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词条 2000 Baltimore Ravens season
释义

  1. Offseason

  2. Season summary

  3. Defensive legacy

  4. 2000 NFL Draft

  5. Personnel

     Staff   Roster  

  6. Regular season

     Schedule  Standings  Game summaries  Week 1: at Pittsburgh Steelers  Week 2: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars  Week 3: at Miami Dolphins  Week 4: vs. Cincinnati Bengals  Week 5: at Cleveland Browns  Week 6: at Jacksonville Jaguars  Week 7: at Washington Redskins  Week 8: vs. Tennessee Titans  Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers  Week 10: at Cincinnati Bengals  Week 11: at Tennessee Titans 

  7. Playoffs

      Schedule   Game summaries  AFC Wild Card Game vs Denver Broncos  AFC Divisional Playoff Game at Tennessee Titans  AFC Championship Game at Oakland Raiders  Super Bowl XXXV vs New York Giants 

  8. Awards

  9. References

{{Infobox NFL season
| team = Baltimore Ravens
| logo =
| year = 2000
| record = 12–4
| division_place = 2nd AFC Central
| owner = Art Modell
| coach = Brian Billick
| stadium = PSINet Stadium
| pro bowlers = 5
| playoffs = Won Wild Card Playoffs (Broncos) 21–3
Won Divisional Playoffs (Titans) 24–10
Won AFC Championship (Raiders) 16–3
Won Super Bowl XXXV (Giants) 34–7
| uniform =
| shortnavlink = Ravens seasons
}}

The 2000 Baltimore Ravens season was the franchise's fifth season in the National Football League (NFL) and the second under head coach Brian Billick.

The Ravens concluded their season with a 12–4 record, thus finishing in second place in the AFC Central, earning them a spot in the playoffs as a wild card team. The Ravens won three straight games in the 2000 AFC playoffs, culminating in a trip to Tampa, Florida for Super Bowl XXXV, where they defeated the New York Giants, 34–7. The team's defense, which set a league record for fewest points allowed in a 16-game regular season with 10.3 points per game, is considered among the greatest of all time.

Though just five seasons removed from their relocation from Cleveland, only three players (Matt Stover, Rob Burnett, and Larry Webster) remained from the 1995 Cleveland Browns roster.

{{TOC limit}}

Offseason

The Ravens spent most of the off-season concerned with the status of their star linebacker Ray Lewis, who, along with two acquaintances, was arrested and charged with murder after an incident outside an Atlanta nightclub on January 31, 2000. On June 5, a plea bargain was struck, and murder and aggravated assault charges were dropped in exchange for Lewis' testimony against his companions. Lewis pleaded guilty to one count of obstruction of justice and was sentenced to one year of probation. The NFL fined Lewis $250,000. [1]

The Ravens made some key moves in the offseason to help bolster the team. They signed defensive tackle Sam Adams and tight end Shannon Sharpe in free agency. They used the fifth overall pick in the first round of the 2000 NFL Draft on running back Jamal Lewis.

Season summary

The Ravens started the season with a 5–1 mark, with three of their victories coming by shutout. Despite the great play of the defense, the offense hit a major swoon after the first month of the season. Following a 37–0 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals, the Ravens would not score a touchdown for five consecutive games. The Ravens won the first two of these games due to their defense and field goals from kicker Matt Stover, then lost the next three, including a critical division loss at home to the Tennessee Titans. During this game, quarterback Tony Banks was benched in favor of Trent Dilfer, who would take over for the rest of the season. After a loss at home to Pittsburgh to fall to 5-4, the Ravens broke both their touchdown-less streak and losing streak against the Bengals the next week. It would be the first of seven straight wins to end the regular season.

The Ravens finished one game behind the Titans in the AFC Central, so the Ravens had to begin their playoff run at home in the wild card round against the Denver Broncos. The team cruised to a 21–3 victory, setting up a date with the Titans the following week in Nashville. The Ravens prevailed 24–10, with linebacker Ray Lewis' 50 yard interception return for a touchdown clinching the game. The team then traveled to Oakland to meet the Raiders for the right to represent the AFC in the Super Bowl. The Ravens advanced to their first Super Bowl after a 16–3 victory, as the defense held Oakland, the league's top rushing offense during the season, to just 24 yards on the ground. The Ravens easily defeated the Giants in Super Bowl XXXV, 34–7, as Ray Lewis led another dominant performance by the defense and was named most valuable player of the game for his efforts.

The Ravens relied heavily on their defense, which set several NFL records during the 2000 season, including fewest points ever allowed during a 16-game season (165) and fewest rushing yards ever allowed (970). The defense also forced more turnovers than any team in the league that year (49), and Ray Lewis was named NFL Defensive Player of the Year by the Associated Press. Starting cornerbacks Chris McAlister and Duane Starks combined to intercept ten passes, and defensive end Rob Burnett contributed with 10.5 sacks. Defensive tackle Sam Adams was voted to the Pro Bowl and first-team All-Pro, as was safety Rod Woodson, who had four interceptions and ranked second on the team in tackles during the regular season. The defense also had plenty of other key players, including linebacker Jamie Sharper, outside linebacker Peter Boulware, and defensive tackle Tony Siragusa. Siragusa played alongside Sam Adams, as the two men combining for nearly 700 pounds and were big factors in the Ravens setting the run-stopping record.

Offensively, the Ravens relied heavily on the running game. Rookie running back Jamal Lewis led the way with 1364 yards and veteran Priest Holmes added 588 rushing yards. The passing game was rather pedestrian (23rd in yards passing), but Trent Dilfer brought stability to the position when he took over for Tony Banks mid-season. Tight end Shannon Sharpe, acquired as an unrestricted free agent from Denver during the offseason, was the team's leading pass receiver with 67 catches for 810 yards. Left tackle Jonathan Ogden was selected first-team All-Pro, and widely regarded as the league’s best offensive lineman. The Ravens also had one of the best special teams units in the NFL. Return specialist Jermaine Lewis scored two touchdowns on punt returns during the season, and ran back a kickoff for a touchdown in the Super Bowl. Placekicker Matt Stover made 35 field goals on 39 attempts and was voted to the Pro Bowl and first team All-Pro.[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/rav/2000.htm]

The 2000 Ravens team marked Baltimore's first playoff appearance in 23 years, since the Baltimore Colts were AFC East champions and made it to the AFC Divisional game in 1977.

