the Kansas City Chiefs, Macdonald’s brilliance eventually shined. After the Chiefs moved the ball at will in the first half, the Ravens mostly stonewalled them over the final 30 minutes, holding them scoreless and allowing just 98 yards on 30 plays.

    Then there’s the way that Macdonald relates to and empowers players, which presumably went a long way to him becoming the NFL’s youngest coach at age 36 in Seattle, an organization that Ravens outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney said was run similarly to Baltimore’s.

    “I’ve been saying it since I got here, Mike Macdonald is the smartest defensive coordinator I’ve ever had,” Clowney said. “He puts the guys in the right position. … He leaves nothing that we haven’t seen going into a game that we haven’t seen during the week.”

    It’s just one of many reasons his loss could be stinging for the organization.

    “I think he’s the best candidate out there right now,” Ravens inside linebacker Patrick Queen said Monday of Macdonald. “I don’t think anybody does it like him. Nobody cares like him. Nobody will do what he does. He will not rest until he has everything right. … The guy is all around just the best person I’ve ever been around, coach-wise, person-wise. He really cares and truly cares about the players, the people around the organization and the fans.”

    Added safety Kyle Hamilton on why he is fond of Macdonald’s scheme: “I like the duality of it. We have guys up front who allow us to do a bunch of stuff on the back end, in terms of doing their job correctly. Moving around, everybody doing different things, it doesn’t make us one-dimensional.”

    Who might the Ravens replace him with?

    Baltimore Ravens defensive line coach Anthony Weaver talks with rookie Kaieem Caesar during training camp at Under Armour Performance Center.
    Anthony Weaver was passed over in favor of Mike Macdonald in 2022, but he has experience in the role, having served as the Texans’ defensive coordinator in 2020. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)

    There are some internal possibilities, starting with associate head coach/defensive line coach Anthony Weaver. The 43-year-old was passed over in favor of Macdonald in 2022, but he has experience in the role, having served as the Texans’ defensive coordinator in 2020. He also brings familiarity, having spent four seasons in Baltimore as a player and three as a coach.

    Passing game coordinator Chris Hewitt could also be a possibility. He also brings a level of continuity, having worked his way up in the organization from assistant special teams coach to assistant secondary coach to defensive backs coach to pass defense coordinator to his current role.

    There’s also inside linebackers coach Zach Orr, who, like Macdonald once was, is on the fast track. Unlike Macdonald, he played in the NFL for three seasons with Baltimore before a spinal condition ended his career in 2016. The 31-year-old then spent four seasons with the Ravens as a coaching analyst, was the Jacksonville Jaguars’ outside linebackers coach for a year, then returned to Baltimore in 2022.

    Of course, he (or other staff members) also could follow Macdonald to Seattle to be the Seahawks’ defensive coordinator.

    The Ravens could also turn to someone outside the organization for the job.

    Former Jaguars defensive coordinator Mike Caldwell recently interviewed for the Buffalo Bills opening, but he also has connections to Baltimore, having played for the Ravens for a year in 1996 and been in the mix for the defensive coordinator job when the Ravens hired Macdonald. There’s also Chiefs defensive line coach Joe Cullen, who was previously the Ravens’ defensive line coach and is close to Harbaugh.

    Other names potentially in the mix include former Buffalo Bills defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier and Dallas Cowboys secondary coach and passing game coordinator Joe Whitt Jr., all of whom have some level of history with the Ravens.

    Whoever the Ravens hire, though, one thing seems certain: He’ll have a tough act to follow.

    View the full article

  5. The Baltimore Sun celebrates Black History Month by honoring a wide range of notables who are working to improve the lives, health, education and experiences of all Maryland residents. The third annual 25 Black Marylanders to Watch includes activists and artists, CEOs and presidents, venture startups and adventurous restaurateurs.

    The names were chosen by The Sun’s editors and reporters, who cover these topics and communities and see the progress these honorees are making in their fields. In addition, we honor five Living Legends, who continue to give back while still leading in their own ways.

    Jump to a section: Activism | Arts | Business | Education | Food | Health | Legal | Politics | Religion | Sports | Living Legends

    Activism

    Annette March-Grier is the president and co-founder of Roberta's House, a grief support center that primarily serves Black residents in Baltimore City and Prince George's County who are coping with loss. (Lloyd Fox/Staff photo)
    Annette March-Grier.

    Annette March-Grier

    President and co-founder, Roberta’s House

    Growing up on the second floor of a funeral parlor, Annette March-Grier has always been familiar with mourning. But it was when her mother died in 2006 that she realized supporting families through loss was her calling.

    “I often tell people: this is where my grief became my growth, where I turned my pain into passion,” March-Grier said.

    March-Grier is the president and co-founder of Roberta’s House, which provides grief education and support in the form of trauma-informed care in Baltimore City and Prince George’s County. In 2021, Roberta’s House opened a $14 million building on East North Avenue.

    March-Grier said about 95% of her clientele is African-American. She added that the lack of clinicians in Baltimore who specialize in grief and trauma and treat Black people highlights the need for the free, culturally sensitive services she provides that reach over 2,000 people annually.

    “No one should grieve alone,” March-Grier said.

    — Maya Lora

    Back to top

    Arts

    Terri Lee Freeman, former president of the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tennessee, became the executive director of the Reginald F. Lewis Museum in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
    Terri Lee Freeman.

    Terri Lee Freeman

    Director, Reginald F. Lewis Museum

    Terri Lee Freeman has never met a mountain she couldn’t move.

    As the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture emerges from the pandemic, Freeman’s staff is beginning to inch the taxpayer-supported institution forward.

    Freeman is pleased that attendance at Maryland’s premiere Black museum crept up from 19,236 in-person and virtual visitors last year to 20,614 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2023, as visitors responded to an Afro-Futurist art exhibit and an interactive display inviting guests to imagine the future of Black Baltimore.

    There’s still a way to go before the Lewis hits the benchmark of 70,000 visitors annually, but Freeman is confident the goal is achievable. And though the museum just missed the state-mandated requirement to raise 50% of its annual budget last year, Freeman expects the Lewis to meet or surpass that target in 2023-24.

    In August, a new permanent installation exploring the history of lynching in Maryland will open.

    “I’m really pleased at how the community is engaging with our content,” Freeman said.

    — Mary Carole McCauley

    SHAN Wallace is an artist and photographer and designed one of the murals at Camden Yards. SHAN is one of the 25 Black Marylanders to Watch. (Lloyd Fox/Staff photo)
    SHAN Wallace.

    SHAN Wallace

    Artist, photographer and muralist

    Much like the Orioles last year, artist SHAN Wallace had the city behind her for the unveiling of her new Orioles stadium mural in May.

    “I’ve received so much love and encouragement around it,” Wallace said.

    Over the summer, the East Baltimorean — whose work has appeared in the Baltimore Museum of Art and in exhibits across the country — concluded her stint as the Enoch Pratt Free Library’s inaugural artist-in-residence.

    She kicked off 2024 teaching a teen photography class at the Walters Art Museum; creating a large piece for D.C.’s National Museum of Women in the Arts, where she’ll be featured in this year’s “Women to Watch” exhibit; and pushing forward on “Glory Days,” a documentary that she said captures her experience as a partygoer in Baltimore’s LGBTQ+ nightlife scene.

    “The gay scene really raised me,” Wallace said. “I wouldn’t be who I am without gay nightlife in Baltimore, which at one point was just so vivid, and so active and so lively.”

    — Abigail Gruskin

    Wordsmith
    Baltimore-based rapper and musician Wordsmith also know as Anthony Parker will perform Saturday with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at Harford Community College's APGFCU Arena.
    Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
    Wordsmith.

    Wordsmith

    Songwriter, poet and BSO Partner

    Ask the hip-hop artist and activist Wordsmith (aka Anthony Parker) what he’s looking forward to in 2024, and he responds with a “to-do” list that would wear out a battalion.

    He is about to embark on a national tour as part of a musical trio performing “Concerts for the Human Family” based on themes of love, unity and reconciliation.

    He’ll spend March and April working with students at the Enoch Pratt Free Library’s Penn North branch to rehearse and perform a play inspired by a museum exhibit celebrating Black female geniuses.

    He has a big Black History Month concert coming up in Montgomery County.

    Oh, and did we mention that the community action group he founded, Rise With a Purpose, serves lunch every Friday to homeless members of the Penn North neighborhood?

    “I don’t want people to remember me primarily as a musician,” Wordsmith said, “but as a good man who was reliable and who tried to lift his city up.”

    — Mary Carole McCauley

    Back to top

    Business

    P. David Bramble, managing partner and co-founder of Baltimore-based MCB Real Estate. Bramble is leading MCB's project to redevelop Harborplace, which it owns, into a mixed-use development. He is in Crust by Mack, a new business in the Pratt Street pavilion at Harborplace. (Kim Hairston/Staff photo)
    P. David Bramble.

    P. David Bramble

    Managing partner, MCB Real Estate

    P. David Bramble had a negative view of developers until he became one himself.

    Now the West Baltimore native looks back with pride at local and national projects his MCB Real Estate has worked on since 2007. The Baltimore firm, founded with partner Peter Pinkard, has brought new homes and grocers to distressed areas and transformed contaminated sites.

    The MCB managing partner considers the reinvention of Baltimore’s Harborplace his most challenging project yet. MCB is seeking city approval to demolish retail pavilions it bought out of receivership for a mixed-use project set in parkland.

    Bramble, a lawyer who began rehabbing rowhouses after law school, is encouraged by support from both city residents and officials, despite some strong opposition to proposed apartments and offices. While MCB expects to pose a ballot question allowing the project, opponents are exploring one to block it.

    “Most people recognize that it’s time for really big, sweeping change, huge change, and this project can be the trajectory setter for that change.”

    — Lorraine Mirabella 

    Delali Dzirasa, fearless founder, poses. ..(Karl Merton Ferron/Staff Photo)
    Delali Dzirasa.

    Delali Dzirasa

    CEO, Fearless

    Delali Dzirasa’s Baltimore software company was at a crossroads.

    Fearless had been building software with a social or civic impact since 2009, growing in 14 years from a basement startup to about 260 employees as it expanded from government to commercial contracts.

    “We looked at our mission and vision, to create a world where good software powers things that matter,” said Dzirasa.  But some societal sectors seemed left out, he said, and it was time to “think a little bit bigger about how we actually drive this kind of impact around the world.”

    In August, Fearless launched a new business model to overcome blockers that can derail digital transformation, establishing two new divisions. Fearless Digital develops software, while Denver-based Fearless Guides, an acquisition, coaches leaders in developing people, operations and strategies.

    Fearless now aims to generate $1 billion in revenue, work in 10 countries and improve 100 million lives, by 2030.

    Dzirasa looks forward to “the blank canvas of how are we going to solve this? …I’ve always been driven by impact and how do we build things that help people.”

    — Lorraine Mirabella 

    Maurissa Stone (LaKaye Mbah Photography/handout)
    Maurissa Stone (LaKaye Mbah Photography/handout)

    Maurissa Stone

    Organizer, The Black Canni

    Maurissa Stone got into her line of work “as a result of a painful problem.”

    Stone, who has worked in community development, non-profit management and consulting, saw racism embedded in policies and practices throughout workplaces and organizations, meaning “your ability to survive as a Black person has less to do with what you’re bringing to the table and more to do with your ability to negotiate the culture.”

    Seeking solutions, she started Living Well Center, now at Baltimore Unity Hall on Eutaw Place, as director of innovation. It started in Remington in 2009  “to house a community that’s focused on addressing harm and healing for Black people.”

    In October, hoping to broaden access to Maryland’s legalized recreational cannabis industry and as a healing tool, she launched the Black Canni conference of pharmacists, growers, and business and legal experts.

    “There’s a stigma attached to cannabis. But cannabis today is not the scary dude on the corner anymore.”

    Stone, who offers DEI consulting through Iona Concepts, hopes to spread a Black Canni movement beyond Baltimore.

    “My work is rooted in liberation for Black people.”

    — Lorraine Mirabella 

    Back to top

    Education

    Heidi Anderson president, University of Maryland Eastern Shore.
    Heidi M. Anderson.

    Heidi M. Anderson

    President, University of Maryland, Eastern Shore

    Heidi M. Anderson became president of the University of Maryland, Eastern Shore, one of Maryland’s four historically Black colleges and universities, in 2018.

    Under her tenure, the university, located in Princess Anne, saw increased enrollment along with HBCU’s nationwide. Additionally, the school saw its first U.S. News & World Report ranking in 2023 after the publication listed it as one of the top HBCUs in the nation..

    “One great year of rankings does not make a great university,”  Anderson said in a news release. “But our sustained rise in the rankings indicates that we are on the right trajectory of performance. Our rise in the rankings is a reflection of the quality of our students and faculty and the commitment of our leadership team to sustained excellence.”

    Anderson did not make herself available for an interview.

    Anderson holds a Ph.D. in pharmacy administration and was previously the provost and vice president for academic affairs at Texas A&M University-Kingsville from 2015 to 2017. She served as the provost and vice president of Academic Affairs at the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia from 2013 to 2015.

    — Caitlyn Freeman

    Katrina Caldwell, Vice Provost for Diversity and Inclusion and Chief Diversity Officer at Johns Hopkins University. (Chris Paulis Photography)
    Katrina Caldwell.

    Katrina Caldwell

    Vice provost for diversity and inclusion, Johns Hopkins University

    Katrina Caldwell had a busy first month when she joined the Johns Hopkins University in 2020 as vice provost for diversity and inclusion. In addition to being in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, a swastika was found in a campus building.

    Caldwell has 30 years of experience leading colleges and universities’ diversity missions, primarily in Chicago. As DEI initiatives are scrutinized as a zero-sum game at a national level, Caldwell remains clear-eyed that diversity means everyone deserves to be in environments that support their goals, needs and what they need to feel safe to thrive.

    Higher education institutions, whether public or private, have a responsibility to change the conditions of their community, especially if that community is marginalized, Caldwell said. Community members, in conversations with Caldwell’s office, have said they want a stronger, mutually beneficial relationship with the university.

    “It’s not about just giving out money,” Caldwell said. “It really is about building relationships.”

    She’s leading Hopkins’ $6 million, five-year Diversity and Inclusion Strategic Plan, which evaluates the institution’s culture and advances future goals in areas like research, health equity and academics. Hopkins just completed a year-long campus-wide climate study that will be presented in February.

    — Lilly Price

    Dr. David Heiber, founder and CEO of Concentric Education Solutions. Photo for 25 Black Marylanders to Watch.(Lloyd Fox/Staff)
    David Heiber.

    David Heiber

    Founder, Concentric Education Solutions

    Just 1% of all venture capital funding in 2022 went to Black-founded companies. This fall, David Heiber was in that 1%, having received a $5 million series A round from Maryland-based New Markets Venture Partners.

    Heiber’s education technology start-up, Concentric Education Solutions, is used by 200 schools in six states to conduct home visits that reconnect chronically absent students with school, in addition to tutoring and mentoring services. His employees visited 20,000 homes in Baltimore last year.

    “It’s an anomaly in and of itself,” Heiber said of the $5 million investment. “It gives us a tremendous visibility.”

    A former teacher and school administrator in Baltimore and Washington, D.C., he started his company in 2010. He plans to use the funding to hire chief executives and scale the company’s software infrastructure. Concentric created an re-engagement app to track why students miss school and to share that information with educators. The company also provides mental health counseling.

    — Lilly Price

    Back to top

    Food

    Jasmine Norton, executive chef and owner of The Urban Oyster, at the new location on the Avenue in Hampden. (Kim Hairston/Staff photo)
    Jasmine Norton.

    Jasmine Norton

    Owner, The Urban Oyster

    In just seven years, Jasmine Norton has been through the highs and the lows of the restaurant industry. But 2024 is looking particularly bright.

    Norton, a self-taught chef, launched her seafood business, The Urban Oyster, in 2017 after leaving a career as a sales manager in New York City. She started out shucking oysters at farmers markets, festivals and brewery pop-ups before opening her first brick-and-mortar, in Locust Point, in 2019.

    The restaurant proved to be short-lived, shutting down in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Norton, however, was determined to make a comeback. She moved into the kitchen at the Hotel Revival in Mount Vernon, turning out chargrilled oysters and shrimp tacos for curbside pickup. Later, she launched a spinoff business, The Urban Burger Bar, inside of Hampden’s Whitehall Market.

    As a new year begins, she’s about to open a new dining room for The Urban Oyster. The restaurant will debut in February at 914 W. 36th St. It’s garnering buzz not only for the food — new dishes will include lobster cavatelli and oxtail lasagna — but also for its significance: Norton believes she is the first Black woman to own an oyster bar in Baltimore.

    “I’m a woman of my word,” she said recently, standing in front of the restaurant. “This is not only redemption for the brand, this is redemption for the community, for everyone who supports us. We’re bigger and better being here.”

    — Amanda Yeager

    Restaurateur Chris Simon is preparing to open Prim & Proper, a new restaurant on Redwood Street. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)
    Chris Simon.

    Chris Simon

    Founder, BLK Swan and BTST Services

    Baltimore foodies have likely heard of BLK Swan, the trendy Harbor East restaurant and nightlife spot that Chris Simon opened in 2021.

    What they may not know is that Simon has also found success in a very different field: mental health treatment.

    Simon, who has a master’s degree in social work from Morgan State University, founded BTST Services in 2008, inspired by a job working as a mentor in group homes. The company offers psychiatric rehabilitation, medication management and therapy to clients throughout Maryland.

    Sixteen years in, BTST has nearly 300 employees and offices in Baltimore, Lanham, Frederick and Hagerstown. Simon has partnered with celebrities like Taraji P. Henson and Charlamagne tha God to destigmatize mental health treatment.

    The company is poised to expand after a recent investment by Webster Equity Partners. Simon declined to share a dollar amount, but said he wants to offer services outside of Maryland next.

    He’s getting ready for growth on the restaurant front, as well. In February, he’ll open Prim & Proper, a new restaurant and social club in downtown Baltimore with chef Calvin Riley and partners Berry and Janell Clark of Papi Cuisine. Simon’s vision is for the restaurant to bring an upscale experience to the downtown dining scene.

