baltimore ravens (8-7) at cincinnati bengals...

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• The Balmore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season in nine years under John Harbaugh when they travel to face the Cincinna Bengals (5-9-1) for a New Year’s Day special. Kickoff at Paul Brown Stadium for this AFC North lt is set for 1 p.m. • The Ravens lead the all-me series with Cincinna, 21-20. Under coach Harbaugh, Balmore is 8-9 against the Bengals, including 2-6 in The Queen City. For the fiſth me in the past six years, the Ravens close out the regular season by playing at Cincinna. • In Week 12’s inial matchup vs. Cincinna, the Ravens upended the vising Bengals, 19-14. Balmore built a 16-3 halſtime lead aſter liming Cincinna to 115 total yards in the opening half. K Jusn Tucker was spectacular, hing 4 FGs on the day, including 3 from 50- plus yards (52, 57 & 54) in the first half. (Tucker became just the ninth player in NFL history to record 3 FGs from 50-plus in a single game.) OLB Terrell Suggs led Balmore’s defense by posng 2 sacks, 2 FFs and 1 PD. OLB Elvis Dumervil registered a strip-sack of QB Andy Dalton to help close out the contest, which was sealed when Ravens P Sam Koch took a safety as the clock ran out. • This past Sunday, the Ravens dropped a 31-27 Christmas Day thriller at Pisburgh and were knocked out of the playoffs in a game fing of the NFL’s best rivalry. Early in the fourth quarter, the Ravens enjoyed a 20-10 lead aſter Tucker made a 23-yard FG. But, 3 TD drives in that final stanza, engineered by Pisburgh QB Ben Roethlisberger – amounng to 240 yards – made the difference. The winning TD came on a Roethlisberger-to-WR Antonio Brown 4-yard strike that finished with Brown making a desperate reach across the goal line aſter being stopped at the 1. That play leſt :09 seconds on the game clock. BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1) W EEK 17: S UNDAY , J AN . 1, 2017 1 P . M . ET P AUL B ROWN S TADIUM (65,535) Baltimore Ravens Media Information JUST THE FACTS John Harbaugh on the Ravens’ approach to Week 17 at Cincy: “We work really hard at what we do. I’m proud of our guys. I love our guys. I think our guys are great competors. Our guys want to do really well. We are very close to being a very good football team, but we’re not there yet. We haven’t goen there this year. We have to get there. We have to do what we have to do. Our focus right now is on Cincinna. It’s not going to be on measuring disappointment. That’s not what we do. That’s not what we’re about. It’s going to be going to Cincinna and playing the best football game of the season. That will be our goal. Everybody buys into that. That’s what our guys want to do.” HARBS SAYS Standout CB Jimmy Smith has missed the past two games aſter suffering an ankle injury at New England in Week 14. Starng RT Rick Wagner leſt last Sunday’s contest at Pisburgh with a concussion. The Ravens have 16 players on Injured Reserve, including TE Benjamin Watson, who tore his Achilles tendon on Aug. 27. Other key contributors on IR include DT Carl Davis and TE Maxx Williams. INJURY UPDATE S Eric Weddle on the Ravens’ outlook heading into Week 17: “Hopefully guys look at this moment and realize just how close we are, and that they let it drive them heading into the offseason. We have a great group of guys in the organizaon, from the top down, and we’ll be back in this situaon [playing big games in December]. I’m proud to be a part of this team, a part of this group of men who really challenge each other. We’ve never pointed fingers or turned our backs on one another; we always sck together. That is going to carry us into the future.” NOTE THE QUOTE C ALLING T HE A CTION Television: CBS/WJZ Ch. 13 (Balmore) - Carter Blackburn (play-by-play) - Chris Simms (analyst) - Sco Brandwein (producer) - Andy Freedman (director) Local Radio: WBAL (1090 AM) & 98Rock (97.9 FM) - Gerry Sandusky (play-by-play) - Stan White & Qadry Ismail (analysts) WHAT’S GOING ON? Entering Week 17, Balmore’s defense has produced an NFL-high 18 intercepons, including 4 apiece from Pro Bowl ILB C.J. Mosley and S Eric Weddle. Impressively, Mosley’s 4 INTs rank as the NFL’s most among linebackers this season, while they also stand as the second most by a ‘backer in Ravens single-season history. NFL INTERCEPTIONS LEADERS / 2016 SEASON 1. Balmore Ravens ................ 18 2. San Diego Chargers ................ 17 3. Car., GB, KC & Mia. ................. 16 INTS / RAVENS LINEBACKERS (Single-Season History) 1. Ray Lewis (2003) ......... 6 2. C.J. Mosley (2016) ........4 3. Zachary Orr (2016). .......3 Ray Lewis (3 mes). ....... 3 Daryl Smith (2013) ........ 3 INTS / NFL LINEBACKERS (2016 Season) 1. C.J. Mosley (Bal.) .... 4 2. Zachary Orr (Bal.). ... 3 Thomas Davis (Car.) ... 3 Jordan Hicks (Phi.) .... 3 Deion Jones (Atl.) ..... 3

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Page 1: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

• The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winningseason in nine years under John Harbaugh when they travel to face the Cincinnati Bengals (5-9-1) for a New Year’s Day special. Kickoff at Paul Brown Stadium for this AFC North tilt is set for 1 p.m.

• The Ravens lead the all-time series with Cincinnati, 21-20. Undercoach Harbaugh, Baltimore is 8-9 against the Bengals, including 2-6 in The Queen City. For the fifth time in the past six years, the Ravens close out the regular season by playing at Cincinnati.

• In Week 12’s initial matchup vs. Cincinnati, the Ravens upendedthe visiting Bengals, 19-14. Baltimore built a 16-3 halftime lead after limiting Cincinnati to 115 total yards in the opening half. K Justin Tucker was spectacular, hitting 4 FGs on the day, including 3 from 50-plus yards (52, 57 & 54) in the first half. (Tucker became just the ninth player in NFL history to record 3 FGs from 50-plus in a single game.) OLB Terrell Suggs led Baltimore’s defense by posting 2 sacks, 2 FFs and 1 PD. OLB Elvis Dumervil registered a strip-sack of QB Andy Dalton to help close out the contest, which was sealed when Ravens P Sam Koch took a safety as the clock ran out.

• This past Sunday, the Ravens dropped a 31-27 Christmas Day thrillerat Pittsburgh and were knocked out of the playoffs in a game fitting of the NFL’s best rivalry. Early in the fourth quarter, the Ravens enjoyed a 20-10 lead after Tucker made a 23-yard FG. But, 3 TD drives in that final stanza, engineered by Pittsburgh QB Ben Roethlisberger – amounting to 240 yards – made the difference. The winning TD came on a Roethlisberger-to-WR Antonio Brown 4-yard strike that finished with Brown making a desperate reach across the goal line after being stopped at the 1. That play left :09 seconds on the game clock.

BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1) Week 17: Sunday, Jan. 1, 2017 • 1 p.m. eT • paul BroWn STadium (65,535)

B a l t i m o r e R a v e n s M e d i a I n f o r m a t i o n

JUST THE FACTSJohn Harbaugh on the Ravens’ approach to Week 17 at Cincy: “We work really hard at what we do. I’m proud of our guys. I love our guys. I think our guys are great competitors. Our guys want to do really well. We are very close to being a very good football team, but we’re not there yet. We haven’t gotten there this year. We have to get there. We have to do what we have to do. Our focus right now is on Cincinnati. It’s not going to be on measuring disappointment. That’s not what we do. That’s not what we’re about. It’s going to be going to Cincinnati and playing the best football game of the season. That will be our goal. Everybody buys into that. That’s what our guys want to do.”

HARBS SAYS

Standout CB Jimmy Smith has missed the past two games after suffering an ankle injury at New England in Week 14. Starting RT Rick Wagner left last Sunday’s contest at Pittsburgh with a concussion. The Ravens have 16 players on Injured Reserve, including TE Benjamin Watson, who tore his Achilles tendon on Aug. 27. Other key contributors on IR include DT Carl Davis and TE Maxx Williams.

INJURY UPDATE

S Eric Weddle on the Ravens’ outlook heading into Week 17:“Hopefully guys look at this moment and realize just how close we are, and that they let it drive them heading into the offseason. We have a great group of guys in the organization, from the top down, and we’ll be back in this situation [playing big games in December]. I’m proud to be a part of this team, a part of this group of men who really challenge each other. We’ve never pointed fingers or turned our backs on one another; we always stick together. That is going to carry us into the future.”

NOTE THE QUOTE

calling The acTionTelevision: CBS/WJZ Ch. 13 (Baltimore)- Carter Blackburn (play-by-play) - Chris Simms (analyst) - Scott Brandwein (producer) - Andy Freedman (director)Local Radio: WBAL (1090 AM) & 98Rock (97.9 FM)- Gerry Sandusky (play-by-play) - Stan White & Qadry Ismail (analysts)

WHAT’S GOING ON?Entering Week 17, Baltimore’s defense has produced an NFL-high 18 interceptions, including 4 apiece from Pro Bowl ILB C.J. Mosley and S Eric Weddle. Impressively, Mosley’s 4 INTs rank as the NFL’s most among linebackers this season, while they also stand as the second most by a ‘backer in Ravens single-season history.

NFL INTERCEPTIONS LEADERS / 2016 SEASON1. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182. San Diego Chargers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173. Car., GB, KC & Mia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16

INTS / RAVENS LINEBACKERS(Single-Season History)

1. Ray Lewis (2003) . . . . . . . . . 62. C.J. Mosley (2016) . . . . . . . .43. Zachary Orr (2016). . . . . . . .3

Ray Lewis (3 times). . . . . . . . 3Daryl Smith (2013) . . . . . . . . 3

INTS / NFL LINEBACKERS (2016 Season)

1. C.J. Mosley (Bal.) . . . . 42. Zachary Orr (Bal.). . . . 3

Thomas Davis (Car.) . . . 3Jordan Hicks (Phi.) . . . . 3Deion Jones (Atl.) . . . . . 3

Page 2: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

Pos: G Ht: 6-3 Wt: 305 Exp. (NFL/Ravens): 10/10College: Iowa Hometown: Anamosa, IAWhat is your approach to teaching young linemen? “I’ve seen enough older guys do it when I was a young guy – [Jonathan] Ogden, [Mike] Flynn, [Matt] Birk, guys like that paved the way for me. You follow those guys, and naturally,

you keep playing and understand that you will take on that role when you get older. You just want to be there to guide and help them in any way possible. You also want to be an example to show them how it’s done day-in and day-out.”There was a stretch for the O-line with injuries and an uncertain rotation. How did you rally guys to keep confidence? “Believe it or not, it really doesn’t matter. Good or bad, up or down, it’s about us getting the job done on Sunday. It doesn’t matter the score. We have a job to do. We’re supposed to do it, and we’re paid a lot of money to do it at a high level. I try to tell the young guys, no matter what the situation is, when it’s Sunday, we go out there and put our best foot forward to compete and win. That’s the way we stick around, and that’s the way you have success in the NFL.”Much was made about your switch from right guard to left in the middle of the season, but the transition has been seamless. Did you have any doubt you could make it work? “I had my doubts. I was really nervous, and I still get really nervous about it just because I’m not as comfortable in my stance. I would say experience has definitely helped me. Just knowing that even if I feel a little awkward, as long as I stay in front of them and stay square in the passing game, it will give me a chance to win the block. It’s definitely not been easy, and I don’t have it all the way down yet. But I just take the same approach every day to work hard and get better.” What do you like about O-line coach Juan Castillo’s coaching style? “As a lineman, you have to be a grinder. I feel like we are grinders. Juan is a grinder, too. We’re working hard and staying on top of our fundamentals. In our aspect of the game, it’s all about doing things through repetition and honing fundamentals to make it easier on Sunday. We don’t want to have to think about it. It’s better to naturally be in the right position. Juan is on top of this. It’s about grinding and Juan is a grinder.” You were just voted to your sixth Pro Bowl. What do you love about the experience? “One of the best things about the NFL in general is you get to meet a lot of good people from all across the world. It’s just awesome to see. No matter where they come from, good people are good people. It’s nice meeting them and sharing experiences with other NFL players.” If you were to endorse a product, what product or business would it be? “A fishing company – Rapala Fishing.” Dream retirement plan? “I plan to be in some aspect of the fishing industry, maybe getting paid to fish and endorse or test out new products. If I could go fishing for leisure, not like tournament fishing, but leisure and spending time with my family, that would be great.”

Date Opponent Time/Result Sun. Sept. 11 BUFFALO BILLS W 13-7Sun. Sept. 18 at Cleveland Browns W 25-20Sun. Sept. 25 at Jacksonville Jaguars W 19-17Sun. Oct. 2 OAKLAND RAIDERS L 27-28Sun. Oct. 9 WASHINGTON REDSKINS L 10-16Sun. Oct. 16 at New York Giants L 23-27Sun. Oct. 23 at New York Jets L 16-24 Sun. Nov. 6 PITTSBURGH STEELERS W 21-14Thurs. Nov. 10 CLEVELAND BROWNS W 28-7Sun. Nov. 20 at Dallas Cowboys L 17-27Sun. Nov. 27 CINCINNATI BENGALS W 19-14Sun. Dec. 4 MIAMI DOLPHINS W 38-6Mon. Dec. 12 at New England Patriots L 23-30Sun. Dec. 18 PHILADELPHIA EAGLES W 27-26Sun. Dec. 25 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 27-31 Sun. Jan. 1 at Cincinnati Bengals 1:00 p.m.

2016 TEAM INFORMATION

SCHEDULE/RESULTS (8-7)

SPOTLIGHT: MARSHAL YANDA

Teams W L T Home Road Div. Con. PF PA StreakPittsburgh 10 5 0 5-2 5-3 4-1 8-3 373 303 Won 6Baltimore 8 7 0 6-2 2-5 4-1 7-4 333 294 Lost 1Cincinnati 5 9 1 3-3-1 2-6 2-3 4-7 298 305 Lost 2Cleveland 1 14 0 1-7 0-7 0-5 1-10 240 425 Won 1

2016 AFC NORTH STANDINGS

MILESTONES IN REACH1

FG of 50+ yards needed by K Justin Tucker to set an NFL single-season record. Tucker’s 10 such boots in 2016 currently tie Blair

Walsh (2012) for the most in a season.

2FG makes needed by K Justin Tucker (an NFL-high 37 currently)

to set a Ravens’ single-season record and break his current mark of 38 from 2013. With 3 FGMs, “Tuck” would also become just

the third kicker in NFL history to reach 40 FGs in a season (David Akers, 44 in 2011 & Neil Rackers, 40 in 2005).

4Points needed by K Justin Tucker (137 currently, second most in the NFL) to set a new Ravens’ single-season record, which would

break his previous mark of 140 from 2013.

16Receiving yards needed by WR Mike Wallace (984 on 68 catches) to post the third 1,000-yard season of his career and the 12th in

Ravens history. Wallace’s team-high 984 yards rank 18th in the NFL.

32Receiving yards needed by TE Dennis Pitta (638 on a career-high

75 catches) to post a single-season career high (current best is 669 from 2012). With 1 more catch, he’ll set the Ravens’ single-season record for most by a TE (currently tied with Todd Heap from 2005).

128Passing yards needed by QB Joe Flacco (4,050 currently) to break Vinny Testaverde’s single-season team record of 4,177 from 1996.

2016 PRO BOWL RAVENSFB Kyle Juszczyk, LB C.J. Mosley, K Justin Tucker and G Marshal Yanda have been selected to play in the Pro Bowl for their standout play in 2016. This marks the 11th-straight year that the Ravens will have at least four players tabbed to play in the game.

FB Kyle Juszczyk – First Pro BowlJuszczyk leads the NFL in receptions (35) and receiving yards (265) by a fullback, while he has also rushed 5 times for 22 yards and 1 TD.LB C.J. Mosley – Second Pro BowlMosley ranks third on the team with 80 tackles. He has also posted 4 INTs, which rank No. 1 among all NFL linebackers, adding 8 PD and 1 FF. K Justin Tucker – Second Pro BowlTucker has produced one of the best seasons ever by a kicker. The NFL’s most accurate kicker of all time (89.8%), he is 37-of-38 (NFL-high 97.4%) on field goal attempts and 26-of-26 on PATs this season. (His lone FG miss was a blocked kick.) A perfect 10-for-10 from 50 yards and beyond, Tucker is currently tied (Blair Walsh, 2012) for the most 50-plus FGs made in NFL single-season history. Amazingly, an NFL-single-season record 24 of Tucker’s 37 FGs made have come from at least 40 yards.G Marshal Yanda – Sixth Pro BowlYanda continues to cement himself as the top interior lineman in Ravens history. His six Pro Bowl invites tie OLB Terrell Suggs for fourth most in team history and are second among offensive linemen only to Hall of Fame T Jonathan Ogden (11). Though he typically plays right guard, Yanda, considered one of Baltimore’s toughest players, moved seamlessly to left guard midway through the season to help combat a shoulder injury.

Page 3: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

QB Joe Flacco on what S Eric Weddle brings to the team and if he was snubbed by not making the Pro Bowl:“There is no doubt [he got snubbed]. When it comes to the Pro Bowl, it is about stats, and it is really about the fans, which it should be. I think Eric’s season speaks for itself, just what he has gone out there and done – tackles, interceptions and all of that stuff. Now, having said that, you do not get a chance to see the kind of leader he is, the type of person [he is]. It is not easy to come to a new team, come in here and try to prove to everybody, ‘I belong here; I’m a good player.’ And at the same time, be a leader right away. That is the thing you can feel from Eric. He has come in here, and he has not been bashful. He has made the right impact right away in leading this football team. How he plays on the field, that speaks for itself. Of course he should be there [in the Pro Bowl].”

S Eric Weddle on OLB Terrell Suggs: “He brings the fire, passion and energy, but also a calming influence to the whole defense and to the team. We all look to him for these types of games, not only to be our leader – be our playmaker – but also to calm us when things aren’t going so well, to calm our nerves and be like, ‘Hey, let’s stick together. Let’s do what we’re coached to do. We’re a great defense, a great team. Let’s go play like it.’ He’s an unbelievable player, person, and it’s been an honor to be with him these last six months.”

S Eric Weddle on ILB C.J. Mosley’s selection to the Pro Bowl: “When I first got here, I was excited to play with him, because I’ve seen him. I was at the Pro Bowl with him in his rookie year. He’s just light years ahead of where you’d think a third-year player would be, both mentally and the way he carries himself. He’s a very quiet, humble kid. He takes coaching. He takes when I alert him to something or tell him, ‘Maybe this is a better way to do this here on these plays. You can count on me this way.’ He soaks it up, and it’s like he’s been practicing it for years. He’s a special talent – a special teammate, a guy that leads by the way he carries himself and the way he practices. It’s old school, and I love it. I love being around him. I love trying to give and share everything I can to make him a better player.”

Offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg on the strong play of rookie T Ronnie Stanley:“Ronnie is one of those select few, I would say, as a rookie [who has been] able to do what he has done. Typically to do that, you have to be really, really good, first. You sort of have to have natural instincts, second. You have to stay healthy, typically. Then, you have to play at a real high level. All of the rookies that I have had that have played at that high level have had all of those. The one fortunate thing is staying healthy. He certainly has played better and better every week with very few setbacks. Sometimes a rookie plays really well and then steps back to be able to go forward. He has not done that. He has played at a high level on a consistent basis.”

WR Mike Wallace on the impact of WR Steve Smith Sr.: “Legendary player. I was just telling him, ‘You can play a couple of more years if you want to. Let’s just keep it going.’ I think he’s going to probably [retire] after this year because he’s been playing 16 years. That’s a long time. But if anybody can keep playing, it’s him. It’s just an honor to be on the team with him every day, to see the way he works, the way he carries himself. I just love it. I love that guy to death. I wish I had more time with him, but when you have greatness around you, you just absorb whatever you can get from him.”

ProFootballTalk’s Michael David Smith on K Justin Tucker: “Tucker is a perfect 10-for-10 on field goals 50 yards or longer, and not only does he make those kicks, but he makes them look easy: I don’t think I’ve seen a single Tucker kick this year that wouldn’t have been good on the narrower goal posts they use in arena football. With 10 field goals beyond 50 yards this year, Tucker is tied for an NFL single-season record. What Tucker is doing is extraordinary.”

Head coach John Harbaugh on Pro Bowl FB Kyle Juszczyk:“He’s been extremely valuable. He plays the fullback position, but he’s also a very multiple-type of a player. You can give him the ball. He’s great in pass protection. He can line up outside and then run routes as an outside receiver. Not to minimize, he’s one of our best special teams players. He’s just a core special teams player. He’s excellent at that. I think his value is very high.”

The Baltimore Sun’s Childs Walker on ILB Zachary Orr:“Orr certainly does not play the most glamorous role on a very good defense. He rarely rushes the passer. He’s not a monster at the line of scrimmage like Brandon Williams or a coach on the field like Eric Weddle. He doesn’t make as many plays in coverage as fellow linebacker C.J. Mosley. But much like the guy he replaced, Daryl Smith, he produces every game, leading the Ravens in tackles as he swoops in to clean up the ball carriers who’ve been diverted by Williams and Co. He’s just a sound cog in the machine.”

ILB Zachary Orr on the Ravens organization giving him a chance as an undrafted rookie in 2014:“This organization is the key to my success right now. They gave me a chance to show what I can do. They didn’t coach me any different than they coached C.J. Mosley, a first-round draft pick. They didn’t coach me any different than Albert McClellan or Daryl Smith or Terrell Suggs or Elvis Dumervil. They all coached everybody the same. That is the great thing about it. I have heard in other places players are basically ‘training camp bodies.’ But here, they coach every player like you are actually on the team, and you are a Raven.”

TE Dennis Pitta on the goal of finishing the season 9-7: “We need to keep our heads up about the resiliency we showed [in Pittsburgh]. But our goal now is to

get to 9-7. The Bengals will be our next test. We want to win that game, so that will be our focus.”

QUOTH THE RAVENS

Page 4: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

DEFENSE --Ravens-- --Bengals--Category Stats Rank Stats Rank Total Defense 318.9 5 351.8 17Rush Defense 85.1 2 116.0 22Pass Defense 233.7 10 235.8 11Points Per Game 19.6 7 20.3 113rd-Down Def. % 35.9 5 38.8 144th-Down Def. % 68.8 25t 50.0 16tRed Zone Def. (TD%) 54.8 16 53.3 13

OFFENSE --Ravens-- --Bengals--Category Stats Rank Stats RankTotal Offense 348.5 18 356.0 14 Rush Offense 92.7 26 107.7 17Pass Offense 255.8 11 248.3 16Points Per Game 22.2 19 19.9 23t3rd-Down Off. % 35.9 26 40.1 154th-Down Off. % 43.8 22t 77.8 3Red Zone Off. (TD%) 54.8 18 53.1 21

TEAM --Ravens-- --Bengals--Category Stats Rank Stats RankTurnover Ratio +7 6t +1 14tPenalties 121 30t 86 3tPenalty Yards 1,070 30 706 2

PASSING YARDS (TDS/INTS)Joe Flacco . . . . 4,050 (20/14) Andy Dalton . . . 3,980 (17/8)

RUSHING YARDS (YPC)Terrance West . . . . 756 (4.0) Jeremy Hill . . . . . . . 839 (3.8)Kenneth Dixon . . . . 338 (4.3) Giovani Bernard (IR) . .337 (3.7)

RECEIVING YARDS (CATCHES)Mike Wallace . . . . . . 984 (68) A.J. Green . . . . . . . . .964 (66)Steve Smith Sr. . . . . . 765 (67) Brandon LaFell . . . . .795 (57)Dennis Pitta . . . . . . . 683 (75) Tyler Boyd . . . . . . . . .564 (52)

POINTSJustin Tucker. . . . . . . . . . . 137 Mike Nugent . . . . . . . . . . .92Terrance West . . . . . . . . . . 36 Jeremy Hill . . . . . . . . . . . . .54Steve Smith Sr. . . . . . . . . . . 34 Brandon LaFell . . . . . . . . . .36

INTERCEPTIONS (YARDS)C.J. Mosley . . . . . . . . . . .4 (40) George Iloka. . . . . . . . .3 (21)Eric Weddle . . . . . . . . . . .4 (92) Dre Kirkpatrick . . . . . . .3 (21)Zachary Orr . . . . . . . . . . .3 (23) Two Players . . . . . . . . 2 (n/a)

SACKS (YARDS)Terrell Suggs . . . . . . . . 8 (-62) Geno Atkins . . . . . 8.5 (-61.5)Timmy Jernigan . . . . . 5 (-36) Carlos Dunlap . . . . . . 7 (-44)Matthew Judon . . . . . 4 (-34) Will Clarke . . . . . . . . . . . 4 (-15)

TACKLES (SOLO)Zachary Orr . . . . . . . 130 (89) Karlos Dansby . . . . .103 (63)Eric Weddle . . . . . . . . 85 (48) Vontaze Burfict . . . .101 (73)C.J. Mosley . . . . . . . . . 80 (54) Shawn Williams . . . . .74 (53)

GROSS PUNTING (NET)Sam Koch . . . . . . . 45.9 (39.9) Kevin Huber . . . . . 46.1 (39.7)

FIELD GOALS (PCT.)Justin Tucker . . . .37/38 (97.4) Randy Bullock . . . 3/4 (75.0)

PUNT RETURN YARDS (AVG.)Michael Campanaro . . 25 (12.5) Alex Erickson . . . . . 195 (7.2)

KICKOFF RETURN YARDS (AVG.)Chris Moore . . . . . 143 (23.8) Alex Erickson . . . . 796 (28.4)

Category Ravens Bengals Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-7 . . . . . . . . . . . 5-9-1Current Streak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lost 1 . . . . . . . . . Lost 2Points Scored . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 333 . . . . . . . . . . . 298TDs Scored . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 . . . . . . . . . . . . 32Rushing TDs Scored . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . 15Passing TDs Scored . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 . . . . . . . . . . . . 17TDs on Returns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0Points Against . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 294 . . . . . . . . . . . 305TDs Allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 . . . . . . . . . . . . 33Rushing TDs Allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . 11Passing TDs Allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 . . . . . . . . . . . . 22TDs Allowed by Return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0Time of Possession Avg. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30:52 . . . . . . . . . . 29:49KOR Avg. For. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23.7 . . . . . . . . . . .26.0KOR Avg. Against . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21.0 . . . . . . . . . . .22.9PR Avg. For . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.2 . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.4PR Avg. Against . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11.6 . . . . . . . . . . . 9.5Sacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 . . . . . . . . . . . . 30Sacks Allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 . . . . . . . . . . . . 40Interceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 . . . . . . . . . . . . 15Interceptions Thrown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

RAVENS / OPPONENT INFORMATION

2016 NFL RANKINGS 2016 BAL./CIN. LEADERS

2016 TALE OF THE TAPE

SERIES HISTORY• Overall Series: Ravens lead, 21-20.• In Cincinnati: Ravens are 7-13. • In Baltimore: Ravens are 14-7. • Note: The Ravens won 19-14 in Week 12 this season. • Under John Harbaugh: Ravens are 8-9 vs. Cincinnati.

SERIES HISTORY / SINCE 2008 / JOHN HARBAUGH ERADate Location Result Attendance 09/07/08 Baltimore Ravens, 17-10 70,97811/30/08 Cincinnati Ravens, 34-3 63,87110/11/09 Baltimore Bengals, 17-14 71,16111/08/09 Cincinnati Bengals, 17-7 64,31309/19/10 Cincinnati Bengals, 15-10 64,07101/02/11 Baltimore Ravens, 13-7 71,08811/20/11 Baltimore Ravens, 31-24 71,32001/01/12 Cincinnati Ravens, 24-16 63,43909/10/12 Baltimore Ravens, 44-13 71,06412/30/12 Cincinnati Bengals, 23-17 61,56511/10/13 Baltimore Ravens, 20-17 OT 70,99212/29/13 Cincinnati Bengals, 34-17 62,40609/07/14 Baltimore Bengals, 23-16 70,92510/26/14 Cincinnati Bengals, 27-24 55,71109/27/15 Baltimore Bengals, 28-24 70,97001/03/16 Cincinnati Bengals, 24-16 57,25411/27/16 Baltimore Ravens, 19-14 70,903

All-Time Series Results are on Page 334 of the Ravens’ Media Guide.

• Baltimore is 4-1 in division play this season, and with a win over Cincinnati, can produce the second-best record (5-1) against the AFC North under John Harbaugh (Ravens were 6-0 in 2011).• Under coach Harbaugh, the Ravens are 34-19 in AFC North play, producing wins in six of their last eight games.

DIVISION FAST FACTS

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Pro Connections• Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis served as Baltimore’s defensive coordinator from 1996-2001. During the 2000 season, Lewis’ defense set an NFL record for fewest points allowed in a season (165), en route to winning Super Bowl XXXV.• In 1998, Bengals ST coordinator Darrin Simmons was Baltimore’s assistant ST & assistant strength and conditioning coach. ... Bengals assistant strength & conditioning coach Jeff Friday was the Ravens’ head strength & conditioning coach from 1999-2007. Also, Bengals strength and conditioning coach Chip Morton (1999-2001) served as the assistant strength coach for Baltimore. ... Bengals D-line coach Jacob Burney served as the Ravens’ D-line coach from 1996-98.• Bengals CB Chykie Brown (Injured Reserve) was selected by the Ravens in the fifth round of the 2011 NFL Draft and spent three seasons in Baltimore, including the 2012 Super Bowl XLVII campaign. ... Bengals HB Cedric Peerman was taken by Baltimore in the sixth round of the 2009 NFL Draft.• Ravens CB Chris Lewis-Harris originally signed with Cincinnati as a rookie free agent in 2012, playing in 26 games over four-plus seasons before being claimed off waivers by Baltimore on Nov. 4 this year.

College Connections• Ravens head coach John Harbaugh was the special teams coordinator, TEs, OLBs, RBs coach (1989-94) and assistant head coach (1995-96) at the University of Cincinnati.• Ravens assistant DBs coach Chris Hewitt was a four-year letterman at the University of Cincinnati and a two-time All-Conference USA selection (1995-96) as a DB. Hewitt played under Ravens head coach John Harbaugh – who was the Bearcats’ special teams, TEs, OLBs, and RBs coach (1989-94) and assistant head coach (1995-96) – and Ravens special teams coordinator/associate head coach Jerry Rosburg – who was the team’s LBs, special teams and secondary coach (1992-95). ... Ravens ILBs coach Don Martindale was Cincinnati’s DEs coach (1996), LBs coach and ST coordinator (1997-98), while Ravens senior offensive assistant Craig Ver Steeg led the Bearcats’ QBs and WRs (1990-93).• Ravens head coach John Harbaugh played DB at the University of Miami (OH) from 1980-83 and was inducted into the school’s prestigious Cradle of Coaches Association in 2014. ... Ravens defensive coordinator Dean Pees coached Harbaugh at Miami in 1983.• Bengals defensive coordinator Paul Guenther was an assistant coach (1994-95) at the former Western Maryland College, now McDaniel College, in Westminster, MD.• Ravens ILB C.J. Mosley and Bengals QB AJ McCarron and CB Dre Kirkpatrick were on the 2011 BCS National Championship team with Alabama. Mosley and McCarron also won the 2012 title. ... Ravens DE Lawrence Guy and Bengals LB Vontaze Burfict were teammates at Arizona State from 2009-10. ... Ravens T James Hurst (2010-13) and Bengals C Russell Bodine (2011-13) started on the O-line for North Carolina in 2012, blocking for Bengals RB Giovani Bernard (2009-12). ... Ravens T Rick Wagner (2008-12) and Bengals G Kevin Zeitler (2008-11) started on the Wisconsin O-line. ... Ravens WR/RS Chris Moore played at Cincinnati from 2011-15, finishing his career ranked first in school history with 26 receiving TDs.• Bengals secondary coach Kevin Coyle was the defensive coordinator at Maryland from 1994-96.

