BALTIMORE — John Harbaugh packed up 18 years of Baltimore history and headed for the Meadowlands. The New York Giants threw a parade, confident they dominated the 2026 coaching carousel. Casual fans across the league agreed, crowning New York the immediate victors of the offseason for snagging the biggest name available. But down in Maryland, the Ravens front office quietly executed a calculated strike of their own: handing the franchise keys to Jesse Minter.
Everyone wants to win the offseason. Fans judge trades, free agency, and even press conferences in strict columns of wins and losses. We pretend we know exactly how these moves will pan out. We don’t. Pete Carroll dominated in Seattle and hit a wall in Las Vegas. The Cleveland Browns just handed the reins to Todd Monken, and the Pittsburgh Steelers shocked the division by bringing in Mike McCarthy. Timing dictates success. We have no earthly idea if Harbaugh will save the Giants, but the bigger question remains: did the Ravens win their hire?
The Minter Method and Demanding Accountability
You could almost feel the collective gasp in the city when Harbaugh walked out the building for the last time. The air felt heavy, like an era had permanently slammed shut. But the NFL waits for no one, and ignoring Minter’s track record would be foolish. Most football fans outside of Los Angeles and Ann Arbor couldn’t pick Minter out of a lineup a month ago. But front offices know exactly who he is. He lifted the Michigan Wolverines to the No. 1 defense in the country, then jumped to the Los Angeles Chargers and built the NFL’s No. 1 scoring defense in a single season.
My gut says Minter fixes the Ravens’ defensive identity. I don’t know if he can instantly make Mike Green a superstar or help Roquan Smith perfectly rediscover the form that made him a $20 million man. But Minter schemes specifically to his players’ strengths. He puts guys in the correct spots. I would be absolutely stunned if the Ravens finish in the bottom half of NFL defenses next year.
The 29-Year-Old Offensive Mind
Defense keeps you in the game, but quarterbacks win it. If Lamar Jackson stays healthy, Baltimore possesses an absolute floor of a playoff berth. The Ravens hit the postseason every single time Jackson plays a full slate. He is a two-time MVP. You put him on the field, and opposing defenses panic.
But Minter took a massive, calculated risk. He hired 29-year-old Declan Doyle as his offensive coordinator. Pairing a first-time head coach with a first-time offensive play-caller in Baltimore is daring. Jackson is so uniquely talented that a capable offensive mind shouldn’t mess it up, but the margin for error in the AFC North is razor-thin. Doyle flashed brilliance turning the Chicago Bears’ offense around in 2025, pushing Caleb Williams to nearly 4,000 passing yards. Now, he gets the most electric weapon in football. Hopefully, Doyle proves to be the offensive wunderkind the Ravens clearly believe he is.
“When you watch the tape, there’s not really any throws that he can’t make. He’s very arm-talented. I think there’s even a higher ceiling to his game. You’re looking at a guy that’s been the MVP twice. And yet I still think just like all our guys, he still has room to grow.”
— Declan Doyle, Ravens Offensive Coordinator
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The difference between staying “in the mix” and actually winning a Super Bowl lives in the absolute margins. The Ravens consistently stumbled over their own feet in massive spots. Look at the self-inflicted wounds: Zay Flowers’ fumble in the January 2024 AFC Championship, or Mark Andrews’ miscues in the January 2025 Divisional round. The front office also overestimated their internal options on the offensive line in 2025 and struggled to find a consistent edge rush for years since Terrell Suggs departed.
Minter and Doyle face a massive evaluation period right now. The ultimate question is whether Minter can demand a level of accountability that stops players from making brain-lapsed decisions in January. He and his staff must coach significantly more production out of recent draft picks who have otherwise disappointed. If they tighten the screws, Baltimore takes the next step quickly. If they fail, Jackson will spend another winter watching the title game from his couch.
I certainly do not think this was a bad hire. Every coach who landed a job this cycle—even the slightly questionable timing of Monken to Cleveland or McCarthy to Pittsburgh—was heavily qualified. But I cannot confidently tell you the Ravens “won” their hire yet. We will find out when the weather turns cold.

