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Ravens Insider: Josh Tolentino: The Ravens won ugly, and that’s OK | COMMENTARY


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CLEVELAND — The wind howled, the temperature plunged, and the Ravens walked straight into another afternoon of self-inflicted chaos alongside Lake Erie in downtown Cleveland.

Sunday’s divisional contest featuring the Ravens and Browns had all the makings of a traditional AFC North slugfest.

Quarterback Lamar Jackson was intercepted twice for the first time in two years. Safety Kyle Hamilton was penalized after kicking a football out of frustration. Rookie LaJohntay Wester gift-wrapped points for Cleveland with his muffed punt return.

And the Ravens won anyway.

It was a bumpy, twisty roller coaster, but the Ravens willed themselves to a fourth straight victory, grinding out a come-from-behind 23-16 win that pulled Baltimore back to .500 at Huntington Bank Stadium.

Sunday was a maddening, emotional viewing experience for everyone involved, including Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta, who was seated alongside other team personnel from the second row of Cleveland’s press box, located several hundred feet above the visitors’ sideline.

On a gloomy day when the offense looked stuck, the Ravens muscled through their mistakes and leaned on grit to drag themselves out of an ever-important divisional game to sweep the Browns for the first time since 2020.

“By no means is this the end,” coach John Harbaugh said. “We’re 5-5. Our heads are just above water. We’re just above water. We’re breathing. We’re not even out of the water. But what you saw out there was a tough, hard-fought game against a really good team.”

Baltimore’s defense didn’t allow a single offensive touchdown, just the latest example of Zach Orr’s unit bandaging the season together while the offense continued to find its way. Browns rookie quarterbacks Dillon Gabriel and Shedeur Sanders combined to complete just 11 of 26 passes for 115 yards with zero touchdowns and one interception.

Offensively, Lamar Jackson looked pedestrian against Cleveland’s second-ranked defense. He completed 14 of 25 passes for 193 yards with zero touchdowns and two interceptions. He only rushed four times for 10 yards, while Jackson’s 47.6 passer rating was his lowest since Nov. 28, 2021. Over 53 games during that span, he hadn’t posted a rating in the 40s until Sunday.

Still, Baltimore survived.

“We can fight through adversity,” Jackson said. “This is divisional game, so we know type of game it’ll be. I guess not with the turnovers and stuff like that, but we knew it was going to be a dog fight. … You just have to keep a clear mind. I wouldn’t say frustration, but you’re kind of ticked off because our defense just put us in a great spot, and then for us to turn the ball back over. We can’t have that.”

As much as the offense sputtered, coordinator Todd Monken dialed up his best play call for the game’s most critical moment. Monken’s decision to roll out Mark Andrews on a fake tush push resulted in the go-ahead touchdown score.

Following hours of frustration, that single moment of creativity finally sent the visitors’ sideline exploding like a jack-in-the-box children’s toy that finally sprung open.

“We knew we won the game after that,” cornerback Nate Wiggins said.

Earlier in the season, I hammered the team on their lack of accountability.

Once 1-5, the Ravens have rattled off four straight victories, including three on the road, all while displaying their grit and maturation in multiple departments. Baltimore displayed several examples of improved accountability amid the postgame celebration in the visitors’ locker room.

Wiggins, already dressed and headed toward the exit once the mandatory “cooling” period concluded, was asked by a team staffer to stay and speak with reporters. The second-year defensive back didn’t complain and returned to the room to discuss the team’s latest victory. Meanwhile, Wester willingly addressed his costly mistake, vowing to remember in the future how much impact he carries with each punt he fields.

On the heels of one of his worst performances in several years, Jackson also approached tailback Keaton Mitchell to talk through his incompletion and tipped-ball interception.

Those might be small interactions on the surface, but for a team that struggled with accountability earlier this year, the Ravens continue to progress in that department, among others.

Baltimore Ravens running back Derrick Henry (22) walks off of the field after an NFL football game against the Cleveland Browns, Sunday, Nov. 16 2025, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Kirk Irwin)
Ravens running back Derrick Henry, middle, walks off the field Sunday night after beating the Browns in Cleveland. Henry ran for 103 yards in the victory. (Kirk Irwin/AP)

Baltimore still trails Pittsburgh by a game in the division, but the Ravens are now halfway to the 10-win mark, widely viewed as the AFC’s playoff entry point. Speaking of the Steelers, the Ravens play their rivals twice over the season’s final five weeks. Their first meeting on Dec. 7 at M&T Bank Stadium is shaping up to be one of the most anticipated games of the year, and Pittsburgh could be without quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who reportedly suffered a broken left wrist in their win over the Bengals.

The Ravens might not be winning with style points or full four-quarter performances yet, but they’ve established an important sense of momentum as they enter the final third of the regular season.

“We hope that one day — one of these games — the defense is going to go play lights-out, offense is going to play lights-out,” Hamilton said. “But it’s not guaranteed in this league, and it rarely happens. … It doesn’t matter what the situation is in the game, if there’s a blade of grass to defend, we’re going to defend it.”

DeCosta, as he always does, joined the team in the visitors’ locker room for Harbaugh’s postgame speech. Before the general manager departed, he found Jackson — still in full pads — and pulled him in for a quick embrace near his stall. It was a brief exchange between the two pillars of a team that keeps dragging itself forward.

Sunday wasn’t pretty, but it was progress. It’s OK for the surging Ravens to celebrate that.

Have a news tip? Contact Josh Tolentino at jtolentino@baltsun.com, 410-332-6200, x.com/JCTSports and instagram.com/JCTSports. 

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