Defensive legacy

The Ravens defense in 2000 is often named among the greatest NFL defenses of all time. Baltimore gave up only 970 rushing yards (60.6 per game) all year, an NFL record for a 16-game season,[2] and 186 fewer yards than the next lowest team, Baltimore's Super Bowl XXXV opponent, the New York Giants. Baltimore gave up only five rushing touchdowns all season, and allowed a paltry 2.7 yards per rush, both league bests. Baltimore only allowed 165 points all season, also an NFL record for a 16-game season. Including the postseason, Baltimore’s defense allowed only 167 points in 20 games to opposing offenses that year (8.35 per game). The Ravens allowed three other touchdowns that came from their opponents’ defense and special teams (two interception returns and one kickoff return). Furthermore, the Ravens recovered an astronomical 26 opponents fumbles during the season, double the total of the second-ranked team.[3] Their defense also intercepted 23 passes to give them a total of 49 turnovers forced that season, most in the NFL. They did all of this despite their own offense’s passing struggles and going five consecutive games without scoring a touchdown.

Statistical site Football Outsiders noted, "One more interesting note on the Baltimore defense: it was the only dominant defense of the past few years to be based on stopping the run instead of controlling the pass. For all the cliches about the need to stop the run, in general the best defenses are ranked the highest because they have the best ratings against the pass, not against the run – just like the best offenses are ranked the highest because they are the best through the air, not on the ground. The 2000 Ravens only rank seventh in defense against the pass, but their rushing defense ... is far and away the best of the past six seasons."[4]

2000 NFL Draft

RoundPickPlayerPositionSchool/Club Team
1 5 Jamal Lewis Running Back Tennessee
1 10 Travis Taylor Wide Receiver Florida
3 75 Chris Redman Quarterback Louisville
5 148 Richard Mercier Offensive Guard Miami (FL)
6 186 Adalius Thomas Linebacker Southern Mississippi
6 191 Cedric Woodard Defensive Tackle Texas

Personnel

Staff

{{NFL final staff
| year = 2000
| team = Baltimore Ravens
| front_office =
  • Owner - Art Modell

| head_coach =
  • Head Coach – Brian Billick
  • Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Backs – Steve Shafer

| offensive =
  • Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks – Matt Cavanaugh
  • Running Backs – Matt Simon
  • Wide Receivers – Milt Jackson
  • Offensive Line – Jim Colletto
  • Tight Ends/Assistant Offensive Line – Wade Harman

| defensive =
  • Defensive Coordinator – Marvin Lewis
  • Defensive Line – Rex Ryan
  • Linebackers – Jack Del Rio
  • Assistant Defensive Backs Coach – Donnie Henderson

| special_teams =
  • Special Teams – Russ Purnell

| strength =
  • Strength and Conditioning – Jeff Friday
  • Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Chip Morton

}}

Roster

{{NFL final roster
|Year=2000
|TeamName=Baltimore Ravens
|Active=
|Inactive=
|PS=
|Quarterbacks={{NFLplayer|8|Trent Dilfer}}{{NFLplayer|12|Tony Banks|d=American football}}{{NFLplayer|7|Chris Redman|rookie=y}}
|Running Backs=
  • 29 Chuck Evans
{{NFLplayer|32|Sam Gash|FB}}{{NFLplayer|33|Priest Holmes}}{{NFLplayer|31|Jamal Lewis|rookie=y}}
|Wide Receivers={{NFLplayer|86|Billy Davis|d=wide receiver}}{{NFLplayer|87|Qadry Ismail}}{{NFLplayer|83|Patrick Johnson|d=American football}}{{NFLplayer|84|Jermaine Lewis|d=American football, born 1974}}{{NFLplayer|80|Brandon Stokley}}{{NFLplayer|16|Germany Thompson|rookie=y}}
|Tight Ends={{NFLplayer|81|Ben Coates}}{{NFLplayer|82|Shannon Sharpe}}
|Offensive Linemen=
  • 74 Orlando Bobo
{{NFLplayer|62|Mike Flynn|d=American football|C}}
  • 71 Spencer Folau
  • 66 John Hudson
{{NFLplayer|60|Jeff Mitchell|C}}{{NFLplayer|64|Edwin Mulitalo|G}}{{NFLplayer|75|Jonathan Ogden|T}}{{NFLplayer|70|Harry Swayne|T}}
  • 77 Kipp Vickers
  • 72 Sammy Williams

|Defensive Linemen=
  • 95 Sam Adams
{{NFLplayer|90|Rob Burnett|d=American football|DE}}
  • 91 Lional Dalton
{{NFLplayer|99|Michael McCrary|DE}}
  • 76 Carl Powell
{{NFLplayer|98|Tony Siragusa|DT}}
  • 96 Adalius Thomas
  • 93 Keith Washington
  • 79 Larry Webster