    “I’m always working to fill the void,” he said.

    — Amanda Yeager

    Back to top

    Health

    Dr. Esa Davis is the inaugural associate vice president for community health at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. She also serves as senior associate dean for population health and community medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
    Dr. Esa Davis.

    Dr. Esa Davis

    Associate vice president for community health, University of Maryland Baltimore and senior associate dean for population and community medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine

    Dr. Esa Davis is quick to say that she stands on the shoulders of giants – more specifically, the shoulders of her grandmother, who worked as a registered nurse in an intensive care unit in North Carolina for more than 40 years.

    Her grandmother, a bright and caring woman who ran her own hair salon when she wasn’t working the night shift, had always wanted to be a physician, Davis said. But as a child born in the segregated South, that wasn’t possible. She hoped one of her five children would go into medicine, but although all of them graduated from college and received master’s degrees, none of them chose that path.

    “She then tried to work on her grandchildren,” Davis said with a laugh.

    Inspired by her grandmother, Davis became a family physician, treating patients for more than 20 years. She has a particular passion for helping mothers and their babies, and is a widely published researcher funded by the National Institutes of Health.

    In May, the University of Maryland School of Medicine said that Davis would serve as the University of Maryland Baltimore’s inaugural associate vice president for community health and the senior associate dean for population and community medicine for the school of medicine.

    In these roles, Davis will work with the communities surrounding the schools to promote public health and will help direct the development of a population health strategy for the School of Medicine.

    — Angela Roberts

    Tiffany Tate is the executive director of the Maryland Partnership for Prevention and the creator of the PrepMod software.
    Tiffany Tate.

    Tiffany Tate

    Executive director, Maryland Partnership for Prevention

    Tiffany Tate had every intention of returning to California when she came to Baltimore in the 1990s to get her master’s degree at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

    And yet, nearly 30 years after she graduated, Tate still lives in the city and loves it as much as she did when she first learned about its many strengths and challenges as a student.

    Tate, executive director of the Maryland Partnership for Prevention — a nonprofit that aims to boost national and local immunization efforts — sees public health as a calling, rather than a career. She particularly believes in the power of technology to give health workers the freedom to more creatively and efficiently serve their community.

    Before the coronavirus pandemic began, Tate created software to help parents register their children for flu shot clinics at their local schools and prevent workers from being “buried under 10,000 pieces of paper.”

    That same software ultimately became key to Maryland’s pandemic response, when the state health department contracted with Tate’s organization to allow Marylanders to use it to schedule vaccine appointments and for health care providers to report immunization data to the state. The software, PrepMod, was also used in two dozen other jurisdictions and states around the country, and Tate’s nonprofit donated it to historically Black colleges and universities.

    “I never in my wildest dreams thought I’d be able to contribute to my field in this way,” Tate said.

    — Angela Roberts

    dr.-zimmerman.jpeg?fit=620%2C9999px&ssl=
    Dr. Michael Zollicoffer.

    Dr. Michael Zollicoffer

    Baltimore pediatrician

    Dr. Michael Zollicoffer, or Dr. Z, as he is better known to his patients, is proud to say that he followed in his father’s footsteps.

    In 1962, his father, Dr. Lawrence Zollicoffer, became the fourth African American to graduate from the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. While the elder Zollicoffer had graduated from the historically Black North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University at 17 years old, he waited for 10 years — until the University of North Carolina would admit him — to begin studying for his medical degree.

    The younger Zollicoffer also graduated from the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. And just as his father joined other Black physicians to open the Garwyn Medical Center in Baltimore, Zollicoffer opened his own medical practice almost 40 years ago.

    Throughout his career, Zollicoffer has mentored dozens of medical students, training them to champion the needs of their underserved patients. Zollicoffer is still known to make house calls to people who are too ill to come to his office or who don’t have transportation.

    “If the insurance is good or not, we’ll still see you,” he said, “and if you don’t have anything to pay, then you don’t pay.”

    — Angela Roberts

    Back to top

    Legal

    Maj. Gen. Janeen Birckhead.
    Maj. Gen. Janeen Birckhead.

    Maj. Gen. Janeen Birckhead

    Adjutant General, Maryland National Guard

    Where “opportunity meets preparation” is how Maj. Gen. Janeen Birckhead describes her 30-year military career.

    Before assuming her current post as Adjutant General of Maryland, the two-star Army general came from a family that prized community service and civic engagement. As a teenager growing up in Snow Hill, her mother, civil rights icon Fannie Ward Birckhead, urged her daughter to serve her community, from raising money via bikeathons, to volunteering as a candy striper at Peninsula Regional Hospital in Salisbury.

    Now, as the only Black woman leading a state military, Birckhead oversees 6,000 Guard members and civilian federal and state employees as they navigate everything from operating COVID testing sites, to preparing Marylanders for natural disasters and beefing up the state’s cybersecurity infrastructure.

    Service is a “part of who I am at the grassroots level,” she said. “I see that in this role I’m able to impact people’s lives for the better.”

    — Lia Russell

    Kerri-Ann Lawrence is the first woman of color to be Lab Director of Forensic Services for the Baltimore County Police Department. She is standing in the county's fingerprint lab. (Barbara Haddock Taylor/staff photo)
    Kerri-Ann Lawrence.

    Kerri-Ann Lawrence

    Lab Director, Forensic Services Section, Baltimore County Police Department

    Kerri-Ann Lawrence is a stickler for procedure with a strong sense of justice, useful qualities for the head of Baltimore County Police Department’s forensics lab. “When something is wrong, it just irks me so much,” Lawrence said. “I might not be a lawyer but I’m still fighting for others.”

    At 17, she immigrated to Baltimore from Jamaica with her family. After a semester at Towson University, she joined the U.S. Army, serving her first year in South Korea.

    Lawrence began her career in Baltimore County as a crime scene technician in 2004, earning master’s degrees in intelligence analysis from Johns Hopkins University and forensic science from National University. She became lab director in September.

    “I was filled with so much emotion: ‘Little me, all the way from Jamaica,’” she said. “A vet in the military, all of this and now I’m here.”

    — Cassidy Jensen

    Back to top

    Politics

    Angela Crenshaw is the first Black woman to lead the Maryland Park Service.
    Angela Crenshaw.

    Angela Crenshaw

    Superintendent, Maryland Park Service

    Angela Crenshaw called her role as the first Black woman to lead Maryland’s Park Service “astounding” — but she also understands the responsibility of restructuring an agency that, in her words, has had “a trying year and a half, two years.”

    Crenshaw was named the Park Service’s acting superintendent following the arrest of former Gunpowder Falls manager Michael Browning on rape charges. He was convicted of a misdemeanor sex offense.

    Crenshaw was officially appointed superintendent of Maryland’s Park Service late last year.

    “What’s that saying – life comes at  you fast?” she said.

    Crenshaw started at the Department of Natural Resources in 2008 in its Boating Services division and became a park ranger in 2013.

    As she moves the Park Service forward, Crenshaw wants to be available to her staff to provide a safe and welcoming environment for rangers and visitors, noting Maryland’s “history of segregation” on its public lands.

    “I know that sounds simple, but it hasn’t been in the past — the recent past and way back,” said Crenshaw.

    — Hannah Gaskill

    Federalsburg Town Council member Darlene Hammond. Darlene Hammond and Brandy James were elected to the town council in Sept. as the first elected Black council members in the town's 200-year history. Their election followed an NAACP and ACLU-led lawsuit to correct the voting districts to ensure better representation for the town's Black residents.(Lloyd Fox/Staff)
    Darlene Hammond.

    Darlene Hammond

    Councilwoman, Federalsburg

    Darlene Hammond had become used to working behind the scenes for her community — whether she was mentoring young people, volunteering during elections or serving on the board of a Caroline County-created advisory group to improve services for residents.

    So when she stepped into the spotlight in her small town last summer by running and winning a seat on the Federalsburg town council, it was something of a new experience, and in more ways than one.

    Hammond, a former pharmacy technician, became one of the first two Black council members in Federalsburg’s 200-year history after an NAACP and ACLU-led lawsuit to create a more equitable voting system there.

    Hammond said she’s trying to use her new platform to inspire civic engagement for a community that still struggles to get involved, even after a historic victory.

    “Your vote is your voice, and it does matter,” Hammond said. “If you want change you have to show up. You have to sit in that seat. It can’t be an empty seat.”

    — Sam Janesch

    Federalsburg Town Council member Brandy James. Darlene Hammond and Brandy James were elected to the town council in Sept. as the first elected Black council members in the town's 200-year history. Their election followed an NAACP and ACLU-led lawsuit to correct the voting districts to ensure better representation for the town's Black residents.(Lloyd Fox/Staff)
    Brandy James.

    Brandy James

    Councilwoman, Federalsburg

    More than four months after a monumental victory that made her and a colleague the first two Black residents of Federalsburg to win seats on the town council in history, Brandy James said she’s still just getting started.

    “It does bring a different mindset to the council, a different perspective,” James said.

    A crisis intervention expert who conducts trainings for police agencies, James was elected to the four-person town council in Caroline County in September after an NCAA and ACLU-led federal lawsuit to create a more equitable voting system.

    The lawsuit followed a long line of similar cases over several decades, particularly across Maryland’s Eastern Shore, to align with the Voting Rights Act.

    James said while the council hasn’t made any major decisions in her short tenure so far, she’s looking forward to focusing on issues like affordable housing, developing programs for the elderly and bringing more daycare centers to the 2,800-person town.

    — Sam Janesch

    Back to top

    Religion

    Rev. Robert R.A. Turner, 41, at the Empowerment Temple AME Church which he has led since 2021. Rev. Turner has been named one of 25 Black Marylanders to Watch. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)
    Rev. Robert Turner.

    Rev. Robert Turner

    Senior pastor, Empowerment Temple AME Church

    Martin Luther King Day found the Rev. Robert Turner taking on the same challenge he’d tackled 15 times since taking over as senior pastor of Empowerment Temple AME Church in West Baltimore: walking the 42.9 miles from its campus on Primrose Avenue to the White House.

    The preacher with the booming voice chatted with passers-by and Instagram followers along the way. Thirteen hours later, he led a demonstration calling for the creation of a commission to explore how the government could make reparations for slavery.

    Each of his 16 walks has drawn attention to a civil or human rights issue, and for Turner, the soreness and shredded sneakers are well worth the trouble.

    “With Maryland’s large Black population, it should be a no-brainer that people in its largest city should lead on these issues,” he says. “Baltimore and America are still suffering from the issue of race.”

    Since taking over at Empowerment, the megachurch founded by the charismatic Rev. Dr. Jamaal H. Bryant in 2000, he has stabilized its once shaky financial picture, spearheaded a building renovation, started a monthly fresh-food giveaway program, created community prayer stations, founded a benevolence committee to help locals with bills, and even found time to write a book. “Creating a Culture of Repair,” which offers 120 ideas for helping to heal racial divides, is to be published in April.

    He’ll be making another walk to Washington in honor of Black History Month on Presidents’ Day (Feb. 19), where he again hopes to convince political leaders and others to see the urgency of the reparations issue.

    “We are growing for Christ,” he says.

    — Jonathan Pitts

    Back to top

    Sports

    LSU Lady Tigers forward Angel Reese gestures for a three point basket scored by a teammate3 against the Coppin State Eagles during a non conference homecoming game for the St. Frances Academy Panthers alum and NCAA basketball champion...(Karl Merton Ferron/Staff Photo)
    LSU Lady Tigers forward Angel Reese gestures for a three point basket scored by a teammate3 against the Coppin State Eagles during a non conference homecoming game for the St. Frances Academy Panthers alum and NCAA basketball champion…(Karl Merton Ferron/Staff Photo)

    Angel Reese

    Power forward, LSU women’s basketball team

    As long as she’s playing for the Tigers, Angel Reese will be known there as “The Bayou Barbie.” But after leading the reigning NCAA champions to an 80-48 rout of Coppin State at the Eagles’ Physical Education Complex Arena on Dec. 20, the 6-foot-3 junior reminded media members that she was “The Baltimore Barbie” first.

    That loyalty has endeared the Randallstown native and St. Frances graduate to thousands of basketball fans in and around the Baltimore area. It wasn’t that long ago when Reese herself was enthralled by another Baltimore star, Angel McCoughtry.

    “Seeing what Angel did in college and the WNBA, winning Olympic gold medals with Team USA, that inspired me to dream big,” she said. “Being someone that this next generation of kids can latch onto and build their dreams around means a lot to me, and I take that responsibility seriously.”

    — Ed Lee

    Chad Steel, SVP of Communications for the Baltimore Ravens. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)
    Chad Steele.

    Chad Steele

    Senior vice president of communications, Baltimore Ravens

    Chad Steele and his family were at a hibachi restaurant in Hunt Valley in 2016 when a nearby table overheard him talking about leaving for the Super Bowl the next day.

    When Steele said he worked for the Ravens, the man’s young son from the other table started glowing over the jersey and autographed picture of wide receiver Steve Smith Sr. he’d received for Christmas.

    Seeing the reaction, Steele handed his phone to the boy: Smith was on the other end.

    “What did that cost the Ravens?” Steele says.

    As the son of an Army colonel, Steele moved 14 times growing up, so community has always been important. “Some of them I was accepted, some of them I wasn’t,” he says. Which is why he finds his role with the Ravens so rewarding.

    Whether it’s connecting the media to the team, or connecting with fans, relationships and having an impact is what matters most to the father of two. Said Steele: “That’s the best part.”

    — Brian Wacker

    Coppin State men's basketball coach Larry Stewart is one of the Black Marylanders to Watch for 2024. (Kevin Richardson/Staff photo)
    Larry Stewart.

    Larry Stewart

    Coach, Coppin State men’s basketball team

    Reviving the Eagles basketball program wasn’t going to be simple — even for someone with the gravitas of Larry Stewart, a two-time Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Player of the Year and a five-year NBA veteran who is regarded as one of the greatest players in the school’s history.

    Still, Coppin State’s lackluster record thus far is a sobering reminder that expectations should be reasonable.

    Stewart remains committed to restoring the Eagles to their previous heights of four MEAC Tournament championships with the last occurring in 2008.

    “There’s a fiery side because I love the game of basketball and I want to win,” he said. “But I also understand that it’s about patience. I see the game a certain way, and I played the game a certain way. So if your team is not on that level, you have to have patience with them. Over time and with that patience will come the wins.”

    — Ed Lee

    Frances Tiafoe of the United States plays a backhand in their round two singles match against Tomas Machac of the Czech Republic during the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on Jan. 17, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)
    Frances Tiafoe.

    Frances Tiafoe

    Professional tennis player

    When tennis phenom Frances Tiafoe reached the 2022 U.S. Open semifinals, he was the first American man to do so since 2006 — and the first Black American man in 50 years.

    The next year, “Big Foe,” currently ranked no. 14 in the world, reached a career-high ranking of no. 10.

    It wouldn’t have been possible if not for his early training at College Park’s Junior Tennis Champions Center, which the Hyattsville native credited as “the only reason why I am where I am in my career.”

    “It gave me 24/7 access to play the sport and made me fall in love with the game,” Tiafoe said in an email interview.

    He launched a charitable fund there last summer with the USTA foundation and was inducted into the USTA Mid-Atlantic Hall of Fame in December. With three ATP singles titles under his belt, his sights are set on breaking into the sport’s top five.

    “I want to keep making the DMV proud,” he said.

    — Abigail Gruskin

    Back to top

    Living Legends

    Alvin O. Gillard will retire at the end of Feb. from his role as executive director of the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights, a role he has held for 10 years. He has worked to defend civil rights in Maryland for over 40 years. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)
    Alvin O. Gillard.

    Alvin O. Gillard

    Executive director, Maryland Commission on Civil Rights

    This month is Alvin O. Gillard’s last as executive director of the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights, a position he’s held for nearly 10 years.

    The commission is the state’s anti-discrimination agency which investigates complaints in areas like employment, housing and public accommodations. Gillard manages the day-to-day operations and will retire at the end of February.

    “This agency is as relevant today as it was when it was created,” Gillard said. “We’d like to think the progress that we’ve made renders agencies like this obsolete. But that absolutely is not based in reality.”

    By Gillard’s own estimation, he has spent over 40 years promoting civil rights. And he doesn’t see a future where work like his won’t be needed. He encouraged Marylanders to not “rest on past gains” and to be proactive about attacks on voting rights, reproductive rights and affirmative action.

    “While we make progress, we are also fighting many of the same fights over and over again,” Gillard said.

    — Maya Lora

    Warren Hayman, a retired Morgan professor, is nominated as a Black Marylanders to Watch for 2024 for his work shaping students for generations. (Warren Hayman)
    Warren C. Hayman.

    Warren C. Hayman

    Former Morgan State University educator

    Warren C. Hayman has shaped generations of students through his decades of work in education.

    “My motivation for my work is helping students of color to succeed in school and in life at all levels,” Hayman said in an email.

    He worked for 42 years at Morgan State University as assistant dean of education until 2004. Then, he joined the school’s Urban Educational Leadership Program, which prepares future leaders, as a program coordinator until retiring in 2021.

    Along with his work at Morgan, Hayman was on the Baltimore County School Board for 10 years. He has been the president of the Dunbar High School advisory board for the last 10 years.

    Hayman said his greatest accomplishment was helping develop the Dunbar High School Health Partnership, which pairs Dunbar students with Johns Hopkins resources.

    The program has produced doctors, pharmacists, college professors and nurses, among other professions.

    — Tony Roberts

    Dr. Joanne Martin, founded the National Great Blacks in Wax Museum with her husband Elmer in 1883, (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)
    Joanne Martin.

    Joanne Martin

    President and co-founder, The National Great Blacks in Wax Museum

    Forty years ago, Joanne Martin pawned her wedding ring to help establish the National Great Blacks in Wax Museum. Now, the celebrated gallery boasts 150 life-sized exhibits, draws 80,000 visitors annually and — thanks in part to a $2 million grant last year from the federal government — will complete an expansion at its site on North Avenue in 2026.

