BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Ravens entered 2025 as Super Bowl favorites, but they ended it watching the playoffs from the couch. At the center of the 8-9 disappointment was Lamar Jackson, whose production dipped to levels rarely seen since he took over the league. While fans searched for a complex explanation, Hall of Famer Kurt Warner says the film tells a different, more painful story.
The “Inches” That Defined a Season
Warner didn’t find a broken mechanics or a quarterback who forgot how to read a defense. Instead, he saw a superstar missing the “easy” stuff. Jackson finished 2025 with 2,549 passing yards, 21 touchdowns, and seven interceptions across 13 starts. The most jarring stat? A career-low 349 rushing yards. A hamstring injury in Week 4 against the Kansas City Chiefs robbed him of his elite burst, and he never quite regained that game-breaking twitch.
The veteran quarterback spent hours on the tape. He wasn’t looking for a total overhaul. He was looking for the Lamar Jackson who makes the impossible look routine. In 2025, the routine became impossible. “As I was watching film, I couldn’t put my finger on anything that said, ‘Oh, OK, here’s what he’s doing different,’” Warner told ESPN’s Jamison Hensley. “It was more just missing plays that he’s made a million times before.”
Baltimore’s offense didn’t lack weapons. Even with the addition of veteran DeAndre Hopkins, who chipped in 330 yards, the unit couldn’t find its soul. The timing was off. The precision was gone. Drives that used to end in touchdowns stalled out after a missed five-yard out or a slightly overthrown deep ball to Zay Flowers. These weren’t schematic failures; they were execution lapses in a league that punishes every mistake.
“We didn’t execute. It’s on me to put points on the board, and we just didn’t do it consistently enough. You can’t leave those plays on the field in this league.”
— Lamar Jackson, Baltimore Ravens QB
The Jesse Minter Era Begins
The fallout from the 2025 season was swift. The Ravens moved on from long-time head coach John Harbaugh, who has since taken the reins for the New York Giants. Enter Jesse Minter, the defensive mind tasked with stabilizing a franchise in transition. Minter’s first priority isn’t reinventing Jackson; it’s protecting him. After a season where Jackson took sacks on 10.7% of his dropbacks—a career-high—the focus must shift to the trenches.
Warner’s assessment offers a silver lining for 2026. If Jackson’s struggles were truly about “missing plays” rather than a fundamental decline in talent, the fix is about rhythm and health. With a full offseason to heal the hamstring and a new coaching staff building a floor for the offense, the Ravens are betting that the 2025 version of No. 8 was the anomaly, not the new normal. For Baltimore to return to the top of the AFC North, Jackson doesn’t need to be Superman—he just needs to be himself again.

