Ravens Finally Gave Lamar Jackson The Guard Help Fans Wanted

With savvy offseason moves and strategic investments, the Baltimore Ravens have transformed their offensive guard lineup into a formidable force for the 2026 season.

The Ravens spent the offseason fixing a problem that was impossible to ignore, and the clearest sign of progress sits right in the middle of the line. Baltimore’s guard play went from a glaring weakness to a group that suddenly looks built to hold up in 2026.

That’s why the offensive guard spot stands out as the team’s most improved position group. The Ravens added a new coaching staff, brought in a lethal pass rusher, and made major changes up front for Lamar Jackson, but the overhaul at guard may be the biggest swing of all.

Last season, the position was straight up pitiful. Now it has the look of a unit with real depth and legitimate upside.

The headliners are John Simpson and Vega Ioane. Simpson is back in Baltimore for a second stint after signing a three-year, $30 million contract, and the Ravens are banking on the veteran’s experience to stabilize a unit that badly needed it.

He brings 72 starts with him, and while his play has been inconsistent, he already showed what he can do in his 2023 run with the Ravens. The hope is that the reunion gets him back near that level.

Ioane is the other half of the makeover, and he arrives with the kind of profile that makes the move easy to understand. Baltimore took him at No. 14 overall, and the fit was obvious enough that he showed up in plenty of mock drafts before the pick was made.

His Penn State tape was as close to clean as it gets. In 2025, he didn’t allow a sack or QB hit, and over 1,106 career pass-blocking snaps, he gave up just two sacks.

That kind of production was already enough to sell the idea of putting him in front of Jackson, and his strong start to his first NFL offseason has only added to the optimism.

The nice part for Baltimore is that the upgrades don’t stop with the starters. Andrew Vorhees had a rough season, but now he’s in a backup role, where his experience could matter if injuries hit.

Emery Jones Jr. also fits into the picture after a rookie year interrupted by early injuries. He gets a full offseason this time, which should help him get into NFL-ready shape.

Even the late-round depth has a chance to matter. Seventh-round pick Evan Beerntsen gives the Ravens another interior option, though he could still be cut before the regular season. The fact that he’s even part of the conversation says plenty about how much better this group looks now.

There’s still some uncertainty here, but Baltimore should at least have an average guard unit in 2026. Given how bad things were a year ago, that alone would be a major step forward.

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