    Martin, who has two masters degrees and a Ph.D. in educational psychology, stays determined to build on the legacy of the museum set forth by her late husband, Elmer, who died in 2001.

    “I have commitment, passion and drive to tell our [African-American] story, uncompromisingly and unapologetically, and to light a spark in children and make them want to learn our past,” said Martin, a historian and author who lives in Gwynn Oak.

    “If I can make young people cry [at the starkest museum displays], then they have grabbed hold of history in an emotional way,” she said. “They must feel the importance of human life through the sacrifices [their forebears] have made, and how precious their own lives are now.”

    — Mike Klingaman

    Ernestine Shepherd, 87, who holds a Guinness world record (in 2010 and 2011) for being the oldest female bodybuilder in the world, teaches her Body Sculpture class at You Fit in Randallstown. She will be the Grand Marshal in the 2024 MLK Day parade in Baltimore. (Barbara Haddock Taylor/staff photo)
    Ernestine Shepherd.

    Ernestine Shepherd

    Bodybuilder and community health activist

    Decades ago, Ernestine Shepherd’s sister inspired the now 87-year-old to adopt a fitness regime many in their 20s would struggle to emulate. Today, Shepherd keeps a tribute to her sister in her bedroom: Christian Larson’s “The Optimist Creed,” which she reads every day.

    “When she died, she said to me, ‘I want you to keep doing what we have been doing and help as many people as we can to live a healthy, happy, positive, confident lifestyle,'” Shepherd said.

    Recognized twice as the oldest female bodybuilder in the world, Shepherd trains clients at YouFit gym in Randallstown and hosts a community walk in Druid Hill Park once a month. The lifelong Baltimorean also travels all over the country to speak on the importance of walking and encourages others to pursue healthier lifestyles through exercise.

    Living according to the creed, Shepherd strives to “give so much time to improving myself that I have no time whatsoever to criticize others.”

    — Maya Lora

    At ringside was Baltimore's mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young, enjoying the bouts on the Gervonta "Tank" Davis against Ricardo Núñez fight card at Royal Farms Arena.
    Kevin Richardson / Baltimore Sun
    Bernard C. ‘Jack’ Young.

    Bernard C. ‘Jack’ Young

    Former mayor of Baltimore

    Bernard C. “Jack” Young has been busy since leaving Baltimore City Hall in 2020. He alternates days as a “climate volunteer” at Dunbar High School and NAF Academy, and at his church when he isn’t spending time with his five grandchildren.

    On top of that, the longtime East Baltimore councilman is still who people turn to when they need help finding a job, paying water bills, or getting their trash picked up. “Just issues that make a person’s life better,” said Young.

    Young left office as acting mayor in December 2020 after shepherding the city through a ransomware attack, disgraced Mayor Catherine Pugh’s “Healthy Holly scandal,” and the pandemic. Observers applauded him for steering the city through some “troubled times,” stepping up after representing East Baltimore for nearly 25 years on the council.

    “Public service was my life,” Young said of his 25-year career in politics. “People knew to turn to me because I got stuff done.”

    — Lia Russell

    Back to top

    View the full article

  6. Dennard Wilson’s stay in Baltimore turned out to be a short one.

    The Tennessee Titans are set to hire the Ravens’ defensive backs coach to be their defensive coordinator, according to multiple reports.

    Wilson, 41, spent just one season in Baltimore after being passed over for the Philadelphia Eagles’ defensive coordinator job last year.

    A former safety who was born in Upper Marlboro and starred at DeMatha Catholic High School, then Maryland, Wilson signed with Washington as an undrafted free agent in 2004 but suffered a career-ending knee injury in the preseason. He then turned to coaching, spending time with the St. Louis and Los Angeles Rams, New York Jets and then the Eagles.

    In his one season in Baltimore, the Ravens had one of the best secondaries in the league.

    This season, the Ravens allowed the fewest yards per pass (5.7) in the NFL, were seventh in completion rate allowed (61.3%) and sixth in passing yards allowed per game (193.1). Second-year safety Kyle Hamilton was also named an All-Pro and selected to the Pro Bowl, safety Geno Stone was second in the NFL in interceptions with seven, and cornerbacks Brandon Stephens and Ronald Darby emerged as dependable defenders on the outside after injuries hampered 2019 All-Pro Marlon Humphrey.

    Wilson would replace Shane Bowen, who is a holdover from coach Mike Vrbael’s staff. Vrabel was fired earlier this month after six seasons in Tennessee.

    Titans general manager Ran Carthon also worked with Wilson when the two were with the Rams, where Carthon was director of player personnel and Wilson served as defensive quality control coach from 2012 to 2014 and defensive backs coach from 2015 to 2016.

    Tennessee had one of the league’s better run defenses this past season, but its pass defense was porous, ranking 29th in completion percentage allowed, 23rd in yards per pass and 18th in passing yards allowed per game.

    Wilson is the second Ravens coach to leave Baltimore this offseason after defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald was officially introduced as head coach of the Seattle Seahawks on Wednesday.

    View the full article

  7. Ravens kicker Justin Tucker said Monday he’s “willing to let it all go” when it comes to the dustup with Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes before Sunday’s AFC championship game, but the Kansas City Chiefs stars apparently are not.

    Speaking Wednesday on his “New Heights” podcast, Kelce said Tucker violated an “unwritten rule” and “poked the bear” by stretching and placing his equipment where Mahomes decided to warm up in the end zone at M&T Bank Stadium. Kelce reacted by tossing Tucker’s helmet, footballs and kicking tee aside, which was caught on video and shared widely on social media.

    “If you want to be a [expletive] about it, you keep your helmet and your football and your [expletive] kicking tee right where the quarterbacks are warming up . … If you’re not going to pick that up, I’ll happily move that for you,” Kelce said on the podcast, which he hosts weekly with his brother and Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce.

    Tucker said Monday, after the Ravens’ 17-10 loss, that he’s done the same thing during his 12-year career and “never really had a problem with anybody.” Several users on X, formerly Twitter, also shared photos of Tucker warming up in the same spot in the opposing team’s end zone before several games during his decorated 12-year career, in which he’s become the most accurate kicker in NFL history.

    However, Mahomes, the star quarterback and two-time league Most Valuable Player, also took issue with Tucker, who he thought was trying “to get under our skin.”

    “I’ve had seven years of doing that same warmup routine, and there’s only been like three occasions where there’s been a kicker that wasn’t … moving out of the way,” Mahomes told a Kansas City radio station Tuesday. “It was in Baltimore all three times.”

    Tucker said he “just thought it was all just some gamesmanship, all in good fun, but they seem to be taking it a little bit more seriously and I’m totally willing to let it all go.”

    Jason Kelce, a seven-time Pro Bowl selection and Super Bowl champion, agreed with his brother, saying Tucker is “a legendary kicker and he knows how to poke the buttons.”

    “He does this. And there’s other kickers that will do it, too, other punters. You know, it’s definitely unwritten that you stay out of the way of the other team when they’re trying to utilize the field. You find a way to work on the other side of the field when it makes sense. That’s part of the game within the game. You can tell he’s playing it in these clips, you can see his facial expressions — he knows what he’s doing.”

    Travis Kelce said Tucker was “poking the bear” and making the star tight end — and boyfriend of pop star Taylor Swift — look like the “bad guy.”

    “I mean, he was kind of winking at me, being a [expletive] about it, trying to get under the skin. I get it. But me and Pat? We’ve been having the same mentality for this game all week long, man. And it was a — you’ve got to go in there and have the right mindframe, right mindset, and we just weren’t in a joking mood. We were ready to get after it.

    “So, Justin, sorry if we took it to a level that you didn’t think it’d get to that way, but if you’re going to be a [expletive], I promise you I can one-up you every time, dude.”

    He did on Sunday, at least, as Kelce caught 11 passes for 116 yards and a touchdown as the Chiefs advanced to their fourth Super Bowl in the past five seasons. They’ll meet the San Francisco 49ers on Feb. 11 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

    @baltimoresun

    We asked some @Baltimore Ravens players if they knew any @Taylor Swift songs. Here’s what they said. Produced by our @karartwork. #baltimoreravens #baltimore #swiftie or not.

    ♬ original sound – Baltimore Sun

    View the full article

  8. After masterminding a historic defense for the Ravens in 2023, Mike Macdonald will get a shot to run his own team next season.

    The Seattle Seahawks are hiring Baltimore’s defensive coordinator to be their next coach, a source with direct knowledge of the situation confirmed to The Baltimore Sun. At 36 years old, he will be the NFL’s youngest head coach. NFL Network, which was first to report the news alongside ESPN, reported Macdonald has signed a six-year deal.

    He replaces Pete Carroll, 72, who stepped down earlier this month after 14 seasons in Seattle, where he led the Seahawks to their only Super Bowl title in 2013. This season, Seattle finished 9-8 and missed the playoffs.

    Macdonald, meanwhile, had become one of the hottest candidates in the league, interviewing this year with at least a half-dozen teams after helming a Baltimore defense that over the past two seasons ranked in the top five in scoring, total yards, rushing yards, red-zone touchdown rate and third-down conversion rate. Along the way, he also drew high praise for his intelligence, high-level defensive schemes that wreaked havoc for opposing offenses, as well as his ability to connect with players.

    This season, the Ravens became the first team in NFL history to have a defense that led the league in sacks (60), takeaways (31) and points allowed per game (16.1), despite fielding a unit that entered the year with questions about its secondary and defensive front and was without a bona fide pass rusher.

    They also ranked first in passing yards allowed per play, first in rushing touchdowns allowed per game, second in overall yards allowed per play and had several players who flourished in his scheme. Veteran outside linebacker Kyle Van Noy had a career-high nine sacks in the regular season, while fellow outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney also experienced a resurgence, matching his career high with 9 1/2 sacks. Defensive tackle Justin Madbuike, meanwhile, led all interior linemen with 13 sacks, while inside linebacker Roquan Smith led the team with 158 tackles and inside linebacker Patrick Queen surpassed his previous career high from a season ago with 133 tackles.

    Dubbed a “mad scientist” by Smith, Clowney, a 10-year NFL veteran, called Macdonald the smartest defensive coordinator he’s ever been around.

    He’s also been dubbed in league circles as a defensive-minded version of Sean McVay, the Los Angeles Rams coach who, at age 30, was the youngest NFL coach in history when they hired him in 2017. McVay then became the youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl and be named NFL Coach of the Year when the Rams won the title in the 2021 season.

    Like McVay, Macdonald’s rise has been rapid.

    He first arrived in the Ravens’ Owings Mills offices in 2014 as a coaching intern after serving as a graduate assistant and safeties and defensive quality control coach at the University of Georgia, and his brilliance and tireless work ethic quickly paid off. Macdonald was promoted to a defensive assistant the following year then continued to work his way up the ranks, serving as defensive backs coach in 2017 before being promoted to linebackers coach the next year.

    When the University of Michigan had an opening for a defensive coordinator after its 2020 season, Harbaugh suggested Macdonald to his younger brother Jim. In his first and only season in Ann Arbor, the Wolverines went from ranking 84th in total defense the year before to 20th. Michigan also routed Ohio State and went on to the College Football Playoff, with three of its defensive players being selected in the first 45 picks of the NFL draft.

    Following the departure of defensive coordinator Don “Wink” Martindale after Baltimore’s 2021 season, Harbaugh lured Macdonald back for the opening, and in his first season as the Ravens’ defensive coordinator, only four teams had more sacks.

    This season, Baltimore’s defense produced two All-Pros — Smith and safety Kyle Hamilton — and four Pro Bowl selections, including Queen and Madubuike.

    Said Clowney: “I’ve been saying it since I got here, Mike Macdonald is the smartest defensive coordinator I’ve ever had.”

    And now he’ll take his talents to Seattle.

    This story might be updated.

    View the full article

  9. Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers said he’s already turned the page on this season to the next, preferring to put a costly goal line fumble in the fourth quarter of the AFC championship against the Kansas City Chiefs behind him. Now that the offseason is here, team brass will do the same.

    General manager Eric DeCosta and coach John Harbaugh will meet with the media Friday in Owings Mills, where there are plenty of questions to be asked.

    Baltimore reached its first conference title game in 11 years, but it ultimately fell short in disastrous fashion. The Ravens also have a tidal wave of players set to hit free agency, making the climb back to the precipice of the Super Bowl that much harder.

    Here’s a look at that, and more, as Baltimore heads into the offseason.

    Free agents

    The Ravens have more than two dozen free agents as they enter the offseason, many of whom were significant contributors all over the field this season.

    The most notable ones on offense include wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Nelson Agholor, running backs J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards, and guards Kevin Zeitler and John Simpson. On defense, inside linebacker Patrick Queen, outside linebackers Jadeveon Clowney, Kyle Van Noy and Malik Harrison, along with defensive tackle Justin Madubuike, cornerbacks Arthur Maulet and Ronald Darby, and safety Geno Stone are all unrestricted free agents as well.

    Some of them are unlikely to be back because of age, cost, both or for other reasons.

    In terms of who would be a priority to bring back among the group, Madubuike and Queen top the list but the Ravens likely won’t be able to retain both. They already have $100 million over five years tied up in inside linebacker Roquan Smith, so issuing the franchise tag for Madubuike, whose 13 sacks led all interior defensive linemen and who was a disruptive force anchoring the line, seems the likely path with that decision costing about $21 million, per Over The Cap.

    Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate Baltimore Ravens #24 Jadeveon Clowney bring down Kansas City Chiefs #10 Isiah Pacheco in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)
    Ravens linebackers Patrick Queen, right, and Jadeveon Clowney, left, are both slated to be free agents. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    Clowney has said he’d like to be back, and he showed plenty of juice in tying his career high with 9 1/2 sacks, but he’d probably have to be willing to take less money than what another team would likely be willing to pay him.

    On offense, the line is a concern given age and injuries to tackles Morgan Moses and Ronnie Stanley, and there are decisions to be made on what to do about Zeitler, 33, and Simpson, who won the job at left guard and performed solidly most of the season. Beckham, meanwhile, was in part signed to get quarterback Lamar Jackson to re-sign, and though he flashed at times he will be 32 next season and cost prohibitive.

    Losing coaches and front office staff

    Already, one important member of the Ravens’ front office staff has been snatched up by another team with the Los Angeles Chargers hiring director of player personnel Joe Hortiz from Baltimore to be their general manager alongside new coach Jim Harbaugh.

    Hortiz was long overdue, and that hardly figures to be the only departure.

    Defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald has already interviewed with several teams and is in the running for both head coach openings that remain, the Washington Commanders and Seattle Seahawks. That’s only the beginning.

    Assistant head coach/defensive line coach Anthony Weaver, defensive backs coach Dennard Wilson, inside linebackers coach Zach Orr and defensive passing game coordinator Chris Hewitt have all received head coach or defensive coordinator interviews as well, with Weaver getting a second interview with the Commanders for its head coach opening. Some of these guys, or others, are going to go elsewhere. Baltimore has the personnel to promote from within and is an attractive destination for those on the outside, but continuity is often a hallmark of continued success in the NFL.

    Salary cap

    At the top of the salary cap pyramid are the Commanders, with a whopping $73,649,626 in cap space. Just north of the beltway, things are little more, well, tight, with the Ravens sitting at 19th with just under $14 million in room.

    On the surface, that might not seem so bad considering they had even less than that last offseason and reached the AFC championship game. Of course, they didn’t have more than two dozen free agents then, either. Plus, there will be more draft picks to sign this year than last. In other words, when considering their effective cap space, which factors in the cost of filling out the roster and signing a draft class, the Ravens will have only $5.1 million to spare.

    There are myriad ways to create more space such as restructuring deals and adding void years, and there will be teams in worse shape than Baltimore when it comes to the numbers, but filling out the roster the way it did this past season will be much tougher this year, particularly given the array of needs.

    Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    Ravens left tackle Ronnie Stanley had an up-and-down 2023 season. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    Needs

    One thing that got exposed against the Chiefs was the Ravens’ offensive line. It was, by and large, mediocre this season and simply got bullied at times against Kansas City.

    With Moses and Stanley getting older and dealing with injuries, and with both starting guards hitting free agency, finding a dependable tackle should be the first goal. From there, the Ravens will need help at cornerback, outside linebacker, wide receiver and running back. Or put another way, at just about every level of offense and defense.

    Draft

    After being the top seed in the AFC and reaching the conference championship, the Ravens won’t draft until 30th in the first round.

    The last time they picked that late in the first round was in 2013, when they, of course, won the Super Bowl and selected defensive back Matt Elam with the 32nd pick. In terms of need, it’s hard to imagine them getting, for example, a top-tier left tackle that far down. They also have a history of picking the best player available at whatever spot they pick.

    They’ll also have more picks this year (seven) than they did entering the draft last year (five), though they ended up with six last year after making a late-round deal with the Cleveland Browns to acquire a seventh-round pick. Baltimore’s other picks this year are in the second (62nd overall), third (93), fourth (130), fifth (163) and seventh (247) rounds, along with an extra seventh-round pick (225) from the 2023 trade with the New York Jets for safety Chuck Clark.

    The Ravens are also projected to earn a fourth-round compensatory pick for guard Ben Powers, who signed with the Denver Broncos last offseason.

    Key dates

    Feb. 1: East-West Shrine Bowl (Frisco, Texas)

    Feb. 3: Senior Bowl (Mobile, Alabama)

    Feb. 29-March 3: NFL scouting combine (Indianapolis)

    March 5: Deadline for clubs to designate franchise or transition players

    March 11-13: Clubs are permitted to contact and enter into contract negotiations with agents of players who will become unrestricted free agents

    March 13: The start of the new league year at 4 p.m. All 2023 player contracts expire and clubs can begin officially signing free agents and making trades

    March 24-27: NFL annual meeting (Orlando, Florida)

    April 1: Start of offseason workouts for teams with new coaches

    April 15: Start of offseason workouts for teams with incumbent coaches

    April 19: Last day for teams to match offer sheets for restricted free agents

    April 24: Deadline for teams to time, test and interview draft-eligible prospects

    April 25-27: NFL draft (Detroit)

    View the full article

  10. The city of Baltimore got hit by a sudden change.

    It occurred Sunday when the Kansas City Chiefs beat the Ravens, 17-10, to advance to Super Bowl 58 in Las Vegas on Feb. 11 against the San Francisco 49ers. Life as we knew it came to a standstill. Some local fans cried.