Hometown/High School Connections• Several Ravens hail from Ohio: head coach John Harbaugh (Perrysburg), SVP of football admin. Pat Moriarty (Cleveland), “D” coordinator Dean Pees (Dunkirk), ILBs coach Don “Wink” Martindale (Dayton) and FB Kyle Juszczyk (Medina). Pees, who attended Hardin Northern (Dola, OH) HS and was inducted into the Hardin County Ohio Sports Hall of Fame in 2011, was honored with the second-annual “A Tribute to Ohio’s Finest” award by Ohio State in 2015. Martindale was an All-State LB at Trotwood-Madison (Trotwood, OH) HS.• Ravens DT Brandon Williams attended Harmony Prep in Cincinnati.

RAVENS / OPPONENT INFORMATION

KEY CONNECTIONS

TOP PERFORMERS VS. BENGALS

WEEK 16 RECAP: PIT. 31, BAL. 27The Ravens dropped a 31-27 thriller at Heinz Field last Sunday and were knocked out of the playoffs in a game fitting of the NFL’s best rivalry. Early in the fourth quarter, the Ravens enjoyed a 20-10 lead after K Justin Tucker made a 23-yard FG at the 14:18 mark. But, 3 TD drives in that final stanza, engineered by Pittsburgh QB Ben Roethlisberger – amounting to 240 yards – made the difference. (It was the Steelers’ sixth-straight victory and ended a four-game losing streak to the Ravens.) The winning TD came on a Roethlisberger-to-WR Antonio Brown 4-yard strike that finished with Brown making a desperate reach across the goal line after being stopped at the 1. That play left 9 seconds on the game clock, and completed a 10-play, 75-yard drive in 1:09. Baltimore had taken a 27-24 lead with 1:18 left in the contest on a spectacular 10-yard TD run by FB Kyle Juszczyk, completing an impressive 14-play, 75-yard series. On its first possession of the game, Pittsburgh took a 7-0 lead after Roethlisberger found TE Xavier Grimble with a 20-yard TD dart. A 41-yard Tucker FG made the score 7-3 after one quarter. A 38-yard Tucker FG left the Ravens trailing by one, 7-6, at the half. A nifty QB Joe Flacco 18-yard throw to WR Steve Smith Sr., plus a Flacco-to-Smith 2-pointer, gave the Ravens an early third-quarter, 14-7 lead. After a K Chris Boswell FG (36 yards), Tucker added 2 more FGs for the 20-10 lead. The Steelers closed the gap to 20-17 on the first of their 3 fourth-quarter TD drives when RB Le’Veon Bell ran 7 yards for a score. On their next possession, Bell scored again, this time on a 7-yard pass from Roethlisberger, to give the Steelers a 24-20 lead. Bell finished with 137 yards, including 122 rushing. Big Ben was 24-of-33 for 279 yards, including 10 for 96 to Brown, who had just 1 catch for 7 yards in the first half. Roethlisberger threw 2 interceptions (ILBs Zachary Orr and C.J. Mosley). Flacco was 30-of-44 for 262, with TE Dennis Pitta catching 8 for 75 yards and 7 to Smith Sr. for 79. RB Kenneth Dixon led the Ravens with 57 rushing yards.

OLB ELVIS DUMERVILG TT Solo AS INT TDs FF FR Sk-Yds PD 10 19 15 4 0-0 0 3 2 7-44 3• In Week 12 this season, Dumervil tallied a strip-sack (and recovered another fumble) in the Ravens’ 19-14 win.• “Doom” strip-sacked Andy Dalton in Week 3 of the 2015 season, forcing a fumble that LB C.J. Mosley returned for a 41-yard TD.

QB JOE FLACCORecord Att. Cmp. Pct. Yds TDs INT Rate8-8 529 321 60.7 3,270 16 20 72.7• In Week 12 this season, Flacco was 25-of-36 for 234 yards, 1 TD and 1 INT in the Ravens’ 19-14 victory. • On 9/27/15 vs. Cin., Flacco was 32-of-49 for 362 yards, 2 TDs and 1 INT. He hit WR Steve Smith Sr. for a 50-yard TD during the game.

LB C.J. MOSLEYG TT Solo AS INT TDs FF FR Sk-Yds PD 5 41 22 19 1-5 0 0 1 1-7 5• Mosley returned a strip-sack fumble (OLB Elvis Dumervil) 41 yards for a TD in Week 3 of the 2015 season.

WR STEVE SMITH SR.G Rec. Yds Avg. LG TDs 1st 25+7 43 651 15.1 80t 4 26 6• Smith Sr. has posted four 100-yard receiving performances in six career games vs. Cincy, including a 186-yarder (13 catches) in Week 3 of the 2015 season. He had a 50-yard TD catch in that game.

OLB TERRELL SUGGSG TT Solo AS INT TDs FF FR Sk-Yds PD 23 83 51 32 0-0 0 4 1 10.5-64 6• Suggs’ 10.5 career sacks vs. Cincinnati, including 2 in Week 12 this season, stand as his third most against any team.

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The Ravens dominated the first half, limiting Cincinnati to 115 yards and taking a 16-3 lead, and then held on for a 19-14 victory over the Bengals at M&T Bank Stadium. The win snapped a five-game losing streak against their division rivals and kept the Ravens in a firstplace tie with Pittsburgh in the AFC North. K Justin Tucker tied the NFL record with three 50-plus-yard field goals, all in the first half. Tucker converted 52-, 57-, 54- and 36-yard FGs in the contest. The Ravens opened the game with an 11-play, 75-yard touchdown drive that ended with a QB Joe Flacco-to-WR Breshad Perriman 14-yard touchdown score. Tucker’s first FG made the score 10-0 after the initial quarter. A Mike Nugent 23-yard FG made the score 10-3 in the second period before Tucker added 57- and 54-yarders to end the half. Cincinnati closed the gap to 16-9 in the third when QB Andy Dalton directed an 11-play, 86-yard TD series that ended with a 3-yard TD pass to TE Tyler Eifert. (Dalton was 7-of-9 for 94 yards on the drive, but Nugent missed the PAT.) With seven minutes left in the game, Tucker’s fourth FG (36 yards) gave the Ravens a 19-9 lead before a Nugent 36-yarder with 2:50 left in the game made it 19-12. Baltimore P Sam Koch ran out the clock, taking a safety on the game’s final play to make the margin 19-14. OLB Terrell Suggs was spectacular, producing 2 sacks and 2 FFs, helping limit the Bengals to just 64 rushing yards. Flacco completed 25 of 36 passes for 234 yards to nine different receivers. Rookie RB Kenneth Dixon caught 4 for 31 yards and added a game high 49 rushing yards. Dalton was 26-of-48 for 283 yards, with six of those passes going to RB Jeremy Hill for 61 yards. Hill managed only 21 yards on 12 rushing attempts. OLB Elvis Dumervil returned to the Ravens after missing the last five games and produced the key strip sack of Dalton with just over a minute left in the game.

The Ravens dominated the first half, limiting Cincinnati to 115 yards and taking a 16-3 lead, and then held on for a 19-14 victory over the Bengals at M&T Bank Stadium. The win snapped a five-game losing streak against their division rivals and kept the Ravens in a first-place tie with Pittsburgh in the AFC North. K Justin Tucker tied the NFL record with three 50-plus-yard field goals, all in the first half, keeping his perfect season intact (27 of 27 on FGA and 15 of 15 for PATs.) Tucker converted 52-, 57-, 54- and 36-yard FGs in the contest. The Ravens opened the game with an 11-play, 75-yard touchdown drive that ended with a QB Joe Flacco-to-WR Breshad Perriman 14-yard touchdown score. Tucker’s first FG made the score 10-0 after the initial quarter. A Mike Nugent 23-yard FG made the score 10-3 in the second period before Tucker added 57- and 54-yarders to end the half. Cincinnati closed the gap to 16-9 in the third when QB Andy Dalton directed an 11-play, 86-yard TD series that ended with a 3-yard TD pass to TE Tyler Eifert. (Dalton was 7-of-9 for 94 yards on the drive, but Nugent missed the PAT.) With seven minutes left in the game, Tucker’s fourth FG (36 yards) gave the Ravens a 19-9 lead before a Nugent 36-yarder with 2:50 left in the game made it 19-12. Baltimore P Sam Koch ran out the clock, taking a safety on the game’s final play to make the margin 19-14. OLB Terrell Suggs was spectacular, producing 2 sacks and 2 FFs, helping limit the Bengals to just 64 rushing yards. Flacco completed 25 of 36 passes for 234 yards to nine different receivers. Rookie RB Kenneth Dixon caught 4 for 31 yards and added a game-high 49 rushing yards. Dalton was 26-of-48 for 283 yards, with six of those passes going to RB Jeremy Hill for 61 yards. Hill managed only 21 yards on 12 rushing attempts. OLB Elvis Dumervil returned to the Ravens after missing the last five games and produced the key strip sack of Dalton with just over a minute left in the game.

CINCINNATI BENGALS (Head Coach: Marvin Lewis) OFFENSE DEFENSEWR 86 J. Wright LDE 96 C. DunlapLT 77 A. Whitworth NT 94 D. PekoLG 65 C. Boling DT 97 G. AtkinsC 61 R. Bodine RDE 90 M. JohnsonRG 68 K. Zeitler LB 57 V. ReyRT 70 C. Ogbuehi LB 55 V. BurfictTE 81 T. Kroft DB 21 D. DennardH-B 89 R. Hewitt LCB 27 D. KirkpatrickWR 11 B. LaFell RCB 24 A. JonesQB 14 A. Dalton SS 26 J. ShawHB 32 J. Hill FS 43 G. Iloka

BALTIMORE RAVENS (Head Coach: John Harbaugh) OFFENSE DEFENSEWR 89 S. Smith Sr. DT 99 T. JerniganLT 79 R. Stanley NT 98 B. WilliamsLG 73 M. Yanda DE 93 L. GuyC 53 J. Zuttah RUSH 55 T. SuggsRG 62 V. Ducasse ILB 57 C. MosleyRT 71 R. Wagner ILB 54 Z. OrrTE 88 D. Pitta SAM 50 A. McClellanWR 17 M. Wallace LCB 24 S. WrightWR 11 K. Aiken SS 32 E. WeddleRB 28 T. West FS 21 L. WebbQB 5 J. Flacco RCB 36 T. Young

GAME SUMMARY 1 2 3 4 OT TOTAL FIELD GOALS (MADE) & MISSEDCINCINNATI 0 3 6 5 - 14 M. Nugent (23, 36)BALTIMORE 10 6 0 3 - 19 J. Tucker (52, 57, 54, 36)

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSBENGALS RAVENS

RUSHING ATT YDS AVG LG TD RUSHING ATT YDS AVG LG TDR. Burkhead 5 29 5.8 17 0 K. Dixon 13 49 3.8 15 0J. Hill 12 21 1.8 7 0 T. West 13 48 3.7 16 0A. Dalton 3 14 4.7 12 0 J. Flacco 2 19 9.5 16 0 M. Wallace 1 -1 -1.0 -1 0 S. Koch 1 -23 -23.0 -23 0Total 20 64 3.2 17 0 Total 30 92 3.1 16 0

PASSING ATT CMP YDS SK/YD TD LG IN RT PASSING ATT CMP YDS SK/YD TD LG IN RTA. Dalton 48 26 283 3/22 1 25 0 78.7 J. Flacco 36 25 234 2/15 1 31 1 84.7Total 48 26 283 3/22 1 25 0 78.7 Total 36 25 234 2/15 1 31 1 84.7

RECEIVING REC YDS AVG LG TD RECEIVING REC YDS AVG LG TDJ. Hill 6 61 10.2 24 0 K. Dixon 4 31 7.8 16 0T. Eifert 5 68 13.6 25 1 S. Smith 4 20 5.0 8 0T. Boyd 5 62 12.4 22 0 M. Wallace 3 57 19.0 31 0B. LaFell 3 38 12.7 23 0 D. Pitta 3 34 11.3 18 0J. Wright 3 23 7.7 11 0 K. Juszczyk 3 18 6.0 16 0R. Burkhead 2 19 9.5 17 0 T. West 3 16 5.3 9 0A. Erickson 1 7 7.0 7 0 K. Aiken 2 30 15.0 19 0R. Hewitt 1 5 5.0 5 0 D. Waller 2 14 7.0 8 0C. Core 0 0 0.0 0 0 B. Perriman 1 14 14.0 14 1Total 26 283 10.9 25 1 Total 25 234 9.4 31 1

INTERCEPTIONS NO YDS AVG LG TD INTERCEPTIONS NO YDS AVG LG TDR. Maualuga 1 9 9.0 9 0 Total 1 9 9.0 9 0 Total 0 0 0.0 0 0

SACKS SACKSC. Dunlap 1-10, M. Johnson 1-5 T. Suggs 2-17, E. Dumervil 1-5

TACKLES (TOP 3) TACKLES (TOP 3)V. Burfict 13 (10 solo), D. Dennard 8 (4 solo), Z. Orr 11 (6 solo), L. Webb 8 (7 solo), E. Weddle 7 (5)M. Johnson 6 (6 solo), J. Shaw 6 (5 solo)

TEAM STATISTICS BENGALS RAVENSFirst Downs 22 (3-15-4) 16 (4-12-0)Third Downs 5-16 (31%) 5-16 (31%)Fourth Downs 1-1 (100%) 1-2 (50%)Total Net Yards 325 311Plays – Average 71-4.6 68-4.6Net Yds Rushing 64 92Rushes – Average 20-3.2 30-3.1Net Yards Passing 261 219Att. – Yds Lost – Gross Pass. 3-22-283 2-15-234Passes Att. – Comp.– INT 48-26-0 36-25-1Red Zone 1-5 (20%) 1-3 (33%)Goal-to-Go 1-1 (100%) 0-0 (0%)Punts – Average 6-47.2 5-44.4Penalties – Yards 2-15 8-69Fumbles – Lost 4-2 1-0Time of Possession 28:43 31:17

OFFICIALS – Referee: Clete Blakeman (34), Umpire: Ramon George (128), Head Linesman: Hugo Cruz (94), Line Judge: Tony Veteri (36), Side Judge: Joe Larrew (73), Field Judge: Adrian Hill (29), Back Judge: Steve Patrick (17)

TEAM QTR TIME PLAY DESCRIPTION (extra point) DRIVE SCORERavens 1 10:15 B. Perriman 14 yd. pass from J. Flacco (J. Tucker kick) 11-75, 4:45 0-7Ravens 1 5:39 J. Tucker 52 yd. Field Goal 7-2, 2:41 0-10Bengals 2 14:50 M. Nugent 23 yd. Field Goal 14-69, 5:49 3-10Ravens 2 1:40 J. Tucker 57 yd. Field Goal 7-41, 2:55 3-13Ravens 2 0:00 J. Tucker 54 yd. Field Goal 7-37, 1:01 3-16Bengals 3 4:16 T. Eifert 3 yd. pass from A. Dalton (kick failed, wr) 11-86, 4:58 9-16Ravens 4 12:16 J. Tucker 36 yd. Field Goal 12-59, 7:00 9-19Bengals 4 6:00 M. Nugent 36 yd. Field Goal 9-35, 2:50 12-19Bengals 4 0:00 S. Koch OB in end zone for a Safety 14-19

GAME 11: RAVENS 19, BENGALS 14Baltimore (6-5) • Cincinnati (3-7-1)

Sunday, November 27, 2016 • 1:02 PM ET • M&T Bank Stadium • BaltimoreWeather: 50o, Sunny, Wind WNW 12 mph • Attendance: 70,903 • Time: 3:05

The Ravens dominated the first half, limiting Cincinnati to 115 yards and taking a 16-3 lead, and then held on for a 19-14 victory over the Bengals at M&T Bank Stadium. The win snapped a five-game losing streak against their division rivals and kept the Ravens in a first-place tie with Pittsburgh in the AFC North. K Justin Tucker tied the NFL record with three 50-plus-yard field goals, all in the first half, keeping his perfect season intact (27 of 27 on FGA and 15 of 15 for PATs.) Tucker converted 52-, 57-, 54- and 36-yard FGs in the contest. The Ravens opened the game with an 11-play, 75-yard touchdown drive that ended with a QB Joe Flacco-to-WR Breshad Perriman 14-yard touchdown score. Tucker’s first FG made the score 10-0 after the initial quarter. A Mike Nugent 23-yard FG made the score 10-3 in the second period before Tucker added 57- and 54-yarders to end the half. Cincinnati closed the gap to 16-9 in the third when QB Andy Dalton directed an 11-play, 86-yard TD series that ended with a 3-yard TD pass to TE Tyler Eifert. (Dalton was 7-of-9 for 94 yards on the drive, but Nugent missed the PAT.) With seven minutes left in the game, Tucker’s fourth FG (36 yards) gave the Ravens a 19-9 lead before a Nugent 36-yarder with 2:50 left in the game made it 19-12. Baltimore P Sam Koch ran out the clock, taking a safety on the game’s final play to make the margin 19-14. OLB Terrell Suggs was spectacular, producing 2 sacks and 2 FFs, helping limit the Bengals to just 64 rushing yards. Flacco completed 25 of 36 passes for 234 yards to nine different receivers. Rookie RB Kenneth Dixon caught 4 for 31 yards and added a game-high 49 rushing yards. Dalton was 26-of-48 for 283 yards, with six of those passes going to RB Jeremy Hill for 61 yards. Hill managed only 21 yards on 12 rushing attempts. OLB Elvis Dumervil returned to the Ravens after missing the last five games and produced the key strip sack of Dalton with just over a minute left in the game.

CINCINNATI BENGALS (Head Coach: Marvin Lewis) OFFENSE DEFENSEWR 86 J. Wright LDE 96 C. DunlapLT 77 A. Whitworth NT 94 D. PekoLG 65 C. Boling DT 97 G. AtkinsC 61 R. Bodine RDE 90 M. JohnsonRG 68 K. Zeitler LB 57 V. ReyRT 70 C. Ogbuehi LB 55 V. BurfictTE 81 T. Kroft DB 21 D. DennardH-B 89 R. Hewitt LCB 27 D. KirkpatrickWR 11 B. LaFell RCB 24 A. JonesQB 14 A. Dalton SS 26 J. ShawHB 32 J. Hill FS 43 G. Iloka

BALTIMORE RAVENS (Head Coach: John Harbaugh) OFFENSE DEFENSEWR 89 S. Smith Sr. DT 99 T. JerniganLT 79 R. Stanley NT 98 B. WilliamsLG 73 M. Yanda DE 93 L. GuyC 53 J. Zuttah RUSH 55 T. SuggsRG 62 V. Ducasse ILB 57 C. MosleyRT 71 R. Wagner ILB 54 Z. OrrTE 88 D. Pitta SAM 50 A. McClellanWR 17 M. Wallace LCB 24 S. WrightWR 11 K. Aiken SS 32 E. WeddleRB 28 T. West FS 21 L. WebbQB 5 J. Flacco RCB 36 T. Young

GAME SUMMARY 1 2 3 4 OT TOTAL FIELD GOALS (MADE) & MISSEDCINCINNATI 0 3 6 5 - 14 M. Nugent (23, 36)BALTIMORE 10 6 0 3 - 19 J. Tucker (52, 57, 54, 36)

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSBENGALS RAVENS

RUSHING ATT YDS AVG LG TD RUSHING ATT YDS AVG LG TDR. Burkhead 5 29 5.8 17 0 K. Dixon 13 49 3.8 15 0J. Hill 12 21 1.8 7 0 T. West 13 48 3.7 16 0A. Dalton 3 14 4.7 12 0 J. Flacco 2 19 9.5 16 0 M. Wallace 1 -1 -1.0 -1 0 S. Koch 1 -23 -23.0 -23 0Total 20 64 3.2 17 0 Total 30 92 3.1 16 0

PASSING ATT CMP YDS SK/YD TD LG IN RT PASSING ATT CMP YDS SK/YD TD LG IN RTA. Dalton 48 26 283 3/22 1 25 0 78.7 J. Flacco 36 25 234 2/15 1 31 1 84.7Total 48 26 283 3/22 1 25 0 78.7 Total 36 25 234 2/15 1 31 1 84.7

RECEIVING REC YDS AVG LG TD RECEIVING REC YDS AVG LG TDJ. Hill 6 61 10.2 24 0 K. Dixon 4 31 7.8 16 0T. Eifert 5 68 13.6 25 1 S. Smith 4 20 5.0 8 0T. Boyd 5 62 12.4 22 0 M. Wallace 3 57 19.0 31 0B. LaFell 3 38 12.7 23 0 D. Pitta 3 34 11.3 18 0J. Wright 3 23 7.7 11 0 K. Juszczyk 3 18 6.0 16 0R. Burkhead 2 19 9.5 17 0 T. West 3 16 5.3 9 0A. Erickson 1 7 7.0 7 0 K. Aiken 2 30 15.0 19 0R. Hewitt 1 5 5.0 5 0 D. Waller 2 14 7.0 8 0C. Core 0 0 0.0 0 0 B. Perriman 1 14 14.0 14 1Total 26 283 10.9 25 1 Total 25 234 9.4 31 1

INTERCEPTIONS NO YDS AVG LG TD INTERCEPTIONS NO YDS AVG LG TDR. Maualuga 1 9 9.0 9 0 Total 1 9 9.0 9 0 Total 0 0 0.0 0 0

SACKS SACKSC. Dunlap 1-10, M. Johnson 1-5 T. Suggs 2-17, E. Dumervil 1-5

TACKLES (TOP 3) TACKLES (TOP 3)V. Burfict 13 (10 solo), D. Dennard 8 (4 solo), Z. Orr 11 (6 solo), L. Webb 8 (7 solo), E. Weddle 7 (5)M. Johnson 6 (6 solo), J. Shaw 6 (5 solo)

TEAM STATISTICS BENGALS RAVENSFirst Downs 22 (3-15-4) 16 (4-12-0)Third Downs 5-16 (31%) 5-16 (31%)Fourth Downs 1-1 (100%) 1-2 (50%)Total Net Yards 325 311Plays – Average 71-4.6 68-4.6Net Yds Rushing 64 92Rushes – Average 20-3.2 30-3.1Net Yards Passing 261 219Att. – Yds Lost – Gross Pass. 3-22-283 2-15-234Passes Att. – Comp.– INT 48-26-0 36-25-1Red Zone 1-5 (20%) 1-3 (33%)Goal-to-Go 1-1 (100%) 0-0 (0%)Punts – Average 6-47.2 5-44.4Penalties – Yards 2-15 8-69Fumbles – Lost 4-2 1-0Time of Possession 28:43 31:17

OFFICIALS – Referee: Clete Blakeman (34), Umpire: Ramon George (128), Head Linesman: Hugo Cruz (94), Line Judge: Tony Veteri (36), Side Judge: Joe Larrew (73), Field Judge: Adrian Hill (29), Back Judge: Steve Patrick (17)

TEAM QTR TIME PLAY DESCRIPTION (extra point) DRIVE SCORERavens 1 10:15 B. Perriman 14 yd. pass from J. Flacco (J. Tucker kick) 11-75, 4:45 0-7Ravens 1 5:39 J. Tucker 52 yd. Field Goal 7-2, 2:41 0-10Bengals 2 14:50 M. Nugent 23 yd. Field Goal 14-69, 5:49 3-10Ravens 2 1:40 J. Tucker 57 yd. Field Goal 7-41, 2:55 3-13Ravens 2 0:00 J. Tucker 54 yd. Field Goal 7-37, 1:01 3-16Bengals 3 4:16 T. Eifert 3 yd. pass from A. Dalton (kick failed, wr) 11-86, 4:58 9-16Ravens 4 12:16 J. Tucker 36 yd. Field Goal 12-59, 7:00 9-19Bengals 4 6:00 M. Nugent 36 yd. Field Goal 9-35, 2:50 12-19Bengals 4 0:00 S. Koch OB in end zone for a Safety 14-19

GAME 11: RAVENS 19, BENGALS 14Baltimore (6-5) • Cincinnati (3-7-1)

Sunday, November 27, 2016 • 1:02 PM ET • M&T Bank Stadium • BaltimoreWeather: 50o, Sunny, Wind WNW 12 mph • Attendance: 70,903 • Time: 3:05

LAST GAME VS. BENGALS

RAVENS 19, BENGALS 14: 11/27/16 IN BALTIMORE

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1. New England Patriots . . 102. Philadelphia Eagles . . . . . 5 Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . . . 54. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . 45. Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . . 46. Car., Den., GB, NYG, Sea., SF . . 3

1. New England Patriots . . 2222. Indianapolis Colts . . . . . 187

Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . 1874. Green Bay Packers . . . . 1805. Baltimore Ravens . . . . 1726. Denver Broncos . . . . . . 170

1. Green Bay Packers . . . . . . 7 New England Patriots . . . 7 3. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . 6

Cincinnati Bengals . . . . . . 6 Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . . 6

(Berths from 2008-15)

1. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 152. New England Patriots . . 143. Green Bay Packers . . . . . 134. Seattle Seahawks . . . . . . 125. Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . 11

1. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 102. New England Patriots . . . 8 Seattle Seahawks . . . . . . . 84. Green Bay Packers . . . . . . . 75. Denver, Pittsburgh . . . . . . 6

1. New England Patriots. . 622. Green Bay Packers . . . . 553. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 544. Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . 515. Seattle Seahawks . . . . . . 496. New Orleans Saints . . . . 48

1. New England Patriots . . 1172. Green Bay Packers . . . . . 993. Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . . 984. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 955. Denver Broncos . . . . . . . 92

1. New England Patriots . . . 52. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . 33. Denver Broncos . . . . . . . . 2 Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . . 2 NY Jets, Pittsburgh . . . . . . 2

1. New England Patriots . . 1092. Green Bay Packers . . . . . 92

Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . . 924. Denver Broncos . . . . . . . 86

Indianapolis Colts . . . . . 866. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 85

1. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . 72. Green Bay Packers . . . . . . 4

New York Jets . . . . . . . . . . 44. San Francisco 49ers . . . . . 35. NYG, Phi., Sea. . . . . . . . . . 2

1. New England Patriots . . . 62. New York Giants . . . . . . . . 3 3. Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . . . 36. Seattle Seahawks . . . . . . . 35. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . 26. Car., Den., Ind. . . . . . . . . . 2

1. New England Patriots . . . 42. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . 22. New York Giants . . . . . . . . 2 Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . . . 25. Den., GB, Ind., . . . . . . . . . 1 NO, Sea., TB . . . . . . . . . . . 1

1. Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . 13New England Patriots . . 13

3. Green Bay Packers . . . . . . . .12 4. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 10 Phi., Pit., Sea. . . . . . . . . . 10

(Berths from 2008-15)

1. New England Patriots . . 312. Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . 243. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 23 4. GB, Pit., Sea. . . . . . . . . . . 217. Philadelphia Eagles. . . . . 20

1. New England Patriots . . 222. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . 153. Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . . 134. Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . . 12

Seattle Seahawks . . . . . . 12

1. New England Patriots . . 162. Green Bay Packers . . . . . 143. Indianapolis Colts . . . . . . 13

Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . . 135. Baltimore/Philadelphia . . 11

John harBaugh era(Since 2008)

nfl’S WinningeST franchiSeS (Since 2000)

PLAYOFF WINNING PERCENTAGE / SINCE 1970 MERGER Rk. Team Record Pct. 1. Baltimore Ravens** 15-8 .652 2. New York Giants**** 20-11 .645 3. San Francisco 49ers***** 30-19 .612 4. New England Patriots**** 28-18 .609 5. Pittsburgh Steelers****** 34-22 .607 * Number of Super Bowl Titles

The Baltimore Ravens are one of four franchises (New England, NY Giants and Pittsburgh) to win multiple Super Bowls since 2000.

LB Ray Lewis - 2000 QB Joe Flacco - 2012

Super Bowl XXXV MVPIn a magnificent effort showcasing thrilling performances by their defense, offense and special teams units, the Baltimore Ravens won Super Bowl XXXV with a 34-7 victory over the New York Giants. Allowing the Giants a meager 152 total net yards, New York’s attack crossed midfield just twice, while Baltimore’s “D” posted 4 INTs. LB Ray Lewis was named the game’s MVP, capping an accolade-filled season in which he was also tabbed the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year.

Super Bowl XLVII MVPBaltimore defeated San Francisco, 34-31, in Super Bowl XLVII, capturing the franchise’s second World Championship. After an amazing first-half performance, the Ravens took a commanding 28-6 lead. But following a bizarre, 34-minute power outage that halted play, the 49ers stormed back into contention. Clinging to a 34-29 edge late in the game, the Ravens stood firm on a pivotal goal-line stand, jamming SF on four-straight plays inside the 7-yard line. QB Joe Flacco was named the game’s MVP.

RAVENS WINNING WAYS

SUPER BOWL TITLES

BEST POSTSEASON WINNING PCT.

TOTAL WINS PLAYOFF BERTHS

PLAYOFF GAMES PLAYOFF WINS

PLAYOFF ROAD WINS AFC TITLE GAMES

REG. SEASON HOME WINS REG. SEASON WINS

SUPER BOWL SUCCESS

TOTAL WINS

WINNING SEASONS

SUPER BOWL BERTHS

PLAYOFF BERTHS

SUPER BOWL TITLES

PLAYOFF GAMES

CONF. TITLE GAMES

PLAYOFF WINS

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John Harbaugh has led the Ravens to a playoff berth in six (2008-12 and 2014) of his eight full seasons in Baltimore, and in 2012, captured the franchise’s second Super Bowl championship. Under his guidance, the Ravens have secured an appearance in three AFC Championships (2008, 2011 & 2012).Here are several Harbaugh quick hits:

• The Ravens are one of only five teams with at least six playoff berths in the past eight full seasons: GB (7), NE (7), Bal. (6), Cin. (6) and Ind. (6).• The Ravens’ 10 playoff wins since ‘08 are two more than the next teams’ wins (New England & Seattle, both 8).• Harbaugh is the only head coach in NFL history to win a playoff game in each of his first four and five seasons.• John and his brother, Jim

(formerly of the 49ers), are the only head coaches to advance to three conference title games in the first five years as NFL bosses.• Harbaugh is the only head coach in NFL history to win a playoff game in six of the first seven seasons of a coaching career.• In 2012, John Harbaugh became the third coach (with Bill Cowher & Chuck Knox) since the 1970 merger to guide his team to the playoffs in each of his first five seasons.• Harbaugh, Tom Landry (Dallas) and Tom Coughlin (Jaguars/Giants) own the most road playoff wins (7) by a HC in NFL history. • Including playoffs (10-5), the Ravens are 95-63 since 2008, producing the NFL’s fourth-most total victories. He has led the Ravens to 85 regular season wins, ranking sixth most since 2008.

TOTAL NFL WINS / INCLUDING PLAYOFFS(Since Harbaugh’s 2008 Baltimore Arrival)

Rk. Team Total Wins 1. New England Patriots 117 2. Green Bay Packers 99 3. Pittsburgh Steelers 98 4. Baltimore Ravens 95 5. Denver Broncos 92

(Baltimore Ravens: 2008-16)• Overall Career Record . . . . 95-63• Regular Season Record . . . 85-58• at Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54-18• on Road . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31-40• vs. AFC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64-43• vs. AFC North . . . . . . . . . . . 34-19• vs. NFC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21-15• vs. Bengals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-9• Playoffs Record . . . . . . . . . . 10-5• Home Playoff Games . . . . . . 2-0• Road Playoff Games . . . . . . . 7-5• Super Bowl Record . . . . . . . . 1-0

HEAD COACH SNAPSHOT

With the Ravens’ 2014 playoff berth, John Harbaugh became one of eight coaches in NFL history to make the postseason in six of their first seven seasons coaching (list below). For coaches to make the playoffs in at least six of their first eight years, “Harbs” is one of three active coaches to do so (Mike McCarthy & Andy Reid).

COACHING PLAYOFF BERTHS IN SIX OF FIRST SEVEN SEASONS

John Harbaugh owns the second-most playoff victories (10, tied) by a head coach in his first eight seasons (since the 1970 merger).

MOST PLAYOFF WINS BY A HEAD COACH / FIRST EIGHT SEASONS(Since 1970 Merger)

Coach (Team) Playoff Wins Seasons Joe Gibbs (Was.) 11 1981-88John Harbaugh (Bal.) 10 2008-15George Seifert (SF) 10 1989-96

Only in First Five:• “Harbs” is the only head coach in NFL history to win a playoff game in each of his first four and five seasons. He and his brother, Jim (formerly of the 49ers), are also the only coaches to advance to three conference title games in the first five years of a coaching career.

