The Baltimore Ravens’ season ended with a 26-24 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers after a missed game-winning field goal.
Despite being a preseason Super Bowl favorite, the Ravens underachieved due to injuries and execution errors.
Quarterback Lamar Jackson was hampered by multiple injuries, and the defense struggled with its pass rush all season.
Tyler Loop’s missed game-winning, 44-yard field goal in the Baltimore Ravens’ 26-24 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers was emblematic of Baltimore’s entire year.
The Ravens were a popular preseason Super Bowl 60 pick. They sputtered out the gate to a 1-5 start, and Lamar Jackson dealt with hamstring, knee, ankle, toe and back injuries that hampered the quarterback and limited him to 13 games. The defense, void of a serviceable pass rush, ranked in the back half of the NFL.
Jackson never regained his two-time MVP form. The Ravens’ leaky defense was vulnerable against the pass all season. And all three phases were plagued with execution errors.
So, it shouldn’t have come as a surprise when the football drifted right off Loop’s foot to end Baltimore’s season and simultaneously clinch the Steelers the AFC North title and a playoff berth.
Baltimore underachieved all season.
“It’s definitely very frustrating,” Ravens linebacker Roquan Smith said postgame. “When you’re doing things that are not having you progress in the game of football, I think it’s just a reflection of like who we are and we have to be better. It’s nothing else to be said. We have to be better play in and play out. It sucks. This sucks. This moment sucks.”
Jackson said he was “stunned” following the season-ending loss.
“We did all that to come up short,” Jackson said. “Devastated (and) furious.”
The Ravens’ roster is comprised of six Pro Bowlers, tied with Denver Broncos, San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks for the most in the NFL. But Baltimore’s the only squad among the four teams on vacation during the postseason.
“It’s disappointing. Our guys fought. We were that close to winning the (AFC) North and we didn’t get a chance to get it done,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. “All that other stuff is history. We had a chance to do it. We didn’t do it. We’re disappointed and we move on.”
The Ravens had Super Bowl aspirations.
Harbaugh and the Ravens now enter an offseason filled with uncertainty. There are questions about Harbaugh’s future after a roller coaster 18th season in Baltimore. While Jackson has a $74.5 million cap hit for the 2026 season and is eligible for an extension that would ease the team’s cap burden.
“The (2025) Ravens will always remember this. At the end of the day, it’s a moment and it’s a year that we’ll never get back,” Smith said. “It sucks when you feel like we let each other down and not playing to your standard and just knowing the potential. But potential don’t mean anything because it’s just potential…We didn’t do anything. Don’t make no bone about it. We have to be better. Whoever is coming back, including myself.”
Poignant, though honest words from Smith. The 2025 Ravens should be remembered as the Super-Bowl caliber roster that underachieved and missed the playoffs.
Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.