|Linebackers={{NFLplayer|58|Peter Boulware}}
  • 57 O. J. Brigance
  • 51 Cornell Brown
  • 56 Anthony Davis
  • 50 Brad Jackson
{{NFLplayer|52|Ray Lewis|d=American football}}{{NFLplayer|55|Jamie Sharper}}
|Defensive Backs={{NFLplayer|35|Robert Bailey|d=American football|CB}}
  • 45 Corey Harris
{{NFLplayer|20|Kim Herring|FS}}
  • 25 Clarence Love
{{NFLplayer|21|Chris McAlister|CB}}
  • 42 Anthony Mitchell
  • 43 Anthony Poindexter
{{NFLplayer|22|Duane Starks|CB}}
  • 38 James Trapp
{{NFLplayer|26|Rod Woodson|SS}}
|Special Teams={{NFLplayer|5|Kyle Richardson|P}}{{NFLplayer|3|Matt Stover|K}}
|Reserve Lists={{NFLplayer|30|Obafemi Ayanbadejo|FB|IR}}{{NFLplayer|40|Pedro Edison|rookie=y|TE|IR}}{{NFLplayer|85|John Jones|d=American football|TE|IR}}{{NFLplayer|89|Travis Taylor|d=American football|rookie=y|WR|IR}}{{NFLplayer|88|Frank Wainright|TE|IR}}{{NFLplayer|54|Calvin Wilkinson|rookie=y|LB|IR}}
|Practice Squad={{NFLplayer|39|Alan Ricard|rookie=y|FB}}{{NFLplayer|46|Robert Arnaud|rookie=y|RB}}{{NFLplayer|59|Rod Payne|C}}{{NFLplayer|73|Kelly Gregg|DT}}
}}

Regular season

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Game site Ref
1 September 3, 2000 at Pittsburgh Steelers W 16–0 1–0 Three Rivers Stadium [5] CBS 1:00pm
2 September 10, 2000 Jacksonville Jaguars W 39–36 2–0 PSINet Stadium [6] CBS 1:00pm
3 September 17, 2000 at Miami Dolphins L 6–19 2–1 Pro Player Stadium [7] ESPN 8:30pm
4 September 24, 2000 Cincinnati Bengals W 37–0 3–1 PSINet Stadium [8] CBS 1:00pm
5 October 1, 2000 at Cleveland Browns W 12–0 4–1 Cleveland Browns Stadium [9] CBS 1:00pm
6 October 8, 2000 at Jacksonville Jaguars W 15–10 5–1 ALLTEL Stadium [10] ESPN 8:30pm
7 October 15, 2000 at Washington Redskins L 3–10 5–2 FedExField [11] CBS 1:00pm
8 October 22, 2000 Tennessee Titans L 6–14 5–3 PSINet Stadium [12] CBS 1:00pm
9 October 29, 2000 Pittsburgh Steelers L 6–9 5–4 PSINet Stadium [13] CBS 1:00pm
10 November 5, 2000 at Cincinnati Bengals W 27–7 6–4 Paul Brown Stadium [14] CBS 1:00pm
11 November 12, 2000 at Tennessee Titans W 24–23 7–4 Adelphia Coliseum [15] CBS 1:00pm
12 November 19, 2000 Dallas Cowboys W 27–0 8–4 PSINet Stadium [16] FOX 4:15pm
13 November 26, 2000 Cleveland Browns W 44–7 9–4 PSINet Stadium [17] CBS 1:00pm
14Bye
15 December 10, 2000 San Diego Chargers W 24–3 10–4 PSINet Stadium [18] CBS 1:00pm
16 December 17, 2000 at Arizona Cardinals W 13–7 11–4 Sun Devil Stadium [19] CBS 4:15pm
17 December 24, 2000 New York Jets W 34–20 12–4 PSINet Stadium [20] CBS 1:00pm

Standings

{{2000 AFC Central standings}}

Game summaries

Week 1: at Pittsburgh Steelers

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 1: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers—Game summary
|date=September 3
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=10 |R2=3 |R3=3 |R4=0
|home=Steelers
|H1=0 |H2=0 |H3=0 |H4=0
|stadium=Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|attendance=55,049
|weather=73 °F (Clear/Humid)
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200009030pit.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 23-yard field goal, Ravens 3–0
  • BAL – Qadry Ismail 53-yard pass from Tony Banks (Matt Stover Kick), Ravens 10–0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 26-yard field goal, Ravens 13–0
Third quarter
  • BAL- Matt Stover 33-yard field goal, Ravens 16–0
Fourth quarter
  • No scoring plays

|stats=Top passers
  • BAL – Tony Banks 18/32, 199 yards, 1 touchdown
  • PIT- Kent Graham 17/38, 199 yards
Top rushers
  • BAL- Priest Holmes 27 rushes, 119 yards
  • PIT – Richard Huntley 7 rushes, 31 yards
Top receivers
  • BAL – Qadry Ismail 7 receptions, 102 yards, 1 touchdown
  • PIT – Plaxico Burress, 4 receptions, 77 yards

}}

In the opening game for Baltimore's regular season, they squared off against division rivals Pittsburgh Steelers at their turf. In a game where the Ravens had 336 yards of total offense, they first scored points with a field goal kick from Matt Stover. Later in the first quarter, Qadry Ismail would catch a pass from Tony Banks for seven more points. After another field goal kick, the Steelers were being shut out by the end of halftime, 13–0. The final score in the game resulted from another field goal from Stover, and the final score resulted with the Ravens winning 16–0. With this win, the Ravens began their season at 1–0.