    The euphoria died and so did some nice new traditions such as “The Harbaugh” dance. The purple eyes of the Ravens logo on car windows have disappeared along with the purple pennants on automobile antennas.

    They faded soon after Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his girlfriend, Taylor Swift, embraced and kissed on the field at M&T Bank Stadium and quarterback Patrick Mahomes took a short victory lap.

    There is talk about next year.

    Oh, always next year …

    It’s just so hard to have another season like this past one where the Ravens had their most complete team in franchise history. They also had perhaps the NFL’s best defense and a favorite to win the Most Valuable Player Award in quarterback Lamar Jackson.

    Swoosh, all gone.

    But before we move on to next year, here is my final report card of the 2023 season.

    Lamar Jackson runs onto the field as the Houston Texans get ready to play the Baltimore Ravens in NFL Divisional Round playoff game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff photo)
    Quarterback Lamar Jackson dominated this season for the Ravens, despite the disappointing finish. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    Quarterback

    During the regular season, Jackson threw for a career-high 3,678 yards with 24 touchdowns while leading the team in rushing with 821 yards. He also had career highs in completion rate (67.2) and average yards per attempt (8.0). There is no doubt he improved under first-year offensive coordinator Todd Monken as far as accuracy, leadership and the ability to call his own plays. He is the best scrambler to ever play the game, and his ability to extend plays is elite. But the narrative for Jackson won’t change this offseason. He didn’t get it done in the conference championship game, misfiring on short and intermediate passes. He wasn’t fundamentally sound and will be remembered for throwing an interception into triple coverage to tight end Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the fourth quarter of a two-score game. The criticisms of his 2-4 mark in the postseason are justified and part of the nature of the job. Go ask Hall of Fame quarterback Jim Kelly, who lost three Super Bowls. The same things were said about John Elway until he won back-to-back Super Bowl titles. He needs to focus and lock in even more. Grade: A-

    Running backs

    Gus Edwards was No. 2 in rushing behind Jackson during the regular season, gaining 810 yards on 198 carries. He was the power back who occasionally could jump cut out to the tackles. Justice Hill proved to be a commodity for the team as both a rusher (387 yards on 84 carries) and receiver (206 yards on 30 catches). The big mystery will always be why Monken didn’t use either Edwards or Hill much in the AFC title game against Kansas City. They had a combined six carries for 23 yards against a team that was ranked No. 18 in rushing defense allowing 113.2 yards per game. The Ravens also missed speedster and rookie Keaton Mitchell, who rushed for 396 yards on 47 carries before suffering a season-ending injury against Jacksonville on Dec. 17. His speed provided the Ravens with the missing element of having a player who could score from anywhere on the field. After a slow start because of offseason surgery, Patrick Ricard again proved he was one of the best blocking fullbacks in the league. Grade: B-

    Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a 30-yards touchdown pass against the Chiefs in the first quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    Zay Flowers was the Ravens’ best wide receiver as a rookie. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    Receivers

    The Ravens had more talent this season than in recent memory. They had possession types in Odell Beckham Jr. and Nelson Agholor, and a quick change of direction performer in rookie Zay Flowers, who could also play outside if needed. Flowers put pressure on opposing defenses because of his ability as both a receiver in the slot, or as a runner going in motion. The Ravens had one of the better tight end duos in Mark Andrews and Likely, and Likely played well after Andrews went down and missed seven games because of an ankle injury he suffered on Nov. 12 against the Bengals. Andrews, who returned for the AFC title game versus Kansas City, had better hands but Likely showed more breakaway ability. The missing piece from this group was a big, fast receiver on the outside who could challenge talented cornerbacks such as Kansas City’s L’Jarius Sneed or Trent McDuffie. The Ravens need to upgrade at this position in the offseason to get faster and younger. Grade: B

    Offensive line

    Like in years past, the Ravens need to find more versatile linemen who can pass protect as well as run block. The inability to protect Jackson was key in the AFC title game as Jackson was sacked four times and pressured several others. As a group, the Ravens were good at running the ball. They had power and could climb up on linebackers in the second level, which is why they ranked No. 1 in rushing offense during the regular season. But both offensive tackles, Morgan Moses and Ronnie Stanley, were bothered by injuries, forcing the Ravens to rotate them in with Patrick Mekari and Daniel Faalele. Both starters were liabilities in pass protection; Stanley versus bull rushers and Moses handling speed. The Ravens will probably select an offensive tackle or two in the draft, but it will be interesting to see what they do at guard because both starters, John Simpson and Kevin Zeitler, are free agents. Jackson was sacked 60 times during the regular season. Grade: C+

    Ravens practice at Under Armour Performance Center in Owings Mills, Md. before playoff game against Texans.
    Ravens defensive end Justin Madubuike had a team-high 13 sacks in the regular season. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)

    Defensive line

    Overall, the Ravens were overwhelming on defense but could use more versatility up front. End Justin Madubuike had a career year with 56 tackles during the regular season and he led the team in sacks with 13. He will command a big contract as a free agent, though Baltimore could use the franchise tag on him. His quickness and penetration were exceptional against both the run and pass. Nose tackle Michael Pierce started the season strong but appeared to slow down midseason. The Ravens had counted on Broderick Washington to be more of a steadier influence at tackle, but he struggled even in his forte, run defense. After Madubuike, reserve Brent Urban played reasonably well and became somewhat of a force in pass rushing, even knocking down passes at times. Look for third-year tackle Travis Jones to gain more playing time next season, even though he needs to be more disciplined. Grade: B

    Linebackers

    Along with Jackson, these were the most dominant guys on the roster. Roquan Smith led the team in tackles during the regular season with 158 and weakside linebacker Patrick Queen was second with 133. Smith became a head-hunter at times with some vicious hits. Queen had momentary lapses but made significant progress this season with his open-field tackling. He also seemed to turn up his intensity this season (must be a contract year). The Ravens got surprisingly strong efforts from veteran outside linebackers Jadeveon Clowney and Kyle Van Noy, who had nine sacks. Clowney probably played well enough, finishing with 9 1/2 sacks, to earn a big contract this offseason. The only problem was that these guys seemed to have a meltdown in the loss to Kansas City. Several of those unnecessary roughness penalties were, to say the least, unnecessary. Grade: A-

    Secondary

    This unit was supposed to be the biggest weakness on defense but turned out to be a major strength. Hamilton was third on the team in tackles with 81, including 10 for loss in the regular season that led all NFL safeties. He just didn’t miss tackles and was excellent coming off the corner as either a run-stopper or a pass-rusher. The second best player in the group was cornerback Brandon Stephens, who was fourth on the team with 71 tackles. He was a surprise because he seemed too stiff to play corner after years as a safety, but he was extremely physical and could match receivers step for step down the field. The Ravens had a rash of injuries in the secondary, but players such as safety Geno Stone and cornerback Arthur Maulet stepped up. It will be interesting to see what the Ravens do with cornerback Marlon Humphrey and safety Marcus Williams, both of whom missed time during the season because of injuries. Grade: A-

    Special teams

    Justin Tucker converted on 32 of 37 field goals and was 3 of 3 in the postseason, including a 50-plus yarder. Jordan Stout had a good regular season and averaged 47.9 yards on 67 punts, and he landed 28 inside the 20-yard line. He was slightly below his average in the playoffs putting four inside the 20, but averaging 46.7 on nine kicks. The Ravens had Tylan Wallace as a returner during part of the regular season when Devin Duvernay was out with an injury, and he seemed more decisive. But Duvernay looked good in the postseason and the Ravens were hoping he might break one against the Chiefs, but Kansas City stayed away from him in the return game. Grade: B

    Coaching

    Coach John Harbaugh did a good job of directing a tight-knit group. The Ravens were unselfish and that is difficult to accomplish in this day and age. The special teams struggled early but Chris Horton got them to come around in the end. Defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald got his group to play hard and the Ravens always adjusted to the opposition. Monken will get criticized for not running the ball much against the Chiefs, but he made a big difference in the performance of Jackson and upgraded a passing game that had been stagnant for years. Harbaugh lets his assistants coach but there needs to be times when he dictates the pace and calls. He is the key voice and should determine the outcome. In the final game, the Ravens, especially the veterans, were selfish and lost their composure. That was a bad look for the entire staff. Grade: B+

    View the full article

  11. The Ravens’ dominant season ended Sunday in a mistake-filled 17-10 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game. Instead of Baltimore spending the next two weeks soaking in all the Super Bowl has to offer, attention turns toward the harsh reality of the offseason.

    There are no questions as important as last year’s unresolved contract situation with quarterback Lamar Jackson, who is expected to win his second NFL Most Valuable Player Award in the first season of his five-year, $260 million deal. But the Ravens have plenty of work to do to reshape one of the best rosters in team history.

    The list of pending free agents is long and includes several standouts and key contributors from a 2023 team that finished with the NFL’s best record and came one win away from reaching its first Super Bowl in 11 years. The Ravens have long built through the draft, and that won’t change as they move forward with one of the league’s highest-paid players.

    Baltimore owns the No. 30 overall pick in the first round, which begins April 25 in Detroit. With an expected compensatory selection in the fourth round for the loss of free agent guard Ben Powers last offseason, it has a projected eight picks: No. 30 (first), No. 62 (second), No. 93 (third), No. 130 (fourth), No. 133 (compensatory), No. 163 (fifth), No. 225 (seventh) and No. 247 (seventh).

    If recent history is any guide, the Ravens should expect another impact player with their top selection. In his past four drafts, general manager Eric DeCosta picked wide receivers Zay Flowers and Rashod Bateman, inside linebacker Patrick Queen, outside linebacker Odafe Oweh, Pro Bowl center Tyler Linderbaum and All-Pro safety Kyle Hamilton in the first round.

    Here are five players at positions of need who could be targets at No. 30.

    Arizona offensive tackle Jordan Morgan

    The Ravens’ offensive line could look very different next season. Guards Kevin Zeitler and John Simpson are pending free agents, and tackles Ronnie Stanley and Morgan Moses are coming off a season in which they rotated in and out of the lineup down the stretch. While Stanley is likely coming back, the Ravens could move on from Moses, who turns 33 in March and is entering the final year of his contract. Daniel Faalele and Patrick Mekari are capable backups on team-friendly deals, but the Ravens need to invest in a long-term starter at tackle.

    The 6-foot-6, 320-pound Morgan might be the best fit. He played left tackle during his five-year career at Arizona, but he could also shift inside to guard. The 22-year-old put together his best season as a senior, allowing only two sacks in 787 snaps over 12 games for one of the nation’s best passing teams. A first-team All-Pac 12 selection, Morgan led the Wildcats in total blocking grade (84.3), run-blocking grade (77.0) and pass-blocking grade (87.3), per Pro Football Focus.

    Utah cornerback Zemaiah Vaughn (5) tackles Oregon wide receiver Troy Franklin (11) during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Oct. 28, 2023, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
    Utah cornerback Zemaiah Vaughn tackles Oregon wide receiver Troy Franklin on Oct. 28. Franklin was one of two Football Bowl Subdivision receivers with 1,300-plus receiving yards and 14-plus touchdowns in 2023. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

    Oregon wide receiver Troy Franklin

    With Odell Beckham Jr. and Nelson Agholor entering free agency, the Ravens need another young wide receiver to pair with Zay Flowers and Rashod Bateman. Franklin would be an intriguing addition.

    The 6-3, 187-pound Franklin was an explosive playmaker during his junior season at Oregon, joining LSU’s Malik Nabers as the only Football Bowl Subdivision receivers with 1,300-plus receiving yards and 14-plus touchdowns. Playing in the Ducks’ up-tempo spread offense led by star quarterback Bo Nix, Franklin had 15 catches of 30-plus yards and eight receptions of 40-plus yards, which both ranked among the top three in the country.

    Alabama edge defender Chris Braswell

    The Ravens relied heavily on veteran outside linebackers Jadeveon Clowney and Kyle Van Noy to finish first in the NFL with 60 sacks, but both are headed for free agency. Odafe Oweh looks ready to hold down a starting spot, but David Ojabo has played just five games in two seasons and Tyus Bowser will likely be released in a cost-cutting move after a knee injury kept him out all year. That leaves a thin group on the edge.

    Braswell’s name should be familiar to local fans. Before a standout career at Alabama, he was a five-star prospect at St. Frances and the No. 2 ranked player in Maryland. After playing behind standout prospects Will Anderson and Dallas Turner early in his Crimson Tide career, the 6-3, 255-pound Braswell enjoyed a breakout senior season, recording eight sacks, 10 1/2 tackles for loss, three forced fumbles and an interception that he returned for a touchdown. He finished with 56 quarterback pressures, the most in the SEC.

    The Baltimore native might crush the NFL scouting combine, too. Braswell was ranked seventh on Bruce Feldman’s annual “Freaks List” entering the 2023 season after being clocked at 21.9 mph on the GPS and bench-pressing 405 pounds.

    Georgia defensive back Kamari Lassiter (3) is shown during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Tennessee Martin Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023, in Athens, Ga. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)
    Georgia cornerback Kamari Lassiter allowed just 15 receptions for 136 yards as a junior. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

    Georgia cornerback Kamari Lassiter

    With Ronald Darby, Arthur Maulet and Rock Ya-Sin entering free agency and Marlon Humphrey coming off an injury-hampered season, cornerback is once again an area of focus entering the draft.

    While most of the top corners are expected to come off the board early, there might be some good options at the end of the first round. The 6-foot, 180-pound Lassiter is perhaps the best of that second tier after a standout career at Georgia. As a junior, he allowed just 15 receptions for 136 yards and a 48.7 passer rating in coverage, according to Pro Football Focus, earning second-team All-SEC honors from the coaches. Although he’s a bit undersized and lacks the strength to consistently beat blocks, the former four-star prospect doesn’t shy away from making tackles in run support.

    Miami defensive lineman Leonard Taylor III

    The Ravens might need to use the franchise tag to bring back breakout star Justin Madubuike, who led the team with 13 sacks this past season. Brent Urban is also entering free agency, and Broderick Washington was a disappointment in the first season of his three-year, $15.8 million deal. That leaves some question marks on the defensive front.

    Adding a former five-star prospect to the mix could be the answer. The 6-3, 305-pound Taylor did not dominate in college the way many had hoped, recording six sacks in three seasons, but he flashed the quickness, strength and technique that could make him a standout interior pass rusher at the next level. He’s far from a finished product, but the Ravens could bring him along slowly before giving him a bigger role in 2025.

    View the full article

  12. One by one, they stood up for Lamar Jackson. He had taken the Ravens all the way to the AFC championship game, and they were not going to abandon him, just because talking heads had spent the morning labeling him a choker, saying he was out of excuses for his subpar postseason performance.

    “They got a job to do, I guess, but I don’t think Lamar cares, nor do I care what other people have to say outside this building,” All-Pro safety Kyle Hamilton said. “That just comes with the territory. Heavy is the head that wears the crown. There’s a lot of people out there, hoping for people like Lamar to fail, but we all know that he’s the best player in this league, and I’m happy to have him on this team.”

    Ravens players still felt shocked and pained by their 17-10 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs as they cleaned out their lockers Monday afternoon, less than 24 hours after the final seconds of a wildly promising season had ticked away. Jackson had spoken immediately after the loss — “I’m not frustrated at all. I’m angry about losing” — so he was not around to comment on the aftermath.

    But teammates wanted the world to know that they’re eager to move forward with him leading the flock. A year earlier, they had faced questions about whether Jackson would be back with the Ravens at all as he approached free agency. A difficult loss felt better than that grim alternative.

    “Lamar’s the man,” veteran guard Kevin Zeitler said. “He’s the leader of this team. He’s fiery. He cares more than anyone. I think it’s very obvious when you watch it. No matter what people want to say, I know he’s going to be back, ready to work when it’s time and take us all the way.”

    The Ravens had built their entire offseason around helping Jackson put his best foot forward in year six of his career. They signed him to a $260 million extension, remade his wide receiver corps, replaced offensive coordinator Greg Roman with a more sophisticated pass designer in Todd Monken.

    From the beginning of training camp, Jackson met the challenge, insisting that the team remain laser-focused on each granular moment, managing more of the offense while throwing more accurately than he ever had, rallying the Ravens in rare moments when they veered off course.

    Eight days before he met the Chiefs, he played the first truly splendid playoff game of his career as the Ravens raced past the Houston Texans with 24 unanswered points in the second half. He seemed loose and eager throughout last week.

    And then, Jackson crashed with the world watching. He either rushed or held the ball too long. He overshot deep targets and failed to sense pressure coming from behind him on a strip sack. When the Ravens still had a chance to get back in the game in the fourth quarter thanks to their stout defense, he threw an interception into triple coverage.

    Jackson’s statistical line — 20 of 37 for 272 yards, one touchdown and one interception — wasn’t good but did not fully capture how far he fell into his worst tendencies.

    Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball by Chiefs Charles Onenihu for a 2nd quarter turnover as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
    Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is stripped of the ball by Chiefs defensive end Charles Onenihu in the second quarter Sunday. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    There were many other reasons the Ravens lost, from Monken’s curious game plan to immature penalties to wide receiver Zay Flowers’ fumble at the goal line. But the story of their ultimate failure could not center on anyone but Jackson, who had made himself the league’s presumptive Most Valuable Player over his previous 17 games.

    Here’s a mere sampling of the Lamar takes that cascaded forth Sunday night and Monday morning:

    Stephen A. Smith on ESPN’s “First Take”: “With all due respect, it was a choke job. Let’s call it what it is. It’s doing what you’re accustomed to doing until the moment arrives, and then, you don’t.”

