Giana Han is a Ravens beat reporter from Howard County. After graduating from Penn State, she was AL.com’s Auburn reporter and then the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Flyers reporter. In Alabama, she gained experience covering a variety of sports as well as COVID-19, Black Lives Matter and finance. Philadelphia taught her about hockey and rabid sports fans before she returned home to Maryland. Most of her articles are fueled by lattes and are focused on viewing sports through a new lens.
Minter shared that he’s excited about a lot of things he’s experiencing for the first time. But he didn’t have many answers to some of the most pressing questions.
Hutson has stepped into the roster spot John Carlson left open — he’s got two points in four games, with his ice time steadily increasing — but the rookie is adept at evading the shadows even as he follows in others’ footsteps.
Restructuring quarterback Lamar Jackson’s contract cleared about $40 million in cap space. The Ravens used some of that to continue adding free agents after offensive lineman John Simpson, quarterback Tyler Huntley and pass rusher Trey Hendrickson.
The day after Maxx Crosby posted his view from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, the Ravens backed out of the trade that sent two first-round picks to Las Vegas for the Pro Bowl pass rusher, according to the Raiders.
COLUMN | Tyler Linderbaum, Isaiah Likely, Jordan Stout and others are gone. Should the Ravens have found ways to keep more of their free agents? And how does this change the strategy going forward?
After a season of inconsistency on the offensive line, the Ravens are losing their only 2025 Pro Bowl lineman after failing to agree to a contract extension with three-time Pro Bowler Tyler Linderbaum.
Maxx Crosby is a dogged run defender and has 69.5 career sacks in seven seasons, giving the Ravens and first-year coach Jesse Minter the premier edge rusher the team has lacked in recent years.
The Baltimore Ravens still plan to go “BPA” with their strategy (picking the “best player available” on the board). They also plan to build from the trenches.
Starting Monday, general manager Eric DeCosta and his staff will add to their evaluations of draft-available players as the NFL combine opens in Indianapolis.