Week 2: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 2: Jacksonville Jaguars at Baltimore Ravens
|date=September 10
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Jaguars
|R1=17 |R2=6 |R3=3 |R4=10
|home=Ravens
|H1=0 |H2=7 |H3=15 |H4=17
|stadium=PSINet Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
|attendance=63,843
|weather=74 °F (Clear/Humid)
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200009100rav.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • JAX – Mike Hollis 36-yard field goal, Jaguars 3–0
  • JAX – Jimmy Smith 45-yard pass from Mark Brunell (Mike Hollis kick), Jaguars 10–0
  • JAX – Jimmy Smith 43-yard pass from Mark Brunell (Mike Hollis kick), Jaguars 17–0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Travis Taylor 14-yard pass from Tony Banks (Matt Stover kick), Jaguars 17–7
  • JAX – Mike Hollis 45-yard field goal, Jaguars 20–7
  • JAX – Mike Hollis 48-yard field goal, Jaguars 23–7
Third quarter
  • BAL – Travis Taylor 23-yard pass from Tony Banks (Ben Coates pass from Tony Banks), Jaguars 23–15
  • JAX – Mike Hollis 34-yard field goal, Jaguars 26–15
  • BAL – Obafemi Ayanbadejo 5-yard pass from Tony Banks (Matt Stover kick), Jaguars 26–22
Fourth quarter
  • BAL – Jermaine Lewis 12-yard pass from Tony Banks (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 29–26
  • BAL – Matt Stover 44-yard field goal, Ravens 32–26
  • JAX – Mike Hollis 48-yard field goal, Ravens 32–29
  • JAX – Jimmy Smith 40-yard pass from Mark Brunell (Mike Hollis kick), Jaguars 36–32
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 29-yard pass from Tony Banks (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 39–36

|stats=Top passers
  • JAX – Mark Brunell 28/50, 386 yards, 3 touchdowns, 2 interceptions
  • BAL – Tony Banks 23/40, 262 yards, 5 touchdowns, 2 interceptions
Top rushers
  • JAX – Stacey Mack 11 rushes, 36 yards
  • BAL – Priest Holmes 10 rushes, 54 yards
Top receivers
  • JAX – Jimmy Smith 15 receptions, 291 yards
  • BAL – Travis Taylor 4 receptions, 80 yards

}}

At the Ravens first home game, Baltimore trailed the Jacksonville Jaguars for the majority of the game, where the home team gained another 300+ yard total offense. The first quarter was dominated by Jacksonville, where the time period ended with 2 touchdown passes from Mark Brunell to Jimmy Smith and a field goal from Mike Hollis (17–0). Baltimore put up their first points in the second quarter with a touchdown pass from Tony Banks to Travis Taylor. However, the first half ended with two more field goals from the Jaguars. The third quarter began with the Ravens trailing 23–7. Two further touchdowns by the Ravens (one which was for two extra points) and a field goal from Jaguars put the home team with less than a touchdown differential. In the continuing scoring shootout, the Ravens scored first in the fourth quarter with a touchdown to lead for the first time during the entire game, 29–26. By the later portion of the quarter, the Jaguars had surpassed Baltimore once more at 36–32. In the last scoring drive of the game, Shannon Sharpe completed a 29-yard pass from Banks to defeat Jacksonville, 39–36. With this win, Baltimore's record elevated to 2–0.

Week 3: at Miami Dolphins

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 3: Baltimore Ravens at Miami Dolphins
|date=September 17
|time=8:20 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=0 |R2=0 |R3=3 |R4=3
|home=Dolphins
|H1=3 |H2=3 |H3=7 |H4=6
|stadium=Pro Player Stadium, Miami, Florida
|attendance=73,464
|weather=83 °F (Clear/Humid)
|referee=
|TV=ESPN
|TVAnnouncers=Mike Patrick, Joe Theismann & Paul Mcguire
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200009170mia.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • MIA – Olindo Mare 42-yard field goal, Dolphins 3–0
Second quarter
  • MIA – Olindo Mare 41-yard field goal, Dolphins 6–0
Third quarter
  • MIA – Lamar Smith 7-yard rush (Olindo Mare kick), Dolphins 13–0
  • BAL – Matt Stover 27-yard field goal, Dolphins 13–3
Fourth quarter
  • MIA – Lamar Smith 8-yard pass from Jay Fiedler (Olindo Mare kick failed), Dolphins 19–3
  • BAL – Matt Stover 33-yard field goal, Dolphins 19–6

|stats=Top passers
  • BAL – Tony Banks 19/31, 189 yards, 1 interception
  • MIA – Lamar Smith 11/16, 160 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception
Top rushers
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 9 rushes, 76 yards
  • MIA – Lamar Smith 23 rushes, 63 yards
Top receivers
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 5 receptions, 56 yards
  • MIA – Lamar Smith 3 receptions, 47 yards, 1 touchdown

}}

In week 3, the Ravens and the Miami Dolphins gained little offense in a defensive struggle for both teams. The first half was led by the Dolphin's placekicker Olindo Mare with two field goals. The Ravens attacked back during the second half, with two field goals of their own by Matt Stover; however, with a touchdown pass from Jay Fiedler to Lamar Smith and a rushing touchdown from the latter player, the Dolphins overcame Baltimore 19–6. In a game where the Ravens got just above 250 yards of total offense, Baltimore ultimately fell to a 2–1 record.

Week 4: vs. Cincinnati Bengals

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 4: Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens
|date=September 24
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Bengals
|R1=0 |R2=0 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=Ravens
|H1=10 |H2=14 |H3=3 |H4=10
|stadium=PSINet Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
|attendance=68,481
|weather=70 °F (Clear/Humid)
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200009170mia.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 30-yard field goal, Ravens 3–0
  • BAL – Travis Taylor 8-yard pass from Tony Banks (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 10–0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 11-yard rush (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 17–0
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 1-yard pass from Tony Banks (Matt Stover Kick), Ravens 24–0
Third quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 37-yard field goal, Ravens 27–0
Fourth quarter
  • BAL – Obafemi Ayanbadejo 1-yard rush (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 34–0
  • BAL – Matt Stover 19-yard field goal, Ravens 37–0

|stats=Top passers
  • CIN – Scott Mitchell 14/23, 97 yards, 2 interceptions
  • BAL – Tony Banks 20/36, 196 yards, 2 touchdowns
Top rushers
  • CIN – Corey Dillon 12 rushes, 9 yards
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 25 rushes, 116 yards
Top receivers
  • CIN – Clif Groce 4 receptions, 24 yards
  • BAL – Priest Holmes 4 receptions, 48 yards

}}

In an attempt to redeem their road lost to the Dolphins, the Ravens faced division rivals Cincinnati Bengals. In a complete shut out, the Ravens gained a near 400 yards (391 yards exact) in a game where the defense shut down the Bengals for only 94 yards of offense. During the first half, the Ravens scored three touchdowns (two passes from Tony Banks to Travis Taylor and Shannon Sharpe, and a rush by Jamal Lewis) and a field goal by Matt Stover. The second half ended with two more field goals and a rushing touchdown from Obafemi Ayanbadejo to finish with a score of 37–0. With this win, Baltimore's record elevated to 3–1.