    The Ringer’s Bill Simmons on his podcast: “The Ravens … got haymakered coming out of the gate and then just keeled over, and all of the fears about that Ravens team and Lamar and the whole era just came seeping out for three solid hours.”

    Andscape columnist Martenzie Johnson: “On Sunday night, there was nothing defensible about what Jackson did.”

    Teammates anticipated this barrage coming for their leader. As much as they wanted to win the Super Bowl for themselves, they wanted to win it for Jackson. They know how much it means to him and how much weight crashes on his shoulders when the team falls short.

    “Honestly, what hurts me the most is that I wanted to get him the recognition that he deserves,” linebacker Patrick Queen said. “It’s a team sport, it’s a team effort, but that guy was the main guy I was playing for, honestly. So much stuff he gets that he doesn’t deserve. This was his opportunity to be able to write some of that stuff off and move on to the next thing. That’s why it hurts, because you want to see people like that, teammates that you love and care about, get what they’re supposed to get, and that didn’t happen.”

    Wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. is the rare player who understands how it feels to be as famous as Jackson is. He was one of the first to console the younger man as the game slipped away.

    Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. consoles quarterback Lamar Jackson on the bench late in the game. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. consoles quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, late in Sunday’s loss to the Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    “When you have a player like Lamar, who — 30 years from now, we’ll speak Lamar Jackson’s name, and everyone is going to know and remember — there are certain moments that define you, and this is just one that will be in his career,” Beckham said. “The greats have all been through tough times, and I don’t think this is going to stop him from wanting to get to the ultimate goal. I think, if anything, he’s going to work even harder. He wants it bad. I had never seen somebody so locked in and just in their flow and in their era, and I just felt like it was his time. And like I say, sometimes things happen in life, and it doesn’t go the way that we plan. It’s just about, what do you do from here?”

    As Beckham noted, Jackson is far from the first Hall of Fame quarterback talent to confront cries of “can’t win the big one.”

    Dan Marino rewrote the league’s passing records in the 1980s and 1990s but was badly outplayed by Joe Montana in his lone Super Bowl.

    John Elway awed NFL evaluators with his package of arm and leg talent but did not lead the Denver Broncos to a Super Bowl win until the penultimate season of his 16-year career.

    Peyton Manning won two MVP awards and finished second two other times before he finally reached and won the Super Bowl in his ninth season.

    Quarterbacks who sparkle on the biggest stages almost from the moment they hit the NFL — Mahomes, Tom Brady, Johnny Unitas — are the rarest kind. Jackson, for all his brilliance, is navigating a more jagged path.

    He did not seem shaken when he spoke after Sunday’s loss. He was angry that he turned the ball over when the Ravens were in striking distance, dissatisfied that the offense did not meet the standard it had set over a string of dominant late-season victories. But he’s not one to sink into gloom, and he gave no indication that will change after this loss, his fourth in six career playoff contests.

    “We’ve been waiting all this time, all these moments for an opportunity like this, and we fell short,” he said. “But I feel like our team is going to build.”

    Outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney, the No. 1 pick in the 2014 draft, is another in the select group of teammates who can identify with the intense spotlight on Jackson.

    “I love him regardless of how that game shook out; it’s just like my brother forever,” Clowney said. “Keep your head up, man. I dealt with that scrutiny throughout my career. I just kept my head up, kept the people around me who love me — kept them close, and you build from there. You continue to move forward.”

    View the full article

  13. All season long, Zay Flowers was a boundless font of boyhood fun, a broad smile stretching across his face and a constant energy emanating from the Ravens’ rookie wide receiver.

    Monday afternoon in Owings Mills, that energy was directed in a much different manner as he angrily threw his belongings into the large, black, industrial-size garbage bag sitting in front of his locker. Locker cleanout is the day every player and team around the NFL dreads, and this one came with a mix of emotions for a team that had produced the best record in the league during the regular season, reached the first AFC championship game of Lamar Jackson’s career and came within a game of reaching its first Super Bowl in 11 years only to fall on its face Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs.

    Among them: disappointment, anger, uncertainty.

    It was also a somber reminder of missed opportunity.

    “Probably the best year I had playing football in my life,” Flowers said when asked about a season playing alongside the presumptive NFL Most Valuable Player, quarterback Lamar Jackson. “That should tell you.

    “We wouldn’t be here without him. He know. The love for him in here and everything, we all got his back and we gonna be right back at it next year. He ain’t going anywhere, I ain’t going nowhere, so let’s get it.”

    First, though, came gathering personal items, reflecting on what could’ve and should’ve been and saying goodbye.

    This year, after all, was supposed to be different.

    The Ravens re-signed Jackson to a lucrative five-year, $260 million extension after two years of sometimes acrimonious negotiations that at one point included a trade request from the star quarterback. They spent more money in the offseason on offense than any team in the NFL and surrounded him with the most talent he’s ever had in his six years in Baltimore, particularly at wide receiver, with a first-round draft pick spent on Flowers and the additions of solid veteran receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Nelson Agholor.

    Ravens Zay Flowers takes a break from cleaning out his locker to talk with the media a day after their season-ending loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)
    Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers talks with the media on Monday. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)

    Baltimore also bolstered things on the other side of the ball, with free agent additions such as outside linebackers Jadeveon Clowney and Kyle Van Noy, and under coordinator Mike Macdonald fielded a historically great defense that became the first in league history to lead the NFL in sacks, takeaways and points allowed per game.

    The Ravens then went out and played like the sport’s best team, compiling a 13-4 regular season record that included nine wins in their last 11 games, including blowouts of the NFC runner-up Detroit Lions, Seattle Seahawks, the Super Bowl-bound San Francisco 49ers and Miami Dolphins.

    The stars seemed to be aligned for a trip to the sport’s biggest stage, with dominant victories, an MVP quarterback, a harmonious blend of veteran and rising young stars and even their share of magical moments, like backup punt returner Tylan Wallace’s overtime touchdown to lift the Ravens to victory over the Los Angeles Rams. They entered the postseason as the top seed in the AFC and with home-field advantage through the conference championship and hosted the city’s first title game in more than a half-century.

    This season was supposed to be different.

    Different from 2019 when Jackson, in his first full year as the starter, and the Ravens flamed out in a divisional round stunner against the Tennessee Titans after going 14-2 in the regular season. Different from each of the past two seasons when Jackson’s year was cut short by injury. Different from the past 11 years when the Ravens won just two playoff games and failed to advance past the divisional round.

    If it felt like Groundhog Day, it’s because in so many ways it was.

    The Ravens’ immaturity for the big moment was exposed again. From undisciplined penalties to costly turnovers, including by Jackson and Flowers, Baltimore squandered nearly every opportunity it had. They were all contributors to a disastrous, mistake-filled performance against a mature and poised Chiefs team that was playing in its sixth straight AFC title game and is headed to its fourth Super Bowl in the past five years, while Ravens players dispersed and headed home.

    “It doesn’t feel good at all,” left tackle Ronnie Stanley said. “We didn’t handle the business that we came to handle, but we got to move forward as a team and we’re just on the mindset that we’re going to use in the offseason to do everything we can to get better.”

    John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail to score a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)
    John Brown, of Phoenix, reacts after the Ravens fail to score a touchdown in the fourth quarter Sunday against the Chiefs. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    That’s easier said than done, though, with nearly two dozen players hitting free agency this offseason, many of them notable contributors from this season.

    Among the players who are unrestricted free agents: defensive tackle Justin Madubuike, inside linebacker Patrick Queen, Clowney and Kyle Van Noy, safety Geno Stone, cornerback Arthur Maulet, Beckham and Agholor, running backs J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards, and guards Kevin Zeitler and John Simpson.

    And with less than $14 million in available salary cap space, according to Over The Cap, the roster will, simply put, look significantly different in 2024.

    Its coaching staff and front office will, too, with director of player personnel Joe Hortiz headed to Los Angeles to be the Chargers’ general manager and defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald in the running head coaching jobs with the Commanders and Seahawks. Others have drawn interest from organizations around the league.

    The finality of the moment and the difficulty of getting back to this point next season amid a sea of expected change was not lost on the players who trudged through the locker room Monday.

    “[It’s a] special group,” said Clowney, who had a resurgence with 9 1/2 sacks in the regular season. “The group, you won’t get it back again next year, but I felt like we had a squad to win it. It kind of hurt more than anything that has happened in my career to lose that game yesterday.

    “But we’re back to the drawing board. Life continues.”

    Slowly.

    One by one players made their way out of a final team meeting, through exit interviews and into the locker room to gather their things and face a litany of questions from reporters. Not every player was there, as is always the case, but the ones who were said the stir of emotions were palpable.

    “It’s still a little raw,” outside linebacker Odafe Oweh said. “I don’t think it’ll really set in until after the Super Bowl. Definitely a tough situation.

    “So close, working hard in the offseason, all the blood sweat and tears with your brothers, a lot of guys who are not gonna be on the team next year, so that’s the part of it that hurts. … It’s probably gonna stick with me for a while.”

    Longer for some than for others.

    “It takes probably the whole offseason,” Queen said. “You don’t wanna lose like that. Just too many opportunities that we had to be able to capitalize on, and we didn’t. That’s what stings the most, and that’s why it just takes so long to get over. You don’t get another chance until next season starts. We have to make our way there again, if we even get a chance. That’s why it hurts.”

    Added Zeitler: “When you have potential that’s unrealized, it hurts a lot. You’re so close to the end, and it just didn’t happen. But that’s life in this league. Only one team can win again. You use it as fuel, got to move on to next year.”

    There were other lingering questions, too, including about the Ravens’ game plan, which included just six running plays for its backs against a Kansas City defense that was one of the worst in the league against the run this season.

    Despite leading the league in rushing during the regular season, Baltimore ran the ball just 16 times Sunday and threw it 37 times. Running back Justice Hill, who is one of two running backs from the active roster under contract for next season (along with rookie Keaton Mitchell), got just three carries that went for 3 yards Sunday.

    “Those were the plays that were called,” he said diplomatically. “I don’t call the plays, I just run them.”

    There were, however, plenty of bright spots from the season, individually and collectively. The players who will be back will take those and try to build on them here next season. It will be a long wait for some and less so for others.

    Asked when he’ll turn the page on this season and focus on the next one, Flowers offered a terse but direct answer: “I already did.”

    The rest of Baltimore, meanwhile, will have to wait seven long months.

    View the full article

  14. The Ravens’ offseason was barely 24 hours old when the first domino fell.

    The Los Angeles Chargers are expected to hire Baltimore’s director of player personnel Joe Hortiz as their next general manager, according to multiple reports Monday. The news came on the same day that players cleaned out their lockers at the team’s Owings Mills facility after the Ravens fell to the Kansas City Chiefs, 17-10, in Sunday’s AFC championship game.

    The Chargers, who finished fourth in the AFC West after going 5-12, fired their previous general manager, Tom Telesco, along with coach Brandon Staley late in the regular season.

    In joining Los Angeles there is also a level of familiarity after the Chargers hired Ravens coach John Harbaugh’s brother Jim to be their coach, wooing him from the University of Michigan, where he won a national championship this season.

    Hortiz and the Ravens have yet to confirm the reports.

    Hortiz, 48, has been with the Ravens since 1998 and in his current position since 2019.

    Given the success of many of the Ravens’ draft picks and free agent signings, Hortiz has been a hot job candidate after helping oversee college and pro scouting and serving as general manager Eric DeCosta’s top personnel evaluator.

    Hortiz began his career with the Ravens as a scout and rose through the organization under former general manager and Pro Football Hall of Famer Ozzie Newsome and then DeCosta. During his tenure in Baltimore, the Ravens won two Super Bowls, during the 2000 and 2012 seasons, and have won seven AFC North titles since 2003.

    This year, the Ravens finished with the NFL’s best record at 13-4 and were the top seed in the AFC.

    Hortiz inherits a Chargers roster already stocked with talent, including quarterback Justin Herbert, safety Derwin James and receivers Keenan Allen and Mike Williams. Still, Hortiz’s work will be cut out for him with the Chargers having missed the playoffs eight of the past 10 years and four of the past five.

    The Chargers also finished 28th in total defense this season, something Hortiz should be able to help remedy given his success in Baltimore, where the Ravens became the first team in NFL history to lead the league in sacks, takeaways and points allowed per game this season.

    This story might be updated.

    View the full article

  15. As the Ravens sorted through their lockers Monday in Owings Mills, packing up shoes, athletic gear, books and souvenirs from the season, a game of Connect Four sat on a nearby coffee table.

    The locker room had been a hub of activity for the past five months and players expected that would be the case again this week, as they prepared for the season’s ultimate goal, the Super Bowl. The Connect Four game was nearly complete — in a few instances, there were three tokens in a row — but neither side had been able to place four in succession. It, like the Ravens’ season, sat unfinished.

    Baltimore was favored to beat the visiting Chiefs in the AFC championship game on Sunday and players, such as team leader and quarterback Lamar Jackson, set their sights all year on the Super Bowl. But after an uninspiring offensive performance, the Ravens fell, 17-10, to Kansas City, meaning players were left to prematurely pack up their lockers two weeks before they had hoped.

    The postseason comes to a crashing conclusion quickly. Last week, the locker room brimmed with energy as they readied for Kansas City; Monday, players solemnly threw their belongings in bags before parting from the practice facility once more.

    “It feels unfinished. Everything just feels unfinished,” right guard Kevin Zeitler said. “[It] feels like we should be practicing this week, keeping it going with this group and obviously that is not the case.”

    Players tossed old shoes into a donation box and took other belongings home with them, beginning their offseason earlier than anticipated.

    Safety Kyle Hamilton said he’s sore, and that his heart is sore, but he’ll move on. He’ll travel to Florida Tuesday for the Pro Bowl — an event he’s honored to be a part of, but one he’d hoped to miss because of Super Bowl plans.

    “It’s kind of just numb for me, honestly. It’s shocking,” Hamilton said. “It sucks to lose in that fashion at home, being that close to our goal.”

    “I didn’t really have it in my mind to come clean my locker out today,” said right tackle Morgan Moses, smiling in a sort of disbelief, “but obviously things happen.”

    Ravensxe2x80x99 Patrick Queen takes a break from cleaning out his locker to talk with the media a day after their season-ending loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)
    Ravens linebacker Patrick Queen takes a break from cleaning out his locker to talk with the media on Monday, a day after their season-ending 17-10 loss to the Chiefs in the AFC championship game. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)

    The Ravens won more games than any NFL team this year and appeared to be the one to beat entering the postseason. Some fans, who’d already purchased flights or hotel rooms in Las Vegas for the Super Bowl, had to cancel them after Baltimore tied a season-low with 10 points, coming up short against the defending champion Chiefs.

    “Special group. The group, you won’t get it back again next year, but I felt like we had a squad to win it,” outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney said.

    Baltimore won’t be the same next year. Several key contributors, such as inside linebacker Patrick Queen, defensive tackle Justin Madubuike and wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr., to name just a few, are set to be free agents.

    The inevitable roster turnover was apparent when outside linebacker Kyle Van Noy was asked about the Ravens’ future. Picked up on a one-year contract during the regular season, the 32-year-old Van Noy used the third-person “they,” rather than “we,” to describe the team’s future. “It’s going to be different. Every year is different,” the 10-year NFL veteran said.

    The Ravens simply won’t be able to retain the bulk of their players who are set to become free agents because of cap restrictions. Instead, they’ll likely sign other players and will welcome draft picks, too. They pick No. 30 in the NFL draft, which takes place April 25.

    Ravensxe2x80x99 Devin Duverney cleans out his locker as players packed up their belongings a day after their season-ending loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)
    Ravens wide receiver Devin Duverney cleans out his locker on Monday. (Kevin Richardson/Staff)

    Safety Geno Stone is set to hit the open market, but he, like most players, wasn’t ready to forecast his future.

    “That’s something I’ll just wait and kind of see what happens. I’m not really trying to look into it right now,” he said. “I’m trying to really just get over this game and enjoy the time I have with my teammates right now.”

    The 33-year-old Zeitler says he’s “ready to roll” and that he hopes he’ll be a Raven next year.

    “Hopefully that business side of football can be figured out nice and quick, and we can get that taken care of,” he said.

    The Ravens’ coaching and front office staff could change, too, in particular defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, who is reportedly being considered for both the Seattle Seahawks and Washington Commanders head coach openings.

    Much of Baltimore’s core will return, however. Quarterback Lamar Jackson, the presumptive NFL Most Valuable Player who has received criticism for coming up short again in the playoffs, will, of course, be back. So will defensive cornerstones Hamilton and linebacker Roquan Smith.

    Each of the team’s tight ends is expected to be back, as are receivers Rashod Bateman and rookie Zay Flowers, who fumbled on the goal line in Sunday’s loss, one of the game’s most pivotal plays. Center Tyler Linderbaum, another Pro Bowl selection, will still anchor the offensive line for years to come.

    As Flowers took a break from cleaning out his locker Monday, he was asked when he’ll turn the page in his mind toward next season. “I already did,” he said.

    View the full article

  16. As Ravens kicker Justin Tucker stretched on the M&T Bank Stadium field while Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes warmed up more than an hour before Sunday’s AFC championship game, Kansas City tight end Travis Kelce tossed Tucker’s footballs away and threw aside his helmet.

    The moment — shared on social media by NFL Network — went viral and prompted criticism of both Tucker and Kelce. On Monday, after the Ravens’ 17-10 loss, Tucker explained that he thought the move by Kelce was “just some gamesmanship.”

    Unlike other NFL players, kickers warm up on both sides of the field to practice field goals against each direction’s wind. Tucker said he’s done the same thing during his 12-year career and “never really had a problem with anybody.”

    Tucker said that Mahomes asked him to move his helmet, and Tucker “happily got up” and moved it out of the way.

    “At least I thought it was enough out of the way. And then Travis comes over and he just kicks my stuff and he throws my helmet,” Tucker said. “I just thought it was all just some gamesmanship, all in good fun, but they seem to be taking it a little bit more seriously and I’m totally willing to let it all go.”