John Harbaugh is the third head coach in Baltimore Ravens history. He is the franchise’s all-time winningest coach (95 total victories), with Brian Billick (85) ranking second. Coach Seasons Reg. Season Rec. Playoffs Rec.John Harbaugh 2008-16 85-58 10-5Brian Billick 1999-2007 80-64 5-3Ted Marchibroda 1996-98 16-31-1 n/a

________________

JOHN HARBAUGH SEASON-BY-SEASONYear Record Playoffs (Result)2016 8-7 No playoff berth2015 5-11 No playoff berth2014 10-6 1-1 (lost in Divisional)2013 8-8 No playoff berth2012 10-6 4-0 (won Super Bowl XLVII)2011 12-4 1-1 (lost in AFC Champ.)2010 12-4 1-1 (lost in Divisional) 2009 9-7 1-1 (lost in Divisional)2008 11-5 2-1 (lost in AFC Champ.)

John Harbaugh owns the fifth-best winning % (.601) among active NFL head coaches, compiling a 95-63 overall record (including playoffs). For head coaches who’ve coached a minimum of 85 games, he is fourth only to Bill Belichick, Mike McCarthy and Mike Tomlin.

2016 ACTIVE HEAD COACHES / CAREER WINNING PERCENTAGE(Totals Include Regular Season and Playoff Games / Min. 40 Games)

Rk. Coach Team Seasons Record Pct. 1. Bill Belichick Cle./NE 1991-95, 2000-16 259-125 .674 2. Mike McCarthy Packers 2006-16 120-68-1 .638 3. Mike Tomlin Steelers 2007-16 108-62 .635 4. Bruce Arians Cardinals 2013-16 41-24 .631 5. John Harbaugh Ravens 2008-16 95-63 .601 6. Chuck Pagano Colts 2012-16 51-34 .600

(Active 2016 Coaches)1. Bill Belichick . . . . . . . . . . . 42. John Harbaugh . . . . . . . . 1 Pete Carroll . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Gary Kubiak . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Mike McCarthy . . . . . . . . . 1 Sean Payton . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Mike Tomlin . . . . . . . . . . . 1

(Active 2016 Coaches)Rk. Coach Rec. Pct. 1. Gary Kubiak . . . . 5-2 .714 2. Bill Belichick . . 23-10 .697 3. John Harbaugh . . 10-5 .667 3. Rex Ryan . . . . . . . 4-2 .667 5. Pete Carroll . . . . . 9-6 .600 Sean Payton . . . . 6-4 .600

Paul Brown (Browns): 1950-55 John Madden (Raiders): 1969-70, 1972-75 Dennis Green (Vikings): 1992-94, 1996-98John Robinson (Rams): 1983-86, 1988-89

George Seifert (49ers): 1989-90, 1992-95 Bill Cowher (Steelers): 1992-97 Mike Holmgren (Packers): 1993-98John Harbaugh (Ravens): 2008-12, 2014

HEAD COACH JOHN HARBAUGH

PLAYOFF WIN PCT. SUPER BOWL TITLES

COACH HARBS MAKING HIS MARK

PLAYOFF MILESTONES

RAVENS COACHING RECORDS

QUITE THE START

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Special teams coordinator/associate head coach Jerry Rosburg, a 38-year coaching veteran, has guided a strong special teams group since arriving in Baltimore in 2008. Here are several standout notes:

Six Pro Bowlers• Six Ravens have earned Pro Bowl honors while

playing for Rosburg: ST Brendon Ayanbadejo (2008), K Billy Cundiff (2010), RS Jacoby Jones (2012), K Justin Tucker (2013 & 2016), LS Morgan Cox & P Sam Koch (2015).

Prime Punter & Kicker• Earning his first Pro Bowl nod in 2015, P Sam Koch’s 46.7 gross average ranked No. 9 in the NFL, while his 42.9 net average was No. 2. In 2014, Koch posted the NFL’s No. 3 gross (47.4) and No. 1 net (43.3) averages. Both marks are career highs and Ravens records. Two-time Pro Bowl K Justin Tucker, who Rosburg scouted and helped sign as a rookie free agent, owns the NFL’s most FGs (167) since entering the NFL in 2012. With an 89.8% career success mark, “Tuck” is the most accurate kicker in league history (167-of-186 on FGAs).

Ravens Big Returns• Led by Pro Bowl RS Jacoby Jones in the 2012 Super Bowl season, Baltimore ranked first in the NFL in KOR average (27.3). Jones, who became the first player ever to record dual KORs of at least 105 yards in a career, tied for a league-leading 3 kick return TDs (2 KORs & 1 PR). He also tied an NFL record for longest KOR in a Super Bowl with his 108-yard KOR-TD. (In 2014’s game at Pit., he added another 108-yarder to his resume, marking 4 total KOR-TDs over 100 yards in his career.)Rosburg’s Past• Prior to Baltimore, Rosburg built a successful NFL special teams resume with the Browns (2001-06) and Falcons (2007). Over a five-year span (2002-06), Cleveland’s special teams were ranked as the top NFL unit in The Dallas Morning News’ annual comprehensive report.

Ravens Block Party• Since 2014, the Ravens have produced 12 blocked kicks (breakdown detailed below), ranking as the NFL’s No. 1 figure. In fact, Baltimore has a league-best (tied, Mia.) 4 blocks in 2016 – 1 punt, 1 PAT and 2 FGAs.

• In Games 7-11 during the 2015 season, the Ravens blocked a kick (2 PATs, 2 FGs and 1 punt) in five-straight contests, a feat that had not been accomplished since 1983 (Atlanta Falcons). Impressively, Baltimore’s 5 blocked kicks in 2015 tied (Oakland) for the NFL’s most.

Regular Season . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85-58vs. AFC North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-19vs. AFC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64-43vs. NFC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21-15Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54-18Away . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31-40On grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30-23Artificial turf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55-35September . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20-10October . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-19November . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28-11December . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20-17January . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3-1Leading at halftime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66-17Leading After 3 quarters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74-14When scoring first . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62-19Positive or even turnover ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66-25Scoring 20 or more points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68-24Scoring 30 or more points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-4Totaling 350 or more net yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46-22Rushing for 150 or more yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26-5Holding opp. under 250 net yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29-6Holding opp. under 21 points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68-14Holding opp. under 15 points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51-6

Since 2008, when Jerry Rosburg became the Ravens’ ST coordinator, Baltimore owns the NFL’s No. 1 KOR average (25.3).

NFL KICKOFF RETURN AVERAGE(Since 2008 / Rosburg’s Baltimore Tenure)

Rk. Team KOR Yards Avg. Long TDs1. Baltimore Ravens 408 10,308 25.3 108t 62. Minnesota Vikings 472 11,568 24.5 109t 103. Atlanta Falcons 336 8,142 24.2 102t 1

NFL KICK RETURN TOUCHDOWNS / SINCE 2011

Team Position YearsBaltimore Ravens Head Coach 2008-16Philadelphia Eagles Secondary 2007Philadelphia Eagles Special Teams Coord. 1998-2006Indiana University DBs/Special Teams Coord. 1997University of Cincinnati Assistant Head Coach 1995-96University of Cincinnati TEs/OLBs/RBs/Special Teams 1989-94Morehead State DBs/ST Coord./S&C Coach 1988University of Pittsburgh Tight Ends 1987Western Michigan Graduate Assistant 1984-86

In 2015, senior NFL writer Rick Gosselin of The Dallas Morning News ranked the Ravens’ special teams unit No. 1 in the NFL in his annual comprehensive ratings system based on 22 categories, assigning points according to each standing — 1 for best, 32 for worst. 2015 marked the fourth-straight year in Gosselin’s Top 5, as Baltimore was No. 5 in 2014, No. 5 in 2013, and in 2012, earned the No. 2 spot.

For years, Baltimore has been especially strong at blocking kicks. Since 2014, the Ravens have produced the NFL’s most blocked kicks (12), including an NFL-high (tied, Mia.) 4 this season: DE Lawrence Guy’s blocked PAT at Cleveland, which was returned by CB Tavon Young for 2 points; DE Brent Urban’s FG block at Jacksonville, which set up K Justin Tucker’s game-winning FG; DT Brandon Williams’ blocked FG at the New York Jets; and RB Javorius “Buck” Allen’s blocked punt vs. Pittsburgh, which was returned 14 yards for a TD by WR Chris Moore.

KICKOFF RETURN TDS Team KOR-TDs

Minnesota . . . . . . . . . 7Baltimore . . . . . . . . . .4Kansas City & Philly . . 4

TOTAL KICK RETURN TDS Team TK-TDs

Minnesota . . . . . . . 12Philadelphia . . . . . . . 9Bal., KC. . . . . . . . . . . 8

COACH HARBAUGH / COACH ROSBURG NOTES

HARBAUGH BACKGROUND RAVENS THRIVE UNDER ROSBURG

TRENDS UNDER HARBS

RAVENS SWAT TEAM

FOUR-STRAIGHT TOP 5S

A STRONG RETURN

Total Blocks . . . . 12FG Blocks . . . . . . . 6PAT Blocks . . . . . . . 3Punt Blocks . . . . . . 3

1st Qtr. . . . . . . . . . 22nd Qtr. . . . . . . . . 13rd Qtr. . . . . . . . . . 34th Qtr. . . . . . . . . . 6

When Losing . . . . 8When Winning . . . 2When Tied . . . . . . 2Record w/ Block . .7-5

MOST BLOCKED KICKS (Since 2014)

Rk. Team Blocks1. Baltimore . . . . . . . . . .122. Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . 105. NE, Oak., Phi. . . . . . . . . 9

MOST BLOCKED KICKS (2016 Season)

Rk. Team Blocks1. Baltimore . . . . . . . . . . .4

Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43. Cin., NE & Sea. . . . . . . . 3

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Marty Mornhinweg was elevated to offensive coordinator on Oct. 10, prior to the start of Week 6. A 22-year NFL coaching veteran, Mornhinweg, who joined Baltimore as QBs coach in 2015, is a former head coach of the Detroit Lions (2001-02). He has also served as offensive coordinator for the NY Jets

(2013-14), Philadelphia (2004-12) and San Francisco (1997-2000).

• Throughout his NFL coaching career, five quarterbacks have earned Pro Bowl honors under Mornhinweg’s direction: Michael Vick, Donovan McNabb, Steve Young, Jeff Garcia and Brett Favre.

• In his most recent role as an offensive coordinator (Jets: 2013-14), the team’s run game ranked as the NFL’s third best (138.7 ypg) unit during his time. Prior to joining NYJ, Mornhinweg served 10 seasons (2003-12) in Philly, including nine (2004-12) as the “O” coordinator/assistant head coach. He and John Harbaugh spent five seasons (2003-07) together on the Eagles’ coaching staff.

• His first NFL coordinator job came with the San Francisco 49ers (1997-2000), where in 1998, the team set franchise marks in total yards (6,800), first downs (381) and rushing yards (2,544).

MORNHINWEG’S NFL OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR ROLES1997-2000: 49ers – Offensive Coordinator/QBs Coach• During this span, SF offense ranked third in total net yards (364.6 ypg),

including third in rushing (131.4 ypg) and fifth in passing (233.2 ypg). • In 1999, the 49ers boasted the NFL’s No. 1 rush offense (130.9 ypg). • In 1998, SF offense ranked No. 1 in the NFL (425.0 ypg), including first

in rushing (159.0 ypg) and second in passing (266.0 ypg).

2004-12: Eagles – Offensive Coordinator/Asst. Head Coach• Under Mornhinweg’s guidance, 10 different offensive players earned

a total of 17 Pro Bowl honors. • Philly set a then-franchise best with 6,386 total net yards in 2011. • In his first season (2004) guiding the offense, Philadelphia advanced

to Super Bowl XXXIX.

2013-14: NY Jets – Offensive Coordinator• Jets ranked third in the NFL rush offense (138.7 ypg) during this span. • In 2014, helped guide a rushing attack that finished third in the NFL

(142.5 ypg) behind RBs Chris Ivory and Chris Johnson.

Dean Pees, a 13-year NFL-coaching veteran, became the Ravens’ defensive coordinator in 2012 and helped guide Baltimore to its second World Championship in Super Bowl XLVII. Pees, who was New England’s “D” coordinator from 2006-09, heads a Ravens’ squad that currently ranks No. 5 in

the NFL in total defense, including No. 2 vs. the run. Pees also leads a unit that, during the John Harbaugh Era (2008-16), has allowed the NFL’s second-fewest points (19.1) per game, third-fewest yards (316.5) per game and the second-fewest TDs (287).

POINTS PER GAME ALLOWED(Since 2008)

1. Pittsburgh . . . . . . 18.72. Baltimore. . . . . . . 19.13. Seattle . . . . . . . . . 19.4

TOUCHDOWNS ALLOWED(Since 2008)

1. Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . 2852. Baltimore . . . . . . . 2873. Seattle. . . . . . . . . . . 298

TOTAL NET YARDS ALLOWED(Since 2008)

1. Pittsburgh . . . . . 306.22. NY Jets . . . . . . . . 315.23. Baltimore. . . . . . 316.5

OPPONENT PASSER RATING(Since 2008)

1. Baltimore . . . . . . . 79.92. Green Bay . . . . . . . 80.03. Cincinnati. . . . . . . . 80.3

In 2015, with Marty Mornhinweg as the Ravens’ quarterbacks coach, Baltimore posted the second-most net yards in team history. The Ravens also set a franchise record by averaging 266.9 passing yards per game. This season, with Mornhinweg as the team’s O.C., Baltimore racked up the sixth-most single-game yards (496) in team history during a 38-6 Week 13 victory over Miami.

RAVENS OFFENSIVE OUTPUT / SINGLE-SEASON HISTORY

Dean Pees is another standout in a long line of great Ravens defensive coordinators, four of whom have gone on to become NFL head coaches: Marvin Lewis (1996-2001), Mike Nolan (2002-04), Rex Ryan (2005-08) and Chuck Pagano (2011).

RAVENS ALL-TIME DEFENSIVE COORDINATORS

RAVENS TOP TOTAL NET YARDS/ SINGLE-GAME HISTORY Yards Game/Date Results

553 9/25/11 at STL W, 37-7548 12/13/09 vs. Det. W, 48-3533 12/23/12 vs. NYG W, 33-14503 9/23/12 vs. NE W, 31-30501 9/13/09 vs. KC W, 38-24496 12/4/16 vs. Mia. W, 38-6

NET PASSING YARDS Year Yards

2015 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,2711996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,9782014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,819

TOTAL NET YARDS Year Yards

2014 . . . . . . . . . . . 5,8382015 . . . . . . . . . . 5,7491996 . . . . . . . . . . . 5,723

Dean Pees (2012-16)Chuck Pagano (2011)Greg Mattison (2009-10)

Rex Ryan (2005-08) Mike Nolan (2002-04) Marvin Lewis (1996-2001)

COORDINATORS: MORNHINWEG / PEES NOTES

MORNHINWEG NAMED O.C. PEES LEADS THE “D”

RAVENS DOMINANT DEFENSE

ALL-TIME “D” COORDINATORS

RAVENS OFFENSIVE BESTS

Led by defensive coordinator Dean Pees, the Ravens’ defense is one of five NFL units to allow an average of under 320.0 yards per game this season, with Baltimore’s 318.9 mark ranking No. 5 in the league. Additionally, Baltimore’s “D” ranks in the Top 7 in many key categories entering Week 17:

RAVENS TOP DEFENSIVE RANKINGS / ENTERING WEEK 17 Category Stat Rank

Interceptions 18 1 Rushing Defense (YPG) 85.1 2 First Downs Per Game Avg. 17.9 2Rushing Touchdowns 8 2t Third-&-1 Conversions Pct. 45.8 3Turnovers Forced 28 3Rushing Avg. Per Carry 3.69 4Third-Down Percentage 35.9 5Total Defense (YPG) 318.9 5Three-&-Outs Forced 43 6tPoints Per Game 19.6 7

RUSHING YARDS ALLOWED(Since 2008)

1. Pittsburgh . . . . . . 91.32. Baltimore. . . . . . . 96.43. NY Jets . . . . . . . . . 99.4

THIRD-DOWN PERCENTAGE(Since 2008)

1. Houston . . . . . . . . 35.52. Baltimore . . . . . . . 36.23. Arizona. . . . . . . . . . 36.6

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GM & executive VP Ozzie Newsome fosters a working environment that breeds standout coaches. By bringing in individuals who embrace the “Raven way,” Newsome aims to create a synergy that manufactures success among scouts, coaches and players. As a result, Baltimore has had many assistants move on to become head coaches on the collegiate and NFL levels.

CURRENT HEAD COACHES WHO COACHED W/ RAVENS(2016 Season)

Head Coach (Team) Last Position Held w/ Ravens (Years)Jim Caldwell (Lions) Offensive Coordinator (2012-13)Jack Del Rio (Raiders) Linebackers (1999-2001)John Fassel (Rams interim) Special Teams Assistant (2005-07)Kirk Ferentz (Iowa) Asst. Head Coach/Offense (1996-98) Hue Jackson (Browns) Quarterbacks (2008-09)Gary Kubiak (Broncos) Offensive Coordinator (2014)Marvin Lewis (Bengals) Def. Coordinator (1996-2001)Chuck Pagano (Colts) Def. Coordinator (2008-11) David Shaw (Stanford) Wide Receivers (2002-05)• Other former assistants who became head coaches include Pat Hill (Fresno State), Eric Mangini (Jets & Browns), Rick Neuheisel (UCLA), Mike Nolan and Mike Singletary (49ers), Mike Pettine (Browns), Rex Ryan (Jets & Bills), Jim Schwartz (Lions), Mike Smith (Falcons) and Ken Whisenhunt (Cardinals & Titans).

The Ravens have had 37 different players earn Pro Bowl honors since the team’s inception in 1996. Of those, 21 are homegrown players – 18 drafted and three signed as a rookie free agent:

RAVENS’ HOMEGROWN PRO BOWLERS Year Drafted (Rd.) Name Pro Bowls

1996 (1st) LB Ray Lewis 131996 (1st) T Jonathan Ogden 112002 (1st) S Ed Reed 92003 (1st) OLB Terrell Suggs 62007 (3rd) G Marshal Yanda 62006 (1st) DT Haloti Ngata 51997 (1st) OLB Peter Boulware 41999 (1st) CB Chris McAlister 32008 (2nd) RB Ray Rice 32001 (1st) TE Todd Heap 21996 (5th) WR/RS Jermaine Lewis 22007 (4th) FB Le’Ron McClain 22014 (1st) LB C.J. Mosley 22000 (6th) OLB Adalius Thomas 22012 (RFA) K Justin Tucker # 22015 (RFA) LS Morgan Cox # 12007 (1st) G Ben Grubbs 12013 (4th) FB Kyle Juszczyk 12006 (6th) P Sam Koch 12000 (1st) RB Jamal Lewis 12002 (RFA) LB Bart Scott # 1

# Undrafted rookie free agent Bold indicates 2016 Pro Bowler

The Ravens, led by Ozzie Newsome, have selected 21 players in the first round. These picks have earned an amazing 57 combined Pro Bowls, several All-Rookie honors, multiple Defensive Player of the Year Awards and two Super Bowl MVP honors.

RAVENS FIRST-ROUND DRAFT PICKS Year Name Pick Pro Bowls

1996 T Jonathan Ogden* 4 111996 LB Ray Lewis* ++ ~ 26 131997 LB Peter Boulware* 4 41998 CB Duane Starks* 101999 CB Chris McAlister* 10 32000 RB Jamal Lewis*= 5 12000 WR Travis Taylor 10 2001 TE Todd Heap* 31 22002 S Ed Reed* + 24 92003 OLB Terrell Suggs* + 10 62003 QB Kyle Boller 192005 WR Mark Clayton* 222006 DT Haloti Ngata* 12 52007 G Ben Grubbs* 29 1 2008 QB Joe Flacco^ ~ 18 2009 T Michael Oher* 232011 CB Jimmy Smith 272013 S Matt Elam 322014 LB C.J. Mosley* 17 22015 WR Breshad Perriman 262016 T Ronnie Stanley 6

* All-Rookie Team ^ Rookie of the Year (NFL.com Fan Vote) ~ Super Bowl MVP+ Defensive Player of the Year Awards = Offensive Player of the Year Award

Top 10 Quick Hit: • Of the seven players chosen in the Top 10 by Baltimore, five have earned Pro Bowl status. Two of those players – OLB Peter Boulware and OLB Terrell Suggs – also earned Defensive Rookie of the Year honors.

Late-Round Success Quick Hit: • The Ravens have found gems later in the first round, including LB Ray Lewis (26th), TE Todd Heap (31st), S Ed Reed (24th), G Ben Grubbs (29th), QB Joe Flacco (18th), CB Jimmy Smith (27th) and LB C.J. Mosley (17th).

This season, FB Kyle Juszczyk (first), LB C.J. Mosley (second), K Justin Tucker (second) and G Marshal Yanda (sixth) were selected to play in the Pro Bowl for their standout play in 2016. This marks the 11th-straight year that the Ravens will have at least four players tabbed to play in the game.

GM Ozzie Newsome’s legacy is unlike any the game has seen. Known throughout all of sports as a premier leader, Newsome is a Hall of Fame player, the architect of Baltimore’s 2000 and 2012 Super Bowl championship teams and an elite personnel evaluator who became the NFL’s first African American GM.

“Ozzie’s credibility is what stands out the most,” head coach John Harbaugh states. “And it’s not just about what he has accomplished. To me, it’s his commitment and focus while striving to do more.”

OZZIE NEWSOME CAREER SNAPSHOT• NFL’s first African American General Manager (promoted in 2002)• Architect of Ravens 2000 & 2012 Super Bowl Championship Teams• NFL Executive of the Year (2000)• Pro Football Hall of Fame (class of 1999)• State of Alabama Hall of Fame (class of 1995)• National Football Foundation College Hall of Fame and NCAA Hall of Fame (class of 1994)• 13-Year NFL Tight End with Cleveland Browns (1978-90)• Three-Time Pro Bowler (1981, 1984-85)• Four-Time Cleveland Touchdown Club Offensive Player of the Year• Current Member of Two Major NFL Policy-Making Groups: Competition Committee and Player Care Foundation Board

OZZIE NEWSOME / PERSONNEL NOTES

WIZARDRY OF OZ BALTIMORE COACHING TREE

FIRST-ROUND FINDS HOMEGROWN PRO BOWLERS

2016 PRO BOWLERS

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The Ravens’ “20/20 Club” includes members of the team’s personnel staff who started with the Ravens as young assistants and grew into evaluators with more input. The term “20/20” refers to hiring 20-year-olds for $20,000. According to Ozzie Newsome: “The guys actually started when they were a little older than 20 and for more than $20,000, but that’s what we call them.”

RAVENS “20/20 CLUB” GRADUATES(Current Personnel Staff)

Name Joined Ravens Current TitleGeorge Kokinis (Cle.) 1991 Senior Personnel AssistantEric DeCosta 1996 Assistant General ManagerJoe Hortiz 1998 Director of College ScoutingChad Alexander 1999 Asst. Dir. of Pro PersonnelMark Azevedo 2005 Northeast Area ScoutDavid Blackburn 2007 West Area ScoutIan Cunningham 2008 SE/SW Area ScoutAndrew Raphael 2013 Southeast Area Scout

The Baltimore Ravens have earned 10 playoff berths in their history (2014, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008, 2006, 2003, 2001, 2000). Baltimore’s 10 berths from 2000-15 tie (Pit.) for third in the AFC and tie for fourth overall in the NFL.

MOST NFL PLAYOFF BERTHS(2000-15 / Past 16 Full Seasons)

NFC 12 - Green Bay 10 - Philadelphia 10 - Seattle 7 - NY Giants

AFC13 - Indianapolis 13 - New England10 - Baltimore 10 - Pittsburgh 9 - Denver

TEAMS TO WIN AT LEAST ONE PLAYOFF GAMEIN FIVE-CONSECUTIVE POSTSEASONS

(Since 1970 Merger) Team Cons. Seasons Years Wins

Dallas Cowboys 6 1991-96 12New England Patriots 5 2011-15 8Baltimore Ravens 5 2008-12 9New England Patriots 5 2003-07 11Philadelphia Eagles 5 2000-04 7Green Bay Packers 5 1993-97 9Oakland Raiders 5 1973-77 7

The Baltimore Ravens have won two Super Bowl titles during their 20-year history, capturing the Lombardi Trophy in 2000 and 2012. Baltimore is just one of four NFL franchises to win multiple World Championships since 2000.

MOST SUPER BOWL CHAMPIONSHIPS (Since 2000 Season) Titles Team Seasons

4 New England Patriots 2001, 2003-04, 20142 Baltimore Ravens 2000, 20122 New York Giants 2007, 20112 Pittsburgh Steelers 2005, 2008

The Ravens have produced four AFC North titles since 2002 division realignment, including back-to-back division crowns from 2011-12 under head coach John Harbaugh.

MOST AFC NORTH TITLES(Since 2002 Division Realignment)

Rk. Team AFC North Titles 1. Pittsburgh Steelers 7 2. Baltimore Ravens 4

Cincinnati Bengals 4 4. Cleveland Browns 0 ________________

RAVENS AFC NORTH TITLE SEASONS(Franchise History)

Season Coach Final Record Postseason (Rec.)2012 John Harbaugh 10-6 SB Champs (4-0)2011 John Harbaugh 12-4 AFC Champ. (1-1)2006 Brian Billick 13-3 Div. Game (0-1)2003 Brian Billick 10-6 WC Game (0-1)

Baltimore is one of five teams to earn a playoff berth six of the past eight full seasons, doing so from 2008-12 and in 2014. In each of those respective years, the Ravens won at least one playoff game.

MOST NFL PLAYOFF BERTHS (2008-15 / Past Eight Full Seasons)

Berths Team Seasons 7 Green Bay Packers 2009-157 New England Patriots 2009-156 Baltimore Ravens 2008-12, 20146 Cincinnati Bengals 2009, 2011-156 Indianapolis Colts 2008-10, 2012-14

The Ravens have a history of unearthing rookie free agent gems. On their 2016 Week 17 roster, Baltimore has 12 players who entered the NFL as rookie free agents. Of those 12, eight were originally signed by the Ravens (listed below):

ORIGINAL RAVENS ROOKIE FREE AGENT SIGNINGS(On 2016 Week 17 Roster)

2010: LS Morgan Cox2010: LB Albert McClellan2012: K Justin Tucker2014: T James Hurst

2014: LB Zachary Orr2015: OLB Brennen Beyer2016: LB Patrick Onwuasor2016: DT Michael Pierce

Undrafted rookie free agent DT Michael Pierce made the Ravens’ 53-man Week 1 roster this season. His status marked the 13th-straight season a RFA has made Baltimore’s roster, tying (Den. & NE) for the NFL’s second-longest active streak.

CONSECUTIVE SEASONS W/ ROOKIE FA ON WEEK 1 ROSTER(Current NFL Streaks)

Rk. Team Seasons1. Indianapolis Colts 172. Baltimore Ravens 13 Denver Broncos 13 New England Patriots 13

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RAVENS TEAM / PERSONNEL NOTES

PLAYOFFS SIX OF THE LAST EIGHT RAVENS “20/20” CLUB

RAVENS RFAS CONSISTENT CONTENDERS

BATTLE OF THE NORTH

QUITE THE STREAK

UNDRAFTED SUCCESS AN ELITE GROUP

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NFL’S TOP TURNOVER MARGIN / SINCE 2008 Rk. Team Turnover Diff. Take-Aways Give-Aways

1. New England +115 259 1442. Green Bay +95 256 1613. Carolina +39 258 219

San Francisco +39 227 1885. Atlanta +36 230 1946. Kansas City +33 229 196

Seattle +33 230 1978. Baltimore +31 232 201

FEWEST GIVE-AWAYS (Since 2008)1. New England . . . . . . . .1442. Green Bay . . . . . . . . . .1613. San Francisco . . . . . . .1884. Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .1945. Kansas City . . . . . . . . .1966. Seattle. . . . . . . . . . . . .1977. Baltimore . . . . . . . . . 201

TURNOVER DIFFERENTIAL(2016 Season)

1. Oakland . . . . . . . . . . +182. Kansas City . . . . . . . . +153. Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . +10

New England . . . . . . +105. Buffalo . . . . . . . . . . . . +96. Baltimore . . . . . . . . . .+7

Dal., GB, Min. . . . . . . . +7

Year TA/TO Plus/Minus Record 2016 28/21 +7 8-72015 14/28 -14 5-112014 22/20 +2 10-62013 24/29 -5 8-82012 25/16 +9 10-62011 26/24 +2 12-42010 27/20 +7 12-42009 32/22 +10 9-72008 34/21 +13 11-52007 23/40 -17 5-112006 40/23 +17 13-32005 26/36 -10 6-102004 34/23 +11 9-72003 41/38 +3 10-62002 31/32 -1 7-92001 28/36 -8 10-62000 49/26 +23 12-4Total 504/455 +49 157-114Since 2000, here are the Ravens’ records in a game:When turnover ratio is +2 or better . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69-5When turnover ratio is +1 or better . . . . . . . . . . . . .100-15When turnover ratio is even . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29-21When turnover ratio is negative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27-76

69-5 Since 2000, the Ravens own a 69-5 record when posting at least

a +2 turnover margin in a game, with the only losses coming in 2010 (23-20 OT at NE), 2012 (24-23 at Phi.), 2014 (34-33 vs. SD)

and twice in 2016 (27-23 at NYG & 30-23 at NE).

In the John Harbaugh Era (since 2008), the Ravens have produced 38 games without turning the ball over, a mark that ties for seventh best in the NFL. Baltimore’s record is 31-7 in those contests.

ZERO-TURNOVER GAMES / SINCE 2008 Rk. Team Zero-Turnover Games

1. New England Patriots 582. Green Bay Packers 513. Kansas City Chiefs 46

San Francisco 49ers 465. Indianapolis Colts 39 Seattle Seahawks 397. Baltimore & Carolina 38

P Sam Koch (175) has not missed a game in his NFL career, a streak that ranks first in Ravens history. Among non-specialists, FB Kyle Juszczyk and DB/LB Anthony Levine Sr. tie to own the longest active streak of consecutive games played (63).

RAVENS CONSECUTIVE GAMES PLAYED / CURRENT STREAKS Rk. Player Games

1. Sam Koch 1752. Justin Tucker 793. Kyle Juszczyk 63 Anthony Levine Sr. 63

________________

RAVENS CONSECUTIVE GAMES PLAYED / ALL-TIME STREAKS Rk. Player Games Years 1. Sam Koch 175 2006-present 2. Jarret Johnson 129 2003-11 3. Joe Flacco 122 2008-2015 4. Peter Boulware 111 1997-2003 5. Matt Stover 110 2002-08

________________

BALTIMORE RAVENS MOST ALL-TIME GAMES PLAYED Rk. Player Games Years 1. Ray Lewis 228 1996-2012 2. Matt Stover 207 1996-2008 3. Terrell Suggs 196 2003-present 4. Jonathan Ogden 177 1996-2007 5. Sam Koch 175 2006-present 6. Ed Reed 160 2002-12 7. Jarret Johnson 143 2003-11 Marshal Yanda 143 2007-present 9. Joe Flacco 137 2008-present 10. Chris McAlister 135 1999-2008 Haloti Ngata 135 2006-14 12. Kelly Gregg 134 2001-10 13. Mike Flynn 133 1998-2007 Todd Heap 133 2001-10

Punters1. Shane Lechler (Hou.) . . 2372. Donnie Jones (Phi.) . . . 1913. Sam Koch (Bal.) . . . . . 1754. Brett Kern (Ten.) . . . . . . 143

Fullbacks1. Kyle Juszczyk (Bal.) . . . . . 63

Anthony Sherman (KC) . . 633. Patrick DiMarco (Atl.) . . . 614. John Kuhn (NO) . . . . . . . . 60

Among active players, Ravens P Sam Koch (175) & FB Kyle Juszczyk (63) rank third and first, respectively, at their positions for most consecutive games played.