Week 5: at Cleveland Browns

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 5: Baltimore Ravens at Cleveland Browns
|date=October 1
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=3 |R2=6 |R3=3 |R4=0
|home=Browns
|H1=0 |H2=0 |H3=0 |H4=0
|stadium=Cleveland Browns Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio
|attendance=73,018
|weather=62 °F (Clear)
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200010010cle.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 45-yard field goal, Ravens 3–0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 30-yard field goal, Ravens 6–0
  • BAL – Matt Stover 44-yard field goal, Ravens 9–0
Third quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 22-yard field goal, Ravens 12–0

|stats=Top passers
  • BAL – Tony Banks 18/34, 169 yards, 1 interception
  • CLE – Tim Couch 20/35, 203 yards, 3 interceptions
Top rushers
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 13 rushes, 86 yards
  • CLE – Travis Prentic 7 rushes, 11 yards
Top receivers
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 6 receptions, 83 yards
  • CLE – David Patten 7 receptions, 113 yards

}}

The Ravens began a five–game touchdown drought with their matchup against Cleveland. In a game dominated by both defenses, the Ravens allowed just under 250 offensive yards. The first half ended with three field goals from kicker Matt Stover, with the longest being from 45 yards in order to advance the Ravens to the locker room at 9–0. The final scoring in the game came during the third quarter when Stover kicked another field goal from 22 yards. In a shutout for the Browns, the Ravens improved their record to 4–1.

Week 6: at Jacksonville Jaguars

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 6: Baltimore Ravens at Jacksonville Jaguars
|date=October 8
|time=8:20 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=3 |R2=3 |R3=3 |R4=6
|home=Jaguars
|H1=3 |H2=0 |H3=0 |H4=7
|stadium=Alltel Stadium, Jacksonville, Florida
|attendance=65,194
|weather=71 °F (Clear)
|referee=
|TV=ESPN
|TVAnnouncers=Mike Patick, Joe Theismann & Paul Mcguire
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200010080jax.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • JAX – Steve Lindsey 49-yard field goal, Jaguars 3–0
  • BAL- Matt Stover 47-yard field goal, Tied 3–3
Second quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 32-yard field goal, Ravens 6–3
Third quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 43-yard field goal, Ravens 9–3
Fourth quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 21-yard field goal, Ravens 12–3
  • BAL – Matt Stover 23-yard field goal, 'Raven 15–3
  • JAX – Fred Taylor 1-yard rush (Lindsey kick), Ravens 15–10

|stats=Top passers
  • BAL – Tony Banks 17/39, 154 yards
  • JAX – Mark Brunell 18/28, 167 yards, 2 interceptions
Top rushers
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 17 rushes, 44 yards
  • JAX – Fred Taylor 17 rushes, 54 yards
Top receivers
  • BAL – Qadry Ismail 7 receptions, 85 yards
  • JAX – Jimmy Smith 8 receptions, 95 yards

}}

Baltimore would travel back to Jacksonville in a Week 2 rematch against the Jaguars at their turf in Jacksonville. The Ravens went with their second consecutive game without a touchdown with their kicker Matt Stover delivering all their points. In the first quarter, Jaguars kicker Steve Lindsey delivered a 49-yard field goal but was answered with a Stover 47-yard field goal to tie up the game. The second quarter ended with another Stover kick that would take the game to halftime with the Ravens winning 6–3. Stover would kick three more consecutive field goals to increase the score to 15–3, but the Jaguars retaliated with the final score of the game: a 1-yard rushing touchdown from Fred Taylor. However, the game was ultimately decided at 15–10 and the Ravens record elevated to 5–1.

Week 7: at Washington Redskins

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 7: Baltimore Ravens at Washington, Redskins
|date=October 15
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=0 |R2=3 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=Redskins
|H1=0 |H2=3 |H3=0 |H4=7
|stadium=FedExField, Landover, Maryland
|attendance=83,252
|weather=64 °F (Clear)
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200010150was.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • None
Second quarter
  • WAS – Kris Heppner 37-yard field goal, Redskins 3–0
  • BAL – Matt Stover 51-yard field goal, Tied 3–3
Third quarter
  • None
Fourth quarter
  • WAS – Stephen Davis 33-yard rush (Heppner kick), Redskins 10–3

|stats=Top passers
  • BAL – Tony Banks 16/35, 135 yards, 1 interception
  • WAS – Brad Johnson 18/27, 158 yards, 1 interception
Top rushers
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 16 rushes, 34 yards
  • WAS – Stephen Davis 21 rushes, 91 yards, 1 touchdown
Top receivers
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 4 receptions, 50 yards
  • WAS – James Thrash 6 receptions, 62 yards

}}

The Ravens traveled to their Capital Beltway neighbors, Washington Redskins, for their third straight road game. In a defensive struggle, both teams allowed under 250 yards of total offense. Halftime ended with both teams tied at 3–3 as a result of two field goals: one from the Redskins (37 yards by Kris Heppner) and the Ravens (Matt Stover from 51 yards). That field goal from Stover would be the only score that the Ravens put up in this game, where in the fourth quarter, Stephen Davis ran for a 33-yard touchdown that put Washington 10–3 over the Ravens. With this final score, the Ravens suffered their second loss and fell to 5–2.[21]

