How the Ravens got to 1-3 and where they go from here - ESPN
The Baltimore Ravens entered this season as the betting Super Bowl favorite, boasting a Pro Bowl-filled roster that seemed primed to help quarterback Lamar Jackson capture that elusive championship.
One month later, Baltimore has gone from a contender to an early-season catastrophe. After Sunday's painful 37-20 loss at the Kansas City Chiefs, the Ravens have tied the worst start in the franchise's 30-year history and have watched their playoff aspirations take a hit with a 1-3 record.
With Baltimore getting pushed around by similar championship-caliber teams, its struggles on both sides of the ball are only matched by its list of injured starters which includes Jackson, who left Sunday's game in the third quarter with a hamstring injury. Inside the quiet postgame locker rooms, the players have repeatedly looked stunned about the surprising meltdowns on defense and the problems to protect Jackson.
Ravens coach John Harbaugh faces the challenge of digging his team out of a hole that few have been able to climb out from. In the Super Bowl era (since 1966), only 10.6% of teams that started 1-3 were able to rebound and make the playoffs (43 of 405 teams).
«I'm concerned, but I'm not overwhelmed by it,» Harbaugh said of the disappointing start.
The way the Ravens have lost this season has been cause for concern. In the season opener, Baltimore failed to hold a 15-point lead in the fourth quarter and lost at the Buffalo Bills 41-40. In Week 3, the Ravens allowed their most rushing yards (224) in eight years in a 38-30 loss to the Detroit Lions. And, on Sunday, Baltimore fell apart as five starters left with injuries in its most lopsided loss in four seasons.
«We have issues that we're dealing with,» Harbaugh said, «and we have


