Kyle Hamilton And Malaki Starks Just Entered A Ravens Defining Debate

The Ravens' safety duo faces the ultimate test as they strive to eclipse the competition and solidify their dominance in the NFL.

The Ravens may already be sitting on the NFL’s most intimidating safety setup, and 2026 could be the year Kyle Hamilton and Malaki Starks try to make that case impossible to ignore.

Baltimore added Jaylinn Hawkins to complete a group that already looked nasty on paper. With Hamilton and Starks as the foundation, the room suddenly has the kind of depth that makes opposing offenses think twice before testing the middle of the field. Hamilton has long been the headliner, but Starks is quickly becoming part of the conversation, and 2025 may only be the start of what he can become.

That’s where the latest safety duo ranking adds a little extra fuel. In Sports Illustrated’s Matt Verderame’s list, the Ravens came in at No. 2, behind the Atlanta Falcons’ Jessie Bates III and Xavier Watts at No.

  1. For Baltimore, that gives Hamilton and Starks a clear target heading into 2026: prove they belong at the top.

There’s an argument to be made that the ranking should have gone the other way. Watts had the better rookie year than Starks, but Hamilton was far more dominant than Bates last season.

So yes, the top spot is debatable. But the bigger point is what Baltimore has in front of it now.

Verderame pointed to new head coach and defensive playcaller Jesse Minter as a major reason the Ravens’ ceiling is so high. Minter may not need to do much to unlock Hamilton, who is already one of the best players in the league at 25.

But if there’s another level in there, Minter has the track record to help pull it out. He got strong play from Derwin James with the Los Angeles Chargers over the last two seasons, and that gives Baltimore reason to believe Hamilton can keep climbing.

Starks might be the player who benefits most. His rookie season was solid, but by his own standards it was a little underwhelming, something reflected in his 67.9 overall grade from Pro Football Focus.

That doesn’t erase the fact that he has looked like a star since his first snap at Georgia. The raw tools are there, and a leap in 2026 would not be a surprise.

For Hamilton, the formula is simple: keep playing at an All-Pro level and keep overwhelming offenses. For Starks, the next step is sharper coverage instincts and a bigger impact as a ballhawk. If that happens, Baltimore’s defense gets another layer of danger.

The Ravens probably aren’t spending much time worrying about safety rankings. The bigger mission is getting the defense back to being a unit that can wreck games. Still, if Hamilton and Starks do take that final step and become the league’s best duo, it would fit perfectly with what Baltimore is trying to build in 2026.

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