    Tucker said that, later, at the pregame coin toss, he and the Chiefs players were “all dapping each other up and then we just get on with the football game.”

    View the full article

  17. The Ravens’ Super Bowl dreams ended with a flustered, flat performance against the Kansas City Chiefs, who beat them, 17-10, before a deflated home crowd that had hoped to celebrate an ascendant Lamar Jackson.

    Here are five things we learned from the game.

    Lamar Jackson is in for another year of difficult questions after he failed to perform like an MVP in the biggest game

    There’s no such thing as fair when it comes to the most scrutinized position in the most scrutinized sport. So the lasting image of Jackson’s season will not be the Most Valuable Player Award he claims in two weeks but the interception he threw into triple coverage, costing his team its last, best chance to score a touchdown in the most important game of the year. Jackson spiked his helmet, recognizing that for all the Ravens’ brilliant work over the past four months, their chance to keep playing, to reach the Super Bowl he has long coveted, was slipping away.

    Jackson’s passing line — 20 of 37 for 272 yards, one touchdown and one interception — was neither tragically poor nor reflective of his wondrous efficiency in recent games. But the blame for this defeat will fall disproportionately on his shoulders, because he’s the best player, the highest paid, the one who headlines debate segments on the morning sports shows.

    A week earlier, after Jackson had rallied the Ravens from a flat first half to resounding triumph over the Houston Texans, teammates spoke in awe of their asserted, assured offensive master, who possessed answers that eluded him at stressful moments earlier in his career. He seemed finally ready to go blow for blow with the Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes, the reigning alpha at the most celebrated, scrutinized position in American sports.

    We did not see that Jackson on Sunday, when it was time to win the highest-stakes home game in franchise history.

    He performed his best Houdini routine in the first quarter, vanishing from a defender’s grasp and lofting a 30-yard scoring pass to Zay Flowers in the end zone. In the second quarter, he completed a pass to himself, racing to snag the deflected ball and advance 13 yards before the defense knew what was happening.

    But those bedazzlements belied a shaky first half in which he frequently threw to the wrong target or overshot in the face of pressure.

    His play looked even more skittish when contrasted with Mahomes’ cool efficiency under fire. If these were the two best quarterbacks in the world, as Ravens cornerback Marlon Humphrey suggested three days before the game, one still operated in a higher realm.

    Jackson moved the Ravens more freely in the second half but could not come up with the plays to translate those drives into points. Was this all his fault? Of course not. Flowers lost a fumble at the goal line. Wide receivers struggled to separate from Kansas City’s excellent cornerbacks. Jackson’s blockers did not give him a reliable pocket.

    Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith, center, calls a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers, right, in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as referee Shawn Smith calls a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers, right, in the third quarter. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    Offensive coordinator Todd Monken never found his rhythm as a play caller, failing to leverage a running game (81 yards on just 16 carries) that seemed to be the Ravens’ greatest advantage going into the matchup.

    But Jackson was the one who fired too ambitiously when he saw a pair of defenders trailing tight end Isaiah Likely in Tampa 2 zone coverage, only for safety Deon Bush to swoop in for that decisive interception. Jackson thought there was enough contact on Likely to merit a pass interference penalty, but none appeared.

    He was calm when it was all over.

    “I’m not frustrated. I’m angry about losing,” Jackson said. “But I feel our team, we’re going to build.”

    “I told him to stand up tall,” coach John Harbaugh said. “His performance today was all heart.”

    But it was not all efficiency or sound judgment. Jackson needed to be closer to his best to unseat the AFC’s reigning boss, and he’s going to spend the next year hearing all the ways he fell short. He has wanted to be a championship quarterback since childhood, and this is the downside of the life he chose.

    This might have been the best team in Ravens history, but it won’t be remembered as such

    After the Ravens trounced the Miami Dolphins on New Year’s Eve to clinch the AFC’s top playoff seed, Harbaugh said: “I’m not sure I’ve seen a more impressive performance in a season to date.”

    He’s not given to such sweeping, comparative statements, but his team’s performance backed his words. The Ravens outmaneuvered, out-schemed and outhit a parade of the league’s best. Their balance was extraordinary. They could beat you with the sport’s most prolific running attack, with Jackson’s magical arm and legs, with a chameleonic defense that demonstrated extraordinary discipline at the same time it led the league in sacks and takeaways. Aaron Schatz’s defense-adjusted value over average (DVOA), which measures team efficiency, tabbed the Ravens as the hottest team of the past four decades coming off their divisional round thumping of the Texans.

    But they were not that team against the defending Super Bowl champion Chiefs, and in our ring-obsessed sports culture, that means the 2023 Ravens will go down as just another very good playoff entry for a franchise that produces those routinely.

    The players knew a rare chance had passed them by when it was over, knew how hard it was for them to become this good and how hard it will be to get back next year.

    Wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr., signed for one season to help them get over the top, said he’d never played for a better team.

    “These moments don’t come by often,” he said. “That’s why the stakes are so high. Why these players feel the way they feel.”

    Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. consoles quarterback Lamar Jackson on the bench late in the game. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. consoles quarterback Lamar Jackson on the bench late in Sunday’s loss to the Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    Tears welled in linebacker Roquan Smith’s eyes as he spoke from the postgame podium. He had become the most outspoken projector of this group’s soaring confidence. “It’s definitely tough,” he said, voice cracking. “You just think about how hard it is to get back to this position. There’s a lot of things that have to go your way.”

    Harbaugh said he was proud of them, noting the challenges they had overcome and the preseason predictions they had exceeded. But after 16 years of doing this, he knows you only get so many teams that really could win the Super Bowl, a realistic ambition that will go unfulfilled.

    Fans had believed just as fervently and felt the emptiness just as acutely, filing out of M&T Bank Stadium quietly as the Chiefs prepared to accept their trophy on the field.

    “Low,” linebacker Patrick Queen said, describing the collective mood. “We put so much work into it, every day, every practice, the grind, OTAs, training camp, and going through the season. Every single guy in this locker room has put everything he has into it, and we’ve developed bonds, and it’s just really tough to see this outcome. All this that we’ve been working for, and now it comes to an end.”

    The result should not obscure a great performance by a great defense

    Mahomes and his brilliant tight end, Travis Kelce, did what we expect of them as all-time great players. Facing fourth-and-2 on Kansas City’s first drive, the best quarterback in football rolled to his right and found a leaping Kelce over the middle for 13 yards. Three plays later, he trusted Kelce to snare a 19-yard pass in the end zone through cling-wrap coverage from All-Pro safety Kyle Hamilton. World-class stuff.

    Mahomes was just as surgical on the Chiefs’ next drive, a 16-play, 75-yard touchdown to answer Jackson’s touchdown strike to Flowers.

    At that point, it seemed we might be in for both an epic showdown between the sport’s most thrilling quarterbacks and another coronation for the great Mahomes. What we got instead was a ferocious defensive struggle, with a total of six points scored after the 10:56 mark of the second quarter.

    Mahomes’ next eight drives resulted in three points. The Chiefs averaged 4.4 yards per play for the game, a rate that would have ranked 30th in the league in the regular season. We’ll sweep forward with the narrative that Mahomes cannot be stopped come playoff time, and that’s true, but it’s also true he met his match in the Ravens’ defense, which took away his downfield looks, attacked his pocket and stonewalled his power running threat, Isiah Pacheco (24 carries, 68 yards).

    “The defense did a wonderful job and held a great offense to 17 points,” Jackson said.

    Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the third quarter. Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    Ravens safety Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire in the third quarter. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    It’s what we had come to expect from coordinator Mike Macdonald’s crew, which led the league in sacks, takeaways and fewest points allowed while never giving opponents a fixed look to attack. The Ravens’ capacity to adjust during a game set them apart from the outstanding, attacking units coordinated by Macdonald’s predecessor, Don “Wink” Martindale.

    They lined up All-Pros at all three levels and complemented them with tough, smart veterans beautifully suited to their roles. To its last day, this defense played well enough to bring a championship to Baltimore.

    “Just having a group of truly unselfish dudes [who] don’t really care who gets the credit, all celebrate one another, it’s hard to find that in football, let alone in life,” said Smith, the leader.

    Zay Flowers and Kyle Hamilton reminded us how much the Ravens have to be excited about

    Flowers was the Ravens’ offensive star, right up until the moment he reached for a touchdown that would have cut Kansas City’s lead to three and instead saw the ball punched from his grasp by cornerback L’Jarius Sneed. It was a tantalizing, ultimately hellish moment that epitomized a tantalizing, ultimately hellish afternoon for the Ravens’ offense.

    “I thought I did, honestly,” Flowers said when asked if he believed he had broken the plane of the goal line (replays showed he did not). “But I’ll learn from my mistakes.”

    Harbaugh declined to blame the rookie, saying the Ravens teach their players to keep two hands on the ball when they reach for the goal line, which Flowers did.

    It was an unfitting way to conclude a game in which Flowers proved, again, that he’s not destined to join the Ravens’ lineage of underwhelming first-round wide receivers. He saved three of his best games for the Ravens’ late victories over the Dolphins and 49ers and for their loss to the Chiefs. The team will need to create more chances for him as a downfield threat, but there’s no questioning his gift for springing free from the slot, his reliable hands or his ferocious thirst to reach the end zone. No less an authority than Beckham said “he’s going to be a special player.”

    Hamilton already is that, an All-Pro hailed by some as the game’s finest safety in his second season. We knew he would be essential against the Chiefs, whether by covering Kelce, blitzing Mahomes or darting in to hammer Pacheco. As it turned out, he did all three and was the Ravens’ best open-field tackler to boot, finishing with a team-high nine solo stops.

    A few doubters wondered why the Ravens used the No. 14 pick in the 2022 draft on a safety when they had pressing needs at more premium positions. Well, when that safety is 6 feet, 4 inches tall, weighs 220 pounds and makes himself felt on almost every play, conventional rules don’t apply. The Ravens will have plenty of work to do on their defense this offseason, but Smith and Hamilton are elite building blocks, much as Ray Lewis and Ed Reed were once upon a time.

    Throw in Pro Bowl center Tyler Linderbaum, and Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta is three-for-three on his most recent first-round picks.

    The Ravens might want another shot with this team, but they won’t be the same in 2024

    The window just closed on this specific group; that’s reality when more than 20 players — including heart-and-soul stalwarts such as Queen, defensive tackle Justin Madubuike and guard Kevin Zeitler — are headed for free agency.

    The Ravens will hold on to some. Perhaps they’ll use the franchise tag to keep Madubuike, who led the team with 13 sacks and 33 quarterback hits, off the open market, where he might command a $100 million deal. But Queen, who made the Pro Bowl in his fourth season playing through myriad injuries, might be too pricey given the hefty commitment the Ravens have already made to Smith.

    Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    A dejected Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench late in Sunday’s loss to the Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    Outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney, one of the great one-year bargains in team history, will surely cost more next time around. He and Beckham adored their time in Baltimore, but they’ll survey their options.

    The Ravens will have many questions to answer on their offensive line, where guards Zeitler and John Simpson are both headed for free agency and tackles Ronnie Stanley and Morgan Moses battled injuries for much of the season. Linderbaum is the only sure thing. Patrick Mekari and Daniel Faalele did well rotating in to help Stanley and Moses reach the finish line. Might one of them compete for a starting job next summer?

    Harbaugh’s staff could lose Macdonald to the Seattle Seahawks or Washington Commanders, both of which still need to hire a head coach. Defensive backs coach Dennard Wilson could become a coordinator in another city.

    There will be plenty of time over the next two months to assess the choices confronting DeCosta and Harbaugh. Some fans will call for changes at the top after this loss, but that’s far-fetched. Players still respond to Harbaugh throughout every season, and he morphs with the times, as he did in hiring Macdonald and Monken the past two offseasons.

    The Ravens will remain a contender to be reckoned with as long as Jackson is playing quarterback and Smith and Hamilton are around to maintain the franchise’s defensive standard. But this was farewell to an exceptional version of the team.

    “Nobody thought we were going to be in this position — new system, new guys, a whole new team,” Jackson said. “People didn’t think we were going to be in this position, but we were. Next time, we’ve just got to finish.”

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a member of the Kansas City chiefs after the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell Beckham Jr. in the final minutes of the game as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the...

      Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the Chiefs defeat the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship trophy as Chiefs tightend Travis Kelce, right, celebrates.The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating...

      Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate Chiefs victory over the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • A dejected Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench...

      A dejected Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench late in Sunday's loss to the Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field...

      Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench late in the fourth quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the...

      Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail...

      John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail to score a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by kicker Justin Tucker as the fourth quarter and season close against the Kansas City Chiefs during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines in shock, still stinging from his fumble to the Kansas City Chiefs in the end zone during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late...

      Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas...

      Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas City Chiefs keep the ball late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs defensive end George Karlaftis grabs onto him during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a...

      Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a pass in the end zone as Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie covers and cornerback Jaylen Watson, #35 watches during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during...

      Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during the AFC championship game in Baltimore against Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling make a crucial reception sealing victory during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling,...

      Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling, intercepted the ball against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner,...

      Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner, #27 and linebacker Nick Bolton, Baltimore Ravens tight end Isaiah Likely watches a pass get intercepted by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush, #26 during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line...

      Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line by Zay Flowers during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the ball in the end zone to Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie for a touchback during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith, left, in the fourth quarter after a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith, center, calls a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers, right, in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting penalty on the Chiefs L'Jarius Sneed after a 54-yards catch in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the...

      Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the third quarter. Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended...

      Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after his pass was deflected by a Chiefs defensive player in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass...

      Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass as Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson throws the ball away while being brought down by Kansas City Chiefs #95 Chris Jones in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens Brandon Stephens for a first down in the first quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs\xe2\x80\x99 Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate Baltimore Ravens #24 Jadeveon Clowney bring down Kansas City Chiefs #10 Isiah Pacheco in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle....

      Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Jadeveon Clowney as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in...

      Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball by Chiefs Charles Onenihu for a 2nd quarter turnover as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure...

      Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Ravens safety Kyle Hamilton during Sunday's AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark Andrews in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar...

      Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar Jackson in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate his first quarter touchdown during the Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the...

      Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the first quarter as Chiefs #32 Nick Bolton was late on the coverage. Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens safety Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Chiefs tight...

      Ravens safety Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in Sunday's AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in the first quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the...

      Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar...

      Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes. Baltimore Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore...

      Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore get ready as the Baltimore Ravens take on the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas...

      Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas jersey that he wore to the Ravens Super Bowl against the 49ers. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore...

      Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore Ravens game as they host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo...

      Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo on his way to thew stadium. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate...

      A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the...

      Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting...

      avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore...

      Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party...

      Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. ..(Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

    • the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the...

      the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every...

      Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every home game and are on the sideline as the Ravens prepare to host the Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis...

      A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce before the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/staff)

    of

    Expand

    View the full article

  18. This was the stage fans had yearned for: an AFC championship game in Baltimore. The world watched as the Ravens, for the first time, played for a spot in the Super Bowl on their home field.

    But with the grandest of stages can come the most disappointing of outcomes, and that was the result Sunday. After four quarters of making the Ravens offense look pedestrian and the Patrick Mahomes-to-Travis Kelce connection clicking on all cylinders, it was the Chiefs who milled about afterward, celebrating another AFC title with a 17-10 victory. It was Kansas City staffers who ran and hollered down stadium stairwells and hallways, out onto the field that had quickly been converted into the site of a trophy presentation.

    The 71,430 gathered at M&T Bank Stadium, and the millions more watching all over the globe, were left just as Ravens receiver Odell Beckham Jr. was, watching the Chiefs collect more hardware in Baltimore.

    Sunday marked the biggest football game Baltimore had hosted in more than 50 years and, with American sports’ biggest prize — a Super Bowl berth — waiting at the end of it, Ravens fans from both near and far tuned in. The disappointment didn’t discriminate; regardless of fans’ origin, Sunday’s loss stung.

    Jack Rennison, who lives in England, became an NFL fan years ago and used several criteria, including his familiarity with HBO’s “The Wire,” to select a favorite team. Watching with 120 Ravens fans at a London pub, he called Sunday’s game, “a massive anticlimax.”

    “It’s amazing how a room of 100 or so people can just clear out quickly,” he wrote in a text message to The Baltimore Sun. Paraphrasing “The Wire,” he added, “We wanted it to be one way, but it’s that other way.”

    Sunday’s stage was storybook-perfect. Lamar Jackson, who has often been criticized in his career for what he’s not, sought to knock off the mighty Chiefs, who are in the midst of a dynastic run, and Mahomes, the sport’s best. It was the Chiefs’ sixth straight AFC title game appearance, while Jackson, lambasted by pundits for his lack of playoff wins despite his electrifying play, focused all year on winning his first Super Bowl.

    What’s more, this Ravens team, with its dominant season and questions about its future roster and coaching staff, was seemingly built to win this year. Sunday’s loss to the Chiefs marked a pivotal moment for fans near and far.

    “I’m stressed,” Katy Coulman admitted a couple of hours before kickoff. One of seven Ravens fans who flew in from the United Kingdom for the game, Coulman became a Ravens fan years ago, in part because of her love for Towson-originated band All Time Low. Others gravitated toward the Ravens because of Edgar Allan Poe or, simply, for their reputation as a gritty defensive team.

    A few of them drank National Bohemians Sunday as they tailgated, like any Baltimorean.

    A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
    A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    “Once you’ve got the bug, you’ve got the bug,” Coulman, a member of the United Kingdom Ravens Flock, explained of her long-distance fandom. She saved money for five years to attend the game.

    There were glimpses of what many, from Linthicum Heights to London, hoped would be a joyous day. When Jackson eluded a sack and connected with Zay Flowers, pulling a rabbit out of a hat for a first-half touchdown, fans in Sao Paulo, Brazil, jumped up and down, hugging one another, and chanting, “MVP!” Guilherme Foster, a Brazil native who attended the University of Delaware and then lived in Baltimore for several years, was among them, wearing a Baltimore Colts Johnny Unitas jersey.

    He praised the Ravens’ second-half performance as being “Ravens football,” but told The Sun, “Unfortunately, it wasn’t the storybook ending that we’d hoped for.”

