From 1–5 to the Driver’s Seat? Don’t Count Ravens Out Yet
Hereâs the cleanest way to talk about the Ravensâ season from this point on: be better than the Steelers by Week 14, and then beat them twice. Everything else is noise. The standings, the tieâbreakers, the handâwringing about style points â none of it matters if Baltimore canât walk into that first RavensâSteelers game in mid-December looking like the sharper, more complete team.
The good news is the roadmap is right in front of them: Lamar Jackson is expected back out of the bye, and the next six opponents are, frankly, the friendliest stretch theyâll see all year â a run of teams that, combined, sit at 10â24. Handle your business for six weeks and walk into Steelers Week at 7â5 with a chance to flip the division narrative. The bad news? Thereâs basically no margin for another bad loss to a nonâplayoff team. One more flop there, and you place an impossible burden on December.
The Bye Might Be the Lifeline
Baltimore hits the bye week sitting at 1â5. Itâs tied for the worst start in franchise history, and it feels every bit of it. You donât just fall into a hole like that â you dig it with turnovers, penalties, and missed opportunities.
The bye isnât just about getting guys healthy â itâs about getting the team right. Sure, Lamarâs hamstring and Ronnie Stanleyâs ankle matter, but this is also the one week where the coaching staff can step back, exhale, and actually fix things. Coordinators Todd Monken and Zach Orr have seven straight days without a gameplan to write, which means seven straight days to tear apart the film, look each other in the eye, and ask whatâs really been broken. This is the chance to reestablish the culture thatâs supposed to define Ravens football.
For Monken, that means rediscovering balance â getting back to the run looks that set up playâaction, scripting openers that play to Lamarâs legs, and tightening up the redâzone calls that have left points on the field. For Orr and the defense, itâs about finding that edge again â turning pressure into turnovers, cleaning up missed fits in the run game, and cutting out the soft zones that have let teams nickelâandâdime them to death.
Historically, only a handful of teams have climbed out of a 1â5 hole to reach the playoffs, but Baltimore doesnât have to be a miracle story if they use the bye the right way. The path isn't easy: go 6â0 out of the bye, get to 7â5, and enter December ready to fight the Steelers for the division. Thatâs the narrow road back to relevance, but itâs one that starts with coaches doing as much selfâscouting as the players.
Why Week 14 Is the North Star
If thereâs a single date circled in thick black ink, itâs Week 14: Ravens vs. Steelers, the first meeting of the year â and it might as well be labeled the season. The Steelers built a cushion early, but Baltimoreâs chance to flip everything back starts right there. Getting to that week without another loss isnât just ideal, itâs mandatory.
If the Ravens reach Week 14 still clean, the math starts tilting in their favor. They could afford to go 2â2 in their final five (two against Pittsburgh, one with Green Bay, one with New England, and a likely Burrow-less Bengals team) and still land at 10â7, which almost certainly gets them into the playoff picture. Thatâs the floor. The ceiling? Sweep the Steelers, and things get crazy. Suddenly youâre talking about a team that could win the division after starting 1â5.
And hereâs the kicker: the Steelers have a brutal next seven weeks. Theyâll be grinding through playoffâcaliber opponents while the Ravens play the Bears, Dolphins Vikings, Browns, Jets, and Bengals. If Baltimore stays steady and Pittsburgh stumbles even a little, the Ravens can turn Week 14 from a survival game into a division takeover.
The Margin for Error Is Paper Thin
Hereâs the harsh truth: if the Ravens drop even one more to a nonâplayoff opponent before Week 14, everything theyâve worked to rebuild could fall apart. You canât go handing out charity wins in a league this tight. One more slip-up means theyâd hit December staring down the barrel of a 4â1 or 5â0 finish just to have a shot. Could it happen? Technically, sure â 2019 showed us this team can catch fire â but betting on a nearâperfect stretch in a league built on chaos isnât a plan, itâs wishful thinking.
Thatâs why every snap matters now. Step on the gas early, build a twoâscore cushion, and then let Derrick Henry pound the clock into submission. Donât flirt with danger. The earlyâseason Ravens had a bad habit of keeping the door cracked â turnovers in the red zone, sloppy penalties, blown coverages that gave bad teams life. Thatâs got to stop cold.
From here on out, they need to play like a veteran prizefighter: pick your spots, control the tempo, and donât waste energy on style points. Field position and patience win games in November. If Baltimore can just handle the ones theyâre supposed to, they wonât have to chase miracles down the stretch. The marginâs thin, but itâs still there â it just means the Ravens have to stop handing out second chances and start dictating games the way real contenders do.
Packers and Patriots: The 'No Such Thing as a Free Square' Stretch
These matchups with Green Bay and New England might not be divisional, but theyâre still massive. Both teams are wellâcoached, physical, and look playoffâready. The Packers have a stellar defense, and the Patriots have an MVP candidate at quarterback. Thereâs nothing free about these. But if Baltimore handles their business elsewhere and, most importantly, sweeps the Steelers, then even dropping both of these wouldnât sink them. At 10â7, that still feels like a divisionâwinning mark in this AFC North race.
Thatâs not to say they can sleepwalk through them. You still want to make these statement games â proof that the byeâweek reset wasnât a fluke and that this is a team finding its groove. Beating up the lesser opponents and taking care of the rivalry matchups buys you leeway for when youâre facing two teams built for January football.
If the Ravens sweep the Steelers, I genuinely think theyâd win the division, even if they go 10â7. The Steelers could easily finish 9â8 if Baltimore takes both headâtoâheads.
Left for Dead or Ready to Rewrite the Script?
The Ravens donât need a hundred different goals. They need one: be better than the Steelers by Week 14 and sweep the series. Thatâs how you turn a 1â5 start into a home playoff game. The schedule gifts them a sixâweek runway and Lamar Jackson is expected to be back at the controls. Treat every opponent in that stretch like a playoff game, stack methodical wins, and show up in midâDecember looking like the team everyone quietly hoped theyâd still be.
So if they find themselves walking off the field in Week 14 with everything suddenly back in front of them, donât call it a miracle. Call it a response.
Looking for stories that inform and engage? From breaking headlines to fresh perspectives, WaveNewsToday has more to explore. Ride the wave of whatâs next.