CONSECUTIVE GAMES PLAYED / CURRENT NFL STREAKS

IRONMEN / TURNOVERS / CLOSE CALLS NOTES

NFL IRONMEN THE GIVE & TAKE

DURABLE RAVENS

PROTECT THE PIGSKIN

TURNOVER TABLE SINCE 2000

CLOSE CALLS GALORETwenty-six of the Ravens’ last 31 games (since 2015) have been decided by one score (8 points or fewer), ranking as the most such contests among any team. This year, 12 of Baltimore’s 15 games have been decided by one score, tying for second in the league.

NFL GAMES DECIDED BY ONE SCORE (8 POINTS OR FEWER) Since 2015 2016 Season Rk. Team Games Rk. Team Games

1. Baltimore 26 1. San Diego 132. San Diego 25 2. Baltimore 123. NY Giants 22 Detroit 12

Oakland 22 4. Hou., NYG, NO, Oak. 11

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16.4Points per game Baltimore has permitted at home since 2008,

the NFL’s best defensive mark (see chart to the left).

79Interceptions by the Ravens at home since 2008,

ranking as the NFL’s sixth most. (Baltimore produced 8 in 2016.)

74.4Passer rating the Ravens have forced for opposing QBs at

M&T Bank Stadium since 2008, the NFL’s best mark.

296.2Yards per game the Ravens’ defense has permitted at

home since 2008, ranking as the NFL’s stingiest average during that span. (NYJ is second at 296.6 ypg.)

1,774-1,181Ratio the Ravens have outscored opponents at home since 2008, limiting foes to 16.4 points per game. In their 54 wins during this

span, the margin of victory has been 13.6 ppg.

Baltimore’s “D” has been strong at home with John Harbaugh at the helm. Three times since 2008, Baltimore has led the NFL in fewest home points allowed. (The Ravens rank first in 2016.)

RAVENS POINTS PER GAME ALLOWED AT HOME / 2008-16 Season Points/Game NFL Rank

2008 10.0 12009 11.9 12014 13.6 12016 14.8 12011 14.9 32013 17.6 52010 16.5 62012 22.4 202015 26.0 24

Under John Harbaugh, the Ravens are 54-18 in games played in Baltimore, ranking as the NFL’s third-best home winning percentage (.750) since the 2008 NFL campaign began.

NFL’S BEST REGULAR SEASON HOME RECORDS(John Harbaugh Era / Since 2008)

Rk. Team Record Pct.1. New England Patriots 62-10 .8612. Green Bay Packers 55-16-1 .7713. Baltimore Ravens 54-18 .7504. Pittsburgh Steelers 51-20 .718

The Ravens’ “D” has been stout at home for many seasons. Since 2003, Baltimore ranks first in fewest points allowed per game (16.3) among home teams. The Ravens have also registered the top mark in terms of fewest yards allowed per game (290.6).

BEST NFL DEFENSES AT HOME / SINCE 2003

TOTAL DEFENSE(Fewest Yards Allowed)

1. Baltimore . . . . . . . 290.62. Pittsburgh . . . . . . . .294.43. NY Jets . . . . . . . . . .304.3

POINTS PER GAME(Fewest Allowed)

1. Baltimore . . . . . . . . 16.32. New England . . . . . .16.83. Seattle . . . . . . . . . . . .17.3

INTERCEPTIONS (Most in NFL)1. Green Bay . . . . . . . . . 141 2. Baltimore . . . . . . . . .139

Cincinnati . . . . . . . . . 139 New England . . . . . . 139

SACKS (Most in NFL)1. Minnesota . . . . . . . . 3022. Baltimore. . . . . . . . . .3013. NY Giants . . . . . . . . . 2974. LA Rams, Seattle. . . . 287

Simply put, the Ravens have been dominant at home since the day they arrived in Baltimore. Below are the Ravens’ respective home records and corresponding NFL rankings during several periods.

RAVENS HOME RECORDS / NFL RANKINGS Time Period (Milestone) Record NFL Rank

Since 2010 (Past Six-plus Seasons) 42-14 4Since 2008 (John Harbaugh’s Arrival) 54-18 3Since 2000 (First Super Bowl Season) 100-36 2Since 1998 (M&T Bank Stadium Opened) 108-44 3Since 1996 (Team’s Inception) 115-52-1 5

• The Ravens are 14-7 at home in the month of December under head coach John Harbaugh and 34-15 in such games during their history.• Under Harbaugh, the Ravens are 17-3 in November home games, producing the NFL’s best record. The Ravens have won 15 of their past 17 home games during the month and went 3-0 this season.• Under Harbaugh, the Ravens are 14-2 in September home games. The Ravens have won 17 of their past 19 home games in the month of September.• Under coach Harbaugh, the Ravens are 20-7 in home games played against AFC North foes.• Baltimore has won 15 of its last 19 home games vs. AFC North foes.• Baltimore has won 18 of its last 21 home games vs. NFC teams.• The Ravens are 12-3 at home all time against teams from the West Coast (Oak. – 5-1, SD – 3-1, SF – 2-0 and Sea. – 2-1).• In the Ravens’ history, Baltimore has hosted 17 games when the temperature was below 40 degrees. Impressively, the Ravens are 15-2 in these contests, winning 15 of the past 16.

Baltimore has permitted an NFL-best 16.4 ppg at home during the John Harbaugh Era. Under “Harbs,” the Ravens are 27-0 at home when allowing 10 points or fewer. Impressively, in 17 of those games, the Ravens gave up no more than 7 points.

Rk. Team Sacks Yards1. Denver 139 945 Minnesota 139 9113. Carolina 137 8874. Arizona 136 10005. Los Angeles 134 842

Rk. Team Sacks Yards6. Houston 133 8307. Baltimore 132 9242016 Quick Hit: Baltimore produced 15 sacks in eight home games this season, helping the Ravens outscore foes 183-118.

FEWEST POINTS/GAME ALLOWED AT HOME (Since 2008)1. Baltimore . . . . . . .16.42. Seattle . . . . . . . . . 17.43. Pittsburgh . . . . . . 17.7

THAT M&T MAGIC

M&T BANK SECURITY UNDER HARBAUGH AT HOME

HOME SWEET HOME

DOMINANT IN BALTIMORE

“D” AT HOME SINCE 2008

PROTECTING THE BANK

CHARM CITY SACKS

SHUT ‘EM DOWN

Since 2011, the Ravens have posted 132 sacks at M&T Bank Stadium, ranking as the NFL’s seventh most among home teams.

MOST SACKS AT HOME / SINCE 2011

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Since 1996, the Ravens own 56 defensive TDs, scoring at least one in each season of their existence, including WR Chris Moore’s muffed punt snap fumble recovery return for a score at NYJ on 10/23. Baltimore is 43-9 when tallying a D-TD, and since 2003, ties for the NFL’s fourth most (43), going 32-7 in these contests.

NFL DEFENSIVE TOUCHDOWNS (Since 2003) Rk. Team D-TDs

1. Green Bay Packers 492. Arizona Cardinals 463. Chicago Bears 444. Baltimore/Tampa Bay 43

INTERCEPTION TDs(Since 2003)

1. Chicago . . . . . . . . . . . . 342. Green Bay . . . . . . . . . . 333. Baltimore . . . . . . . . . .32

Arizona . . . . . . . . . . . . 32Tampa Bay . . . . . . . . . 32

Dating back to their 2000 Super Bowl-winning season, the Ravens’ defense ranks in the Top 3 in most significant categories.

TOTAL DEFENSE(Yards Allowed Since 2000)1. Pittsburgh . . . . . . . .295.22. Baltimore . . . . . . . 301.73. NY Jets . . . . . . . . . .318.3

POINTS PER GAME(Fewest Allowed Since 2000)1. Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . .18.12. Baltimore . . . . . . . . 18.33. New England . . . . . .18.8

TOUCHDOWNS(Fewest Allowed Since 2000)1. Baltimore . . . . . . . . .5182. Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . . 5343. New England . . . . . . 573

RUSHING YARDS/GAME(Fewest Allowed Since 2000)1. Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . .90.72. Baltimore . . . . . . . . 93.03. Minnesota . . . . . . .104.4

3RD-DOWN CONV. PCT.(Pct. Since 2000)

1. Baltimore . . . . . . . . 35.12. Philadelphia . . . . . . .36.13. Denver . . . . . . . . . . .36.4

OPPONENT QB RATING(Lowest Since 2000)

1. Baltimore . . . . . . . . 76.02. Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . .78.23. Green Bay . . . . . . . . .78.6

INTERCEPTIONS(Most Since 2000)

1. Green Bay . . . . . . . . . 3322. Tampa Bay . . . . . . . . 3163. Baltimore . . . . . . . . .311

4TH-DOWN CONV. PCT.(Pct. Since 2000)

1. New England . . . . . .42.72. Baltimore . . . . . . . . 43.23. Philadelphia . . . . . . .44.4

15Games since 2008 the Ravens have not allowed an opponent to

score a TD. Only Sea. (22), SF (20) and Pit. (17) have more.

20Consecutive seasons the Ravens’ defense has held opponents to a

4.0 rushing average or less, the NFL’s longest such streak.

35Games the Ravens have held foes to 10 points or fewer since 2008, ranking second most in the NFL. (Seattle is first at 36; Pittsburgh is

third at 34.) Baltimore is 35-0 in these contests.

Since Dean Pees was named “D” coordinator in 2012, Baltimore has forced the NFL’s third-most three-&-outs (239). This season, the Ravens’ 43 three-and-outs tie for sixth most in the NFL.

DEFENSIVE THREE-AND-OUTS / SINCE 2012 Rk. Team 3-&-Out Drives

1. Denver Broncos 2612. Houston Texans 2463. Baltimore Ravens 239

Since 2000, Baltimore’s “D” owns the NFL’s second-most shutouts (tied, NE), blanking opponents nine times. The Ravens’ last shutout came in 2009 in a 16-0 Monday Night Football win at Cleveland.

NFL SHUTOUT LEADERS / SINCE 2000 Rk. Team Shutouts 1. Seattle Seahawks 10 2. Baltimore Ravens 9 New England Patriots 9

The Ravens’ No. 5 “D” is one of five NFL units to allow an average of under 320.0 yards per game this season. Additionally, Baltimore’s “D” ranks in the Top 7 in several key categories:

RAVENS TOP DEFENSIVE RANKINGS / ENTERING WEEK 17 Category Stat Rank

Interceptions 18 1 Rushing Defense (YPG) 85.1 2 First Downs Per Game Avg. 17.9 2Rushing Touchdowns 8 2t Third-&-1 Conversions Pct. 45.8 3Turnovers Forced 28 3Rushing Avg. Per Carry 3.69 4Third-Down Percentage 35.9 5Total Defense (YPG) 318.9 5Three-&-Outs Forced 43 6tPoints Per Game 19.6 7

The Ravens haven’t allowed an opponent to average more than 4.0 yards per rushing attempt in a season. In 2016, Baltimore has permitted a 3.69 mark (fourth in the NFL). The Ravens are on pace to extend their NFL record to an incredible 21-consecutive seasons.

MOST CONSECUTIVE SEASONS ALLOWING 4.0 YARDS OR FEWER PER CARRY / NFL HISTORY

Consecutive Seasons Team Years Allowing 4.0 or Fewer

Baltimore 1996-2015 20Buffalo 1986-2000 15Dallas 1964-78 15

DEFENSIVE TEAM NOTES

“D” NUMBERS TO RAVE ABOUT OUTSTANDING DEFENSE

SHUTOUT CITY

PROFITABLE RETURNS

HISTORY OF DOMINANCE

MAKING SHORT WORK

RAVENS EXTEND NFL RECORD

PICK ‘EM OFF

FORCEFUL UP FRONTBaltimore’s defense has been stout on third-and-1 situations this season, with the Ravens permitting opponents to convert just 45.8% of such situations through 15 games (NFL’s third-best mark).

OPPONENT THIRD-&-1 CONVERSIONS / 2016 SEASON Rk. Team Att. Conv. Pct.

1. Tennessee Titans 22 9 40.92. Minnesota Vikings 18 8 44.43. Baltimore Ravens 24 11 45.8

Entering Week 17, Baltimore’s defense has produced an NFL-high 18 interceptions, which is a marked improvement over the 6 thefts the Ravens accumulated during the 2015 campaign.

NFL INTERCEPTIONS LEADERS / 2016 SEASON1. Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182. San Diego Chargers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173. Car., GB, KC & Mia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16

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The Ravens’ Top 6 all-time single-game offensive outputs have come during the John Harbaugh/QB Joe Flacco Era. This figure includes Week 13’s 496 yards vs. Miami this season, in which Baltimore threw for 386 yards and ran for 110. (See notes below.) RAVENS TOP TOTAL NET YARDS (Single-Game History)Yards Game/Date Results553 9/25/11 at STL W, 37-7548 12/13/09 vs. Det. W, 48-3533 12/23/12 vs. NYG W, 33-14503 9/23/12 vs. NE W, 31-30501 9/13/09 vs. KC W, 38-24496 12/4/16 vs. Mia. W, 38-6

Since 2014 (a 47-game span), Baltimore’s 73 sacks permitted rank as the NFL’s fewest. The Ravens have allowed zero sacks in 12 games since 2014, a mark that ties (NYG & Oak.) for the NFL’s most. NFL’S FEWEST SACKS ALLOWED (Since 2014) Rk. Team Sacks

1. Baltimore Ravens 732. Oakland Raiders 773. New York Giants 78

BALTIMORE RAVENS MOST TOTAL YARDS

(Since 2012 / Past Five Years)12/23/12 vs. NYG . . . . . . 53309/23/12 vs. NE . . . . . . . 50312/04/16 vs. Mia. . . . . . 49609/20/15 at Oak. . . . . . . 49310/12/14 at TB . . . . . . . . 47509/28/14 vs. Car. . . . . . . 454

On Nov. 6, in the win over Pittsburgh, WR Mike Wallace recorded the longest offensive play in Ravens regular season history when he registered a 95-yard TD catch and run from QB Joe Flacco. The play also ranks as the second-longest from scrimmage in an NFL game this season, only behind New Orleans’ 98-yard QB Drew Brees-to-WR Brandin Cooks connection on 9/11/16.

LONGEST OFFENSIVE PLAYS (Ravens Single-Game History)

Yards Players Involved Game95t Joe Flacco to Mike Wallace 11/6/16 vs. Pit. 92 Eric Zeier to Derrick Alexander 12/7/97 vs. Sea. 87t Steve McNair to Mark Clayton 12/10/06 at KC

Since 2008, when John Harbaugh was named Baltimore’s head coach, the Ravens are one of five NFL teams (Atl., NE, NO & Phi.) to post at least 190 passing and 125 rushing touchdowns, producing a balanced attack under Harbaugh.

TEAMS W/ AT LEAST 190 PASSING & 125 RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS(Since 2008 / John Harbaugh Era)

Team Passing TDs Rushing TDs Total TDsAtlanta Falcons 240 132 372Baltimore Ravens 192 125 317New England Patriots 283 166 449New Orleans Saints 330 133 463 Philadelphia Eagles 214 142 356

4 In addition, Baltimore is one of seven teams (Dal., NE, Den., Phi., Was. & Hou.) to average at least 220 passing yards and 115 rushing yards per game since Harbaugh’s 2008 arrival.

ZERO SACKS ALLOWED / GAMES / SINCE 2014Baltimore Ravens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12New York Giants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12Oakland Raiders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12Cincinnati Bengals, Pittsburgh Steelers . . 11

4 Says John Harbaugh: “Running the football is part of our DNA in Baltimore.” Under Harbaugh (since 2008), the Ravens have averaged the NFL’s 13th-most rushing yards per game (115.5).

4 Since 2008, the Ravens’ 125 rushing TDs tie (NYJ) for seventh in the NFL, while their 4,055 rushing attempts also stand seventh.

4 Under Harbaugh, when rushing for at least 125 yards in a game, the Ravens have produced a 44-8 record. Baltimore is 26-5 when rushing for at least 150 yards during the Harbaugh Era, which the team did (151) in Week 15's win this season over Philadelphia.

NFL’S FEWEST SACKS ALLOWED (2015 Season) Rk. Team Sacks

1. St. Louis Rams 182. New York Jets 223. Baltimore Ravens 24

In 2015, Baltimore posted the second-most total net yards in team history (89 short of 2014 record), finishing with 5,749 yards. The Ravens also set a franchise record by averaging 266.9 net passing yards per game, all while starting three different quarterbacks.

RAVENS OFFENSIVE OUTPUT / SINGLE-SEASON HISTORY NET PASSING YARDS

Year Yards2015 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,2711996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,9782014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,8192012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,7391997 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,702

TOTAL NET YARDS Year Yards

2014 . . . . . . . . . . . 5,8382015 . . . . . . . . . . 5,7491996 . . . . . . . . . . . 5,7232012 . . . . . . . . . . . 5,6402009 . . . . . . . . . . . 5,619

OFFENSIVE TEAM NOTES

TOP “O” UNDER JOHN & JOE

SECURITY DETAIL

OFFENSE EXPLODES VS. MIAMI

LONGEST PLAY IN TEAM HISTORY

RAVENS NEAR FRANCHISE BEST IN ‘15

RAVENS WILL RUN

A DIVERSE ATTACK

• On Dec. 4, in Week 13’s 38-6 win vs. Miami, the Ravens racked up a season-high 496 yards of total offense, marking the sixth most in single-game team history (and during the John Harbaugh Era).

• QB Joe Flacco, who was not sacked, led the Ravens to 386 net passing yards, which stand as the second most in single-game franchise history.

• Baltimore scored a season-high 38 points, which was the most registered since the 48 points at Tampa Bay on 10/12/14.

• The Ravens’ 32-point margin of victory ranks as the third-best figure under Harbaugh. The only better games were 45 vs. Detroit on 12/13/09 (48-3) and 35 vs. Oakland on 11/11/12 (55-20).

RAVENS “O” GETTING HOTOver the past four games (since Week 13), Baltimore has registered the NFL’s fifth-most points per game (28.8), racking up 115 points during this span. Helping produce those points are 9 TDs that have come via the air, which tie for the league’s third most.

NFL POINTS PER GAME(Since Week 13 / Past Four Games)

Rk. Team Games Points PPG1. Atlanta Falcons 4 144 36.02. Arizona Cardinals 4 129 32.33. Green Bay Packers 4 127 31.84. Indianapolis Colts 4 117 29.35. Baltimore Ravens 4 115 28.86. New England Patriots 4 113 28.3

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Overall Record Home AwayOverall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .181-153-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115-52-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66-101In M&T Bank Stadium (since 1998). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108-44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108-44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . n/aCoached by Ted Marchibroda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16-31-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-12-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-19Coached by Brian Billick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80-64 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50-22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30-42Coached by John Harbaugh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85-58 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54-18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31-40vs. AFC Teams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140-119 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89-47 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51-72vs. AFC North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52-37 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20-24vs. AFC Central (1996-2001) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26-28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-14vs. AFC East . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21-21 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-16vs. AFC South . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-10vs. AFC West . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22-18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-11vs. NFC Teams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46-35-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31-8-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-27vs. NFC North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-5vs. NFC Central (1996-2001) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-4vs. NFC East . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-9-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-2-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-7vs. NFC South . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10-6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-3vs. NFC West . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14-9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-8On Monday Night Football - ABC/ESPN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-9On NBC/ESPN - Sunday Night or Thursday Night. . . . . . . . . . . . 15-13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-8On NFL Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2In Overtime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12-10-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7-3-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-7Ravens Shutout Wins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-0 In Season Openers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-7Indoors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . n/a . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-14Note: Baltimore has played in Houston’s Reliant/NRG Stadium five times (3-2), Indy’s Lucas Oil Stadium twice (0-2) and Dallas’ Texas Stadium once (1-0). Three of those games at Reliant Stadium (12/13/10, 10/21/12 & 12/21/14) came when the roof was closed, meaning those games were “indoors,” while the other games listed are considered “outdoors” due to open roofs. In August . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-0In September. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43-28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28-7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-21In October . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-46 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18-17 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-29In November . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53-37-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-12-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21-25In December . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47-38 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-23In January . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5-3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3

Team Since 2000 Since 2008 2016Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157-114 . . . . . . . 85-58 . . . . . . 8-7vs. AFC North (since 2002) . . . . . . . . . 52-37 . . . . . . . 34-19 . . . . . . 4-1vs. AFC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118-86 . . . . . . . 64-43 . . . . . . 7-4vs. NFC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39-28 . . . . . . . 21-15 . . . . . . 1-3Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100-36 . . . . . . . 54-18 . . . . . . 6-2Away . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57-78 . . . . . . . 31-40 . . . . . . 2-5On grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68-59 . . . . . . . 30-23 . . . . . . 8-3Artificial turf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89-55 . . . . . . . 55-35 . . . . . . 0-4Outdoors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152-103 . . . . . . . 79-51 . . . . . . 8-6Indoors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11 . . . . . . . . . 4-6 . . . . . . 0-1September . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-21 . . . . . . . 20-10 . . . . . . 3-0October . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30-35 . . . . . . . 14-19 . . . . . . 0-4November . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48-25 . . . . . . . 28-11 . . . . . . 3-1December . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39-31 . . . . . . . 20-17 . . . . . . 2-2January . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-2 . . . . . . . . . 3-1 . . . . . . 0-0Leading at halftime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121-23 . . . . . . . 66-17 . . . . . . 7-3Trailing at halftime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27-78 . . . . . . . 14-36 . . . . . . 1-3Tied at halftime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-13 . . . . . . . . . 5-5 . . . . . . 0-1Tied after 3 quarters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-6 . . . . . . . . . 1-2 . . . . . . 0-0Leading After 3 quarters . . . . . . . . . . 132-16 . . . . . . . 74-14 . . . . . . 7-1Trailing after 3 quarters . . . . . . . . . . . . 23-91 . . . . . . . 10-45 . . . . . . 1-6Decided by 7 points or less . . . . . . . . . 68-63 . . . . . . . 37-39 . . . . . . 6-5Decided by 3 points or less . . . . . . . . . 39-35 . . . . . . . 23-21 . . . . . . 2-1When scoring first . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107-34 . . . . . . . 62-19 . . . . . . 7-4When not scoring first . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50-80 . . . . . . . 23-39 . . . . . . 1-3Positive or even turnover ratio . . . . . 130-37 . . . . . . . 66-25 . . . . . . 6-6Negative turnover ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . 27-77 . . . . . . . 19-33 . . . . . . 2-1Winning penalty ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70-45 . . . . . . . 39-19 . . . . . . 3-1Losing penalty ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75-59 . . . . . . . 38-31 . . . . . . 4-5Overtime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-8 . . . . . . . . . 6-5 . . . . . . 0-0When returning a KOR for a TD . . . . . . . 5-2 . . . . . . . . . 5-1 . . . . . . 0-0When returning a PR for a TD . . . . . . . . . 8-2 . . . . . . . . . 4-0 . . . . . . 0-0

Offense Since 2000 Since 2008 2016Scoring 20 or more points . . . . . . . . . . 119-39 . . . . . . . 68-24 . . . . . 5-4Scoring 30 or more points . . . . . . . . . . . . 52-6 . . . . . . . . 32-4 . . . . . 1-0Having 20 or more first downs . . . . . . . 69-42 . . . . . . . 47-23 . . . . . 3-3Totaling 350 or more net yards . . . . . . . 71-37 . . . . . . . 46-22 . . . . . 3-4At least 35 minutes time of poss. . . . . . . 39-7 . . . . . . . . 19-5 . . . . . 1-1Rushing for 150 or more yards . . . . . . . 51-13 . . . . . . . . 26-5 . . . . . 1-0When not throwing an INT . . . . . . . . . . 86-19 . . . . . . . 48-12 . . . . . 1-4With a 100-yard rusher . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51-20 . . . . . . . . 23-7 . . . . . 0-1Without a 100-yard rusher . . . . . . . . . 106-94 . . . . . . . 62-51 . . . . . 8-6With a 100-yard receiver . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-22 . . . . . . . 22-15 . . . . . 2-2Without a 100-yard receiver . . . . . . . . 122-92 . . . . . . . 63-43 . . . . . 6-5With a 300-yard passer . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21-18 . . . . . . . 18-13 . . . . . 2-2Without a 300-yard passer . . . . . . . . . 136-96 . . . . . . . 67-45 . . . . . 6-5

Defense Since 2000 Since 2008 2016When scoring a defensive TD . . . . . . . . . 38-7 . . . . . . . . 16-5 . . . . . 0-1When returning an INT for a TD . . . . . . . 31-3 . . . . . . . . 13-2 . . . . . 0-0When returning a fumble for a TD . . . . . . 7-4 . . . . . . . . . 3-3 . . . . . 0-1Recording 3 or more sacks . . . . . . . . . .84-34 . . . . . . . 38-20 . . . . . 4-1Holding opp. under 250 net yards . . . . . 45-6 . . . . . . . . 29-6 . . . . . 3-0Holding opp. under 21 points . . . . . . .124-35 . . . . . . . 68-14 . . . . . 7-1Holding opp. under 15 points . . . . . . . .99-15 . . . . . . . . 51-6 . . . . . 5-0Allowing a 100-yard rusher . . . . . . . . . .17-23 . . . . . . . 10-12 . . . . . 2-2Not allowing a 100-yard rusher . . . . .139-92 . . . . . . . 75-46 . . . . . 6-5Allowing a 100-yard receiver . . . . . . . .32-38 . . . . . . . 15-22 . . . . . 2-2Not allowing a 100-yard receiver . . . .126-75 . . . . . . . 70-36 . . . . . 6-5Allowing a 300-yard passer . . . . . . . . . .22-24 . . . . . . . 14-16 . . . . . 0-3Not allowing a 300-yard passer . . . . .134-90 . . . . . . . 71-42 . . . . . 8-4

ALL-TIME RESULTS / TRENDS

RAVENS ALL-TIME RECORDS

RAVENS TRENDS

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Super Bowl XLVII MVP QB Joe Flacco was masterful during the Ravens’ 2012 playoff run, completing 73 of 126 passes for 1,140 yards, 11 TDs and 0 INTs to produce a 117.2 passer rating. Flacco joined Hall of Fame QB Joe Montana (1989) as the only players to produce 11 TDs and 0 INTs during an NFL postseason.

JOE FLACCO STATISTICS / 2012 PLAYOFFSGame (Opp./Rd.) Cmp-Att Pct. Yards TD INT Rate 1/06/13 vs. Ind. (WC) 12-23 52.2 282 2 0 125.61/12/13 at Den. (Div.) 18-34 52.9 331 3 0 116.21/20/13 at NE (AFC) 21-36 58.3 240 3 0 106.32/03/13 at SF (SB) 22-33 66.6 287 3 0 124.2Totals (Record: 4-0) 73-126 57.9 1,140 11 0 117.2Flacco Quick Hits: • In his final six games of 2012 (including playoffs and dating back to 12/23 of the regular season), Flacco was 102-of-170 for 1,483 yards, 13 TDs and 0 INTs, producing a 113.9 passer rating.• Flacco, Joe Montana (1989) and Kurt Warner (2008) are the only QBs in NFL history to throw 11 TDs in a single postseason. Neither Flacco nor Montana threw an INT in their postseasons.

QB Joe Flacco is 128 passing yards shy of breaking Vinny Testaverde’s single-season team record of 4,177 from 1996. Last week at Pittsburgh, Flacco reached the 4,000 milestone for the first time in his career, while he has also set Baltimore’s single-season completions record (404), breaking his previous record (362 in 2013).

RAVENS CAREER PASSING LEADERSRk. Player G Att Cmp Pct Yards TD INT Rate1. Joe Flacco 137 4,693 2,883 61.4 32,372 182 116 84.62. Kyle Boller 53 1,311 746 56.9 7,846 45 44 71.93. V. Testaverde 29 1,019 596 58.5 7,148 51 34 82.8

• QB Joe Flacco’s 93 total wins (including playoffs) rank third among active starting NFL quarterbacks since Flacco entered the league in 2008.

• Flacco has 53 career regular season wins at home, tying (Aaron Rodgers) for the second most among starting QBs since Flacco entered the NFL in 2008 (Tom Brady - 56).

• Baltimore is 37-6 when Flacco posts at least a 100.0 QB rating. Baltimore is 22-3 when he is 110.0 or better.

• Flacco’s 72 regular season victories from 2008-14 are the most by a starting QB in the first seven seasons of a career in NFL history. His 75 wins through eight seasons (2008-15) stand as the fifth most all time (see chart right).

MOST TOTAL WINS BY QBS(Includes Playoffs / Since 2008)

Rk. Player Record 1. Tom Brady . . . . . . . . . . 104-34 2. Aaron Rodgers . . . . . . . . 96-51 3. Joe Flacco . . . . . . . . . . . 93-59 4. Ben Roethlisberger . . . . 90-48 5. Drew Brees . . . . . . . . . . . 89-60

PASSING YARDS(Single-Season Playoff History)1. Eli Manning (2011) . . . 1,2192. Kurt Warner (2008) . . . 1,1473. Joe Flacco (2012) . . . . 1,140

PASSING TOUCHDOWNS(Single-Season Playoff History)1. Joe Flacco (2012) . . . . . . . 11 Joe Montana (1989) . . . . . . 11 Kurt Warner (2008) . . . . . . 11

PASSING FIRST DOWNS(Single-Season Playoff History)1. Eli Manning (2011) . . . . . . 612. Tom Brady (2014) . . . . . . . . 553. Peyton Manning (2006) . . . 554. Joe Flacco (2012) . . . . . . . 53 Aaron Rodgers (2010) . . . . 53

PASSER RATING (Min. 80 Att.)(Single-Season Playoff History)1. Joe Montana (1989) . . . 146.42. Troy Aikman (1992) . . . 126.43. Joe Flacco (2012) . . . . 117.2 Steve Young (1994) . . . 117.25. Joe Montana (1988) . . 117.0

MOST REGULAR SEASON WINS BY QUARTERBACKS

(First Seven Seasons / NFL History) Rk. Player Wins 1. Joe Flacco (2008-14) . . . . . 72 2. Tom Brady (2000-06) . . . . . 70 3. Ben Roethlisberger (2004-10) . .69

300-YARD PASSING GAMES (Ravens Single Seasons)

1. Joe Flacco (2015) . . . . . . . . . . 5 Joe Flacco (2014) . . . . . . . . . . 5

Joe Flacco (2012) . . . . . . . . . . 5 Vinny Testaverde (1996) . . . . 5

4. Joe Flacco (2016, 2011) . . . . . 4

300-YARD PASSING GAMES (Ravens Career History)1. Joe Flacco (2008-16) . . . 302. V. Testaverde (1996-97). . . 83. Steve McNair (2006-07) . . . 2 Jeff Blake (2002) . . . . . . . . 2 Eric Zeier (1996-97) . . . . . . 2

MOST REGULAR SEASON WINS BY QUARTERBACKS

(First Eight Seasons / NFL History) Rk. Player Wins 1. Tom Brady (2000-07) . . . . . 86 2. Ben Roethlisberger (2004-11) . . 80

Peyton Manning (1998-2005) . . 80 4. Jim Kelly (1986-93) . . . . . . . 76 5. Joe Flacco (2008-15) . . . . . 75

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

FRANCHISE LEADER JUST-WIN JOE

PLAYOFF PERFECTION

POSTSEASON BESTS

Prior to being injured in 2015’s Week 11 game vs. St. Louis, QB Joe Flacco had made 122-consecutive regular season starts, marking the fifth-longest streak in NFL history.