    In Austria, Kate Pinter called it “the worst outcome possible.” A Vienna native, she started watching the NFL in 2011, and when the Ravens won the Super Bowl in 2013, she was struck by the team’s colors. She and her husband, Benjamin Deppisch-Pinter, a native of Germany, operate a German-language fan website and spend their Sundays — including late into Monday mornings sometimes, given the six-hour time difference — watching their Ravens.

    They traveled to Baltimore this year for two games and also watched the Ravens in London. Sunday, they were in their living room, eating loaded nachos and surrounded by posters from games they’ve attended, disappointed by the Ravens’ offense.

    “The breaking point was the fumble at the 1-yard line,” Pinter wrote in a text message to The Sun, referencing one of the Ravens’ two fourth-quarter turnovers.

    Benjamin Deppisch-Pinter and Kate Pinter were born in Germany and Austria, respectively, but have been Ravens fans for over a decade. In Nov., they visited Baltimore for the first time and attended two games at M&T Bank Stadium.
    Benjamin Deppisch-Pinter and Kate Pinter were born in Germany and Austria, respectively, but have been Ravens fans for over a decade. In November, they visited Baltimore for the first time and attended two games at M&T Bank Stadium. (Courtesy photo)

    Like in Mexico City — where dozens of Ravens fans gathered Friday — vibes were high in Baltimore before the game. Alan and Kim Moore, of Anne Arundel County, both dyed their hair purple for the occasion. (“Why not?” Alan explained outside the stadium. “It’s the Ravens, man.”)

    The tone of the evening shifted, however, as the Ravens’ loss came into view. As the referees walked off the field, fans in Baltimore hollered at them, and outside Fells Point bars, cigarette smoke and curse words filled the air.

    “Damn. The AFC championship at home, losing that hurts more than losing the Super Bowl, yo,” Jacob Miller, of Arbutus, said.

    While some fans cried foul about missed calls, the performance from Jackson, or pop star Taylor Swift, who attended the game to watch her boyfriend, Kelce, others felt the Ravens were simply outdueled by one of the greats, Mahomes.

    Çağman Şeker, who’s from Istanbul, Turkey, and moved to Baltimore last month, recently embraced the Ravens and just wanted to see the city celebrate after a win. “That was bad,” he said, “but Baltimore is going to be OK.”

    Baltimore Sun reporter Dillon Mullan contributed to this article.

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a member of the Kansas City chiefs after the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell Beckham Jr. in the final minutes of the game as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the...

      Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the Chiefs defeat the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship trophy as Chiefs tightend Travis Kelce, right, celebrates.The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating...

      Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate Chiefs victory over the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field...

      Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench late in the fourth quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the...

      Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail...

      John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail to score a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by kicker Justin Tucker as the fourth quarter and season close against the Kansas City Chiefs during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines in shock, still stinging from his fumble to the Kansas City Chiefs in the end zone during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Fans react to a penalty against the Ravens late in...

      Fans react to a penalty against the Ravens late in the fourth quarter of Sunday's AFC championship game against the Chiefs. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas...

      Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas City Chiefs keep the ball late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs defensive end George Karlaftis grabs onto him during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a...

      Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a pass in the end zone as Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie covers and cornerback Jaylen Watson, #35 watches during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during...

      Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during the AFC championship game in Baltimore against Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling make a crucial reception sealing victory during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling,...

      Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling, intercepted the ball against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner,...

      Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner, #27 and linebacker Nick Bolton, Baltimore Ravens tight end Isaiah Likely watches a pass get intercepted by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush, #26 during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line...

      Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line by Zay Flowers during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the ball in the end zone to Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie for a touchback during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith, left, in the fourth quarter after a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith, center, calls a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers, right, in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting penalty on the Chiefs L'Jarius Sneed after a 54-yards catch in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the...

      Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the third quarter. Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended...

      Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after his pass was deflected by a Chiefs defensive player in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass...

      Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass as Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson throws the ball away while being brought down by Kansas City Chiefs #95 Chris Jones in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens Brandon Stephens for a first down in the first quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs\xe2\x80\x99 Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate Baltimore Ravens #24 Jadeveon Clowney bring down Kansas City Chiefs #10 Isiah Pacheco in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle....

      Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Jadeveon Clowney as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in...

      Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball by Chiefs Charles Onenihu for a 2nd quarter turnover as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark Andrews in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar...

      Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar Jackson in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate his first quarter touchdown during the Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the...

      Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the first quarter as Chiefs #32 Nick Bolton was late on the coverage. Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs' Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in the first quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the...

      Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar...

      Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes. Baltimore Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore...

      Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore get ready as the Baltimore Ravens take on the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas...

      Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas jersey that he wore to the Ravens Super Bowl against the 49ers. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore...

      Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore Ravens game as they host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo...

      Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo on his way to thew stadium. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom pose...

      A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom pose together at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party before Sunday's AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Chiefs. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the...

      Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting...

      avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore...

      Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party...

      Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. ..(Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

    • the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the...

      the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every...

      Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every home game and are on the sideline as the Ravens prepare to host the Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis...

      A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce before the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/staff)

    of

    Expand

    View the full article

  19. Sunday’s AFC championship game was supposed to be a defining moment for Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson.

    It turned out to be a bigger one for Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

    With Kansas City beating Baltimore, 17-10, at M&T Bank Stadium, there is no doubt that Mahomes is the best quarterback in the modern era of pro football. The difference in styles alone puts him up there with some of the all-time greats such as Joe Montana, John Elway and Tom Brady, but he’s been nearly unbeatable in big games throughout his storied seven-year career.

    The road to the AFC title had to go through Baltimore, but the road to the Super Bowl still goes through Mahomes and the Chiefs. He has led Kansas City to six straight AFC championship games and two Super Bowl titles, winning the game’s Most Valuable Player honors in each victory.

    He was the NFL MVP in 2018 and 2022, and he added yet another impressive win to his resume Sunday. The elusive Mahomes completed 30 of 39 passes for 241 yards and a touchdown, finishing with a passer rating of 100.5 while improving to 14-3 in his postseason career.

    He was hot in the first half, became ordinary in the second, yet still put the dagger in the heart of Baltimore. Up by a touchdown with 2:19 left and facing a third-and-9, Mahomes, under duress and falling backward, completed a 32-yard pass to Marquez Valdes-Scantling.

    It ended the Ravens’ season.

    “It’s tough. One of the top two quarterbacks in the league, him and Lamar [Jackson], whatever way you want to rank them,” Ravens linebacker Patrick Queen said. “It’s tough. He can make plays, he can throw, he can buy time. That’s what we try to limit him from doing. But there were times when he just did what he does. We had opportunities to capitalize, but we just didn’t get it done.”

    Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Jadeveon Clowney as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
    Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away while Ravens outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney, left, pressures him on Sunday. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    Mahomes has been on a roll this postseason. He completed 23 of 41 passes for 262 yards in the Chiefs’ 26-7 wild-card-round win over the Miami Dolphins and then connected on 17 of 23 throws for 215 yards and two touchdowns against the Buffalo Bills last Sunday.

    He has been hampered by receivers dropping passes throughout the season. The Chiefs’ receiving corps outside of tight end Travis Kelce and rookie wideout Rashee Rice is nothing to call home about. Tyreek Hill is catching bombs in Miami now, and JuJu Smith-Schuster, who caught 78 passes for 933 yards for Kansas City last season, now resides in New England. No matter.

    Some Ravens fans said they wanted to see Mahomes in the postseason because they wanted to face the best, but they might want to rethink that one.

    “Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce — they have great players,” Ravens defensive tackle Michael Pierce said. “You scheme yourself [and] try to put yourself in positions to stop those guys. We got it done. It’s just way too late, so credit to them. They played a great game, especially early. Our defense just got … we got started way too late.”

    Meanwhile, Jackson, the favorite to win the NFL MVP Award, struggled with the same issues that have plagued him throughout his career. He completed 20 of 37 passes for 272 yards but consistently overthrew and underthrew receivers because of sloppy fundamentals. The Ravens couldn’t match up on the outside with Kansas City cornerbacks Trent McDuffie and L’Jarius Sneed, and Jackson had problems throwing to the outside of the field.

    He easily could have had two other passes intercepted outside of the one that was picked off in the end zone when he tried to force a pass to tight end Isaiah Likely, who was triple-covered, midway through the fourth quarter in a two-score game. Pocket awareness? He struggled with that as well.

    Jackson, of course, would prefer to win a Super Bowl than be league MVP. It’s reminiscent of watching former Ravens and Pro Football Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Lewis run directly to the locker room after every playoff loss because he didn’t win a Lombardi Trophy.

    That type of spirit drives competitors.

    “I’m very proud of my team. We had a new system, offensive coordinator [Todd Monken] different things,” Jackson said. “There were different things we saw like motions and stuff like that. We had adversity at the beginning of the season. We [weren’t] playing well. People didn’t know what the Ravens offense or defense was going to look like, and we made it all the way to this point.

    “Our goal was short. We made it here, but we’ve just got to finish next time, but I’m very proud of my team [on] all phases.”

    But Jackson can’t be blamed totally for this defeat. The defense allowed 319 yards, including 221 in the first half when the Chiefs scored all 17 of their points. Offensively, the Ravens weren’t able to sustain many long drives, something that had become their signature this season. It was one of the key differences in the game — Kansas City had long, controlled drives, especially in the first half, and won the time of possession battle, 37:30 to 22:30.

    That’s been the Ravens’ formula for success and part of the reason they couldn’t run the ball, which they gave up on early. They rushed just 16 times for 81 yards, and eight of those were by Jackson, who had 54 yards. Baltimore also struggled protecting Jackson, who was sacked four times.

    The frustration showed. It showed as Jackson kept trying to force passes to veteran Odell Beckham Jr., who couldn’t get separation, and it showed in the penalties, all eight of them for 95 yards. Queen and middle linebacker Roquan Smith looked especially frustrated as the game wore on.

    But many of the problems stem from the Ravens failing to contain Mahomes. He made and extended plays with his legs. He threw from various angles and looked very much in control of the Chiefs’ offense.

    It’s why when the game was over, Mahomes and Kelce, who had 11 catches on 11 targets for 116 yards, including a 19-yard touchdown to cap the Chiefs’ opening drive, were up on the stage holding the Lamar Hunt Trophy.

    The road to the Super Bowl still goes through Kansas City, and ultimately, Mahomes.

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a member of the Kansas City chiefs after the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell Beckham Jr. in the final minutes of the game as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the...

      Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the Chiefs defeat the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, lifting the Lamar Hunt Trophy on...

      Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, lifting the Lamar Hunt Trophy on Sunday after the Chiefs beat the Ravens, 17-10, improved to 14-3 in the postseason. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating...

      Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate Chiefs victory over the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field...

      Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench late in the fourth quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the...

      Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail...

      John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail to score a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by kicker Justin Tucker as the fourth quarter and season close against the Kansas City Chiefs during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines in shock, still stinging from his fumble to the Kansas City Chiefs in the end zone during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late...

      Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas...

      Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas City Chiefs keep the ball late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs defensive end George Karlaftis grabs onto him during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a...

      Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a pass in the end zone as Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie covers and cornerback Jaylen Watson, #35 watches during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during...

      Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during the AFC championship game in Baltimore against Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling make a crucial reception sealing victory during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling,...

      Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling, intercepted the ball against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner,...

      Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner, #27 and linebacker Nick Bolton, Baltimore Ravens tight end Isaiah Likely watches a pass get intercepted by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush, #26 during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line...

      Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line by Zay Flowers during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the ball in the end zone to Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie for a touchback during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith, left, in the fourth quarter after a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith, center, calls a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers, right, in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting penalty on the Chiefs L'Jarius Sneed after a 54-yards catch in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the...

      Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the third quarter. Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended...

      Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after his pass was deflected by a Chiefs defensive player in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass...

      Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass as Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson throws the ball away while being brought down by Kansas City Chiefs #95 Chris Jones in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens Brandon Stephens for a first down in the first quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs\xe2\x80\x99 Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate Baltimore Ravens #24 Jadeveon Clowney bring down Kansas City Chiefs #10 Isiah Pacheco in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle....

      Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away while Ravens...

      Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away while Ravens outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney, left, pressures him on Sunday. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in...

      Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball by Chiefs Charles Onenihu for a 2nd quarter turnover as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark Andrews in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar...

      Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar Jackson in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate his first quarter touchdown during the Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the...

      Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the first quarter as Chiefs #32 Nick Bolton was late on the coverage. Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs' Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in the first quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the...

      Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar...

      Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes. Baltimore Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore...

      Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore get ready as the Baltimore Ravens take on the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas...

      Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas jersey that he wore to the Ravens Super Bowl against the 49ers. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore...

      Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore Ravens game as they host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo...

      Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo on his way to thew stadium. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate...

      A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the...

      Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting...

      avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore...

      Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party...

      Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. ..(Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

    • the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the...

      the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every...

      Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every home game and are on the sideline as the Ravens prepare to host the Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis...

      A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce before the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/staff)

    of

    Expand

    View the full article

  20. SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Brock Purdy threw for 267 yards and a touchdown, and the San Francisco 49ers rallied from 17 points down at halftime to beat the Detroit Lions 34-31 on Sunday and reach the Super Bowl.

    The 49ers (14-5) scored 17 points in an eight-minute span of the third quarter to tie the NFC championship game and then pulled away in the fourth quarter to earn a rematch against Kansas City after losing to the Chiefs in the Super Bowl four years ago.

    San Francisco mounted the fourth comeback ever from 17 points down or more in a conference title game thanks to some big plays by Purdy and bad mistakes from the Lions (14-6), including two failed fourth downs in field-goal range. Detroit fell short of reaching the first Super Bowl in franchise history.

    “We played as bad of a first half as we could, but we were still within 17. There’s plenty of points there you can make up,” Niners coach Kyle Shanahan said. “The D shut them out there in the second half and this dude right next to me (Purdy) made it happen.”

    After being questioned about whether he could lead a comeback, Purdy has now done it twice in as many weeks. He engineered a game-winning drive in the fourth quarter to beat Green Bay last week and then had an even bigger comeback against the Lions.

    Christian McCaffrey had two TD runs and little-used backup Elijah Mitchell scored on a 3-yard run to make it 34-24 with 3:02 to play as the Niners got over the conference title game hump after losing the past two seasons.

    “There’s been unfinished business for a while, man. Our team was set out for this for a long time,” Shanahan said. “It’s been a long year to get to this point, and we got it done today. It was hard at the beginning, but the character we have in our team, the type of guys we have, we can’t wait to get to Vegas, man.”

    The Niners blew a 10-point lead in the fourth quarter of the NFC championship game against the Los Angeles Rams two years ago and then were forced to play much of last year’s title game loss at Philadelphia without a functioning quarterback after Purdy injured his elbow on the opening drive and fourth-stringer Josh Johnson left with a concussion early in the third quarter.

    But San Francisco managed to make the long journey back to this stage and now is in position to deliver the franchise its record-tying sixth Super Bowl title and first since the 1994 season.

    A magical season for the Lions ended in heartbreak. Detroit remains the only team to play every season of the Super Bowl era without reaching the ultimate game. This looked like it could be the year to end that drought when Detroit won back-to-back playoff games after winning just one in the previous 56 seasons.

    But the Lions couldn’t finish the job despite holding a 24-7 halftime lead.

    San Francisco settled for a field goal on the opening drive of the second half before the game completely flipped in a four-minute span.

    Detroit coach Dan Campbell opted to go for it on fourth-and-2 from the San Francisco 28, but Josh Reynolds couldn’t hold onto a pass from Jared Goff, leading to a turnover on downs.

    The Lions then seemed to have a potential interception when Purdy’s deep pass bit Kindle Vildor in the face mask, but the ball popped up and was caught for a spectacular 51-yard gain by Brandon Aiyuk. Purdy found Aiyuk three plays later for a 6-yard score.

    “Before the game, a ladybug landed on my shoe. And you all know what that means,” Aiyuk said. “That’s all I can say. Other than that, I don’t know.”

    Jahmyr Gibbs then fumbled on the next play from scrimmage, setting up a 1-yard run by McCaffrey to tie the game at 24.

    It only got worse from there for the Lions with Reynolds dropping another pass on third down, leading to a punt that Detroit had a chance to down at the 1 but botched.

    Purdy then drove the Niners to a 33-yard field goal by Jake Moody and their first lead of the game.

    Campbell bypassed a chance at a game-tying field goal on fourth-and-3 from the Niners 30 midway through the fourth quarter. Goff threw an incomplete pass and the Niners drove to the insurance touchdown.

    Goff added a TD pass to Jameson Williams with 56 seconds to play, but the 49ers recovered the onside kick to seal the win. Goff finished 25 for 41 for 273 yards and a touchdown.

    San Francisco’s heralded front seven had no answer in the first half for Detroit’s offensive line, which repeatedly opened up big holes, giving the backs several yards even before first contact.

    The Lions ran for 148 yards in the first half, getting TD runs from Williams, David Montgomery and Gibbs.

    Michael Badgley added a late field goal to give Detroit a 24-7 lead at the half, tied for the second-biggest scoring output for a road team in the first half of a conference title game since the NFL-AFL merger.

    View the full article

  21. Zay Flowers flipped a towel over his head. He shielded his eyes from the final Kansas City Chiefs drive that would milk the clock and officially end the Ravens’ season, one stop from Super Bowl 58. After his fumble at the goal line cost the Ravens a golden opportunity to get back in the game in the fourth quarter, he turned up the sideline, his back to the action. 

    That’s where he met Odell Beckham Jr.

    The veteran receiver, who signed a one-year deal with the Ravens in the spring, pulled in the rookie for an embrace. This wasn’t a quick hug. It wasn’t performative outreach. This was Beckham, fully embracing Flowers, in his ear doing most of the talking, sharing a lengthy human moment during the curtain call of their season, a 17-10 home loss in the AFC championship game.