Week 8: vs. Tennessee Titans

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 8: Tennessee Titans at Baltimore Ravens
|date=October 22
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Titans
|R1=0 |R2=7 |R3=7 |R4=0
|home=Ravens
|H1=3 |H2=3 |H3=0 |H4=0
|stadium=PSINet Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
|attendance=69,200
|weather=60 °F (Clear)
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200010220rav.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 21-yard field goal, Ravens 3–0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 38-yard field goal, Ravens 6–0
  • TEN – Rodney Thomas 9-yard pass from Steve McNair (Al Del Greco kick), Titans 7–6
Third quarter
  • TEN – Randall Godfrey 24-yard interception return (Al Del Greco kick), Titans 14–6
Fourth quarter
  • None

|stats=Top passers
  • TEN – Steve McNair 11/21, 101 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception
  • BAL – Tony Banks 17/32, 229 yards, 3 interceptions
Top rushers
  • TEN – Rodney Thomas 18 rushes, 53 yards
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 17 rushes, 58 yards
Top receivers
  • TEN – Chris Sanders 3 receptions, 60 yards
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 8 receptions, 104 yards

}}

In Week 8, the Ravens flew back home to face off against division rivals Tennessee Titans. The Ravens continued their touchdown-less streak, where Matt Stover produced the only score for Baltimore with two field goals (from the 21 and 38-yard lines). In the second quarter, Titans quarterback Steve McNair threw a 9-yard pass to Rodney Thomas to go ahead of the home team. Just under one point, the Ravens sought to get ahead of Tennessee, however, Tony Banks produced a game high of 3 interceptions, with the last one sealing the game for the Titans as they won 14–6. With this loss, the Ravens fell to 5–3.

Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 9: Pittsburgh Steelers at Baltimore Ravens
|date=October 29
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Steelers
|R1=0 |R2=0 |R3=6 |R4=3
|home=Ravens
|H1=0 |H2=6 |H3=0 |H4=0
|stadium=PSINet Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
|attendance=69,200
|weather=47 °F (Windy)
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200010290rav.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • None
Second quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 51-yard field goal, Ravens 3–0
  • BAL – Matt Stover 49-yard field goal, Ravens 6–0
Third quarter
  • PIT – Hines Ward 45-yard pass from Kordell Stewart (Kris Brown kick failed), Tied 6–6
Fourth quarter
  • PIT – Kris Brown 24-yard field goal, Steelers 9–6

|stats=Top passers
  • PIT – Kordell Stewart, 9/18, 133 yards, 1 touchdown
  • BAL – Trent Dilfer 12/25, 152 yards, 1 interception
Top rushers
  • PIT – Jerome Bettis 18 rushes, 65 yards
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 19 rushes, 93 yards
Top receivers
  • PIT – Hines Ward 2 receptions, 55 yards
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 3 receptions, 51 yards

}}

In a rematch from week 1, Baltimore continued their streak without a touchdown. However, second-string quarterback Trent Dilfer started in replacement of Tony Banks, who in the past four games had not thrown one touchdown but rather more interceptions. In this game, unlike Banks, Dilfer threw no interceptions but was unable to connect with any receiver into the endzone. The Ravens had the advantage heading into halftime with two field goals from Matt Stover that were over 40 yards. In the third quarter, the Steelers retaliated with six points of their own as a result of a touchdown and a missed extra point from Kris Brown.

Week 10: at Cincinnati Bengals

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 10: Baltimore Ravens at Cincinnati Bengals
|date=November 5, 2000
|time=1:00 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=3 |R2=21 |R3=0 |R4=3
|home=Bengals
|H1=0 |H2=0 |H3=7 |H4=0
|stadium=Paul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio
|attendance=54,759
|weather=44 °F
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200011050cin.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 38-yard field goal, Ravens 3–0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Brandon Stokely 14-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Stover kick good), Ravens 10–0
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 18-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Stover kick good), Ravens 17–0
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 19-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Stover kick good), Ravens 24–0
Third quarter
  • CIN – Peter Warrick 4-yard rush (Neil Rackers kick good), Ravens 24–7
Fourth quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 32-yard field goal, Ravens 27–7

|stats=Top passers
  • BAL – Trent Dilfer 23/34, 244 yards, 3 touchdowns
  • CIN – Akili Smith 15/ 27, 137 yards
Top rushers
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 22 attempts, 109 yards
  • CIN – Corey Dillon 16 attempts, 23 yards
Top receivers
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 3 receptions, 70 yards
  • CIN – Tony McGee 2 receptions, 41 yards

}}

In a Week 4 rematch, the Ravens traveled to Ohio against AFC Central adversaries, Bengals. Matt Stover put the Ravens on the board with three points after a 38-yard field goal in the first quarter. Baltimore entered their season best second quarter in this game with three touchdown passes from new starting quarterback Trent Dilfer that had the Ravens up by 24 unanswered points. Cincinnati answered with a touchdown, and their only score, during the third quarter with Peter Warrick's 4-yard rush. The game came to a close following a field goal from Stover that had the Ravens defeat the Bengals 27–7. The Ravens improved their record to 6–4 and began a seven-game winning streak.