MOST CONSECUTIVE STARTS BY A QUARTERBACK / NFL HISTORY Rk. Player (Years) Games

1. Brett Favre (1992-2010) 2972. Peyton Manning (1998-2011) 2083. Eli Manning (2004-present) 1984. Philip Rivers (2006-present) 1755. Joe Flacco (2008-15) 1226. Ron Jaworski (1977-84) 116

QUARTERBACK IRONMEN

FLACCO’S FINE MARKS

RAVENS SINGLE-SEASON PASSING YARDSRk. Player (Year) Cmp-Att Pct. Yards TD INT Rate 1. V. Testaverde (‘96) 325-549 59.2 4,177 33 19 88.7 2. Joe Flacco (‘16) 404-623 64.8 4,050 20 14 84.5 3. Joe Flacco (‘14) 344-554 62.0 3,986 27 12 91.0 4. Joe Flacco (‘13) 362-614 59.0 3,912 19 22 73.1 5. Joe Flacco (‘12) 317-531 59.7 3,817 22 10 87.7

RAVENS SINGLE-GAME PASSING YARDS

RAVENS PASSING RECORDS

MOST PASSES WITHOUT AN INT (Ravens History) Rk. Player (Year) Passes

1. Joe Flacco (2016) 176 2. Eric Zeier (1997-98) 175 3. Steve McNair (2006) 162 4. Joe Flacco (2010) 137 5. Joe Flacco (2014) 126 Joe Flacco (2012) 126

Yards Player (Opp./Date)429 Vinny Testaverde vs. STL, 10/27/96389 Joe Flacco at STL, 9/25/11385 Joe Flacco at Min., 10/18/09384 Joe Flacco at Oak., 9/20/15382 Joe Flacco vs. NE, 9/23/12

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QB Joe Flacco threw 5 TD passes in the 2014, 48-17 win at TB, becoming the fastest QB since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger to reach the 5-passing TD mark in a game. (Source: Elias SB)

FASTEST QBs TO REACH 5 TDs IN GAME / SINCE 1970 MERGER Quarterback Time Date/Game

Joe Flacco (Bal.) 16:03 10/12/14 at TBBen Roethlisberger (Pit.) 28:09 11/5/07 vs. Bal. Donovan McNabb (Phi.) 28:12 12/5/04 vs. GBTommy Kramer (Min.) 28:55 9/28/86 vs. GBPeyton Manning (Ind.) 29:03 9/26/04 vs. GB

More about the 5-TD performance at Tampa Bay:• Flacco’s 5 total passing TDs tie (Tony Banks, 9/10/00 vs. Jax) for the most in Ravens single-game history. Flacco’s 149.7 passer rating set a franchise record, as he was 21-of-28 (75.0%) for 306 yards and 0 INTs.

With 300 passing yards . . . . . . . 18-12With 3-or-more TD passes . . . . . 13-3When not throwing an INT . . . . 48-13With at least 4 comps. of 25+ yards . . 9-4With at least a 100 QB rating . . . 37-6With at least a 110 QB rating . . . 22-3When not sacked . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-6Playing in < 40 degree weather . . 10-6On Turf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54-32

On Grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29-22vs. AFC North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-18vs. AFC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62-40vs. NFC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21-14In September . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20-10In October. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-19In November . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27-11In December/January . . . . . . . . 22-14In season’s final four games . . . 20-11

• In the Ravens’ last 10 playoff games (since the 2010 season), Flacco is 196-of-327 for 2,563 yards, 24 TDs and 4 INTs (104.1 rating). He has led the Ravens to a 7-3 record in these contests.• In Baltimore’s last six playoff games (5-1 record), Flacco has thrown 17 TDs and 2 INTs. Completing 119 of 200 passes for 1,691 yards, he owns a magnificent 111.1 QB rating.

• Flacco has thrown at least 2 TDs in eight-straight playoff games, marking the longest streak in NFL postseason history. • Flacco has 25-career postseason TD passes, tied (Brett Favre) for second most in a QB’s first eight seasons. (Tom Brady is first - 26.)• Flacco’s streak of 197 passes without throwing an INT in the postseason (from 1/22/12 to 1/10/15) is the second longest in NFL playoff history (Drew Brees, 226). Joe Montana (179 from 1989-91) and Steve Young (173 from 1994-96) are third and fourth, respectively.• Among active QBs, Flacco’s 25 playoff TD passes rank fourth most (Tom Brady - 56, Peyton Manning - 40 & Aaron Rodgers - 27).• Flacco’s 3,223 career passing yards in the playoffs rank sixth most among active quarterbacks.• Flacco’s 10 career playoff victories are the most among NFL quarterbacks since he entered the league in 2008.• Flacco has seven career road wins in the playoffs (including two apiece in each of the 2008 and 2012 campaigns), ranking as the most by a QB in league history (Eli Manning is next with five).

1. Joe Flacco . . . . . . . . . . . 102. Tom Brady. . . . . . . . . . . . . 83. Peyton Manning . . . . . . . . 7 Aaron Rodgers . . . . . . . . . 7 Russell Wilson . . . . . . . . . 7

PLAYOFF WINS(By QBs / Since 2008)

1. Joe Flacco . . . . . . . . . . . . 72. Eli Manning . . . . . . . . . . . . 53. L. Dawson, J. Delhomme . . 4 A. Rodgers, B. Roethlisberger . .4 M. Sanchez, R. Staubach . . 4

ROAD PLAYOFF WINS(By QBs / NFL History)

GAME-WINNING DRIVES IN FOURTH QUARTER OR OVERTIME (26 TOTAL) Date/Opp. Drive Length Scoring Play Time Left Score

11/02/08 at Cle. 5 plays, 59 yards in 1:54 Stover 22-yard field goal 5:36 30-2701/10/09 at Ten. (Div.) 9 plays, 51 yards in 3:30 Stover 43-yard field goal 0:53 13-1009/13/09 vs. KC 8 plays, 74 yards in 3:15 Clayton 31-yard pass from Flacco 2:06 38-2411/29/09 vs. Pit. 6 plays, 17 yards in 3:23 Cundiff 29-yard field goal 6:42 (OT) 20-1709/26/10 vs. Cle. 10 plays, 69 yards in 5:41 Boldin 27-yard pass from Flacco 9:13 21-1710/03/10 at Pit. 4 plays, 40 yards in 0:36 Houshmandzadeh 18-yard pass from Flacco 0:32 17-1410/24/10 vs. Buf. 4 plays, 9 yards in 1:58 Cundiff 38-yard field goal 10:54 (OT) 37-3412/19/10 vs. NO 5 plays, 66 yards in 1:31 Cundiff 32-yard field goal 10:03 27-24 (30-24 final)10/30/11 vs. Ari. 5 plays, 37 yards in 0:52 Cundiff 25-yard field goal 0:00 30-2711/06/11 at Pit. 13 plays, 92 yards in 2:16 T. Smith 26-yard pass from Flacco 0:08 23-20 11/24/11 vs. SF 16 plays, 76 yards in 7:34 Pitta 8-yard pass from Flacco 14:56 13-6 (16-6 final)09/23/12 vs. NE 7 plays, 70 yards in 1:55 Tucker 27-yard field goal 0:00 31-3011/04/12 at Cle. 9 plays, 81 yards in 4:22 T. Smith 19-yard pass from Flacco 4:26 22-15 (25-15 final)11/25/12 at SD 12 plays, 40 yards in 3:09 Tucker 38-yard field goal 0:00 13-13 12 plays, 69 yards in 3:49 Tucker 38-yard field goal 1:07 (OT) 16-1301/12/13 at Den. (Div.) 3 plays, 77 yards in :38 J. Jones 70-yard pass from Flacco 0:31 35-35 6 plays, 16 yards in 2:33 Tucker 47-yard field goal 13:18 (2OT) 38-3510/06/13 at Mia. 7 plays, 34 yards in 2:25 Tucker 44-yard field goal 1:42 26-2311/10/13 vs. Cin. 8 plays, 28 yards in 4:34 Tucker 46-yard field goal 5:27 (OT) 20-1712/08/13 vs. Min. 5 plays, 80 yards in 0:41 M. Brown 9-yard pass from Flacco 0:04 29-2612/16/13 at Det. 7 plays, 24 yards in 1:43 Tucker 61-yard field goal 0:38 18-1609/21/14 at Cle. 6 plays, 37 yards in 1:58 Tucker 32-yard field goal 0:00 23-2112/28/14 vs. Cle. 2 plays, 69 yards in :50 T. Smith 16-yard pass from Flacco 7:33 13-10 (20-10 final)10/01/15 at Pit. 7 plays, 45 yards in :58 J. Tucker 42-yard field goal 0:03 20-20 8 plays, 32 yards in 4:33 J. Tucker 52-yard field goal 5:08 (OT) 23-2011/01/15 vs. SD 9 plays, 59 yards in 2:27 J. Tucker 39-yard field goal 0:00 29-2611/22/15 vs. STL 5 plays, 12 yards in :54 J. Tucker 47-yard field goal 0:00 16-1309/18/16 at Cle. 5 plays, 27 yards in 2:35 J. Tucker 49-yard field goal 11:19 22-20 (25-20 final)09/25/16 at Jax. 8 plays, 22 yards in 1:57 J. Tucker 54-yard field goal 1:02 19-17

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

GAME-WINNING DRIVES: 26 (24 REGULAR SEASON & 2 PLAYOFFS)

JANUARY JOE FLACCO SPLITS

FLACCO IS THE FASTEST

In Week 3 at Jax., QB Joe Flacco set a team record with 21-consecutive completions, 1 shy of the NFL single-game record.

MOST CONSECUTIVE COMPLETIONS / NFL SINGLE-GAME HISTORY22 . . . . Mark Brunell (Was.) vs. Houston on 9/24/0622 . . . . David Carr (Hou.) vs. Buffalo on 11/19/0621 . . . Joe Flacco (Bal.) at Jacksonville on 9/25/1621 . . . . Rich Gannon (Oak.) vs. Denver on 11/11/02 21 . . . . Eli Manning (NYG) at New Orleans on 11/28/11

21 STRAIGHT FOR JOE

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In Week 15 vs. Philadelphia, WR Steve Smith Sr. passed Hall of Famer Marvin Harrison for the seventh-most receiving yards in NFL history. Additionally, Smith Sr.’s 1,028 receptions stand 12th in league annals, as he reached the coveted 1,000 milestone in Week 11 at Dallas.

ALL-TIME RECEIVING YARDS / NFL HISTORYRk. Player (Years) Rec. Yards Avg. LG TDs 1. Jerry Rice (1985-2004) 1,549 22,895 14.8 96t 197 2. Terrell Owens (1996-2010) 1,078 15,934 14.8 98t 153 3. Randy Moss (1998-2012) 982 15,292 15.6 82t 156 4. Isaac Bruce (1994-2009) 1,024 15,208 14.9 80t 91 5. Tony Gonzalez (1997-2013) 1,325 15,127 11.4 73t 111 6. Tim Brown (1988-2004) 1,094 14,934 13.7 80t 100 7. Steve Smith Sr. (2001-16) 1,028 14,697 14.3 80t 81 8. Marvin Harrison (1996-2008) 1,102 14,580 13.2 80t 128 9. Larry Fitzgerald (2004-16) 1,120 14,346 12.8 80t 10310. Reggie Wayne (2001-14) 1,070 14,345 13.4 80 82

MULTIPLE SEASONS WITH 1,000 RECEIVING YARDS(Active NFL Wide Receivers)

Rk. Player (Team) Seasons 1. Steve Smith Sr. (Bal.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Brandon Marshall (NYJ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 3. Anquan Boldin (Det.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Larry Fitzgerald (Ari.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 7. Marques Colston (FA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Roddy White (FA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

WR Steve Smith Sr. ranks first among active WRs and is tied for fourth in NFL history with 51-career 100-yard receiving games. Smith Sr. also ranks second (with 8 such games) in Ravens history.

CAREER 100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES / NFL HISTORY Rk. Player (Career) Total 1. Jerry Rice (1985-2006) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 2. Randy Moss (1998-2010, 2012) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 3. Marvin Harrison (1996-2008) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 4. Steve Smith Sr. (2001-16) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 (8 as a Raven) 4. Andre Johnson (2003-16) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

Terrell Owens (1996-2011) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 7. Don Maynard (1958-73) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 8. Torry Holt (1999-2009) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Michael Irvin (1988-99) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4710. Calvin Johnson (2007-15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Brandon Marshall (2006-16) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Jimmy Smith (1992-2005) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46

4 Note: Smith Sr.’s eight-career 100-yard receiving games in 35 contests as a Raven rank only behind WR Mark Clayton, who posted nine from 2005-09 (76 games).

4 Smith Sr. and Hall of Famer Tim Brown are the only players in NFL history to eclipse 13,000 receiving yards & 4,000 return yards.

4 Smith Sr. and Brown are also the only players ever to post 900 catches and score a rushing, receiving, PR & KOR TD.

4 Smith Sr. is the only player in league history with at least 1,000 catches, 1,000 punt return yards and 2,000 kickoff return yards.

MOST RECEIVING YARDS / RAVENS SINGLE GAMESYds. Player/Game, Date (Catches) 258 Qadry Ismail @ Pit., 12/12/99 (6 rec.)198 Derrick Alexander vs. Pit., 12/1/96 (7 rec.)186 Steve Smith Sr. vs. Cin., 9/27/15 (13 rec.)

MOST RECEPTIONS / RAVENS SINGLE GAMESRec. Player/Game, Date (Yards) 13 Steve Smith Sr. vs. Cin., 9/27/15 (186 yards) 13 Priest Holmes vs. Ten., 10/11/98 (98 yards) 12 Javorius Allen at Mia., 12/6/15 (107 yards)

SMITH SR.’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHS

Catches14 at Chi. on 11/20/0513 vs. Cin. on 9/27/1511 twice, last 10/30/05Receiving Yards201 vs. Min. on 10/30/05189 at Bal. on 10/15/06186 vs. Cin. on 9/27/15

ACTIVE NFLTOUCHDOWN LEADERS

Rk. Player Total TD 1. Antonio Gates (SD) 110 2. Larry Fitzgerald (Ari.) 103 3. Adrian Peterson (Min.) 102 4. Frank Gore (Ind.) 91 5. Steve Smith Sr. (Bal.) 89

ACTIVE PLAYERS: CONSEC. GAMES W/ A CATCH STREAK

Games Player194 Larry Fitzgerald (Ari.)159 Brandon Marshall (NYJ)142 Steve Smith Sr. (Bal.)118 Pierre Garçon (Was.)110 Michael Crabtree (Oak.)

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

AN ALL-TIME GREAT A SPECIAL GROUP

ALL-TIME NFL RECEIVING YARDS

RECORD-SETTING DAYS

BIG-PLAY THREAT

ACTIVE BESTS

STEVE’S 100S

WR Steve Smith Sr. ranks seventh on the NFL’s all-time combined yards chart with 19,146 yards (14,697 receiving; 2,371 KOR; 1,684 PR; 387 rushing and 7 fumble recovery). Here are the Top 8:

1. Jerry Rice . . . . . . . . . . 23,5462. Brian Mitchell . . . . . . . 23,3303. Walter Payton . . . . . . 21,8034. Emmitt Smith . . . . . . . 21,583

5. Tim Brown . . . . . . . . . 19,6826. Marshall Faulk . . . . . . 19,1907. Steve Smith Sr. . . . . . 19,1468. Darren Sproles . . . . . . 18,975

ALL-TIME NFL COMBINED YARDS

Without question, WR Steve Smith Sr. is one of the greatest to ever play in the NFL. Smith Sr., who in Week 11 this season registered his 1,000th catch, is one of four players in NFL history to record at least 14,000 receiving yards, 1,000 catches, 75 receiving touchdowns and a 14.0-yard career receiving average.

PLAYERS WITH 14,000 RECEIVING YARDS, 1,000 CATCHES, 75 RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS & 14.0-YARD RECEIVING AVERAGE

(NFL History) Player (Years) Rec. Yards Avg. TDs

Jerry Rice (1985-2004) 1,549 22,895 14.8 197Isaac Bruce (1994-2009) 1,024 15,208 14.9 91Terrell Owens (1996-2010) 1,078 15,934 14.8 153Steve Smith Sr. (2001-16) 1,028 14,697 14.3 81

WR Steve Smith Sr. leads all active NFL passing targets with 141-career 25-plus-yard catches. Smith Sr. bodes well in that category over the past 22 years, too, ranking third. With his 52-yard TD reception this year in Week 4 vs. Oakland, he reached 32-career catches of 50-plus yards, second most (DeSean Jackson, 37) among active players. Of Smith Sr.’s 32, 20 have produced TDs.

25-PLUS-YARD RECEPTIONS LEADERS(Active NFL WRs)

Rk. Players Rec. 1. Steve Smith Sr. . . . . . 141 2. DeSean Jackson . . . . . 112 3. Anquan Boldin . . . . . . 109 4. Larry Fitzgerald . . . . . . 108 5. Brandon Marshall . . . . . 89

(NFL WRs / Since 1995)Rk. Players Rec. 1. Randy Moss . . . . . . . . 161 2. Terrell Owens . . . . . . . 158 3. Steve Smith Sr. . . . . . 141 4. Isaac Bruce . . . . . . . . . 137 5. Marvin Harrison . . . . . 134

25+ 25+

SMITH SR. HALL OF FAME WORTHY

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OLB Terrell Suggs, the 2011 Defensive Player of the Year and Ravens’ all-time sacks leader (114.5), has tallied a team-best 8 sacks this season. Suggs, who ranks No. 2 in career Ravens tackles (856), has played valiantly the past eight games with a torn biceps he sustained in Week 6 at the Giants.

RAVENS ALL-TIME SACKS / CAREER LEADERSRk. Player (Years) Sacks 1. Terrell Suggs (2003-16) 114.5 2. Peter Boulware (1997-2005) 70.0 3. Michael McCrary (1997-2002) 51.0 4. Ray Lewis (1996-2012) 41.5 5. Adalius Thomas (2000-06) 38.5 ________________

RAVENS ALL-TIME TACKLES / CAREER LEADERS Rk. Player (Years) Tackles

1. Ray Lewis (1996-2012) 2,6432. Terrell Suggs (2003-16) 8563. Kelly Gregg (2001-10) 7214. Ed Reed (2002-12) 6615. Haloti Ngata (2006-14) 528

OLB Terrell Suggs’ 114.5 career sacks rank fifth among active players, as do his 822 yards lost. Suggs had a team-, career- and AFC-high 14 sacks in 2011. He posted 10 QB drops during the 2013 campaign, had 12 in 2014 and owns 8 sacks this season.

NFL SACKS LEADERS / ACTIVE PLAYERS Rk. Player Sacks Yards

1. Julius Peppers (GB) 143.5 873.5 2. DeMarcus Ware (Den.) 138.5 883.0 3. Dwight Freeney (Atl.) 122.5 922.5 4. Robert Mathis (Ind.) 122.0 859.5 5. Terrell Suggs (Bal.) 114.5 822.0 6. Elvis Dumervil (Bal.) 98.0 629.0 7. Mario Williams (Mia.) 97.5 560.5 8. Trent Cole (Ind.) 90.5 706.5 9. Tamba Hali (KC) 89.5 591.5

Suggs Quick Hits: • The Ravens are 66-27 all time when Suggs records at least a half-sack. Baltimore is 17-1 when he tallies 2-or-more sacks and 5-0 when he posts 3 sacks.• Suggs had 12 sacks in 2014, 1 of which produced a safety in the Week 7 win vs. Atlanta. Suggs’ safety was the eighth in franchise history and first since 2008.

RAVENS FORCED FUMBLES (Career Leaders)

1. Terrell Suggs . . . . . . . 322. Ray Lewis . . . . . . . . . . 203. Adalius Thomas . . . . . 15

RAVENS FUMBLE RECOVERIES (Career Leaders)1. Ray Lewis . . . . . . . . . . . . 202. Terrell Suggs . . . . . . . . . 133. Ed Reed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

SUGGS’ CAREER SACKS (Most vs. a Single Team)

1. Cleveland Browns . . . . . .172. Pittsburgh Steelers . . . . 14.53. Cincinnati Bengals . . . 10.54. Miami Dolphins . . . . . . . 8.5Note: Including playoffs, Suggs has totaled 19.5 sacks vs. Pittsburgh.

Five-time Pro Bowl OLB Elvis Dumervil, who returned from injury in Week 12 vs. Cincy after missing five-straight games, registered a strip-sack to help close out the win. He has totaled 386 tackles, 98 sacks, 24 FFs, 13 FRs and 1 INT during his career. “Doom” had a team-high (and single-season franchise record) 17 QB drops in 2014 and a team-best 6 sacks in 2015

(both campaigns yielded Pro Bowls). Since entering the NFL in 2006, his 98 sacks rank third among active players.

NFL SACKS LEADERS / SINCE 2006 / ACTIVE PLAYERS Rk. Player Sacks Yards

1. DeMarcus Ware (Den.) 130.5 836.0 2. Julius Peppers (GB) 103.0 624.0 3. Elvis Dumervil (Bal.) 98.0 629.0 4. Mario Williams (Mia.) 97.5 560.5

In 2014, OLB Elvis Dumervil (17) and OLB Terrell Suggs (12) combined to produce the most sacks (29) among any NFL duo. Dumervil’s 17 ranked as the league’s third most, while Suggs produced his sixth-career double-digit sack campaign.

NFL’S TOP SACK DUOS / 2014 SEASON Rk. Team Player (Sacks) Player (Sacks) Cmb. Sacks

1. Bal. Elvis Dumervil (17) Terrell Suggs (12) 29.02. Buf. Mario Williams (14.5) Marcell Dareus (10) 24.53. Den. Von Miller (14) DeMarcus Ware (10) 24.0

Though he missed 2010 due to injury (torn pectoral), OLB Elvis Dumervil’s 31 games with at least 1.5 sacks tie (DeMarcus Ware)for the NFL’s most since 2006. “Doom” had seven such games in 2014, and in 2015, he had two such performances, including his 1.5-sack effort on Monday night (11/30) at Cleveland.

MULTIPLE-SACK (1.5 OR MORE) GAMES(Active Players Since 2006) Multiple

Rk. Player Sack Games 1. Elvis Dumervil (Bal.) 31 2. DeMarcus Ware (Den.) 31 3. Robert Mathis (Ind.) 25

Julius Peppers (GB) 25 5. J.J. Watt (Hou.) 24

In 2014, Ravens OLB Elvis Dumervil tied a career high (from 2009), ranking third in the NFL in sacks (17, see chart below). He also set the Ravens’ single-season record with that figure and ranked second in the league with -127.5 sack yards. Over the past four years (since joining the Ravens), Doom has registered 34.5 QB drops, a mark that ties for 11th in the NFL.

NFL SACKS LEADERS (2014 Season)1. Justin Houston . . . . . . . . 222. J.J. Watt . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.53. Elvis Dumervil . . . . . . . . .174. Connor Barwin . . . . . . . 14.55. Mario Williams . . . . . . . 14.5

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

SUGGS SIZZLES SACKS OF DOOM

AN ELITE GROUP

ELVIS HEADLINES

DOOM’S DUAL SACKS

BALTIMORE BOOKENDS

RAVENS SACKS LEADERS (Single-Season Records)1. Elvis Dumervil (2014) . . . . . 172. Peter Boulware (2001) . . . . 153. Michael McCrary (1998) . . 14.54. Terrell Suggs (2011) . . . . . . 145. Trevor Pryce (2006) . . . . . . . 136. Terrell Suggs (2014, 2003) . . 12

RAVENS SACKS LEADERS (2016 Season)1. Terrell Suggs . . . . . . . . . . .82. Timmy Jernigan . . . . . . . . 53. Matthew Judon . . . . . . . . 44. Elvis Dumervil. . . . . . . . . . 2

Michael Pierce . . . . . . . . . 2 Brent Urban . . . . . . . . . . . 2

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Third-year DT Timmy Jernigan has been a force in the trenches for Baltimore this season. Jernigan has posted 5 sacks (second most on the team) in 15 games, with those QB drops tying (Ndamukong Suh & Kyle Williams) for the AFC’s second most among DTs. Jernigan’s 9 tackles for loss this season rank

fifth among AFC DTs, while he has also posted 1 INT.

Mosley Quick Hits: 4 Mosley, Luke Kuechly, Jamie

Collins and Thomas Davis are the only NFL defenders to tally at least 300 tackles, 5 sacks and 5 INTs since 2014 (see below). Mosley has 325 tackles, 7 sacks and 6 INTs.

4 Mosley was the NFL’s only player with at least 125 tackles, 3 sacks and 2 INTs in 2014, when he finished second to DT Aaron Donald in 2014 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year voting.

4 Mosley (2014), Daryl Smith (2013) & Ray Lewis (1998, 1999, 2000 & 2001) are the only Raven defenders to register at least 115 tackles, 3 sacks and 2 INTs in a season.

4 Mosley is the first-ever Ravens’ rookie to earn Pro Bowl honors (2014).

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

Since his team-leading and then-career-high 20 PD in 2011 (tied for fourth most in the NFL that season), CB Lardarius Webb ranks No. 8 in the league with 72 pass breakups. In 2016, Webb made the move from CB to safety, where he has posted 66 tackles, 1 sack, 1 INT and 5 PD.

CAUGHT IN HIS WEBB

NFL’S PASSES DEFENSED(2011 Season)

1. Brandon Browner (Sea.) 232. Tramon Williams (Cle.) . 223. Darrelle Revis (NYJ) . . . . 214. Lardarius Webb (Bal.) . .20

Brandon Flowers (KC) . . 206. Joe Haden (Cle.) . . . . . . . 197. Three Players . . . . . . . . . 18

NFL’S PASSES DEFENSED(2011-16)

1. Richard Sherman (Sea.) . . . 922. Johnathan Joseph (Hou.) . . 833. Joe Haden (Cle.) . . . . . . . . . 824. D. Rodgers-Cromartie (NYG) . . 805. Brent Grimes (TB) . . . . . . . 77

Tramon Williams (Cle.) . . . 777. Aqib Talib (Den.). . . . . . . . . 768. Lardarius Webb (Bal.) . . . 72

MASTERFUL MOSLEY

BIG-PLAY ‘BACKER

TIMMY TAKES OFF

S Eric Weddle’s 23-career INTs tie for sixth among active safeties. In his first year as a Raven, he has produced a team-high 4 picks (tied with LB C.J. Mosley) and 85 tackles (second on the team). The three-time Pro Bowler has posted 898 tackles, 82 PD, 7.5 sacks, 6 FFs and 4 FRs during his career.

NFL INTERCEPTIONS LEADERS / ACTIVE NFL SAFETIES Rk. Player INTs Yards TDs

1. DeAngelo Hall (Was.) 43 838 5 2. Reggie Nelson (Oak.) 35 483 1 3. Mike Adams (Ind.) 25 284 2 Jairus Byrd (NO) 25 468 2

Michael Griffin (Car.) 25 328 1 6. Eric Weddle (Bal.) 23 382 3 Earl Thomas (Sea.) 23 295 1

Weddle Quick Hits:4 Weddle is one of three NFL safeties (Landon Collins & Kurt Coleman)

with at least 4 INTs and 1 sack in 2016. Weddle’s 4 thefts tie (two players) for fifth most among NFL safeties.

4 In Week 14 at NE, Weddle posted a sack and an INT in the same game for the first time in his career.

THE SECONDARY’S SERGEANT

LB C.J. Mosley, Baltimore’s 2014 first-round draft pick and now a two-time Pro Bowler, has produced the NFL’s 11th-most total tackles (325) over the past three years. This season, Mosley has tallied 80 stops, 4 INTs, 8 PD and 1 FF, earning the second Pro Bowl honors of his career.

NFL’S TACKLES / SINCE 2014 1. Lavonte David (TB) . . . . . .374 2. Luke Kuechly (Car.) . . . . .373

Bobby Wagner (Sea.) . . . .373 4. D’Qwell Jackson (Ind.) . . .366 5. Lawrence Timmons (Pit.) . . 359 6. Preston Brown (Buf.) . . . .347 7. K.J. Wright (Sea.) . . . . . . .341 8. Johnathan Cyprien (Jax.) . . 338 9. Telvin Smith (Jax.) . . . . . .33610. Paul Posluszny (Jax.) . . . .32911. C.J. Mosley (Bal.) . . . . . . 32512. David Harris (NYJ) . . . . . .317

PITTA’S PRIME PRODUCTIONTE Dennis Pitta, who has twice overcome breaking/dislocating his hip and, at times, thought he would never play again, returned to action in 2016 and has performed incredibly well. Entering Week 17, he ranks third in the NFL in catches by a TE (75) and is 10th in receiving yards (638).

Pitta Quick Hits:4 With 1 catch in Week 17, Pitta will set a Ravens’ single-season record

for receptions by a TE. (He and Todd Heap, 2005, are tied with 75.)4 In Week 2 at Cleveland, Pitta had the eighth 100-yard receiving day by

a Ravens’ TE (102 yards on 9 catches) and second of his career.4 Pitta ranks second in all-time catches (213), receiving yards (2,007)

and receiving TDs (13) by a Ravens’ tight end (see above).

TIGHT END RECEIVING LEADERS (Ravens Career History)Rk. Tight End Rec. Yards TD1. Todd Heap 467 5,492 412. Dennis Pitta 213 2,007 133. Shannon Sharpe 140 1,621 74. Eric Green 114 1,173 7

RECEPTIONS / NFL TES(2016 Season)

1. Travis Kelce (KC) . . . . . . .842. Greg Olsen (Car.) . . . . . .773. Dennis Pitta (Bal.) . . . . 754. Kyle Rudolph (Min.) . . . .72

TACKLES FOR LOSS / AFC DTS (2016 Season)

1. Geno Atkins (Cin.) . . . . 132. Ndamukong Suh (Mia.) . . 11

Corey Liuget (SD) . . . . . 10Kyle Williams (Buf.) . . . 10

5. Timmy Jernigan (Bal.) . . 9

SACKS / AFC DTS(2016 Season)

1. Geno Atkins (Cin.) . . . . .8.52. Timmy Jernigan (Bal.) . . .5

Ndamukong Suh (Mia.) . . . . 5Kyle Williams (Buf.) . . . . . 5

5. Malik Jackson (Jax.) . . . .4.5

DEFENDERS W/ 300 TACKLES, 5 SACKS & 5 INTS / SINCE 2014 Player (Team) Tackles INTs Sacks

Luke Kuechly (Car.) 373 6 6C.J. Mosley (Bal.) 325 6 7Thomas Davis (Car.) 309 7 10.5Jamie Collins (Cle.) 306 5 12.5

Baltimore’s defense has produced an NFL-high 18 interceptions, including 4 from Pro Bowl ILB C.J. Mosley. Mosely’s 4 INTs rank as the NFL’s most among linebackers this season and stand as the second most by a ‘backer in Ravens single-season history.

INTS / RAVENS LINEBACKERS(Single-Season History)

1. Ray Lewis (2003) . . . . . . . . . 62. C.J. Mosley (2016) . . . . . . . .43. Zachary Orr (2016). . . . . . . .3

Ray Lewis (3 times). . . . . . . . 3Daryl Smith (2013) . . . . . . . . 3

INTS / NFL LINEBACKERS (2016 Season)

1. C.J. Mosley (Bal.) . . . . 42. Zachary Orr (Bal.). . . . 3

Thomas Davis (Car.) . . . 3 Jordan Hicks (Phi.) . . . . 3Deion Jones (Atl.) . . . . . 3

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The 2016 campaign marks the sixth-consecutive Pro Bowl invite for G Marshal Yanda. The 10-year veteran has played in 143 games (132 starts) during his career, ranking as the second-most games played among offensive linemen in Ravens history (Jonathan Ogden – 177). Prior to the 2015

campaign, Ravens’ season ticket holders voted Yanda as one of the Top 10 players in the franchise’s 20-year existence.

Named a second alternate to the Pro Bowl in 2016, NT Brandon Williams has emerged as one of the NFL’s most dominant defensive linemen. This season, Williams played perhaps his best game in Week 7 at NYJ when he racked up 8 tackles, 1 sack and 1 blocked FG attempt. Impressively, his 48 total

tackles rank third among all NFL nose tackles entering Week 17.

TOTAL TACKLES / NFL NTS(2016 Season)

1. Damon Harrison (NYG) . . . 822. Danny Shelton (Cle.) . . . 563. Brandon Williams (Bal.) . . 484. Sylvester Williams (Den.) . . 285. Mike Purcell (SF) . . . . . . 26

SOLO TACKLES /NFL NTS(2016 Season)

1. Damon Harrison (NYG) . . . 512. Danny Shelton (Cle.) . . . 313. Brandon Williams (Bal.) . . 324. Sylvester Williams (Den.) . . 195. Two Players . . . . . . . . . . 17

4 Since Williams became a starter in 2014 and consistently helped anchor the Ravens’ D-line, Baltimore has allowed just 92.6 rushing yards per game, ranking third in the NFL.

4 In 2016, the Ravens’ run defense ranks No. 2 in the league, permitting 85.1 yards per game. Baltimore has allowed an NFL-low 64 rushing first downs (tied with Tennessee).