    “He just told me to keep my head up, you know,” Flowers told The Baltimore Sun. He paused, tears welling in his eyes that pointed at his shoes. Flowers wore his black jacket like a cloak over his head.  He tried to keep going. His mouth opened the slightest bit but any follow-up stuck, like sap between his lips incapable of pouring out.

    “I wanted to win,” was all Flowers could muster in an emotional postgame scene. “That’s it.”

    Beckham could offer a bit more from their sideline heart-to-heart: “Just letting Zay know he’s gonna be a special player. This is a moment in your career that’s never gon’ break you. It’s always gonna make you. Just being able to be there for him however I can. I feel the same way they do. I wanted to win. … I was just sharing that, you know, it’s going to be all right. It’s just unfortunate the way it ended.”

    Despite that game-changing fumble and another costly penalty, Flowers was one of the lone bright spots for a Ravens offense that struggled Sunday after dominating much of the season.

    The rookie caught five passes for a team-high 115 yards, the third-most in Ravens playoff history, and scored the team’s only touchdown, a 30-yard grab tied for the longest touchdown catch by a rookie in franchise postseason history. No other Ravens receiver had more than 39 yards.

    Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the first quarter as Chiefs #32 Nick Bolton was late on the coverage. Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)
    Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the first quarter after getting behind Chiefs linebacker Nick Bolton. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    Even when he was flagged for taunting after a 54-yard catch late in the third quarter, pushing the ball back to the Chiefs’ 25-yard line, Flowers got 14 yards back with a catch-and-run.

    But the need for a consoling veteran came later, with the Ravens still within striking distance.

    Baltimore opened the fourth quarter at the Chiefs’ 10. Quarterback Lamar Jackson found Flowers over the middle, and the rookie split three defenders as he dove toward the goal line.

    Flowers thought he broke the plane, as did the 71,430 screaming fans filling M&T Bank Stadium for the biggest home game in Ravens history. But cornerback L’Jarius Sneed poked the ball loose, and the Chiefs recovered the fumble in the end zone for a touchback. The 23-year-old Flowers could only walk back to the sideline in a pit of frustration.

    Flowers slammed his hand against the bench after the fumble. Television cameras revealed the ensuing cut on his left middle finger. A nearby trainer quickly tended to the bloody cut, which Flowers said was already there but “opened up again.”

    “We coach two hands when you reach for the end zone,” coach John Harbaugh said. “[Flowers] had two hands on the ball.”

    The turnover was the turning point of the game, a chance to flip the script on an otherwise underwhelming offensive performance. But that mistake will be the lasting memory of this game, just like the goal line fumble by Ravens backup quarterback Tyler Huntley that was returned 98 yards for the decisive touchdown in last season’s wild-card-round loss to the Cincinnati Bengals.

    “We gon’ get it back next time. We not worried about that,” Jackson said of Flowers’ fumble. “We all make mistakes. It’s his first season. It’s my first time in this situation. It’s his first time in this situation. We gon’ bounce back. Nobody played the game perfect.”

    Flowers, drafted 22nd overall in April, finished his first season leading the Ravens in receiving yards with 858 (293 more than Beckham) and receptions with 77 (32 more than tight end Mark Andrews). For a franchise that has struggled throughout its history to draft and develop wide receivers, Flowers provides plenty of hope.

    But for the rookie who saw so much success, in those tough moments, it helps to have a veteran.

    “Zay is forever little bro to me,” Beckham said. “Regardless of the outcome today, just being able to share that moment with him like, ‘Bro, you gon’ be straight. It’s tough. Yeah, you may hear something about this. That’s just the way the world is.’ Just keep his head, just like everybody else in here.

    “There’s no one play that defines a game. There’s still a lot of football that was left in the game. But these moments, he’ll be able to learn from and become a better player.”

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a member of the Kansas City chiefs after the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell Beckham...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell Beckham Jr. in the final minutes of Sunday's loss to the Chiefs at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the...

      Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the Chiefs defeat the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship trophy as Chiefs tightend Travis Kelce, right, celebrates.The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating...

      Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate Chiefs victory over the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field...

      Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench late in the fourth quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the...

      Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail...

      John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail to score a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by kicker Justin Tucker as the fourth quarter and season close against the Kansas City Chiefs during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines in shock, still stinging from his fumble to the Kansas City Chiefs in the end zone during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late...

      Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas...

      Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas City Chiefs keep the ball late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs defensive end George Karlaftis grabs onto him during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a...

      Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a pass in the end zone as Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie covers and cornerback Jaylen Watson, #35 watches during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during...

      Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during the AFC championship game in Baltimore against Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling make a crucial reception sealing victory during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling,...

      Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling, intercepted the ball against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner,...

      Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner, #27 and linebacker Nick Bolton, Baltimore Ravens tight end Isaiah Likely watches a pass get intercepted by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush, #26 during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line...

      Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line by Zay Flowers during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the ball in the end zone to Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie for a touchback during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith, left, in the fourth quarter after a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith, center, calls a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers, right, in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting penalty on the Chiefs L'Jarius Sneed after a 54-yards catch in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the...

      Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the third quarter. Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended...

      Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after his pass was deflected by a Chiefs defensive player in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass...

      Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass as Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson throws the ball away while being brought down by Kansas City Chiefs #95 Chris Jones in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens Brandon Stephens for a first down in the first quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs\xe2\x80\x99 Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate Baltimore Ravens #24 Jadeveon Clowney bring down Kansas City Chiefs #10 Isiah Pacheco in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle....

      Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Jadeveon Clowney as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in...

      Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball by Chiefs Charles Onenihu for a 2nd quarter turnover as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark Andrews in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar...

      Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar Jackson in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate his first quarter touchdown during the Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the first quarter after getting behind Chiefs linebacker Nick Bolton. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs' Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in the first quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the...

      Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar...

      Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes. Baltimore Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore...

      Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore get ready as the Baltimore Ravens take on the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas...

      Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas jersey that he wore to the Ravens Super Bowl against the 49ers. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore...

      Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore Ravens game as they host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo...

      Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo on his way to thew stadium. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate...

      A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the...

      Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting...

      avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore...

      Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party...

      Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. ..(Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

    • the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the...

      the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every...

      Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every home game and are on the sideline as the Ravens prepare to host the Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis...

      A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce before the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/staff)

    of

    Expand

    View the full article

  22. Lamar Jackson and the Ravens were, once again, mounting the comeback that fans anticipated. Rookie receiver Zay Flowers had fumbled at the goal line on the previous possession, but Jackson — long lambasted for his lack of playoff success — marched the Ravens back into Chiefs territory.

    The dream season had hope. Baltimore, the AFC’s top seed after a special 13-4 regular season, threatened to cut Kansas City’s lead to a single score on a night when the Ravens’ defense had more than held serve against Patrick Mahomes and company. A trip to the Super Bowl was still in sight. Jackson could weave together a brilliant comeback, flipping the narrative about his postseason success and sending the Ravens to the destination he’d long envisioned.

    But on a second-down look, Jackson floated a ball, seemingly up for grabs, to the back of the end zone. Hidden behind three white jerseys was Baltimore tight end Isaiah Likely. He never had a chance.

    Deon Bush intercepted the pass and, despite a last-minute push by the Ravens, that proved to be a critical blow in Baltimore’s 17-10 loss. Mahomes and the Chiefs — whose AFC title game passport is stamped full of appearances — will once again play into February, a month they’re all too familiar with. Jackson and the Ravens, despite their dominant season, will not.

    In answering postgame news conference questions, Jackson stressed the importance of turnovers. Two fumbles and the interception were a key culprit in Sunday’s loss, a lesson learned from the Chiefs, who did not cough the ball up once.

    The Ravens twice had threatened to score in the fourth quarter only to turn the ball over. “Next time, we gotta finish,” Jackson explained.

    Ravens fans hope that next time comes sooner than the last one did. It had been over a decade since Baltimore last played in the AFC championship game and this year’s team looked poised to hoist a trophy. They won more games than any team in the NFL and did so in convincing fashion; they’d knocked off the NFC’s best, the San Fransisco 49ers, on Christmas Day, decimated the high-powered Miami Dolphins in Week 17, taken care of the up-and-coming Houston Texans in the postseason.

    But the Ravens matched a season-low with just 10 points. And for many, one of the most memorable moments of Lamar Jackson’s 2023 campaign, one in which he’ll likely win his second NFL Most Valuable Player Award, will be that play: a forced throw into triple coverage. Afterward, a few fans, disgruntled and likely full of liquid ire, threw beer cans onto the field.

    Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
    Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s AFC championship game against the Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    Jackson threw for 272 yards but also was responsible for two turnovers — the interception and a first-half strip-sack after Chiefs rusher Charles Omenihu slipped past left tackle Ronnie Stanley. More importantly, the Ravens now have a 2-4 playoff record when Jackson starts and, unfairly or not, the quarterback will be blamed by many for this loss.

    Baltimore’s defense, for its part, did what it has all year. The Ravens made open-field tackles, they pressured the quarterback, and they stood tall, allowing only 17 points. The defense, the NFL’s best all season, played well enough to win, despite a slow start.

    Even still, Mahomes racked up 241 yards — often finding his favorite option, tight end Travis Kelce, to escape trouble — and once again, it’ll be him, not Jackson, as the quarterback representing the AFC in the Super Bowl.

    Linebacker Patrick Queen said he considers Mahomes and Jackson to be the league’s best two quarterbacks, in “whatever way you want to rank them,” and he’d hoped that a win Sunday would grant Jackson “the recognition that he deserves” and end the narrative about him that he can’t win the big one.

    “So much stuff he gets that he doesn’t deserve,” Queen said of Jackson. “This was his opportunity to be able to write some of that stuff off and move on to the next thing.”

    But the Ravens’ offense struggled throughout a pedestrian first half. Jackson was not only the team’s leading passer and rusher in the first 30 minutes but also second in receiving yards after he caught and ran with his own batted pass (a fortunate ending to what could have been another turnover). The Chiefs doubled the Ravens’ first-half yards (221 to 110) and tripled their first downs (16 to five), but after a defensive struggle in the third quarter, Baltimore’s offense suddenly looked like itself in the fourth.

    “To be a champion,” Jackson had told reporters last week in Owings Mills, at the Ravens training facility, “you gotta go through a champion.”

    Baltimore outgained the defending champion Chiefs in the fourth quarter and twice nearly scored, teasing a comeback. Both drives ended, however, in disaster, and it’s hard to decide which was more painful: Flowers fumbling as he reached for the goal line or Jackson, minutes later in the same end zone, forcing a throw into the end zone on second down.

    Jackson slammed his helmet down afterward and then, sitting on the sideline, placed his hands over his face, miming the helplessness of Ravens fans everywhere.

    As Likely had sprinted toward the end zone, he’d raised his right hand, calling for the ball. Jackson thought he could fit in a pass to the second-year standout tight end. “I just tried to let him turn around and make a play,” Jackson said.

    He thought there might be pass interference on the play — and Chamarri Conner made contact with Likely as the ball was in the air — but that doesn’t make the triple-coverage interception sting any less.

    Nor will it lessen the doubts about Jackson’s ability to win in the postseason. Of criticism Jackson faces, linebacker Roquan Smith said, “there’s always going to be questions, comments, opinions. That’s just what humans who can speak and have a mouth [do].

    “It’s not pointing fingers at the end of the day. We didn’t get the job done as a team.”

    Jackson has four more years left on a lucrative contract and although questions linger about how this team will look next year — both from a coaching and player personnel standpoint — the Ravens will seek to be in this same spot next January. In the meantime, Mahomes might get his third Super Bowl ring. And the lasting image until then, for many, will be an ill-advised throw to the end zone.

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is comforted by a member of the Kansas City chiefs after the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by a member of the Chiefs staff as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is consoled by Odell Beckham Jr. in the final minutes of the game as the Baltimore Ravens fall to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the...

      Ravens Isaiah Likely looks dejectedly on the sideline as the Chiefs defeat the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes holds up the championship trophy as Chiefs tightend Travis Kelce, right, celebrates.The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating...

      Chiefs head coach Andy Reid celebrates with trophy after beating the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce kisses the trophy to celebrate Chiefs victory over the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during...

      Baltimore Ravens tackle Ronnie Stanley sits on the bench during the the AFC championship game in Baltimore against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench in the...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson sits on the bench in the fourth quarter of Sunday's AFC championship game against the Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field...

      Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers sits dejectedly on the bench late in the fourth quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after...

      Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the...

      Ravens Michael Pierce is dejected on the bench as the Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail...

      John Brown of Phoenix reacts after the Baltimore Ravens fail to score a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, left is consoled by kicker Justin Tucker as the fourth quarter and season close against the Kansas City Chiefs during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers walks on the sidelines in shock, still stinging from his fumble to the Kansas City Chiefs in the end zone during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late...

      Baltimore Ravens fans react to a penalty against Baltimore late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas...

      Fans see the end of the season as the Kansas City Chiefs keep the ball late during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson scrambles as Kansas City Chiefs defensive end George Karlaftis grabs onto him during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a...

      Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. fails to catch a pass in the end zone as Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie covers and cornerback Jaylen Watson, #35 watches during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during...

      Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts in frustration during the AFC championship game in Baltimore against Kansas City Chiefs. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet, #10 watchees Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling make a crucial reception sealing victory during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling,...

      Kansas City Chiefs celebrate after defensive back Deon Bush, kneeling, intercepted the ball against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner,...

      Triple teamed by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Chamarri Conner, #27 and linebacker Nick Bolton, Baltimore Ravens tight end Isaiah Likely watches a pass get intercepted by Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush, #26 during the fourth quarter of the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. The Chiefs stunned the Ravens, 17-10. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for...

      Kansas City Chiefs Deon Bush intercepts a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens Isaiah Likely in the end zone in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball...

      Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Deon Bush intercepts the ball thrown by Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone during the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line...

      Kansas City Chiefs recover a fumble at the one-yard line by Zay Flowers during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers, #4 coughs up the ball in the end zone to Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie for a touchback during the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, right, talks to Referee Shawn Smith, left, in the fourth quarter after a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith,...

      Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, left, reacts as Referee Shawn Smith, center, calls a taunting penalty on wide receiver Zay Flowers, right, in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting...

      Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers is called for a taunting penalty on the Chiefs L'Jarius Sneed after a 54-yards catch in the third quarter. The Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs...

      Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Justin Madubuike sacks Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the...

      Ravens Kyle Hamilton, left, tackles Chiefs Clyde Edwards-Helairehe in the third quarter. Chiefs defeated the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC Championship game. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson catches his own deflected pass against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended...

      Kansas City Chiefs Trent McDuffie breaks up a pass intended for Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in the 4th quarter. The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 17-10 in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson catches a pass after his pass was deflected by a Chiefs defensive player in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass...

      Kansas City Chiefs #22 Trent McDuffie almost intercepts a pass as Baltimore Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson throws the ball away while being brought down by Kansas City Chiefs #95 Chris Jones in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens...

      Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce catches a pass over Ravens Brandon Stephens for a first down in the first quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbles the ball at the one-yard line as he tries to score and the Kansas City Chiefs recover the ball during the AFC championship game against the Chiefs in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs\xe2\x80\x99 Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away...

      Ravens quarterback #8 Lamar Jackson has the ball stripped away by Chiefs #90 Charles Omenihu in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens\xe2\x80\x99 Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Baltimore Ravens #6 Patrick Queen and teammate Baltimore Ravens #24 Jadeveon Clowney bring down Kansas City Chiefs #10 Isiah Pacheco in the second quarter. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle....

      Baltimore Ravens #14 Kyle Hamilton celebrates a first half tackle. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Jadeveon Clowney as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in...

      Baltimore Ravens Justice Hill is tacked after a gain in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is striped of the ball by Chiefs Charles Onenihu for a 2nd quarter turnover as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson keeps for a first down as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away...

      Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws the ball away under pressure from Baltimore Ravens Kyle Hamilton as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark...

      Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson throws a completion to Mark Andrews in the first quarter as the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs...

      Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson catches a tipped pass and runs for gain in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar...

      Kansas City Chiefs' George Karlaftis recovers fumble by Ravens' Lamar Jackson in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate...

      Jan. 28, 2024: Ravens #4 Zay Flowers and teammates celebrate his first quarter touchdown during the Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the...

      Ravens #4 Zay Flowers catches a touchdown pass in the first quarter as Chiefs #32 Nick Bolton was late on the coverage. Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City...

      Baltimore Ravens' Kyle Hamilton is unable to stop Kansas City Chiefs' Travis Kelce from catching a touchdown pass in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in...

      Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers catches a pass in the first quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game in Baltimore. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the...

      Ravens and Chiefs fans fight for the spotlight before the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar...

      Samantha Cholewczynski of Baltimore wears her handmade shirt showing Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes. Baltimore Ravens vs. Kansas City Chiefs AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore...

      Ketia Stokes, right, and her mother, Linda Stokes of Baltimore get ready as the Baltimore Ravens take on the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas...

      Patrick Reed a former Parkville resident wears his Johnny Unitas jersey that he wore to the Ravens Super Bowl against the 49ers. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore...

      Pat McFaul of Bel Air gets ready for the Baltimore Ravens game as they host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo...

      Shawn Blowe of Baltimore carries a giant Lamar Jackson photo on his way to thew stadium. The Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC title game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

    • A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate...

      A group of Ravens fans from the United Kingdom tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the...

      Ravens fans cheer as Zay Flowers arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting...

      avens Jadeveon Clowney arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore...

      Ravens running back Delvin Cook arrives prior to the Baltimore Ravens hosting the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party...

      Ravens fans tailgate at the BMORE Around Town tailgate party prior to the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. ..(Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

    • the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the...

      the Baltimore Ravens host the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship at M&T Bank Stadium. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

    • Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every...

      Chris and Karen Nicewarner of Martinsburg, W. Va attend every home game and are on the sideline as the Ravens prepare to host the Chiefs in the AFC championship game at M&T Bank Stadium. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

    • A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis...

      A fan holds a sign about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce before the 2024 AFC Championship in Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/staff)

    of

    Expand

    View the full article

×
×
  • Create New...