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Reading: Running backs? Better. Wide receivers? Worse. Here’s how the Ravens’ offense looks ahead of the 2024 season
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BigPaulSports > Blog > NFL > Running backs? Better. Wide receivers? Worse. Here’s how the Ravens’ offense looks ahead of the 2024 season
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Running backs? Better. Wide receivers? Worse. Here’s how the Ravens’ offense looks ahead of the 2024 season

BigP
Last updated: 2024/07/19 at 6:28 PM
BigP Published July 19, 2024
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Running backs? Better. Wide receivers? Worse. Here's how the Ravens' offense looks ahead of the 2024 season
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  • Jamison Hensley, ESPN Staff WriterJul 19, 2024, 06:00 AM ET

    Contents
    QuarterbacksWhat to know from the 2024 NFL draftRunning backsWide receiversBest of NFL NationTight endsOffensive line
    Close

      Jamison Hensley is a reporter covering the Baltimore Ravens for ESPN. Jamison joined ESPN in 2011, covering the AFC North before focusing exclusively on the Ravens beginning in 2013. Jamison won the National Sports Media Association Maryland Sportswriter of the Year award in 2018, and he authored a book titled: Flying High: Stories of the Baltimore Ravens. He was the Ravens beat writer for the Baltimore Sun from 2000-2011.

OWINGS MILLS, Md. — With all the changes on the Baltimore Ravens offense — from adding Pro Bowl running back Derrick Henry to overhauling the offensive line — none of this compares to last season when the team had to learn a new offensive system.

In 2023, the Ravens were among the six AFC teams who changed offensive coordinator. But Baltimore was the only one to finish in the top 10 in scoring and yards.

The Ravens enter Monken’s second year with a certain comfort level after averaging 28.4 points and 370.4 points per game.

“It’s just a better understanding,” Ravens wide receiver Nelson Agholor said. “A better understanding allows you to play fast; a better understanding allows you to make adjustments. So, the change is more of the knowledge in how we’re teaching things that work really well, and how we’re trying to eliminate things that we may have struggled at. That’s what got better.”

Reigning NFL Most Valuable Player Lamar Jackson said there is another level that the Ravens can go under Monken.

“I believe the sky is the limit,” Jackson said. “We’re doing new things out here with the offense; [it’s] more verbal, more verbiage for me, if anything, but it’s looking good so far.”

With veteran reporting to training camp starting on July 20, are the Ravens better, worse or the same on offense?

Here is a position-by-position analysis for 2024:


Lamar Jackson is coming off a season where he set career highs with 3,678 yards passing and 67.2% completion rate. AP Photo/Nick Wass

Quarterbacks

Additions: Devin Leary, Emory Jones

Losses: Tyler Huntley

Returnees: Lamar Jackson, Josh Johnson

Better, worse or the same: Same

Jackson is coming off a season in which he set career highs with 3,678 yards passing and 67.2% completion rate. Just as important, he didn’t miss a game due to injury for the first time since 2020. The Ravens will need Jackson to stay healthy because Baltimore is taking a risk by going with Johnson, a 38-year-old journeyman, as its primary backup. He hasn’t started a game in three years. But the Ravens weren’t getting great production from longtime backup Huntley, who joined the Browns after going 3-7 as a starter for Baltimore.


What to know from the 2024 NFL draft

• See all 257 picks | Pick analysis
• Kiper’s draft grades | Best, worst picks
• Ranking best 100 picks | Overreactions
• Big takeaways | Yates’ favorite picks
• Every trade | Read more on the draft

Running backs

Additions: Derrick Henry, Rasheen Ali, Chris Collier

Losses: J.K. Dobbins, Gus Edwards, Dalvin Cook

Returnees: Justice Hill, Keaton Mitchell, Owen Wright, Patrick Ricard (FB)

Better, worse or the same: Better

The Ravens, who led the NFL with 1,768 rushing yards before contact, added Henry, who has topped the league in average yards after first contact (2.21). There has been talk about a decline in production for Henry, who turned 30 after tying a career-low with 4.2 yards per carry. But the Ravens will likely lessen his usual workload by rotating in Hill, one of the most underrated players on the team, and Ali, a rookie fifth-round selection. Baltimore is hoping to get back Mitchell at some point during the regular season, but the team hasn’t given a definitive timetable. Mitchell, who averaged 8.4 yards per carry as a rookie, tore the ACL in his left knee in December.


Running back Derrick Henry, the Ravens’ biggest free agency addition, led the league average yards after first contact (2.21) last season. Nathan Ray Seebeck-USA TODAY Sports

Wide receivers

Additions: Devontez Walker, Deonte Harty, Tayvion Robinson, Dayton Wade, Qadir Ismail, Isaiah Washington

Losses: Odell Beckham Jr., Devin Duvernay

Returnees: Zay Flowers, Rashod Bateman, Nelson Agholor, Tylan Wallace, Malik Cunningham, Sean Ryan

Better, worse or the same: Little worse

Flowers looks like someone who will be Jackson’s No. 1 wide receiver after he set the Ravens’ rookie records with 77 receptions and 858 yards receiving. He was targeted 108 times, which is 54 more than any other returning Baltimore wide receiver. The Ravens didn’t re-sign Beckham, who finished second on the team with 565 yards receiving. Baltimore is hoping increased production from Bateman, a disappointing 2021 first-round pick, will fill that void. Walker, a rookie fourth-round pick, flashed in spring workouts, and Cunningham, a quarterback-turned wide receiver, caught the attention of the coaching staff.


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Tight ends

Additions: Mike Rigerman, Riley Sharp,

Losses: None

Returnees: Mark Andrews, Isaiah Likely, Charlie Kolar, Scotty Washington

Better, worse or the same: Same

Baltimore brings back its top three tight ends in Andrews, Likely and Kolar. Andrews still led the Ravens with six touchdown catches despite missing seven games with an ankle injury. Likely stepped up in Andrews’ absence and caught five touchdowns in the final five games of the regular season. The expectation is Baltimore will use more two tight end formations with Andrews and Likely together than last year.


Tight end Mark Andrews still led the Ravens with six touchdown catches despite missing seven games with an ankle injury. Mark Goldman/Icon Sportswire

Offensive line

Additions: Roger Rosengarten, Josh Jones, Nick Samac, Julian Pearl, Corey Bullock, Darrian Dalcourt, Darrell Simpson

Losses: Kevin Zeitler, Morgan Moses, John Simpson, Sam Mustipher

Returnees: Ronnie Stanley, Tyler Lindarbaum, Patrick Mekari, Andrew Vorhees, Daniel Faalele, Malaesala Aumavae-Laulu, Ben Cleveland, Tashawn Manning, TyKeem Doss

Better, worse or the same: Worse

The Ravens have to replace a lot of experience with the loss of three starters (left guard Simpson, right guard Zeitler and right tackle Moses). Vorhees is the favorite to win the left guard spot, and Faalele is starting to look like the front-runner at right guard. The question mark is at right tackle, where Baltimore has to decide between rookie second-round pick Rosengarten or the more experienced Jones. The Ravens have a track record of successfully replacing offensive lineman. This line could turn out to be better than last year’s because the Ravens will be younger up front and should get a better season out of Stanley. But the new Baltimore starters will have to prove it.

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BigP July 19, 2024
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