Week 11: at Tennessee Titans

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Week 11: Baltimore Ravens at Tennessee Titans
|date=November 12, 2000
|time=12:00 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=7 |R2=10 |R3=0 |R4=7
|home=Titans
|H1=0 |H2=14 |H3=0 |H4=9
|stadium=Adelphia Coliseum, Nashville, Tennessee
|attendance=68,490
|weather=46 °F
|referee=
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=
|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200011120oti.htm Recap]
|scoring=First quarter
  • BAL – Qadry Ismail 46-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 7–0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 2-yard rush (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 14–0
  • TEN – Derrick Mason 14-yard pass from Steve McNair (Al Del Greco kick), Ravens 14–7
  • BAL – Matt Stover 45-yard field goal, Ravens 17–7
  • TEN – Lorenzo Neal 4-yard pass from Steve McNair (Al Del Greco kick), Ravens 17–14
Third quarter
  • No scoring plays
Fourth quarter
  • TEN – Al Del Greco 23-yard field goal, Tied 17–17
  • TEN – Perry Phenix 87-yard interception return (Al Del Greco kick failed), Titans 23–17
  • BAL – Patrick Johnson 2-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 24–23

|stats=Top passers
  • BAL – Trent Dilfer 23/36, 281 yards, 2 touchdowns, 1 interception
  • TEN – Steve McNair 21/34, 228 yards, 2 touchdowns
Top rushers
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 23 attempts, 99 yards, 1 touchdown
  • CIN – Eddie George 5 attempts, 63 yards
Top receivers
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 8 receptions, 92 yards
  • TEN – Derrick Mason 5 receptions, 63 yards, 1 touchdown

}}

Just after battling against Tennessee three weeks earlier, Baltimore traveled to Nashville to face off against the Titans. The Ravens attacked by adding seven points to their score in the first quarter after a reception by Qadry Ismail from Trent Dilfer. Jamal Lewis would then double the points with a 2-yard rush that put up the Ravens 14–0 during the second quarter. The Titans answered with two touchdown passes from Steve McNair to Derrick Mason and Lorenzo Neal, respectively. After a field goal from Matt Stover, halftime stood at 17–14, favoring the Ravens. In a defensive struggle in the third quarter, no team was able to score. However, the game became tied at 17–17 with a 23-yard field goal from Al Del Greco upon the final quarter. Tennessee sought to end the game after Perry Phenix intercepted a pass from Dilfer and returned it 87 yards for a touchdown; however, Del Greco failed to convert the extra point. This allowed the Ravens to end the game with a touchdown pass to Patrick Johnson from Dilfer and a successful extra point conversion. With this win, the Ravens raised their record to 7–4 and became the first team to defeat the Titans in Adelphia Coliseum.

Playoffs

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Game site Ref Time
Wild Card December 31, 2000 Denver Broncos W 21–3 PSINet Stadium [22] CBS 12:30pm
Divisional January 7, 2001 at Tennessee Titans W 24–10 Adelphia Coliseum [23] CBS 12:30pm
AFC Championship January 14, 2001 at Oakland Raiders W 16–3 Network Associates Coliseum  CBS 4:00pm
Super Bowl XXXV January 28, 2001 New York Giants W 34–7 Raymond James Stadium [24] CBS 6:30pm

Game summaries

AFC Wild Card Game vs Denver Broncos

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Wild Card game: Denver Broncos at Baltimore Ravens
|date=December 31
|time=12:30 p.m. EST
|road=Broncos
|R1=0 |R2=3 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=Ravens
|H1=0 |H2=14 |H3=7 |H4=0
|stadium=PSINet Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
|weather=28 °F (Clear/Humid)
|referee=
|TV announcers (CBS)= Greg Gumbel and Phil Simms
|scoring=First quarter
  • No scoring plays
Second quarter
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 1 yard rush (Matt Stover Kick), Ravens 7–0
  • DEN – Jason Elam 31 yard field goal, Ravens 7-3
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 58 yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 14-3
Third quarter
  • BAL- Jamal Lewis 27 yard rush (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 21-3
Fourth quarter
  • None}}

AFC Divisional Playoff Game at Tennessee Titans

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Division Game: Baltimore Ravens at Tennessee Titans
|date=January 7
|time=12:30 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=0 |R2=7 |R3=3 |R4=14
|home=Titans
|H1=7 |H2=0 |H3=3 |H4=0
|stadium=Adelphia Coliseum, Nashville, Tennessee
|weather=43 °F (Clear)
|TV=CBS
|scoring=First quarter
  • TEN – Eddie George 2 yard rush (Al Del Greco Kick), Titans 7-0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 1 yard rush (Matt Stover Kick), tie 7–7
Third quarter
  • TEN – Al Del Greco 21 yard field goal, Titans 10-7
  • BAL – Matt Stover 38 yard field goal, tie 10-10
Fourth quarter
  • BAL – Anthony Mitchell 90 yard blocked field goal return (Matt Stover kick) Ravens 17-10
  • BAL – Ray Lewis 50 yard interception return (Matt Stover kick) Ravens 24-10}}

AFC Championship Game at Oakland Raiders

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= AFC Championship: Baltimore Ravens at Oakland Raiders
|date= January 14
|time=4:05 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=0 |R2=10 |R3=3 |R4=3
|home=Raiders
|H1=0 |H2=0 |H3=3 |H4=0
|stadium=Network Associates Coliseum, Oakland, California
|weather=50 °F (Clear/Humid)
|TV=CBS
|scoring=First quarter
  • No scoring plays
Second quarter
  • BAL – Shannon Sharpe 96 yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Matt Stover Kick), Ravens 7–0
  • BAL – Matt Stover 31 yard field goal, Ravens 10-0
Third quarter
  • OAK – Sebastian Janikowski 24 yard field, Ravens 10-3
  • BAL – Matt Stover 28 yard field goal, Ravens 13-3
Fourth quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 21 yard field goal, Ravens 16-3}}

Super Bowl XXXV vs New York Giants

{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle= {{NFLPrimaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}}; {{NFLSecondaryColor|Baltimore Ravens}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title= Super Bowl XXXV: Baltimore Ravens vs. New York Giants
|date=January 28
|time=6:30 p.m. EST
|road=Ravens
|R1=7 |R2=3 |R3=14 |R4=10
|home=Giants
|H1=0 |H2=0 |H3=7 |H4=0
|stadium=Raymond James Stadium, Tampa Bay, Florida
|weather=57 °F (Clear)
|TV=CBS
|scoring=First quarter
  • BAL- Brandon Stokley 38 yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 7-0
Second quarter
  • BAL – Matt Stover 47 yard field goal, Ravens 10-0
Third quarter
  • BAL – Duane Starks 49 yard interception return (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 17-0
  • NYG – Ron Dixon 97 yard kickoff return (Brad Daluiso kick), Ravens 17-7
  • BAL – Jermaine Lewis 84 yard kickoff return (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 24-7
Fourth quarter
  • BAL – Jamal Lewis 3 yard rush (Matt Stover kick), Ravens 31-7
  • BAL – Matt Stover 34 yard field goal, Ravens 34-7}}