CBS Sports’ Pete Prisco on ranking NT Brandon Williams the most underrated player in the NFL: “A year ago, I picked him as his team’s most underrated player. But after an impressive 16 games in 2015, where he played as well as any nose [tackle] in the league, Williams shoots to the top overall honor. … How he missed out on a Pro Bowl in 2015 is mystifying. It’s tough for centers to move him in one-on-one situations, and he helps free up the linebackers to run to the football.”

A 2013 fourth-round draft pick, FB Kyle Juszczyk is the most-recent Ravens’ “homegrown” Pro Bowler, earning NFL All-Star honors for his standout performance in 2016. This season, he leads the NFL in receptions (35) and receiving yards (265) by a fullback, while he has also helped RB Terrance West rush for a career-high 756 yards and 5 TDs.

Juszczyk Quick Hits:4 Juszczyk is the third fullback in Ravens history to earn Pro Bowl

honors, joining Le’Ron McClain (2008-09) and Vonta Leach (2011-12).

4 John Harbaugh on Juszczyk: “He’s been extremely valuable. He plays the fullback position, but he’s also a very multiple-type of a player. You can give him the ball. He’s great in pass protection. He can line up outside and then run routes as an outside receiver. Not to minimize, he’s one of our best special teams players. He’s just a core special teams player. He’s excellent at that. I think his value is very high.”

MOST PRO BOWLS(Ravens History)

LB Ray Lewis . . . . . . . . . . 13T Jonathan Ogden . . . . . 11S Ed Reed . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9OLB Terrell Suggs . . . . . . . 6G Marshal Yanda . . . . . . 6

MOST PRO BOWLS / ACTIVE NFL OFFENSIVE LINEMEN Rk. Player (Team) Pro Bowls

1. T Joe Thomas (Cle.) 102. T Jason Peters (Phi.) 93. C Nick Mangold (NYJ) 74. G Marshal Yanda (Bal.) 6

G Jahri Evans (NO) 66. Four Other Linemen 5

CONSECUTIVE PRO BOWLS(Active NFL Streaks/O-Linemen)T Joe Thomas (Cle.) . . . . . . 10G Marshal Yanda (Bal.) . . . .6T Trent Williams (Was.) . . . . 5T Tyron Smith (Dal.) . . . . . . . 4

G Marshal Yanda’s six-career Pro Bowls tie (OLB Terrell Suggs) for fourth in Ravens history. His six-straight All-Star nods rank as the NFL’s second-longest active streak among linemen (first by guards).

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

STANDING GUARD B-DUBS DOMINATES

NOTE THE B-DUB QUOTE

ORR HELPS MAN THE MIDDLE

JUICE MAKES THE BOWL

YANDA IN RARE COMPANY

The Baltimore Sun’s Childs Walker on G Marshal Yanda:“Of the many traits that have marked Yanda as a great player over the years, one is his ability to shift positions without losing effectiveness. That versatility is a product of his intelligence and his underappreciated athleticism. He’s also a straight-up tough dude, much like Terrell Suggs on the other side of the ball. Only the elite of the elite guards earn serious Hall of Fame consideration. Yanda belongs in that realm.”

ILB Zachary Orr, the next in a long line of undrafted (2014) rookie free agents who have gone on to shine as a starter for the Ravens’ defense, has produced the NFL’s seventh-most tackles (130) entering Week 17. Orr and Carolina’s Thomas Davis are the only NFL defenders with at least 100 tackles, 3 INTs, 1 forced

fumble and 1 fumble recovery this season.

NFL LEADING TACKLERS / 2016 SEASON Rk. Player (Team) Total Tackles Solo Asst.

1. Bobby Wagner (Sea.) 155 75 802. Sean Lee (Dal.) 145 93 523. Zach Brown (Buf.) 138 93 454. Kwon Alexander (TB) 135 102 335. Christian Kirksey (Cle.) 132 83 49 Alec Ogletree (LA) 132 95 377. Zachary Orr (Bal.) 130 89 41

Orr Quick Hits:4 ESPN’s Jon Gruden on Orr: “He diagnoses plays as well as anyone. He

has tremendous instincts. I love his playing style.”

4 From Weeks 11-14, Orr tallied double-digit tackles in four-straight games. The last Raven to accomplish this feat was Ray Lewis, who had five-straight performances in games 4-8 of the 2009 campaign.

4 Orr’s 3 INTs in 2016 tie three players for the second most among all NFL linebackers (teammate LB C.J. Mosley is first with 4).

RECEPTIONS / NFL FBS(2016 Season)

1. Kyle Juszczyk (Bal.) . . . . 352. John Kuhn (NO) . . . . . . .163. Jamize Olawale (Oak.) . .11

RECEIVING YARDS / NFL FBS (2016 Season)

1. Kyle Juszczyk (Bal.) . . . 2652. Jamize Olawale (Oak.) . .2173. Mike Tolbert (Car.) . . . . .72

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2015 Pro Bowler Sam Koch owns a 45.2 career gross average and 39.4 career net, both marks that rank first in Ravens history. In 2014, Koch posted a career-high and Ravens franchise-record 47.4-yard gross average and a 43.3-yard net average, shattering his previous personal bests.

CAREER GROSS PUNTING AVG.(Ravens History)

Rk. Player Avg. 1. Sam Koch . . . . . . . . . . . .45.2 2. Greg Montgomery . . . . .43.2 3. Dave Zastudil . . . . . . . . .41.6

CAREER NET PUNTING AVG.(Ravens History)

Rk. Player Avg. 1. Sam Koch . . . . . . . . . . 39.4 2. Greg Montgomery . . . 37.2 3. Kyle Richardson . . . . . . 35.4

In 2014’s Week 2 win vs. Pit., P Sam Koch passed OLB Jarret Johnson (129 games, 2003-11) for the longest streak (now 175 games) in Ravens history. Koch has not missed a game in his career.

In his 10th season (2015), P Sam Koch was finally named to his first Pro Bowl, as the standout punter’s net average (42.9) ranked No. 2 in the NFL, while his gross average (46.7) was ninth. Koch also dominated the league in 2014, producing the NFL’s No. 1 net (43.3) and No. 3 gross (47.4) averages.

NET PUNTING AVERAGE(2015 Season)

Rk. Player Net Avg. 1. Johnny Hekker . . . . .43.7 2. Sam Koch . . . . . . . . 42.9 3. Chris Jones . . . . . . . .42.5 4. Sam Martin . . . . . . . .42.0

GROSS PUNTING AVERAGE(2014 Season)

Rk. Player Gross Avg. 1. Tress Way . . . . . . . . . . 47.5

Bryan Anger . . . . . . . . 47.5 3. Sam Koch . . . . . . . . . . 47.3

NET PUNTING AVERAGE(2014 Season)

Rk. Player Net Avg. 1. Sam Koch . . . . . . . . . 43.3* 2. Thomas Morstead . . . 42.9 3. Pat McAfee . . . . . . . . . 42.8

* 5th-best in NFL single-season history

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

SOARING WITH SAM

2015 PRO BOWL PUNTER

KOCH: THE RAVENS’ IRONMAN

WONDERFUL WALLACEWR Mike Wallace, who is in his first season with the Ravens, ranks 18th in the NFL with a team-high 984 receiving yards on 68 catches through 15 games. Since he entered the NFL in 2009, Wallace, Rob Gronkowski, Jordy Nelson and Calvin Johnson (retired) are the only players to produce at least

50 receiving TDs and sport a 15.0 ypc average. (Wallace has an impressive 53 TDs & a 15.1 avg.)

PLAYERS WITH 50 REC. TOUCHDOWNS & 15.0 YPC AVG.(Since Wallace’s First Season in 2009)

Player Rec. Yards Avg. LG TDs Rob Gronkowski (NE) 405 6,095 15.0 76t 68 Calvin Johnson (retired) 605 9,532 15.8 87t 67 Jordy Nelson (GB) 458 6,934 15.1 93t 61 Mike Wallace (Bal.) 482 7,291 15.1 95t 53

Wallace Quick Hits: 4 Wallace owns 71 career catches of at least 25 yards, tying

(Demaryius Thomas) for third among active players since he entered the NFL in 2009.

4 Wallace’s 15.1 career yards-per-catch average ranks eighth best in the NFL among active players.

4 In Week 7 at NYJ, Wallace produced a career-high 10 catches for 120 yards, including a 53-yarder.

4 Wallace’s 95-yard TD catch and run on 11/6 vs. Pit. is the longest offensive play in Ravens regular season history. (See more below.)

MOST FIELD GOALS MADE / SINCE 2012 Rk. Player (Team) FGM

1. Justin Tucker (Bal.) 1672. Stephen Gostkowski (NE) 1603. Steven Hauschka (Sea.) 1464. Adam Vinatieri (Ind.) 1425. Dan Bailey (Dal.) 137

BEST NFL FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE (2016 Season)

Rk. Player (Team) FGM-FGA Pct.1. Justin Tucker (Bal.) 37-38 97.42. Matt Bryant (Atl.) 33-36 91.73. Ryan Succop (Ten.) 21-23 91.34. Adam Vinatieri (Ind.) 26-29 89.75. Matt Prater (Det.) 30-34 88.26. Steven Hauschka (Sea.) 29-33 87.9

P Sam Koch is the Ravens’ all-time leader in punts inside the 20 (currently has 315 during his career). In 2010, he posted a career-high 39 boots inside the 20, which were the NFL’s second most and tied for eighth best all time in league history. This season, Koch’s 35 punts inside the 20 rank third in the NFL.

Dating back to 2006, when he entered the NFL, Koch’s 315 punts inside the 20 rank second in the NFL.

NFL PUNTS INSIDE THE 20 / SINCE 2006 Rk. Player In 20

1. Dustin Colquitt (KC) 3632. Sam Koch (Bal.) 3153. Donnie Jones (Phi.) 305

PUNTS INSIDE THE 20(Ravens History)

Rk. Player In 20 1. Sam Koch . . . . . . . . . . . 315 2. Kyle Richardson . . . . . . .128 3. Dave Zastudil . . . . . . . . . .89 4. Greg Montgomery . . . . . .47

PUNTS INSIDE THE 20(2016 NFL Season)

Rk. Player In 20 1. Johnny Hekker (LA) . . . . 50 2. Dustin Colquitt (KC) . . . 37 3. Sam Koch (Bal.) . . . . . . .35 4. Jeff Locke (Min.) . . . . . . 33

INSIDE THE 20 SUCCESS

PIN ’EM DEEP

WR Mike Wallace has proven to be a dramatic free agent addition for the Ravens. Wallace’s team-high 984 receiving yards rank 18th in the NFL entering Week 17, while his 5 receptions of 50-plus yards rank No. 1. In Week 9 vs. Pittsburgh, he became the third player in NFL history to record 2 TD catches of 95-or-more yards when he produced the longest offensive play in Ravens regular season history with a 95-yard catch and sprint. Wallace’s 23-career receptions of at least 50 yards rank as the NFL’s second most since he entered the league in 2009.

50-YARD RECEPTIONS 50-YARD RECEPTIONS (2016 Season) (Since 2009) 1. Mike Wallace . . . . . . 5 1. DeSean Jackson . . . . . 36 2. Phillip Dorsett . . . . . . . 4 2. Mike Wallace . . . . . . .23

DeSean Jackson . . . . . 4 3. Jordy Nelson . . . . . . . 21

LONG BALL LOVE

PLAYERS WITH TWO CAREER 95-PLUS YARD TD RECEPTIONS Player Lengths/Years

John Taylor (SF) 95 in 1989 & 97 in 1991Gus Tinsley (Chi.) 97 in 1937 & 98 in 1938Mike Wallace (Pit./Bal.) 95 in both 2011 & 2016

THE SELECT 95 CLUB

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Pro Bowl K Justin Tucker ranks as the NFL’s most accurate kicker of all time. He has connected on 167 of 186 FGAs to produce an 89.8 success rate.• Prior to it ending in Week 14’s game at NE, Tucker produced a streak of 35-consecutive FGs made, tying for the fifth-longest stretch all time. He made

33-straight FGs at one point during the 2013 season, which now stands as the seventh-longest streak of all time. • To kick off 2016, Tucker was named AFC Special Teams Player of the Month (Sept.) after going 9-of-9 on FGAs, including 2 game-winners. He is a three-time AFC Player of the Month, which ties him with Ed Reed & Matt Stover for most in Ravens history. Tucker has also earned seven AFC Special Teams Player of the Week honors, including in Week 12 this year after a 4-FG game (3 from 50+) vs. Cin.• In 2013, Tucker made the Pro Bowl by setting team records in FGs made (38) and FGAs (41). Tucker also had a franchise-record 140 points (tied for sixth in NFL).• His 6 FGs on 12/16/13 at Det. set a team record and a single-game NFL high in 2013. Against the Lions, he became the first NFL kicker ever to connect from the 20-, 30-, 40-, 50- & 60-yard range in a game.• Tucker’s 94.9 career FG% when kicking on grass (75-of-79) ranks as the NFL’s best of all time. (The next best is Jay Feely at 86.8%.)• Tucker’s 92.1 career FG% (82-of-89) in the second half/overtime ranks as the NFL’s best second half/OT mark of all time.

JUSTIN TUCKER FIELD GOALS / CAREER STATS Year 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Total Pct. LG PAT Pts2012 0-0 8-8 8-8 10-13 4-4 30-33 90.9 56 42-42 1322013 0-0 10-10 12-13 10-11 6-7 38-41 92.7 61 26-26 1402014 0-0 10-10 11-11 4-4 4-9 29-34 85.3 55 42-42 1292015 0-0 10-10 9-9 10-11 4-10 33-40 82.5 52 29-29 1282016 0-0 4-4 9-10 14-14 10-10 37-38 97.4 57 26-26 137Totals 0-0 42-42 49-51 48-53 28-40 167-186 89.8 61 165-165 666

MOST FIELD GOALS MADE / SINCE 2012 Rk. Player (Team) FGM

1. Justin Tucker (Bal.) 1672. Stephen Gostkowski (NE) 1603. Steven Hauschka (Sea.) 1464. Adam Vinatieri (Ind.) 1425. Dan Bailey (Dal.) 137

MOST NFL POINTS / SINCE 2012 Rk. Player (Team) Points

1. Stephen Gostkowski (NE) 7362. Justin Tucker (Bal.) 666 3. Steven Hauschka (Sea.) 6374. Dan Bailey (Dal.) 6215. Adam Vinatieri (Ind.) 620

CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS MADE

(All-Time NFL Streaks) Rk. Kicker (Years) FGs Made

1. Adam Vinatieri (2015-16) 442. Mike Vanderjagt (2002-04) 423. Gary Anderson (1997-98) 404. Matt Stover (2005-06) 365. Justin Tucker (2015-16) 35 Adam Vinatieri (2013-14) 35

2: FG makes needed by K Justin Tucker (an NFL-high 37 currently) to set a Ravens’ single-season record and break his current mark of 38 from 2013. With 3 FGMs, “Tuck” would also become just the third kicker in NFL history to reach 40 in a season (David Akers, 44 in 2011 & Neil Rackers, 40 in 2005).

4: Points needed by Tucker (137 currently) to set a new Ravens’ single-season record, which would break his previous mark of 140 from 2013.

K Justin Tucker is the NFL’s most accurate kicker of all time, hitting on 167 of 186 FGAs to produce an 89.8 success rate.

BEST CAREER FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE (NFL History / Min. 100 Att.)

Rk. Player FGM-FGA Pct.1. Justin Tucker 167-186 89.82. Dan Bailey 169-189 89.44. Stephen Gostkowski 301-345 87.24. Steven Hauschka 187-215 87.05. Mike Vanderjagt 230-266 86.5

RAVENS PLAYER NOTES

MILESTONES IN REACH

JUST FOR KICKS SECOND IN LEAGUE HISTORY

12Career game-winning FGs by K Justin Tucker, including 2 in 2016:

• 2016: Week 3 at Jax., 53 yards• 2016: Week 2 at Cle., 49 yards• 2015: Week 11 vs. STL, 47 yards• 2015: Week 8 vs. SD, 39 yards• 2015: Week 4 at Pit., 52 yards OT• 2014: Week 3 at Cle., 32 yards

• 2013: Week 15 at Det., 61 yards • 2013: Week 10 vs. Cin., 46 yards OT • 2013: Week 5 at Mia., 44 yards • 2012: Div. at Den., 47 yards 2OT • 2012: Week 12 at SD, 38 yards OT• 2012: Week 3 vs. NE, 27 yards

TUCKER’S GAME-WINNERS

BEST NFL FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE (2016 Season)

Rk. Player (Team) FGM-FGA Pct.1. Justin Tucker (Bal.) 37-38 97.42. Matt Bryant (Atl.) 33-36 91.73. Ryan Succop (Ten.) 21-23 91.34. Adam Vinatieri (Ind.) 26-29 89.75. Matt Prater (Det.) 30-34 88.26. Steven Hauschka (Sea.) 29-33 87.9

BEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE / ROOKIES (NFL History)

Rk. Player (Year) FGM-FGA Pct.1. Blair Walsh (2012) 35-38 92.12. Justin Tucker (2012) 30-33 90.93. Cody Parkey (2014) 32-36 88.9 Alex Henery (2011) 24-27 88.95. Chandler Catanzaro (2014) 29-33 87.96. Dan Bailey (2011) 32-37 86.5

BEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE (Ravens Single-Season History)

Rk. Player (Year) FGM-FGA Pct.1. Justin Tucker (2016) 37-38 97.42. Matt Stover (2006) 28-30 93.33. Justin Tucker (2013) 38-41 92.74. Justin Tucker (2012) 30-33 90.95. Matt Stover (2004) 29-32 90.6

(min. 16 att.)

TUCK ON POINT

In addition to making 35-consecutive FG attempts, a streak that was snapped in Week 14 at NE (detailed below in grey box), here are several more facts about the remarkable 2016 season K Justin Tucker is producing:

4 Tucker’s 37 FGs made rank No. 1 in the NFL. He’s a 37-of-38 this season (lone miss was a block), and he is also 26-of-26 on PATs.

4 Tucker’s 10 FGs of 50-plus yards are a Ravens’ single-season record. They also tie (Blair Walsh, 2012) for the most in NFL history. (“Tuck” is a perfect 10-for-10 from 50 yards and out this year.)

4 An NFL single-season record 24 of Tucker’s 37 FGs made in 2016 have come from 40 yards or beyond.

4 In Week 12 vs. Cincy, Tucker became just the ninth kicker in league history to make 3 FGs of 50-plus yards in a single game (52, 57 & 54). He is also the first kicker in NFL history to make 3 FGs of 50-plus yards in the first half of a game. (These feats earned him AFC ST POW honors.)

4 Since PATs were moved back in 2015, Tucker (55-of-55) and Dan Bailey (70-of-70) are the NFL’s only kickers yet to miss.

TUCK’S TERRIFIC 2016

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Head Coach John Harbaugh: “Our heartfelt condolences and love go out to Justa and the Brooks family on the passing of Clarence. We loved that man! He is at peace now through the grace of Jesus Christ. He fought the good fight and won. One of the finest coaches I have ever met, he changed the lives and influenced players and coaches for the better. He was a great man, loving husband and devoted father. He was as tough and determined in adversity as you’ll ever see and as loyal a friend as there is. ‘C.B.’ will forever walk as a loved and cherished member of the Ravens family.” General Manager & Executive Vice President Ozzie Newsome:“Very few, if any, coaches influenced their players – on and off the field – like Clarence Brooks. How fortunate are the Ravens to have had this special person in our lives for the past 12 years? He was a teacher, a friend, a father figure to many and a great football coach. A lot of our defensive success over the years is due to his ability to get the most out of his players on the defensive line. This is a sad, sad day for our team and extended family. Our hearts ache for Justa and the rest of Clarence’s family.” Owner Steve Bisciotti:“The Bisciottis are so sad to hear about Clarence’s passing. He was the sweetest man I’ve ever met in football. He was also as tough as nails and was as respected by everyone on our team as any coach who ever touched the Ravens. His impact was more than people on the outside could know. He will be so missed.” President Dick Cass: “Clarence had a special rapport with his players. He was both beloved as coach and as a person. His infectious laugh and welcoming smile will be greatly missed, not by just the players and his fellow coaches, but by everyone in our building.” DT Brandon Williams:“Coach Brooks was like a father figure to me and every other player he coached. He made me the player I am today, but more importantly, helped me to be the man I am today. He always got the best out of you. He saw the potential in every player and did everything in his power to help you be the best you could be – on and off the field. Every day I walked in this building, no matter what was going on, he could always make me smile. I will miss him, and my heart goes out to the entire Brooks family.”

DE Lawrence Guy:“Coach Brooks was a heck of a coach, but an even better man. He cared so much about all of us and could always pull the best out of you in any situation. Through him, I learned how to prepare better, practice better and play better. I will truly miss his coaching, his fellowship and his mentorship. Rest well, ‘C.B.’”

OLB Terrell Suggs:“Clarence Brooks was a rare, special coach. We had a relationship that became more than football; he was family. He was every bit the definition of the word ‘coach.’ He was firm and demanding when he needed to be, but was a father figure and caring at the same time. I will definitely miss my friend.” Linebackers Coach Don Martindale:“Clarence Brooks is one of the finest human beings I have ever met. Selfishly speaking, you would like to say he was your best friend, but he was really everybody’s best friend. We are happy he is not suffering anymore. I love him like a brother, and I am going to miss him terribly.” Former Ravens Head Coach Brian Billick (Who Hired Brooks in 2005):“Whew, this hurts. What a man, what a coach, what an inspiration. Beyond being one of the best position coaches in the league, Clarence was one of the most respected people in the NFL. He was a great teacher and friend. His positive and upbeat, yet stern, way was special. The proof is in the pudding. Look at how players improved under him. It would be tough to find a more respected assistant in the NFL. My heart reaches out to Justa and his family.” Former Ravens DT Haloti Ngata:“I am deeply saddened by the news of ‘C.B.’ passing away. I hope that I can help continue his legacy by the way I live and play. I played under ‘C.B.’ for nine years. In that time, he helped me go to five Pro Bowls and win a Super Bowl ring. He deserves a lot of that credit. He worked so hard with me and my Ravens teammates. This is tough news to swallow. I will miss you, Coach. Thank you for everything you taught me through the years – on and off the field. I love you, Clarence.” Former Browns, Ravens & Dolphins DE Rob Burnett: “I cried a few weeks ago when I found out about Clarence and his fight against cancer, and I immediately reached out to Justa and ‘C.B.’ His death rips at my heart. I loved Clarence. He was more than my coach. He was my friend, a mentor and a motivator. This is a sad day for all of those fortunate enough to have known this great person.”

Clarence Brooks, the Baltimore Ravens’ longest-tenured assistant coach, passed away on Sept. 17 at a hospital in Weston, Fla., following a battle with esophageal and stomach cancer. He was 65. The beloved Brooks – referred to by most as “C.B.”

– originally joined the organization in 2005 and served 11 seasons as defensive line coach. This past spring, while undergoing intense treatment for his illness, he transitioned into a senior defensive assistant role, but still spent as much time as he possibly could working with players and fellow coaches, including during the Ravens’ recent training camp. Brooks was a 24-year NFL coaching veteran and one of six assistant coaches retained by head coach John Harbaugh upon his 2008 Baltimore arrival.

In addition to the Ravens, “C.B.” coached for the Miami Dolphins (2000-04), Cleveland Browns (1999) and Chicago Bears (1993-98). Brooks also spent 17 years in the collegiate ranks holding coaching positions at Arizona (1990-92) – where he was instrumental in the notable “Desert Swarm” defense that led the nation in scoring defense in 1992 – Syracuse (1981-89) and his alma mater Massachusetts (1976-80).

During Brooks’ Baltimore tenure as defensive line coach (2005-15), the Ravens allowed the NFL’s fewest rushing touchdowns (89), second-fewest points per game (18.9) and the league’s second-fewest rushing yards per game (94.2).

IN MEMORIAM: CLARENCE BROOKS

CB

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On Monday, Dec. 19, Ravens players visited the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Family Center YMCA to distribute holiday dinner baskets to 150 pre-registered Baltimore-area families in need. The Ravens partnered with Giant Food, the official supermarket of the Baltimore Ravens, to provide dinner baskets that included a turkey, canned goods and non-perishable side dishes. Ravens RB Javorius Allen, DE Kapron Lewis-Moore and RB Terrance West were in attendance to give the gift of a meal this holiday season. The annual event helps feed those who may not have the means to feed their families during the holiday season.

Ravens WR Kamar Aiken and CB Jimmy Smith adopted families through the United Way this holiday season. These players took it upon themselves to purchase presents for parents and children from Baltimore City and County. The grateful families were carefully selected based on need and circumstances. This year, personal deliveries were made possible through the agencies, giving the family members an opportunity to meet the players who chose to show some holiday spirit and give back to those in need.

Ravens TE Benjamin Watson hosted his 12th Annual Big BENefit Shopping event on Monday, Dec. 19 at the Walmart on Liberty Road (Randallstown, Md.). Watson and his One More Foundation surprised 25 families from Building Families for Children with a Christmas shopping extravaganza. Many of these families have fallen on hard times and needed a little assistance around the holidays.

ADOPT A FAMILY

WEBB TOY DISTRIBUTION BIG BENEFIT

GIANT FOOD DISTRIBUTION

RAVENS IN OUR COMMUNITYBALTIMORE RAVENSOUR TEAM. OUR COMMUNITY.

Ravens DB/RS Lardarius Webb hosted his seventh-annual toy drive on Monday, Dec. 19 at the Webster Kendrick Boys & Girls Club. Through the Lardarius Webb Foundation, approximately 250 children received gifts for the holidays. Webb spoke to the youth about the importance of giving back, and each individual was given a hand-picked present. Webb adopted the Webster Kendrick Boys and Girls Club and hosts multiple events there throughout the year.

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Ravens Transcripts Dec. 26, 2016

JOHN HARBAUGH MONDAY PRESS CONFERENCE: WEEK 17 AT BENGALS

Opening statement: “Good to see everybody – appreciate you being here. Obviously, we had a chance to study the tape and start on Cincinnati. We go to work. That’s what you do after anything, really. Win, lose, tie in life, you go back to work. That was a game that we really were excited to play. I was really proud of the way our guys played [and] the way our coaches coached. I thought we were very aggressive with our game-planning. [We] had a lot of good game-planning ideas that we used and that were very effective. I thought our guys just really fought like crazy against a very good football team – talented football team. In the end, they made one more play than we did. When you boil it right down to it, in the end, the very last play, it comes down to if he doesn’t get the ball across the goal line there – I’m talking about Antonio Brown; fabulous football player – if he doesn’t get the ball across the goal line, we win the game right there. That’s how close of a game it was and how good of a game it was – the ball being moved back and forth, up and down the field and things like that. We’re just disappointed, obviously. We wanted to win the game. When you put that much into it – heart, soul, effort, belief in one another, a lot of hard work – it’s going to sting. It’s going to sting for us. It’s going to sting for our fans. It’s going to sting for everybody, because we all care, and we certainly understand that. That’s the nature of the game. That’s the nature of football, and that’s the nature of life. That’s where we’re at, but all of our attention now goes to Cincinnati. We have a week of football left to play, and we intend to make the most of it. I know our players feel the same way.”

With a winning record now being the lone objective, can we assume it’s business as usual as far as the allocation of playing time? (Joe Platania) “That’s a good question. Yes, we’re going [there] to win the game. We’ll play our guys. Everybody that’s healthy will go play. That’s the plan – wouldn’t look at it any other way.”

John, now that you’ve looked at the tape, what did you see from the defense at the end? Did they wear down? Was it just success on Pittsburgh’s end? (Jerry Coleman) “We just saw plays being made on the one side, and we weren’t able to come up with a play. We really couldn’t get to Ben [Roethlisberger]. We tried to blitz – zone blitz, man blitz. We rushed four. We never rushed three. He got out of the pocket a couple times and made some throws. They made a couple of catches, and really, that’s what it boils down to in the end. It was plays being made, and you give them credit for it. I think that’s what you have to do. I don’t feel like we were worn down. Guys were going hard. We had a good rotation. That’s why we put Za’Darius [Smith] up, so we would have enough pass rushers late. Our guys were bringing it, so I think you have to give them credit.”

On the game-winning play, did ILB C.J. Mosley sort of slip as he tried to help S Eric Weddle with that tackle? What happened that got him on the ground? (Stan Charles) “I don’t know about slipping. I didn’t notice that on the coach’s tape. Maybe you noticed it on the TV copy. I haven’t seen the TV copy. I think it was a couple guys doing everything they could to keep him out of the end zone. It was a fast-hitting play. There were some major hits being laid right there. Really, they kept him out of the end zone, but he was able to reach the ball across the line in the end. That’s what it was. It was a great play.”

You don’t think they would have had enough time to spike the ball? (Jeff Zrebiec) “I don’t know. I can’t say. That would be a good question for them. It would have been tough. It was nine seconds when the clock stopped when it was across the goal line. You had to untangle and get everybody to the line of scrimmage. It would have been very challenging to do that. Maybe they could have pulled it off, but we would have had a pretty good chance of that not happening if it would have gone the other way. I don’t want to speak for them. Maybe they could have done it.”

Are you confident in the resiliency of your team after having such an emotional swing and now having this last game? Do you tell them and do you believe winning this game and being 9-7 is important, particularly after last season? (David Ginsburg) “The last part of the question there is irrelevant. I think the whole point is you try to do the best you can. You always try and do the best that you can. You try to win. We talked about it in the locker room after the game. That is what I pointed toward, is the next game. We want to go win it. We do want to be 9-7; it is important. It is important to have one more win than we potentially could have. I do not care what the record is. We want to go win the game. Absolutely, it is important. That is what we do this for; that is what it is all about. Our guys are going to be fired up to do it. I would never question the resiliency, and I really probably did not need it confirmed. It won’t need to be confirmed in this game, because I think anyone who has followed us as you have – you followed us the whole year, you covered us very closely, you are here every day – you know these guys. You know how they have handled adversity throughout the course of the season and throughout the course of the seasons. That is not going to change.”

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Ravens Transcripts Dec. 26, 2016

What do you expect the preparation and this week to be like for your team, and in particular, for WR Steve Smith Sr. heading into what is likely his final game? (Shawn Stepner) “Yes, I think for Steve, it is going to be a big deal for him. But he has been that way all year. I think he will approach it the same way he has all year – as a pro. It will be very meaningful, certainly. How could it not be? But that is a great question for Steve, and he will be much more eloquent in answering it than I could be.”

After the game, S Eric Weddle talked about how he felt like being so close could kind of drive some guys going into the offseason and into next year. Do you think a game like that can have a tangible effect or benefit when you go from year to year? (Garrett Downing) “I am personally motivated anyway. I think all of our guys are very highly-motivated, no matter what. Of course, we feel very excited about where we are as a football team. I know we are a good football team. I know we are a very good football team. That is evident in the way we play. That game hinges here and there; it can fall on a play here and there. That is how close the National Football League is. That is how hard our guys played; that is how hard they [the Steelers] played. It was a dramatic environment. It was a tough environment to be on the road, and our guys handled it very well. There is just no denying that. They [the Steelers] made another play in the end when it was all said and done, and that is what they get credit for. I don’t think we need a game, an environment, to tell us to be excited for next year. How about we just look at next week? How about we just look at next week, and we get ready to go play this game? We will look at next year when the time comes. We will be excited about it, yes.”

Will CB Jimmy Smith play again this year? (Jerry Coleman) “I don’t think so. It is a high ankle [injury]. He probably will not be able to make it for this week. We were hoping for the playoffs.”

You talked about the fanbase in your opening statement about the fans. They have been very loud yesterday. They have been very loud on social media about how they want [owner] Steve [Bisciotti] to make changes at the top, and they are upset with the team not making the playoffs again. What are your thoughts on the fans’ side of it? (Bill West) “I love our fans. I think our fans are great. Fans are going to be disappointed when you do not win; they are going to be excited when you do win. Every fan that I have met over the years – it has been a joy to be around them. That is how I look at it.”

How did you feel CB Shareece Wright played on Sunday? (Ed Lee) “I thought he played well. I thought he had a lot of good moments and played a solid football game.”

