2004 Baltimore Ravens season

Last updated

2004 Baltimore Ravens season
Owner Steve Bisciotti
General manager Ozzie Newsome
Head coach Brian Billick
Offensive coordinator Matt Cavanaugh
Defensive coordinator Mike Nolan
Home stadium M&T Bank Stadium
Results
Record9–7
Division place2nd AFC North
PlayoffsDid not qualify
Pro Bowlers T Jonathan Ogden
LB Ray Lewis
LB Terrell Suggs
CB Chris McAlister
S Ed Reed
Uniform
Baltimore Ravens Uniforms 2004-2015.png

The 2004 season was the Baltimore Ravens' 9th in the National Football League (NFL), their 6th under head coach Brian Billick, and their 3rd season under general manager Ozzie Newsome.

Contents

They were unable to improve upon their previous output of 10–6 and a playoff appearance, instead going 9–7 [1] and missing the playoffs ending in a season of disappointment.

The 2004 season was the subject of the John Feinstein non-fiction book Next Man Up; [2] the result of Feinstein spending the season behind the scenes with the team.

It was highlighted by then-37-year-old Deion Sanders making a comeback after three years out of football. Meanwhile, Jamal Lewis, who was coming off a historic 2003 season, was arrested for drug charges and earned a two-game suspension by the NFL. He would finish the season with just 1,006 yards rushing as the Ravens were one of the worst offenses in the NFL in 2004. Ed Reed, who had 9 interceptions for the season, was named Defensive Player of the Year.

For the season, the Ravens introduced black alternate uniforms for the first time in franchise history.

Draft

2004 Baltimore Ravens draft
RoundPickPlayerPositionCollegeNotes
251 Dwan Edwards   DT Oregon State
382 Devard Darling   WR Washington State
5153 Roderick Green   DE Central Missouri
6187 Josh Harris   QB Bowling Green
6199 Clarence Moore   WR Northern Arizona
7244 Derek Abney   WR Kentucky
7246 Brian Rimpf   G East Carolina
      Made roster        Pro Football Hall of Fame     *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Staff

2004 Baltimore Ravens staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

  • Head athletic trainer – Bill Tessendorf
  • Strength and conditioning – Jeff Friday
  • Assistant strength and conditioning – Paul Ricci
  • Strength and conditioning intern – Juney Barnett

Roster

2004 Baltimore Ravens roster
Quarterbacks (QB)

Running backs (RB)

Wide receivers (WR)

Tight ends (TE)

Offensive linemen (OL)

Defensive linemen (DL)

Linebackers (LB)

Defensive backs (DB)

Special teams (ST)

Practice squad

Reserve

Rookies in italics
53 active, 10 reserve, 8 practice squad

Preseason

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecord
1August 12 Atlanta Falcons W 24–01–0
2August 20at Philadelphia Eagles L 17–261–1
3August 28 Detroit Lions W 17–62–1
4September 2at New York Giants W 27–173–1
[3]

Regular season

Schedule

In addition to their regular games with AFC North divisional rivals, the Ravens played against the AFC East and NFC East based on the NFL’s schedule rotation introduced in 2002, and also played against the Chiefs and the Colts, who had in 2003 finished first in the two remaining AFC divisions.

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordAttendance
1September 12at Cleveland Browns L 3–200–173,068
2September 19 Pittsburgh Steelers W 30–131–169,859
3September 26at Cincinnati Bengals W 23–92–165,575
4October 4 Kansas City Chiefs L 24–272–269,827
5October 10at Washington Redskins W 17–103–290,287
6 Bye
7October 24 Buffalo Bills W 20–64–269,809
8October 31at Philadelphia Eagles L 10–154–367,715
9November 7 Cleveland Browns W 27–135–369,781
10November 14at New York Jets W 20–17 (OT)6–377,826
11November 21 Dallas Cowboys W 30–107–369,924
12November 28at New England Patriots L 3–247–468,756
13December 5 Cincinnati Bengals L 26–277–569,695
14December 12 New York Giants W 37–148–569,856
15December 19at Indianapolis Colts L 10–208–657,240
16December 26at Pittsburgh Steelers L 7–208–764,227
17January 2 Miami Dolphins W 30–239–769,843
Note: Intra-divisional games are in bold text.
[3]

Week 2: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

Pittsburgh Steelers (1–0) at Baltimore Ravens (0–1)
Quarter1234Total
Steelers0001313
Ravens7671030

at M&T Bank StadiumBaltimore, Maryland

Game information

Steelers starting quarterback Tommy Maddox would suffer an injury during this game, sending 2004 first-round pick Ben Roethlisberger out on the field. After the game, Roethlisberger would lead the Steelers to fourteen straight victories to end the season. Thus, this marked the only loss the Steelers suffered during the regular season.

Standings

AFC North
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
(1) Pittsburgh Steelers 1510.9385–111–1372251W14
Baltimore Ravens 970.5633–36–6317268W1
Cincinnati Bengals 880.5002–44–8374372W2
Cleveland Browns 4120.2502–43–9276390W1
#TeamDivisionWLTPCTDIVCONFSOSSOVSTK
Division leaders
1 Pittsburgh Steelers North1510.9385–111–1.484.479W14
2 New England Patriots East1420.8755–110–2.492.478W2
3 [a] Indianapolis Colts South1240.7505–18–4.500.458L1
4 [a] San Diego Chargers West1240.7505–19–3.477.411W1
Wild cards
5 [b] New York Jets East1060.6253–37–5.523.406L2
6 [b] Denver Broncos West1060.6253–37–5.484.450W2
Did not qualify for the postseason
7 [c] [d] Jacksonville Jaguars South970.5632–46–6.527.479W1
8 [c] [d] Baltimore Ravens North970.5633–36–6.551.472W1
9 [c] Buffalo Bills East970.5633–35–7.512.382L1
10 Cincinnati Bengals North880.5002–44–8.543.453W2
11 [e] Houston Texans South790.4384–26–6.504.402L1
12 [e] Kansas City Chiefs West790.4383–36–6.551.509L1
13 [f] Oakland Raiders West5110.3131–53–9.570.450L2
14 [f] Tennessee Titans South5110.3131–53–9.512.463W1
15 [g] Miami Dolphins East4120.2501–52–10.555.438L1
16 [g] Cleveland Browns North4120.2501–53–9.590.469W1
Tiebreakers [h]
  1. 1 2 Indianapolis clinched the AFC #3 seed instead of San Diego based upon head-to-head victory.
  2. 1 2 New York Jets clinched the AFC #5 seed instead of Denver based upon better record against common opponents (New York Jets were 5–0 to Denver’s 3–2 against San Diego, Cincinnati, Houston, and Miami).
  3. 1 2 3 Jacksonville and Baltimore finished ahead of Buffalo because they each defeated Buffalo head-to-head.
  4. 1 2 Jacksonville finished ahead of Baltimore based upon better record against common opponents (Jacksonville were 3–2 against Baltimore’s 2–3 versus Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, Buffalo and Kansas City).
  5. 1 2 Houston finished ahead of Kansas City based upon head-to-head victory.
  6. 1 2 Oakland finished ahead of Tennessee based upon head-to-head victory.
  7. 1 2 Miami finished ahead of Cleveland based upon head-to-head victory.
  8. When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest-ranked remaining team from each division.

References

  1. 2004 Baltimore Ravens
  2. Feinstein, J (2005), Next Man Up, Little, Brown & Co. / Hachette ISBN   978-0-316-01328-4
  3. 1 2 "2004 Baltimore Ravens schedule and results" The Football Database
  4. "2004 Conference Standings". NFL.com. Retrieved April 6, 2024.