Ravens 2026 Schedule Comes Down To One Brutal Quarterback Question

Deck: Analyzing the Ravens' 2026 schedule through the lens of the quarterbacks they'll face reveals familiar challenges and key matchups for rookie head coach Jesse Minter.

When you look at an NFL schedule, the cleanest way to size it up is by staring straight at the quarterbacks. That’s especially true for the Ravens in 2026, because there aren’t many mysteries here. They’ve seen a lot of these passers before, and rookie head coach Jesse Minter has already gone toe-to-toe with plenty of them, too.

That matters in this kind of ranking. It’s not just the quarterback by himself, but the situation around him, the coaches, the teammates, and how he’s already fared against this defense or the version of it that Minter is bringing to Baltimore.

At the top of the list for the Ravens’ toughest matchups is Joe Burrow (4-7), though the record doesn’t tell the real story. The Bengals’ defense has dragged that number down.

Burrow has averaged 290 passing yards per game against Baltimore with 23 touchdown passes and 7 interceptions, along with a 98.3 rating. He’s also been dealing with injuries in several of those games, and this year he won’t have to go to Baltimore on a short week or play a prime-time game, both of which have bothered him before.

Justin Herbert (0-3) is another quarterback Baltimore has had figured out, at least so far. The Ravens have exposed him in the past, but this one comes in a tricky spot for Minter against his old team.

Minter knows Herbert, Herbert knows Minter from their time in LA, and new OC Mike McDaniel is expected to make a huge difference for the Chargers. Herbert is barely completing 60% of his passes against Baltimore, but he’s no longer stuck with Greg Roman.

Josh Allen (2-2) has owned Baltimore in the playoffs, but the regular season has told a different story, especially in a 1 p.m. game in the middle of the year. Even last season, before things unraveled late, the Ravens had him seeing ghosts.

Against Baltimore in the regular season, he’s completing 55% of his passes for 6.1 yards per attempt with a 79.0 rating. On the ground, he’s averaging just 4.3 yards per rush and only 1.39 yards before contact.

Dak Prescott (1-1) is another early-season headache, especially with the game in Brazil and the soft field conditions helping the offense. Minter will try to clean things up on that side of the ball quickly, but Prescott absolutely shredded Orr’s defense early in 2024 for 379 yards and two touchdowns. He owns a 106.5 career rating against the Ravens.

Trevor Lawrence (1-1) brings a different kind of problem. He has better coaching now, the Jaguars look like they’ll stay a tough out, and his legs could matter here, too. Against Baltimore, he’s posted four touchdowns, no interceptions, and a 105.5 rating.

Baker Mayfield (3-7) has a record that looks rough at first glance, but it’s misleading. With Cleveland, he put up 16 touchdown passes, 13 interceptions, and an 82.4 rating against Baltimore.

Now in Tampa, he still has the kind of game that can create problems for the Ravens. Against Minter or Ravens DC Anthony Weaver, he’s 2-2, averaging 8.5 yards per attempt with 11 touchdowns and 285 passing yards per game.

CJ Stroud (1-2) finally got Baltimore last year, throwing for 274 yards and four touchdowns as the Texans moved all over the field. Orr is gone now, and Minter should have this defense fired up for the rematch.

Daniel Jones (1-1) is expected to be ready for Week 1, but that’s a fast return after major surgery late last season. He may not truly be himself until later in the year, which makes catching him in Week 1 a notable break for Baltimore.

Bryce Young is a different case. He’s a quarterback you can win with, and he’s started to do that at home. The belief here is that he’s headed back to the playoffs, and this matchup is in Carolina.

Cam Ward started to settle in during the second half of his rookie season, and this staff should help him. Even so, he’ll still be learning a new offense in Week 4.

Tyler Shough showed more than expected a year ago, though there’s still some skepticism. Marty Hurney, the longtime GM, believes he can win the NFC South with the Saints, but he’s walking into a rough spot in Minter’s home debut in Week 2.

Tua Tagovailoa (1-2) lands near the bottom of the list. He’s described here as not a starter, more of a younger Russell Wilson, and the Ravens have already had success against Russ and should do the same against Tua. Falcons coach Kevin Stefanski is said to have bitten off more than he can chew.

Aaron Rodgers (5-0) sits in a category of his own for now, and not in a good way for Baltimore. He embarrassed Zach Orr’s broken defense last year, and that unit didn’t stop wilting until it cost the game and the season.

Rodgers was sacked on just 2.4% of his dropbacks in two wins over Baltimore last season, compared with 6.1% against everyone else. He averaged 289 passing yards against the Ravens and 196 against everybody else.

Revenge is coming.

At the very bottom is Deshaun Watson (2-2 record vs Ravens/Minter). The assessment here is blunt: he is cooked.

The expectation is that rookie head coach Todd Monken will get a long look at Shedeur Sanders this season, though Watson is still projected to get the first shot. Against Baltimore, Watson has an 80.1 rating, just 205 passing yards per game, and he’s been sacked 17 times in those games.

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