Two of your leaders, OLB Terrell Suggs and G Marshal Yanda, played despite significant injuries. I don’t know if they need offseason surgery or not, but for them, is it tempting to not play this week and maybe they can start the rehab early? Or is that not a factor? (Jeff Zrebiec) “You would have to ask them that. I have not heard anything along those lines.” (Reporter: “So you plan on having them this week?”) “I think I have already answered that.”

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No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Birthdate Exp. College Hometown11 Aiken, Kamar WR 6-2 215 5/30/89 4 Central Florida Miami, FL37 Allen, Javorius RB 6-0 222 8/27/91 2 Southern California Tallahassee, FL45 Beyer, Brennen OLB 6-4 256 11/25/92 1 Michigan Canton, MI86 Boyle, Nick TE 6-4 260 2/17/93 2 Delaware Sussex, NJ12 Campanaro, Michael WR/RS 5-9 191 1/25/91 3 Wake Forest Clarksville, MD46 Cox, Morgan LS 6-4 233 4/26/86 7 Tennessee Collierville, TN30 Dixon, Kenneth RB 5-10 212 1/21/94 R Louisiana Tech Strong, AR62 Ducasse,Vladimir G 6-5 329 10/15/87 7 Massachusetts Port-au-Prince,Haiti58 Dumervil, Elvis OLB 5-11 250 1/19/84 11 Louisville Miami, FL33 Elam,Matt S 5-10 209 9/21/91 4 Florida WestPalmBeach,FL 5 Flacco, Joe QB 6-6 245 1/16/85 9 Delaware Audubon, NJ80 Gillmore,Crockett TE 6-6 260 11/16/91 3 ColoradoState Bushland,TX93 Guy, Lawrence DE 6-4 305 3/17/90 6 Arizona State Las Vegas, NV42 Huff,Marqueston S 5-11 196 4/6/92 3 Wyoming Texarkana,TX74 Hurst,James T 6-5 312 12/17/91 3 NorthCarolina Plainfield,IN66 Jensen,Ryan G/C 6-4 310 5/27/91 3 ColoradoState-Pueblo FortMorgan,CO99 Jernigan, Timmy DT 6-2 295 9/24/92 3 Florida State Lake City, FL91 Judon,Matthew OLB 6-3 275 8/15/92 R GrandValleyState WestBloomfield,MI44 Juszczyk,Kyle FB 6-1 240 4/23/91 4 Harvard Medina,OH4 Koch,Sam P 6-1 222 8/13/82 11 Nebraska Seward,NE41 Levine Sr., Anthony DB/LB 5-11 200 3/27/87 5 Tennessee State Winston-Salem, NC72 Lewis, Alex G/T 6-6 315 4/21/92 R Nebraska Tempe, AZ31 Lewis-Harris,Chris CB 5-10 185 2/11/89 4 Chattanooga Symrna,GA59 Louis, Lamar ILB 5-11 232 10/2/93 R LSU Breaux Bridge, LA15 Mallett,Ryan QB 6-6 250 6/5/88 6 Arkansas Texarkana,TX50 McClellan, Albert LB 6-2 250 6/4/86 6 Marshall Lakeland, FL10 Moore,Chris WR 6-1 200 6/16/93 R Cincinnati Tampa,FL57 Mosley, C.J. ILB 6-2 241 6/19/92 3 Alabama Mobile, AL48 Onwuasor,Patrick ILB 6-0 217 8/22/92 R PortlandState Inglewood,CA54 Orr,Zachary ILB 6-0 225 6/9/92 3 NorthTexas DeSoto,TX18 Perriman,Breshad WR 6-2 215 9/10/93 2 CentralFlorida Lithonia,GA78 Pierce,Michael DT 6-0 339 11/6/92 R Samford Daphne,AL88 Pitta,Dennis TE 6-4 238 6/29/85 7 BYU Moorpark,CA26 Powers,Jerraud CB 5-10 193 7/19/87 8 Auburn Decatur,AL22 Smith, Jimmy CB 6-2 210 7/26/88 6 Colorado Colton, CA90 Smith, Za’Darius OLB 6-4 275 9/8/92 2 Kentucky Greenville, AL89 Smith Sr., Steve WR 5-9 195 5/12/79 16 Utah Los Angeles, CA79 Stanley, Ronnie T 6-6 320 3/18/94 R Notre Dame Las Vegas, NV55 Suggs, Terrell OLB 6-3 265 10/11/82 14 Arizona State Chandler, AZ9 Tucker,Justin K 6-1 180 11/21/89 5 Texas Austin,TX96 Urban, Brent DE 6-7 300 5/5/91 3 Virginia Mississauga, ON, CAN64 Urschel,John G/C 6-3 300 6/24/91 3 PennState Buffalo,NY71 Wagner, Rick G/T 6-6 310 10/21/89 4 Wisconsin West Allis, WI17 Wallace, Mike WR 6-0 205 8/1/86 8 Mississippi New Orleans, LA84 Waller, Darren TE 6-6 255 9/13/92 2 Georgia Tech Acworth, GA21 Webb, Lardarius DB/RS 5-10 182 10/12/85 8 Nicholls State Opelika, AL32 Weddle, Eric S 5-11 195 1/4/85 10 Utah Alta Loma, CA28 West,Terrance RB 5-10 225 1/28/91 3 Towson Baltimore,MD98 Williams, Brandon DT 6-1 340 2/21/89 4 Missouri Southern St. Kirkwood, MO24 Wright, Shareece CB 5-11 184 4/8/87 6 Southern California Colton, CA73 Yanda,Marshal G/T 6-3 305 9/15/84 10 Iowa Anamosa,IA36 Young,Tavon CB 5-9 177 3/14/94 R Temple OxonHill,MD53 Zuttah,Jeremy G/C 6-4 300 6/1/86 9 Rutgers Edison,NJPractice Squad85 Bell, Kenny WR 6-1 197 2/25/92 2 Nebraska Boulder, CO29 Brown, Sam CB 6-1 180 7/30/92 R Missouri Western St. St. Louis, MO61 Broxton, Jarell G 6-3 322 3/27/93 R Baylor Gaithersburg, MD40 Daniel,Robertson CB 6-1 205 10/1/91 1 BYU SanJose,CA43 Houston,Stephen RB 6-0 225 10/28/91 1 Indiana LittleRock,AR95 Lewis-Moore,Kapron DE 6-4 315 1/24/90 4 NotreDame Weatherford,TX63 Pughsley,Jarrod G 6-4 310 12/18/90 2 Akron Lima,OH81 Reynolds,Keenan WR/RS 5-10 190 12/13/93 R Navy Antioch,TN68 Skura,Matt C 6-3 305 2/17/93 R Duke Columbus,OH2 Vaughan,Dustin QB 6-5 220 1/27/91 2 WestTexasA&M CorpusChristi,TXInjured Reserve35 Arrington,Kyle CB 5-10 186 8/12/86 8 Hofstra Brandywine,MD39 Canady, Maurice CB 6-1 193 5/26/94 R Virginia Richmond, VA51 Correa,Kamalei LB 6-3 250 4/27/94 R BoiseState Honolulu,HI94 Davis, Carl DT 6-5 327 3/2/92 2 Iowa Detroit, MI69 Henry,Willie DT 6-3 300 3/20/94 R Michigan Cleveland,OH92 Kaufusi,Bronson DE 6-6 285 7/6/91 R BYU Provo,UT23 Lewis, Kendrick S 6-0 205 6/16/88 7 Mississippi New Orleans, LA49 Luckett,Cavellis ILB 5-11 243 12/6/92 R MiddleTennesseeSt. McComb,MS13 Matthews,Chris WR 6-5 228 10/6/89 3 Kentucky LosAngeles,CA67 Nembot, Stephane T 6-6 320 12/7/91 R Colorado Douala, Cameroon27 Price,Sheldon CB 6-2 194 3/26/91 1 UCLA LaPuente,CA38 Rolle, Jumal CB 6-0 190 5/28/90 3 Catawba Wilson, NC34 Taliaferro,Lorenzo RB 6-0 225 12/23/91 3 CoastalCarolina Yorktown,VA82 Watson,Benjamin TE 6-3 251 12/18/80 13 Georgia RockHill,SC77 Wesley,De’Ondre G/T 6-6 326 7/28/92 2 BYU Antioch,CA87 Williams, Maxx TE 6-4 257 4/12/94 2 Minnesota Waconia, MN

RAVENS ALPHABETICAL ROSTER As of Dec. 27

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----------- 2016 Games ----------- No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Birthdate Exp. College How Acq. P S DNP INA4 SamKoch P 6-1 222 8/13/82 11 Nebraska D6a‘06 15 0 0 05 JoeFlacco QB 6-6 245 1/16/85 9 Delaware D1‘08 15 15 0 09 JustinTucker K 6-1 180 11/21/89 5 Texas FA‘12 15 0 0 010 ChrisMoore WR 6-1 200 6/16/93 R Cincinnati D4b‘16 14 0 0 111 KamarAiken WR 6-2 215 5/30/89 4 CentralFlorida FA‘13 15 6 0 012 MichaelCampanaro WR/RS 5-9 191 1/25/91 3 WakeForest D7‘14 2 0 0 015 RyanMallett QB 6-6 250 6/5/88 6 Arkansas FA‘15 3 0 12 017 MikeWallace WR 6-0 205 8/1/86 8 Mississippi FA‘16 15 15 0 018 BreshadPerriman WR 6-2 215 9/10/93 2 CentralFlorida D1‘15 15 1 0 021 LardariusWebb DB/RS 5-10 182 10/12/85 8 NichollsState D3‘09 15 15 0 022 JimmySmith CB 6-2 210 7/26/88 6 Colorado D1‘11 11 11 0 424 ShareeceWright CB 5-11 184 4/8/87 6 SouthernCalifornia FA‘15 11 8 0 426 JerraudPowers CB 5-10 193 7/19/87 8 Auburn FA‘16 12 5 0 328 TerranceWest RB 5-10 225 1/28/91 3 Towson FA‘15 15 12 0 030 KennethDixon RB 5-10 212 1/21/94 R LouisianaTech D4e‘16 11 0 0 431 ChrisLewis-Harris CB 5-10 185 2/11/89 4 Chattanooga WAV(CIN)‘16 13 0 0 232 EricWeddle S 5-11 195 1/4/85 10 Utah UFA(SD)‘16 15 15 0 033 MattElam S 5-10 209 9/21/91 4 Florida D1‘13 8 0 0 036 TavonYoung CB 5-9 177 3/14/94 R Temple D4a‘16 15 10 0 037 JavoriusAllen RB 6-0 222 8/27/91 2 SouthernCalifornia D4b‘15 8 0 0 741 AnthonyLevineSr. DB/LB 5-11 200 3/27/87 5 TennesseeState FA‘12 15 0 0 042 MarquestonHuff S 5-11 196 4/6/92 3 Wyoming FA‘16 10 0 0 144 KyleJuszczyk FB 6-1 240 4/23/91 4 Harvard D4b‘13 15 7 0 045 BrennenBeyer OLB 6-4 256 11/25/92 1 Michigan FA‘15 0 0 0 146 MorganCox LS 6-4 233 4/26/86 7 Tennessee FA‘10 15 0 0 048 PatrickOnwuasor ILB 6-0 217 8/22/92 R PortlandState FA‘16 10 0 0 050 AlbertMcClellan LB 6-2 250 6/4/86 6 Marshall FA‘10 15 11 0 053 JeremyZuttah G/C 6-4 300 6/1/86 9 Rutgers TR(TB)‘14 15 15 0 054 ZacharyOrr ILB 6-0 225 6/9/92 3 NorthTexas FA‘14 15 15 0 055 TerrellSuggs OLB 6-3 265 10/11/82 14 ArizonaState D1a‘03 14 14 0 157 C.J.Mosley ILB 6-2 241 6/19/92 3 Alabama D1‘14 13 13 0 258 ElvisDumervil OLB 5-11 250 1/19/84 11 Louisville FA‘13 7 2 0 859 LamarLouis ILB 5-11 232 10/2/93 R LSU FA‘16 1 0 0 262 VladimirDucasse G 6-5 329 10/15/87 7 Massachusetts FA‘16 9 7 0 164 JohnUrschel G/C 6-3 300 6/24/91 3 PennState D5‘14 12 3 0 366 RyanJensen G/C 6-4 310 5/27/91 3 ColoradoState-Pueblo D6b‘13 7 3 0 871 RickWagner G/T 6-6 310 10/21/89 4 Wisconsin D5‘13 15 14 0 072 AlexLewis G/T 6-6 315 4/21/92 R Nebraska D4c‘16 9 8 0 673 MarshalYanda G/T 6-3 305 9/15/84 10 Iowa D3b‘07 12 12 0 374 JamesHurst T 6-5 312 12/17/91 3 NorthCarolina FA‘14 15 2 0 078 MichaelPierce DT 6-0 339 11/6/92 R Samford FA‘16 15 1 0 079 RonnieStanley T 6-6 320 3/18/94 R NotreDame D1‘16 11 11 0 480 CrockettGillmore TE 6-6 260 11/16/91 3 ColoradoState D3b‘14 7 5 0 884 DarrenWaller TE 6-6 255 9/13/92 2 GeorgiaTech D6‘15 11 2 0 086 NickBoyle TE 6-4 260 2/17/93 2 Delaware D5a‘15 5 0 0 088 DennisPitta TE 6-4 238 6/29/85 7 BYU D4‘10 15 11 0 089 SteveSmithSr. WR 5-9 195 5/12/79 16 Utah FA‘14 13 13 0 290 Za’DariusSmith OLB 6-4 275 9/8/92 2 Kentucky D4a‘15 12 4 0 391 MatthewJudon OLB 6-3 275 8/15/92 R GrandValleyState D5‘16 13 0 0 293 LawrenceGuy DE 6-4 305 3/17/90 6 ArizonaState WAV(SD)‘14 15 10 0 096 BrentUrban DE 6-7 300 5/5/91 3 Virginia D4a‘14 15 0 0 098 BrandonWilliams DT 6-1 340 2/21/89 4 MissouriSouthernSt. D3‘13 15 15 0 099 TimmyJernigan DT 6-2 295 9/24/92 3 FloridaState D2‘14 15 14 0 0Practice Squad2 Vaughan,Dustin QB 6-5 220 1/27/91 2 WestTexasA&M FA‘16 0 0 0 029 SamBrown CB 6-1 180 7/30/92 R MissouriWesternSt. FA‘16 0 0 0 040 RobertsonDaniel CB 6-1 205 10/1/91 1 BYU FA‘16 1 0 0 043 StephenHouston RB 6-0 225 10/28/91 1 Indiana FA‘16 0 0 0 061 JarellBroxton G 6-3 322 3/27/93 R Baylor FA‘16 0 0 0 063 JarrodPughsley G 6-4 310 12/18/90 2 Akron FA‘16 0 0 0 068 MattSkura C 6-3 305 2/17/93 R Duke FA‘16 0 0 0 081 KeenanReynolds WR/RS 5-10 190 12/13/93 R Navy D6a‘16 0 0 0 085 KennyBell WR 6-1 197 2/25/92 2 Nebraska FA‘16 0 0 0 095 KapronLewis-Moore DE 6-4 315 1/24/90 4 NotreDame D6a‘13 0 0 0 0Injured Reserve13 ChrisMatthews WR 6-5 228 10/6/89 3 Kentucky FA‘15 0 0 0 023 KendrickLewis S 6-0 205 6/16/88 7 Mississippi UFA(HOU)‘15 6 0 0 027 SheldonPrice CB 6-2 194 3/26/91 1 UCLA FA‘15 4 1 0 134 LorenzoTaliaferro RB 6-0 225 12/23/91 3 CoastalCarolina D4b‘14 3 0 0 435 KyleArrington CB 5-10 186 8/12/86 8 Hofstra FA‘15 0 0 0 038 JumalRolle CB 6-0 190 5/28/90 3 Catawba FA‘15 0 0 0 039 MauriceCanady CB 6-1 193 5/26/94 R Virginia D6b‘16 4 0 0 049 CavellisLuckett ILB 5-11 243 12/6/92 R MiddleTennesseeSt. FA‘16 0 0 0 051 KamaleiCorrea LB 6-3 250 4/27/94 R BoiseState D2‘16 9 1 0 567 StephaneNembot T 6-6 320 12/7/91 R Colorado FA‘16 0 0 0 069 WillieHenry DT 6-3 300 3/20/94 R Michigan D4d‘16 0 0 1 877 De’OndreWesley G/T 6-6 326 7/28/92 2 BYU FA‘15 0 0 0 082 BenjaminWatson TE 6-3 251 12/18/80 13 Georgia UFA(NO)‘16 0 0 0 087 MaxxWilliams TE 6-4 257 4/12/94 2 Minnesota D2‘15 4 0 0 092 BronsonKaufusi DE 6-6 285 7/6/91 R BYU D3‘16 0 0 0 094 CarlDavis DT 6-5 327 3/2/92 2 Iowa D3‘15 0 0 0 0

RAVENS NUMERICAL ROSTER As of Dec. 27

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QUARTERBACKS (2) 5 Joe Flacco . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . QB15 Ryan Mallett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . QB

WIDE RECEIVERS (6) 10 Chris Moore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WR/RS11 Kamar Aiken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WR12 Michael Campanaro . . . . . . . . . . WR/RS17 Mike Wallace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WR18 BreshadPerriman . . . . . . . . . . . . . WR89 Steve Smith Sr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WR

RUNNING BACKS (5) 28 Terrance West . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . RB30 Kenneth Dixon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . RB37 Javorius Allen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . RB44 Kyle Juszczyk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FB

TIGHT ENDS (4) 80 Crockett Gillmore . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TE84 Darren Waller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TE86 Nick Boyle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TE88 DennisPitta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TE

OFFENSIVE LINE (9) 53 Jeremy Zuttah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G/C62 Vladimir Ducasse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G 64 John Urschel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G/C66 Ryan Jensen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G/C71 Rick Wagner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G/T72 Alex Lewis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G/T73 MarshalYanda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G/T74 JamesHurst . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T79 Ronnie Stanley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T

SPECIALISTS (3) 4 Sam Koch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . P 9 Justin Tucker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . K46 Morgan Cox . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LS

SECONDA RY (10) 21 Lardarius Webb . . . . . . . . . . . . DB/RS22 Jimmy Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB24 Shareece Wright . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB26 JerraudPowers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB31 ChrisLewis-Harris . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB32 Eric Weddle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S 33 Matt Elam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S36 TavonYoung . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB41 Anthony Levine Sr. . . . . . . . . . . . DB/LB42 MarquestonHuff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S

LINEBACKERS (10) 45 Brennen Beyer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OLB48 PatrickOnwuasor . . . . . . . . . . . . . ILB50 Albert McClellan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LB54 Zachary Orr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ILB55 Terrell Suggs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OLB57 C.J. Mosley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ILB58 Elvis Dumervil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OLB59 Lamar Louis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ILB90 Za’Darius Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . OLB91 Matthew Judon . . . . . . . . . . . . . OLB

DEFENSIVE LINE (5) 78 MichaelPierce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DT 93 Lawrence Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DE96 Brent Urban . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DE98 Brandon Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . DT99 Timmy Jernigan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DT

PRACTICE SQUAD (10) 2 Dustin Vaughan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . QB29 Sam Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB40 Robertson Daniel . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB43 StephenHouston . . . . . . . . . . . . . RB61 Jarell Broxton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G63 JarrodPughsley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G68 Matt Skura . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C81 Keenan Reynolds . . . . . . . . . . . WR/RS85 Kenny Bell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WR95 Kapron Lewis-Moore . . . . . . . . . . . DE

RESERVE/INJURED (16) 13 Chris Matthews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WR23 Kendrick Lewis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S27 SheldonPrice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB34 Lorenzo Taliaferro . . . . . . . . . . . . . RB35 Kyle Arrington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB38 Jumal Rolle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB39 Maurice Canady . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CB49 Cavellis Luckett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ILB51 Kamalei Correa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LB 67 Stephane Nembot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T69 WillieHenry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DT77 De’Ondre Wesley . . . . . . . . . . . . . G/T82 Benjamin Watson . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TE87 Maxx Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TE92 Bronson Kaufusi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DE94 Carl Davis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DT

JohnHarbaugh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HeadCoachJerry Rosburg . . SpecialTeamsCoordinator/AssociateHeadCoachMarty Mornhinweg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OffensiveCoordinatorDeanPees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Defensive CoordinatorRichard Angulo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tight EndsAndyBischoff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OffensiveAssistantJuanCastillo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OffensiveLineJoe Cullen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Defensive LineBobby Engram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wide ReceiversLeslie Frazier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SecondaryThomasHammock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Running BacksChrisHewitt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Defensive BacksChrisHorton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Assistant Special TeamsMike Macdonald . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Defensive Assistant

DonMartindale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LinebackersCraig Ver Steeg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SeniorOffensiveAssistantTodd Washington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . AssistantOffensiveLineMattWeiss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OffensiveAssistantJuneyBarnett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .AssistantStrength&ConditioningRandy Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kicking ConsultantScottCohen . . . . . . . . . . . . .Coaching Assistant/Opponent AnalysisMegan McLaughlin . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FootballInformationManagerDanParsons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .AssistanttoHeadCoachBob Rogucki . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DirectorofStrength&ConditioningSteve Saunders . . . . . . . . . . . . DirectorofPerformance&RecoveryEugene Shen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DirectorofCoachingAnalyticsDrew Wilkins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Defensive Coaching Assistant

As of Aug. 2, 2012As of Aug. 2, 2012 As of Jan. 3, 2016

2016 COACHING STAFF

RAVENS POSITIONAL ROSTER As of Dec. 27

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WR 89 Steve Smith Sr. 11 Kamar Aiken 12 Michael Campanaro

WR 17 Mike Wallace 18 Breshad Perriman 10 Chris Moore

LT 79 Ronnie Stanley 72 Alex Lewis 74 James Hurst

LG 73 Marshal Yanda 72 Alex Lewis 64 John Urschel

C 53 Jeremy Zuttah 64 John Urschel 66 Ryan Jensen

RG 62 Vladimir Ducasse 72 Alex Lewis 66 Ryan Jensen

RT 71 Rick Wagner 73 Marshal Yanda 74 James Hurst

TE 88 Dennis Pitta 84 Darren Waller 86 Nick Boyle 80 Crockett Gillmore

QB 5 Joe Flacco 15 Ryan Mallett

FB 44 Kyle Juszczyk

RB 28 Terrance West 30 Kenneth Dixon 37 Javorius Allen

DT 99 Timmy Jernigan 78 Michael Pierce

NT 98 Brandon Williams 78 Michael Pierce

DE 93 Lawrence Guy 96 Brent Urban

RUSH 55 Terrell Suggs 91 Matthew Judon 90 Za'Darius Smith

ILB 57 C.J. Mosley 50 Albert McClellan 41 Anthony Levine Sr. 59 Lamar Louis

ILB 54 Zachary Orr 48 Patrick Onwuasor

SAM 50 Albert McClellan -- or -- 58 Elvis Dumervil 45 Brennen Beyer

LCB 36 Tavon Young 24 Shareece Wright

SS 32 Eric Weddle 33 Matt Elam 41 Anthony Levine Sr.

FS 21 Lardarius Webb 42 Marqueston Huff

RCB 22 Jimmy Smith* 26 Jerraud Powers 31 Chris Lewis-Harris

P 4 Sam Koch

K 9 Justin Tucker

H 4 Sam Koch

LS 46 Morgan Cox

KOR 10 Chris Moore 12 Michael Campanaro 30 Kenneth Dixon 36 Tavon Young

PR 12 Michael Campanaro 21 Lardarius Webb

All Rookies Underlined

PLAYERS: Kamar Aiken (kuh-MARR); Javorius Allen (juh-VAR-us); Maurice Canady (CAN-uh-dee); Michael Campanaro (camp-uh-NAIR-o); Kamalei Correa

(KAH-mah-lay, corr-A-uh); Marqueston Huff (mar-QUEST-un); Kyle Juszczyk (YOOZ-check); Bronson Kaufusi (cow-FOO-see); Sam Koch (Cook); Anthony

Levine Sr. (luh-VEEN); Cavellis Luckett (cah-VELL-us); Stephane Nembot (steff-ON, NAME-bot); Patrick Onwuasor (o-WAH-so); Dennis Pitta (PIT-uh); Matt

Skura (SKUR-uh); Za’Darius Smith (zuh-DARE-ee-us); Lorenzo Taliaferro (tal-uh-FARE-oh); Lardarius Webb (lahr-DARE-ee-us); Marshal Yanda (YAWN-da);

Tavon Young (TAY-von); Jeremy Zuttah (ZOO-tah) COACHES: Richard Angulo (an-GOO-low); Andy Bischoff (BISH-off); Juan Castillo (cass-TEE-yo); Marty

Mornhinweg (MORNING-wig); Bob Rogucki (ruh-GUS-key); Craig Ver Steeg (ver-STEGG)

PRONUNCIATIONS

Updated by Ravens PR staff on Dec. 27

OFFENSE_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DEFENSE_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

SPECIAL TEAMS_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

* Injured

DEPTH CHART

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YEAR PLAYER ACQ. 2003 OLB Terrell Suggs D1a

2006 PSamKoch D6a

2007 G/TMarshalYanda D3b

2008 QB Joe Flacco D1

2009 DB Lardarius Webb D3

2010 LS Morgan Cox RFA LB Albert McClellan RFA TEDennisPitta D4

2011 CB Jimmy Smith D1

2012 DB/LB Anthony Levine Sr. FA KJustinTucker RFA

2013 OLB Elvis Dumervil FA SMattElam D1 OL Ryan Jensen D6b FB Kyle Juszczyk D4b T Rick Wagner D5 DT Brandon Williams D3

2014 WR Kamar Aiken FA WR/RS Michael Campanaro D7 RBJustinForsett FA TECrockettGillmore D3b DELawrenceGuy WA(SD) OLJamesHurst RFA DT Timmy Jernigan D2 LB C.J. Mosley D1 LB Zachary Orr RFA WR Steve Smith Sr. FA DE Brent Urban D4a RB Lorenzo Taliaferro [Injured Reserve] D4b G/C John Urschel D5 CJeremyZuttah TR(TB)

2015 RB Javorius Allen D4b CB Kyle Arrington [Injured Reserve] FA OLB Brennen Beyer FA TE Nick Boyle D5a WR/RS Kaelin Clay [Injured Reserve] FA DT Carl Davis [Injured Reserve] D3 S Kendrick Lewis [Injured Reserve] UFA (Hou.) QBRyanMallett FA WRChrisMatthews[InjuredReserve] FA WRBreshadPerriman D1 CB Sheldon Price [Injured Reserve] FA CB Jumal Rolle [Injured Reserve] FA OLB Za’Darius Smith D4a WR Darren Waller D6 T De’Ondre Wesley [Injured Reserve] RFA RB Terrance West FA TE Maxx Williams [Injured Reserve] D2 CB Shareece Wright FA

2016 CB Maurice Canady [Injured Reserve] D6b OLB Kamalei Correa [Injured Reserve] D2 RB Kenneth Dixon D4e G Vladimir Ducasse FA DT Willie Henry [Injured Reserve] D4d SMarquestonHuff FA OLBMatthewJudon D5 DE Bronson Kaufusi [Injured Reserve] D3 G/T Alex Lewis D4c CBChrisLewis-Harris WA(Cin.) ILB Lamar Louis FA OLBCavellisLuckett[InjuredReserve] FA WR Chris Moore D4b T Stephane Nembot [Injured Reserve] RFA ILBPatrickOnwuasor RFA T Ronnie Stanley D1 DTMichaelPierce RFA CBJerraudPowers FA WR Mike Wallace FA TE Benjamin Watson [Injured Reserve] UFA (NO) SEricWeddle UFA(SD) CBTavonYoung D4a

1st ROUND (8) TEAM YEAROLBTerrellSuggs Baltimore 2003(10th)TE Benjamin Watson [Injured Reserve] New England 2004 (32nd)QBJoeFlacco Baltimore 2008(18th)CBJimmySmith Baltimore 2011(27th)SMattElam Baltimore 2013(32nd)LBC.J.Mosley Baltimore 2014(17th)WRBreshadPerriman Baltimore 2015(26th)TRonnieStanley Baltimore 2016(6th)

2nd ROUND (5)S Eric Weddle San Diego 2007GVladimirDucasse NYJets 2010DTTimmyJernigan Baltimore 2014TEMaxxWilliams[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2015OLBKamaleiCorrea[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2016

3rd ROUND (13)WR Steve Smith Sr. Carolina 2001G/TMarshalYanda Baltimore 2007CJeremyZuttah TampaBay 2008CBJerraudPowers Indianapolis 2009WRMikeWallace Pittsburgh 2009CB/RSLardariusWebb Baltimore 2009QBRyanMallett NewEngland 2011 CB Shareece Wright San Diego 2011 DTBrandonWilliams Baltimore 2013TECrockettGillmore Baltimore 2014RB Terrance West Cleveland 2014DTCarlDavis[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2015DEBronsonKaufusi[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2016

4th ROUND (13)OLB Elvis Dumervil Denver 2006TEDennisPitta Baltimore 2010FBKyleJuszczyk Baltimore 2013 SMarquestonHuff Tennessee 2014RBLorenzoTaliaferro[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2014DEBrentUrban Baltimore 2014OLBZa’DariusSmith Baltimore 2015RBJavoriusAllen Baltimore 2015RBKennethDixon Baltimore 2016DTWillieHenry[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2016G/TAlexLewis Baltimore 2016WRChrisMoore Baltimore 2016CBTavonYoung Baltimore 2016

5th ROUND (5)SKendrickLewis[InjuredReserve] KansasCity 2010G/TRickWagner Baltimore 2013G/CJohnUrschel Baltimore 2014TENickBoyle Baltimore 2015OLBMatthewJudon Baltimore 2016

6th ROUND (5)PSamKoch Baltimore 2006OLRyanJensen Baltimore 2013WR/RSKaelinClay[InjuredReserve] TampaBay 2015 WRDarrenWaller Baltimore 2015CBMauriceCanady[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2016

7th ROUND (1)DE Lawrence Guy Green Bay 2011WR/RSMichaelCampanaro Baltimore 2014

UNDRAFTED (19)CB Kyle Arrington [Injured Reserve] Philadelphia 2008 LSMorganCox Baltimore 2010DB Anthony Levine Sr. Green Bay 2010LBAlbertMcClellan Baltimore 2010WRKamarAiken Buffalo 2011WRChrisMatthews[InjuredReserve] Cleveland 2011CBChrisLewis-Harris Cincinnati 2012KJustinTucker Baltimore 2012CBSheldonPrice[InjuredReserve] Indianapolis 2013CBJumalRolle[InjuredReserve] Buffalo 2013 OLJamesHurst Baltimore 2014LBZacharyOrr Baltimore 2014OLBBrennenBeyer Baltimore 2015 TDe’OndreWesley[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2015ILB Lamar Louis Arizona 2016 OLBCavellisLuckett[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2016TStephaneNembot[InjuredReserve] Baltimore 2016ILBPatrickOnwuasor Baltimore 2016 DTMichaelPierce Baltimore 2016

[Italicsindicatesplayernotonactive53-manroster.]