The Ravens and Giants would set a Super Bowl record by scoring three touchdowns in three consecutive plays, tallying just 36 seconds in the 3rd quarter. The Ravens defense completely shut down the Giants offense, not yielding a single point. The only points the Giants would score on would be a kickoff return for a touchdown. The Ravens held the Giants to 152 total yards of offense and forced five turnovers along with four sacks. The Ravens defense surrendered just one offensive touchdown in four playoff games and only allowed 16 points (4.0 points per game).

Awards

Middle linebacker Ray Lewis was named NFL Defensive Player of the Year by the Associated Press. Five players represented the Ravens in the Pro Bowl: Lewis joined defensive tackle Sam Adams, safety Rod Woodson, offensive tackle Jonathan Ogden, and kicker Matt Stover. Matt Stover joined Lewis and Ogden on the associated press' All-Pro first team. Defensive end Rob Burnett joined Adams and Woodson on the AP All-Pro second team.

  • Sam Adams, AFC Pro Bowl Selection,[25]
  • Brian Billick, USA Today AFC Coach of the Year,[26]
  • Trent Dilfer, Football Digest Comeback Player of the Year,[26]
  • Jamal Lewis, USA Today Offensive Rookie of the Year,[26]
  • Marvin Lewis, Football Digest Assistant Coach of the Year,[26]
  • Marvin Lewis, Pro Football Writers Association Assistant Coach of the Year,[26]
  • Marvin Lewis, USA Today AFC Assistant Coach of the Year,[26]
  • Ray Lewis, Associated Press Defensive Player of the Year,[26]
  • Ray Lewis, Football Digest Defensive Player of the Year,[26]
  • Ray Lewis, Pro Football Writers Association Defensive Most Valuable Player,[26]
  • Jonathan Ogden, AFC Pro Bowl Selection,[25]
  • Matt Stover, Golden Toe Award [26]
  • Rod Woodson, AFC Pro Bowl Selection,[25]

References

1. ^https://www.nfl.info/nflmedia/news/2000news/NFL-37.htm
2. ^Pro-Football-Reference.com: In a single season, from 1940 to 2011, in the regular season, sorted by ascending opp Rushing Yds
3. ^[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/2000/opp.htm 2000 NFL Opposition & Defensive Statistics]
4. ^2000 DVOA Ratings and Commentary
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens04sep04,0,3166674.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Ravens forge a curtain of own |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-09-04 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
6. ^ {{dead link|date=January 2016}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens18sep18,0,5591516.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Ravens all wet in Miami loss |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-09-18 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=http://static.espn.go.com/nfl/2000/20000924/recap/cinbal.html |title=Cincinnati Bengals/Baltimore Ravens NFL recap on ESPN |publisher=Static.espn.go.com |date=2000-09-24 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens02oct02,0,1200588.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Ravens fill in blank once more |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-10-02 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
10. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens09oct09,0,4411866.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=5-1 Ravens give Jags the boot |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-10-09 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens16oct16,0,3625430.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Redskins pick off Ravens |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-10-16 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
12. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens23oct23,0,2838994.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=End zone again out of bounds |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-10-23 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
13. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens30oct30,0,2052558.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=No end to Ravens' zone |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-10-30 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
14. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens06nov06,0,6246881.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Touchdown! 'Curse over' |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-11-06 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
15. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens13nov13,0,5460445.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Wide smiles for Ravens |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-11-13 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
16. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens20nov20,0,4674009.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Big D runs into bigger 'D' |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date= |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
17. ^{{cite web|url=http://static.espn.go.com/nfl/2000/20001126/recap/clebal.html |title=Cleveland Browns/Baltimore Ravens NFL recap on ESPN |publisher=Static.espn.go.com |date=2000-11-26 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
18. ^{{cite web|url=http://static.espn.go.com/nfl/2000/20001210/recap/sdgbal.html |title=San Diego Chargers/Baltimore Ravens NFL recap on ESPN |publisher=Static.espn.go.com |date=2000-12-10 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
19. ^{{cite web|url=http://static.espn.go.com/nfl/2000/20001217/recap/balari.html |title=Baltimore Ravens/Arizona Cardinals NFL recap on ESPN |publisher=Static.espn.go.com |date=2000-12-17 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
20. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens25dec25,0,5333941.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Ravens get last word on Jets |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-12-25 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
21. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200010150was.htm|title=Baltimore Ravens 3 at Washington Redskins 10|date=2000-10-15|accessdate=2012-01-12}}
22. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens01dec31,0,2712492.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Riding high |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2000-12-31 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
23. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-sp.ravens08jan08,0,610763.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Block party |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2001-01-08 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
24. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/football/bal-superbowl25,0,5685751.story?coll=bal-football-storyutil |title=Ravens romp in Super Bowl, 34-7 |publisher=The Baltimore Sun |date=2001-01-29 |accessdate=2016-01-30}}
25. ^NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, NY, {{ISBN|0-7611-2480-2}}, p. 362
26. ^NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, NY, {{ISBN|0-7611-2480-2}}, p. 201
{{Super Bowl champions}}{{Baltimore Ravens seasons}}{{Super Bowl XXXV}}{{Baltimore Ravens}}{{2000 NFL season by team}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2000 Baltimore Ravens Season}}

5 : Baltimore Ravens seasons|2000 National Football League season by team|American Football Conference championship seasons|Super Bowl champion seasons|2000 in sports in Maryland

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