WHEN/HOW ACQUIRED BY DRAFT ROUND

HOW THE 2016 RAVENS ARE BUILT

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Aiken, Kamar X X X X X WR WR X X X WR WR WR WR X 15 6 0 0

Allen, Javorius INA INA INA X X X X X X X X INA INA INA INA 8 0 0 7

Arrington, Kyle IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Bell, Kenny NOR NOR NOR NOR PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS 0 0 0 0

Beyer, Brennen PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS INA 0 0 0 1

Boyle, Nick SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP X X X X X 5 0 0 0

Brown, Daniel PS PS PS PS X X NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 2 0 0 0

Brown, Sam NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR PS PS 0 0 0 0

Broxton, Jarell PS PS PS PS PS NOR NOR NOR PS PS PS PS PS PS PS 0 0 0 0

Burgess, James NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR PS NOR NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 0

Campanaro, Michael IR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR PS PS PS PS PS X X 2 0 0 0

Canady, Maurice X X X X IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 4 0 0 0

Carter, Chris X X X X X NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 5 0 0 0

Clausell, Blaine PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 0

Clay, Kaelin IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Correa, Kamalei X X X X INA X OLB INA INA X INA INA X X IR 9 1 0 5

Cox, Morgan X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 15 0 0 0

Davis, Carl IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Davis, Will INA INA INA INA X X X NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 3 0 0 4

Dixon, Kenneth INA INA INA INA X X X X X X X X X X X 11 0 0 4

Ducasse, Vladimir NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR X X INA RG RG RG RG RG RG RG 9 7 0 1

Dumervil, Elvis INA INA INA X X INA INA INA INA INA X SAM X X OLB 7 2 0 8

Elam, Matt IR IR IR IR IR IR IR X X X X X X X X 8 0 0 0

Fales, David PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 0

Flacco, Joe QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB QB 15 15 0 0

Forsett, Justin RB RB RB INA NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 3 3 0 1

Gillmore, Crockett X TE TE TE TE TE X INA INA INA INA INA INA INA INA 7 5 0 8

Guy, Lawrence DE DE DE DE DE X DE DE X X DE X DE DE X 15 10 0 0

Henry, Mitchell NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 0

Henry, Willie INA INA INA INA INA INA DNP INA INA IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 1 8

Hester Sr., Devin X X X X X INA X X X X X X X NOR NOR 12 0 0 1

Houston, Stephen PS PS PS PS PS PS PS NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR PS PS PS 0 0 0 0

Huff, Marqueston NOR NOR NOR NOR INA X X X X X X X X X X 10 0 0 1

Hurst, James X X X LT X RT X X X X X X X X X 15 2 0 0

Jackson, Asa NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR PS PS PS INA PS PS NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 1

Jacobs, Nic NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 0

Jensen, Ryan X X X LG X RG RG INA INA INA INA INA INA INA INA 7 3 0 8

Jernigan, Timmy DT DT DT DT DT DT DT DT DT X DT DT DT DT DT 15 14 0 0

Judon, Matthew X X X INA INA X X X X X X X X X X 13 0 0 2

Juszczyk, Kyle FB X FB X FB FB X X FB X X X FB X FB 15 7 0 0

Kaufusi, Bronson IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Koch, Sam X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 15 0 0 0

Levine Sr., Anthony X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 15 0 0 0

Lewis, Alex LG LG LG X LT LT LT LG LG INA INA INA INA INA INA 9 8 0 6

Lewis, Kendrick X X X X X X IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 6 0 0 0

Lewis-Harris, Chris NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR X X X X INA INA X X 6 0 0 2

Lewis-Moore, Kapron PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS 0 0 0 0

Louis, Lamar NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR INA INA 0 0 0 2

Luckett, Cavellis IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Mallett, Ryan DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP X X DNP DNP X DNP DNP DNP 3 0 12 0

Matthews, Chris IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

McClellan, Albert SAM SAM SAM SAM SAM ILB ILB SAM X X SAM X SAM SAM X 15 11 0 0

Moore, Chris X X X X INA X X X X X X X X X X 14 0 0 1

Mosley, C.J. ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB INA INA ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB 13 13 0 2

Nembot, Stephane IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Onwuasor, Patrick PS PS PS PS PS X X X X X X X X X X 10 0 0 0

Orr, Zachary ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB ILB 15 15 0 0

Perriman, Breshad X X X X X X WR X X X X X X X X 15 1 0 0

Pierce, Michael X X X X X X X X X DT X X X X X 15 1 0 0

Pitta, Dennis TE TE X TE X X TE TE TE TE TE TE X TE TE 15 11 0 0

Powers, Jerraud INA INA INA X X DB X X DB DB X DB X X DB 12 5 0 3

Price, Sheldon X X X INA LCB IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 4 1 0 1

Pughsley, Jarrod NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR PS PS PS PS PS PS 0 0 0 0

Reynolds, Keenan PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS 0 0 0 0

Rolle, Jumal IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Skura, Matt PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS PS 0 0 0 0

Smith, Jimmy RCB RCB RCB RCB RCB RCB RCB RCB RCB INA INA RCB RCB INA INA 11 11 0 4

Smith, Za'Darius X X X X X OLB RUSH X OLB OLB INA X INA INA X 12 4 0 3

Smith Sr., Steve WR WR WR WR WR INA INA WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR 13 13 0 2

Stanley, Ronnie LT LT LT INA INA INA INA LT LT LT LT LT LT LT LT 11 11 0 4

Suggs, Terrell RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH INA RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH RUSH 14 14 0 1

Taliaferro, Lorenzo PUP PUP PUP PUP PUP PUP X X X INA INA INA INA IR IR 3 0 0 4

Traylor, Austin NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 0

Tucker, Justin X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 15 0 0 0

Turner, Billy NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR NOR 0 0 0 0

Urban, Brent X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 15 0 0 0

Urschel, John INA INA INA X LG LG LG X X X X X X X X 12 3 0 3

Wagner, Rick RT RT RT RT RT X RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT RT 15 14 0 0

Wallace, Mike WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR 15 15 0 0

Waller, Darren SUSP SUSP SUSP SUSP X X X TE X TE X X X X X 11 2 0 0

Watson, Benjamin IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

Webb, Lardarius FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS FS 15 15 0 0

Weddle, Eric SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS 15 15 0 0

Wesley, De'Ondre IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 0 0 0 0

West, Terrance X X X RB RB RB RB RB RB RB RB RB RB RB RB 15 12 0 0

Williams, Brandon NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT NT 15 15 0 0

Williams, Maxx X X X X IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR 4 0 0 0

Wright, Shareece LCB LCB LCB LCB INA X INA INA INA RCB LCB X X RCB RCB 11 8 0 4

Yanda, Marshal RG RG RG RG RG INA INA RG INA LG LG LG LG LG LG 12 12 0 3

Young, Tavon X X X X X LCB LCB LCB LCB LCB RCB LCB LCB LCB LCB 15 10 0 0

Zuttah, Jeremy C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C 15 15 0 0

Position in Caps = Starter; X = Played/Substituted; IR = Injured Reserve; IRDR = Injured Reserve/Designated Return; PUP = Physically Unable to Perform; NOR = Not on Roster; PS = Practice Squad

REGULAR SEASON TOTALS

REGULAR SEASON TOTALS

Page 36: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

• Jan. 4: Signed LB Brennen Beyer, G Leon Brown, DE Nordly Capi, T Blaine Clausell,WRChuck Jacobs, SNick Perry and TEHarold Spears to Reserve/Future contracts.

• Jan. 5: Signed free agent QB Jerrod Johnson. • March 2: Re-signed LB Albert McClellan, who was scheduled to become a free agent,toarenegotiatedcontract.

• March 3: Terminated the contract of vested veteran LB Daryl Smith; Did not pickupthecontractoptionforDEChrisCanty’sreturnin2016. March 4:KJustinTuckersignedhisfranchiseplayertender.

• March 7: Re-signed unrestricted free agent CB Shareece Wright. • March 10: Signed unrestricted free agent TE Benjamin Watson.• March 15: Signed free agent WR Mike Wallace. • March 16: Signed unrestricted free agent S Eric Weddle; Terminated the contractofSWillHillIII.

• March 17: Re-signed unrestricted free agent LB Chris Carter; Re-signed restricted free agent WR Marlon Brown.

• March 24: Re-signed restricted free agent TE Chase Ford.• March 28: Re-signed exclusive rights free agent RB Terrence Magee.• April 6: Re-signed exclusive rights free agents RB Terrance West and WR

Daniel Brown. • April 7:Re-signedexclusiverightsfreeagentWRChrisMatthews.• April 8: Waived WR Cam Worthy. • April 12: Waived TE Chase Ford. • April 13: WaivedTEHaroldSpears. • April 18: Signed free agent RB Trent Richardson; Re-signed restricted free

agent WR Kamar Aiken; Re-signed exclusive rights free agents WR Jeremy Butler, WR Kaelin Clay and C/G Ryan Jensen; Re-signed exclusive rights free agent CB Jermaine Whitehead.

• April 19: Re-signed exclusive rights free agent CB Jumal Rolle.• April 27: Re-signed exclusive rights free agent T De’Ondre Wesley.• May 3: Withdrewthe tenderofferofexclusive rights freeagentTEKonrad

Reuland and waived G Leon Brown. • May 6: Waived WR Chuck Jacobs and RB Terrance Magee; Signed the following

rookie free agents: G Jarell Broxton, DT Trevon Coley, C Anthony Fabiano, ILB Cavellis Luckett, K Wil Lutz, T Stephane Nembot, OLB Victor Ochi, OLB Mario Ojemudia, ILB Patrick Onwuasor, DT Michael Pierce and C Matt Skura; Signed thefollowing2016draftpicks:CB Maurice Canady, OLB Kamalei Correa, RB Kenneth Dixon, DT Willie Henry, OLB Matthew Judon, T Alex Lewis and WR Chris Moore.

• May 9:Signed2016draftchoiceCB Tavon Young. • May 13:Signed2016draftchoiceT Ronnie Stanley; Waived WR Marlon Brown (failedphysical),DENordlyCapi,DBNickPerryandDBJermaineWhitehead;Signed free agent CB Jerraud Powers.

• May 16: SignedundraftedfreeagentCB Sam Brown; Signed free agents QB Josh Johnson and G Vladimir Ducasse.

• May 31:Signed2016draftchoiceWR/RS Keenan Reynolds.• June 14:Signed2016draftchoiceDE Bronson Kaufusi.• June 15: Terminated the contract of vested veteran T Eugene Monroe• July 23: Placed the following players on the Physically Unable to Perform(PUP)list:OLBElvisDumervil,WRBreshadPerriman,RBTrentRichardson,CBJumal Rolle, WR Steve Smith Sr. and OLB Terrell Suggs.

• July 27:Waived(injured)CBJumalRolleandLBCavellisLuckett(revertedtoIR);SignedfreeagentWR Dobson Collins and ILB Kavell Conner.

• July 30:SignedPMichaelPalardy. • Aug. 2: Waived RB Trent Richardson; Re-signed WR Chuck Jacobs. • Aug. 3:WaivedPMichaelPalardy;SignedRB Stephen Houston.• Aug. 15:Waived(injured)WR/RSKaelinClay,whothenrevertedtoIR;Signed

rookie free agent WR Darius White; Activated OLB Terrell Suggs from thePhysicallyUnabletoPerformlist.

• Aug. 17:Waived(injured)CBSamBrown,whothenrevertedtoIR;ActivatedWRSteveSmithfromthePhysicallyUnabletoPerformlist;SignedfreeagentCB Carrington Byndom.

• Aug. 22: ActivatedOLBElvisDumervil andWRBreshadPerriman from thePhysicallyUnabletoPerformlist.

• Aug. 29: Waived G Jarell Broxton, DT Trevon Coley, WR Dobson Collins, C Anthony Fabiano, WR Chuck Jacobs, QB Jerrod Johnson, LB Mario Ojemudia and WR Darius White; Terminated the contract of vested veteran LB Kavell Conner;PlacedCBKyleArringtonandTEBenjaminWatsononInjuredReserve.

• Aug. 30: Waived KWil Lutz; Placed RB Lorenzo Taliaferro on the Reserve/PhysicallyUnabletoPerformlist;PlacedDEBronsonKaufusiandTStephaneNembot on Injured Reserve.

• Sept. 3: Terminated the contracts of vested veterans G Vladimir Ducasse, RB JustinForsettandQBJoshJohnson;WaivedOLBBrennenBeyer,STerrenceBrooks, ILB Arthur Brown, TE Daniel Brown, WR Jeremy Butler, T Blaine

Clausell,RBStephenHouston,DEKapronLewis-Moore,OLBVictorOchi,ILBPatrickOnwuasor,WR/RSKeenanReynolds,CMattSkuraandCBJulianWilson;Waived(injured)CBCarringtonByndom;PlacedWR/RSMichaelCampanaro,WRChrisMatthewsandG/TDe’OndreWesleyonInjuredReserve.

• Sept. 4: Signed OLB Brennen Beyer, TE Daniel Brown, T Blaine Clausell, RB Stephen Houston, DT Kapron Lewis-Moore, LB Patrick Onwuasor, WR/RSKeenanReynoldsandCMattSkuratothepracticesquad.

• Sept. 5:PlacedDTCarlDavisandSMattElamonInjuredReserve;SignedRBJustinForsettandWR/RS Devin Hester.

• Sept. 6: Signed G Jarell Broxton and QB David Falestothepracticesquad.• Sept. 7: Waived CB Carrington Byndom from Injured Reserve (injurysettlement).

• Sept. 13:WaivedWR/RSMichael Campanaro from Injured Reserve (injurysettlement).

• Oct. 4:TerminatedthecontractofvestedveteranRBJustinForsett.• Oct. 5: Elevated TE Daniel Brown from the practice squad to the 53-man

roster; Signed WR Kenny Belltothepracticesquad.• Oct. 6:PlacedCBMauriceCanadyonInjuredReserve;SignedS Marqueston

Huff offJacksonville’spracticesquadtothe53-manroster.• Oct. 7:PlacedTEMaxxWilliamsonInjuredReserve. • Oct. 8: ActivatedTEDarrenWallerfromtheCommissionerExemptlisttothe

53-man roster. • Oct. 11:PlacedCBSheldonPriceonInjuredReserve;Re-signedGVladimirDucasse.• Oct. 12: Terminated the contract of vested veteran OLB Chris Carter; Claimed offwaivers(Mia.)G/T Billy Turner.

• Oct. 13: WaivedGJarellBroxtonfromthepracticesquad;SignedCB Robertson Daniel tothepracticesquad.

• Oct. 15: WaivedG/TBillyTurnerandelevatedILBPatrickOnwuasorfromthepracticesquadtothe53-manroster.

• Oct. 18: Signed CB/RS Asa Jacksontothepracticesquad.• Oct. 22: PlacedSKendrick Lewison InjuredReserve;ActivatedRB LorenzoTaliaferro from the PhysicallyUnable to Perform list to the 53-man roster;Waived TE Daniel Brown; Elevated CB Robertson Daniel from the practicesquadtothe53-manroster.

• Oct: 25: Re-signedWRDobsonCollins to thepractice squad;Designated SMattElamforreturntopracticefromInjuredReserve.

• Nov. 1:WaivedRBStephenHoustonfromthepracticesquad.• Nov. 2:SignedTENicJacobstothepracticesquad.• Nov. 4:WaivedCBWillDavis;Claimedoffwaivers(Cin.)CB Chris Lewis-Harris.• Nov. 5:WaivedCBRobertsonDanielandactivatedSMattElamfromInjured

Reserve-Designated for Return to the 53-man roster; Waived TE Nic Jacobs fromthepracticesquad.

• Nov. 7: WaivedWRDobsonCollinsfromthepracticesquad;SignedWR/RSMichael Campanaro and TE Mitchell Henrytothepracticesquad.

• Nov. 8: WaivedQBDavidFalesfromthepracticesquad;Re-signedGJarellBroxtonandCBRobertsonDanieltothepracticesquadafterTBlaineClausellwassignedoffthepracticesquadbyWashington.

• Nov. 10:WaivedTEMitchellHenry from thepractice squad;Re-signedQBDavidFalestothepracticesquad.

• Nov. 11: Waived WR/RS Kaelin Clay from Injured Reserve.• Nov. 15:ElevatedCB/RSAsaJacksonfromthepracticesquadtothe53-manroster;WaivedQBDavidFalesfromthepracticesquadandsignedG Jarrod Pughsley and TE Austin Traylortothepracticesquad;PlacedDTWillieHenryon Injured Reserve.

• Nov. 19: Waived TE Austin Traylor from the practice squad; Re-signed QBDavidFalestothepracticesquad.

• Nov. 23: Signed OLB James BurgesstothepracticesquadafterQBDavidFaleswassignedoffBaltimore’spracticesquadtoChicago’sroster.

• Nov. 26: ActivatedTENickBoylefromtheExempt/CommissionerPermissionlisttotheactiveroster;WaivedCB/RSAsaJackson.

• Nov. 29: WaivedOLBJamesBurgessfromthepracticesquad;Re-signedCB/RSAsaJacksontothepracticesquad.

• Dec. 7:Re-signedRBStephenHoustontothepracticesquadafterCB/RSAsaJacksonwassignedbyDetroitoffBaltimore’spracticesquad.

• Dec. 13:WaivedveteranRSDevinHesterandplacedRBLorenzoTaliaferroonInjured Reserve; Signed free agent LB Lamar Louis.

• Dec. 14: ElevatedWR/RSMichaelCampanarofromthepracticesquadtothe53-man roster.

• Dec. 14:Re-signedCBSamBrowntothepracticesquad.• Dec. 24: Placed LB Kamalei Correa on Injured Reserve and elevated OLBBrennenBeyerfromthepracticesquadtothe53-manroster.

• Dec. 27: SignedQBDustinVaughantothepracticesquad. (Bold denotes first time player has joined the Ravens.)

2016 TRANSACTIONS

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Page 38: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

WON 8, LOST 7 * RUSHING No. Yds Avg Long TD09/11 W 13- 7 Buffalo 71,104 West 188 756 4.0 41 509/18 W 25-20 at Cleveland 67,431 Dixon 78 338 4.3 20 109/25 W 19-17 at Jacksonville 60,127 Forsett TM 31 98 3.2 11 010/02 L 27-28 Oakland 71,152 Campanaro 2 62 31.0 39 010/09 L 10-16 Washington 71,318 Flacco 21 58 2.8 16 210/16 L 23-27 at NY Giants 78,487 Allen 9 34 3.8 7 010/23 L 16-24 at NY Jets 78,160 Wallace 5 31 6.2 13 011/06 W 21-14 Pittsburgh 71,286 Juszczyk 5 22 4.4 10t 111/10 W 28- 7 Cleveland 70,921 Moore 3 19 6.3 10 011/20 L 17-27 at Dallas 93,056 Perriman 1 2 2.0 2 011/27 W 19-14 Cincinnati 70,903 Taliaferro 1 0 0.0 0 012/04 W 38- 6 Miami 70,916 Mallett 5 -6 -1.2 -1 012/12 L 23-30 at New England 66,829 Koch 2 -23 -11.5 0 012/18 W 27-26 Philadelphia 71,223 TEAM 351 1391 4.0 41 912/25 L 27-31 at Pittsburgh 66,276 OPPONENTS 346 1277 3.7 85t 801/01 at Cincinnati * RECEIVING No. Yds Avg Long TD Balt. Opp. Pitta 75 638 8.5 30 2TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 294 269 Wallace 68 984 14.5 95t 4

Rushing 72 64 S. Smith 67 765 11.4 52t 5Passing 191 177 Juszczyk 35 265 7.6 40 0Penalty 31 28 West 30 219 7.3 17 13rd Down: Made/Att 78/217 74/206 Perriman 29 437 15.1 53t 33rd Down Pct. 35.9 35.9 Aiken 27 306 11.3 29 14th Down: Made/Att 7/16 11/16 Dixon 27 143 5.3 16 14th Down Pct. 43.8 68.8 Forsett TM 11 36 3.3 10 0

POSSESSION AVG. 30:52 29:08 Waller 10 85 8.5 15 2TOTAL NET YARDS 5228 4783 Gillmore 8 71 8.9 22 1

Avg. Per Game 348.5 318.9 Moore 7 46 6.6 13 0Total Plays 1009 926 Boyle 6 44 7.3 20 0Avg. Per Play 5.2 5.2 Allen 3 15 5.0 8 0

NET YARDS RUSHING 1391 1277 Taliaferro 3 10 3.3 8 0Avg. Per Game 92.7 85.1 TEAM 406 4064 10.0 95t 20Total Rushes 351 346 OPPONENTS 351 3721 10.6 79t 27

NET YARDS PASSING 3837 3506 * INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds Avg Long TDAvg. Per Game 255.8 233.7 Weddle 4 92 23.0 53 0Sacked/Yards Lost 30/227 30/215 Mosley 4 40 10.0 28 0Gross Yards 4064 3721 Orr 3 23 7.7 14 0Att./Completions 628/406 550/351 Young 2 22 11.0 16 0Completion Pct. 64.6 63.8 Powers 2 1 0.5 1 0Had Intercepted 14 18 Lewis-Harris LG 1 11 11.0 11 0

PUNTS/AVERAGE 76/45.9 86/44.7 W. Davis 1 0 0.0 0 0NET PUNTING AVG. 76/39.9 86/40.6 Jernigan 1 0 0.0 0 0PENALTIES/YARDS 121/1070 93/880 Webb 1 0 0.0 0 0FUMBLES/BALL LOST 19/7 25/10 TEAM 18 178 9.9 53 0TOUCHDOWNS 31 36 OPPONENTS 14 169 12.1 51 0Rushing 9 8 * PUNTING No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg BPassing 20 27 Koch 76 3490 45.9 39.9 5 35 68 0Returns 2 1 TEAM 76 3490 45.9 39.9 5 35 68 0

* SCORE BY PERIODS Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS OPPONENTS 86 3842 44.7 40.6 7 30 63 1TEAM 90 82 62 99 0 333 * PUNT RETURNS Ret FC Yds Avg Long TDOPPONENTS 59 73 60 102 0 294 Hester 25 15 180 7.2 28 0* SCORING TD-Ru-Pa-Rt PAT FG S PTS Campanaro 2 2 25 12.5 14 0Tucker 0 0 0 0 26/26 37/38 0 137 Webb 2 3 3 1.5 3 0West 6 5 1 0 0 36 TEAM 29 20 208 7.2 28 0S. Smith 5 0 5 0 0 34 OPPONENTS 31 13 360 11.6 85t 1Wallace 4 0 4 0 0 26 * KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds Avg Long TDPerriman 3 0 3 0 0 18 Hester 19 466 24.5 60 0Dixon 2 1 1 0 0 12 Moore 6 143 23.8 34 0Flacco 2 2 0 0 0 12 Webb 1 8 8.0 8 0Moore 2 0 0 2 0 12 TEAM 26 617 23.7 60 0Pitta 2 0 2 0 0 12 OPPONENTS 26 545 21.0 45 0Waller 2 0 2 0 0 12 * FIELD GOALS 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+Juszczyk 1 1 0 0 0 8 Tucker 0/0 4/4 9/10 14/14 10/10Aiken 1 0 1 0 0 6 TEAM 0/0 4/4 9/10 14/14 10/10Gillmore 1 0 1 0 0 6 OPPONENTS 0/0 7/7 5/5 2/4 0/4Young 0 0 0 0 0 2 Tucker: (50G,37G)(52G,49G,41G)(43G,42G,37G,53G)TEAM 31 9 20 2 26/26 37/38 0 333 (24G,43G)(31G)(23G,39G,35G)(50G,49G,44G)(49G, OPPONENTS 36 8 27 1 30/33 14/20 2 294 42G)(25G,40G)(46G)(52G,57G,54G,36G)(55G)(34B, 2-Pt Conv: S. Smith 2, Juszczyk, Wallace, 50G,38G,37G)(53G,47G)(41G,38G,46G,23G) TEAM 4-5, OPPONENTS 1-3 OPP: (49N)(52N)(49G,52B)()(56N,27G)(21G,31G) SACKS: Suggs 8, Jernigan 5, Judon 4, (22G,51B)()()(30G,21G)(23G,36G)(46N)()(45G,34G,Dumervil 2, Pierce 2, Urban 2, Guy 1, 27G,29G)(36G) McClellan 1, Powers 1, Z. Smith 1, Webb 1, Weddle 1, B. Williams 1, TEAM 30, OPPONENTS 30FUM/LOST: Flacco 5/3, Hester 5/1, West 2/0, Cox 1/0, Dixon 1/0, Jernigan 1/1, Moore 1/0,Mosley 1/1, Pitta 1/1, Wallace 1/0

* PASSING Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD TD% Int Int% Long SK/Lost RatingFlacco 623 404 4050 64.8 6.50 20 3.2 14 2.2 95t 30/227 84.5Mallett 4 2 14 50.0 3.50 0 0.0 0 0.0 9 0/0 58.3Tucker 1 0 0 0.0 0.00 0 0.0 0 0.0 --- 0/0 39.6TEAM 628 406 4064 64.6 6.47 20 3.2 14 2.2 95t 30/227 84.2OPPONENTS 550 351 3721 63.8 6.77 27 4.9 18 3.3 79t 30/215 86.2

Page 39: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

Name Total Solo Assists Sacks Yds. INT Yds. PD FF FROrr, Zach 130 89 41 0 0 3 23 5 1 2Weddle, Eric 85 48 37 1 5 4 92 12 1 0Mosley, C.J. 80 54 26 0 0 4 40 8 1 0Webb, Lardarius 66 55 11 1 10 1 0 5 0 0McClellan, Albert 48 29 19 1 2 0 0 0 0 0Williams, Brandon 48 32 16 1 3 0 0 1 0 0Wright, Shareece 46 40 6 0 0 0 0 6 0 0Young, Tavon 46 39 7 0 0 2 22 8 0 1Suggs, Terrell 33 26 7 8 62 0 0 4 3 0Smith, Jimmy 32 29 3 0 0 0 0 4 0 0Jernigan, Timmy 30 15 15 5 36 1 0 3 0 1Powers, Jerraud 29 24 5 1 11 2 1 5 0 0Pierce, Michael 28 16 12 2 9 0 0 1 0 0Guy, Lawrence 27 14 13 1 9 0 0 0 1 1Judon, Matthew 23 12 11 4 34 0 0 2 0 1Smith, Za'Darius 17 9 8 1 9 0 0 1 1 0Urban, Brent 10 7 3 2 9 0 0 2 0 0Dumervil, Elvis 8 7 1 2 16 0 0 0 2 1Levine Sr., Anthony 7 4 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0Davis, Will 4 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 0Onwuasor, Patrick 4 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Correa, Kamalei 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0Lewis, Kendrick 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Elam, Matt 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Moore, Chris 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1*Totals 806 555 251 30 215 18 178 70 11 8*Recovered a muffed snap on a punt for a TD at NYJ (10/23)

BlockedName Total Solo Assists FF FR KicksOnwuasor, Patrick 9 7 2 1 0 0Lewis, Kendrick 5 5 0 1 0 0Waller, Darren 5 5 0 0 0 0Juszczyk, Kyle 4 3 1 0 0 0Levine Sr., Anthony 4 3 1 0 0 0Moore, Chris 4 3 1 0 1 0Elam, Matt 3 3 0 0 0 0Huff, Marqueston 3 3 0 0 1 0McClellan, Albert 3 3 0 0 0 0Orr, Zach 3 3 0 0 0 0Young, Tavon 3 3 0 0 0 0Canady, Maurice 2 2 0 0 0 0Carter, Chris 2 2 0 0 0 0Wright, Shareece 2 2 0 0 1 0Aiken, Kamar 2 2 0 0 0 0Boyle, Nick 1 1 0 0 0 0Correa, Kamalei 1 1 0 0 0 0Cox, Morgan 1 1 0 0 0 0Hester Sr., Devin 1 1 0 0 0 0Koch, Sam 1 1 0 0 0 0Williams, Maxx 1 1 0 0 0 0Allen, Javorius 0 0 0 0 0 1Guy, Lawrence 0 0 0 0 0 1Urban, Brent 0 0 0 0 0 1Williams, Brandon 0 0 0 0 0 1Totals 60 55 5 2 3 4

Tackles: 13 by C.J. Mosley vs. Phi. (12/18) & Zach Orr vs. Mia. (12/4) and at NYG (10/16)Sacks: 2 by Matthew Judon at NYJ (10/23) & Terrell Suggs vs. Cin. (11/27) and at Jax. (9/25)Interceptions: 1 by eight different players; last by C.J. Mosley and Zach Orr at Pit. (12/25)Passes Defensed: 2 by nine different players; last by Zach Orr at Pit. (12/25)Forced Fumbles: 2 by Terrell Suggs vs. Cin. (11/27)Fumble Recoveries: 1 by seven different players; last by Elvis Dumervil and Lawrence Guy vs. Cin. (11/27)Special Teams Tackles: 3 by Tavon Young at Jax. (9/25)

from Press Box Stats

from Press Box Stats

Page 40: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

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Page 41: BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-7) AT CINCINNATI BENGALS (5-9-1)prod.static.bengals.clubs.nfl.com/.../reg...ravens.pdf · •The Baltimore Ravens (8-7) aim to produce their seventh winning season

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onv

(M/A

)2-

21-

10-

00-

01-

23-

30-

11-

20-

00-

01-

10-

01-

11-

30-

0

4th

Dow

n C

onv

Pct

100%

100%

0%0%

50%

100%

0%50

%0%

0%10

0%0%

100%

33.3

%0%

Tota

l Net

Yar

ds16

038

721

626

131

043

534

427

714

441

732

527

749

632

840

6

Tota

l Off.

Pla

ys48

5963

5462

6466

6548

6771

5865

8155

Avg.

Gai

n Pe

r Pla

y3.

36.

63.

44.

85.

06.

85.

24.

33.

06.

24.

64.

87.

64.

07.

4

Net

Yar

ds R

ushi

ng65

145

4862

6038

155

3633

118

6462

9516

912

7

Tota

l Rus

hing

Pla

ys24

2321

1920

1739

1813

3020

1626

3822

Avg.

Gai

n Pe

r Rus

h2.

76.

32.

33.

33.

02.

24.

02.

02.

53.

93.

23.

93.

74.

45.

8

Net

Yar

ds P

assi

ng95

242

168

199

250

397

189

241

111

299

261

215

401

159

279

Tim

es S

acke

d2

34

01

15

24

13

21

10

Yard

s Lo

st o

n Sa

cks

1618

260

106

2623

392

2211

511

0

Gro

ss Y

ards

Pas

sing

111

260

194

199

260

403

215

264

150

301

283

226

406

170

279

Pass

Atte

mpt

s22

3338

3541

4622

4531

3648

4038

4233

Pass

Com

plet

ions

1520

2425

2932

1323

1727

2629

2522

24

Com

plet

ion

Pct

68.2

%60

.6%

63.2

%71

.4%

70.7

%69

.6%

59.1

%51

.1%

54.8

%75

.0%

54.2

%72

.5%

65.8

%52

.4%

72.7

%

Avg.

Gai

n Pe

r Pas

s4.

06.

74

5.7

6.0

8.4

75.

13.

28.

15.

15.

110

.33.

78.

5

Inte

rcep

tions

02

30

12

01

20

03

11

2

Fum

bles

/ Fu

m. L

ost

0-0

3-0

0-0

1-1

2-1

1-1

2-2

2-0

2-1

1-0

4-2

2-0

2-2

3-0

0-0

Pena

lties

88

712

47

413

35

27

53

4

Pena

lty Y

ards

8959

7593

4611

925

9935

4515

5748

3045

Punt

s7

56

86

46

107

46

66

23

Gro

ss P

untin

g Av

erag

e44

.745

.241

.551

.842

.251

.339

.543

.142

.946

.047

.237

.049

.047

.045

.7

Touc

hbac

ks1

01

02

00

00

11

01

00

Insi

de20

32

24

21

32

12

13

21

1

Punt

s Bl

ocke

d0

00

00

00

10

00

00

00

Net

Pun

ting

Aver

age

41.7

40.8

38.2

46.5

35.5

50.5

38.0

41.6

39.0

41.0

35.7

36.5

43.7

47.0

37.3

Punt

Ret

urns

12

54

23

33

22

10

21

0

Punt

Ret

urn

Yard

s21

1351

9089

1118

5-2

2411

07

220

Punt

Ret

urn

Avg.

21.0

6.5

10.2

22.5

44.5

3.7

6.0

1.7

-1.0

12.0

11.0

0.0

3.5

22.0

0.0

Fair

Cat

ches

10

01

12

02

01

12

10

1

Kick

off R

etur

ns1

24

31

02

00

04

13

23

Kick

off R

etur

n Ya

rds

1332

5866

450

430

00

102

1856

5359

Kick

off R

etur

n Av

g.13

.016

.014

.522

.045

.00.

021

.50.

00.

00.

025

.518

.018

.726

.519

.7

Tim

e of

Pos

sess

ion

27:0

729

:01

28:5

425

:16

29:3

524

:56

36:3

727

.50

21:2

435

:39

28:4

330

:46

29.1

436

:38

25:2

3