American Football Wiki
Register
Advertisement
2005 Baltimore Ravens season
Head Coach Brian Billick
Home Field M&T Bank Stadium
Results
Record 6–10
Place 3rd AFC North
Playoff Finish did not qualify
Timeline
Previous Season Next Season
2004 2006

The 2005 Baltimore Ravens season was the team's tenth season in the NFL. They were unable to improve upon their previous output of 9–7, instead going 6–10[1] and missing the playoffs for the second straight season.

Personnel[]

Staff[]

2005 Baltimore Ravens final staff
Front Office
  • Owner – Steve Bisciotti
  • Minority Owner – Art Modell
  • President – Dick Cass
  • General Manager/Executive Vice President – Ozzie Newsome
  • Vice President of Football Administration – Pat Moriarty
  • Director of College Scouting – Eric DeCosta
  • Director of Pro Personnel – George Kokinis
  • Assistant Director of Pro Personnel – Vincent Newsome

Head Coaches

  • Head Coach – Brian Billick
  • Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line – Chris Foerster

Offensive Coaches

  • Offensive Coordinator – Jim Fassel
  • Quarterbacks – Rick Neuheisel
  • Running Backs – Matt Simon
  • Wide Receivers – David Shaw
  • Assistant Wide Receivers/Quarterbacks – Jedd Fisch
  • Tight Ends/Assistant Offensive Line – Wade Harman
  • Offensive Assistant – John Fassel
  Defensive Coaches
  • Defensive Coordinator – Rex Ryan
  • Defensive Line – Clarence Brooks
  • Linebackers – Jeff FitzGerald
  • Outside Linebackers – Mike Pettine
  • Secondary – Johnnie Lynn
  • Secondary – Dennis Thurman

Special Teams Coaches

  • Special Teams Coordinator – Gary Zauner
  • Special Teams Assistant – Bennie Thompson

Strength and Conditioning

  • Strength and Conditioning – Jeff Friday
  • Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Paul Ricci

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
1 September 11 Indianapolis Colts L 24–7 0–1
70,501
2 September 18 at Tennessee Titans L 25–10 0–2
69,149
3 Bye week
4 October 2 New York Jets W 13–3 1–2
70,479
5 October 9 at Detroit Lions L 35–17 1–3
61,201
6 October 16 Cleveland Browns W 16–3 2–3
70,196
7 October 23 at Chicago Bears L 10–6 2–4
62,102
8 October 31 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 20–19 2–5
64,178
9 November 6 Cincinnati Bengals L 21–9 2–6
70,540
10 November 13 at Jacksonville Jaguars L 30–3 2–7
66,107
11 November 20 Pittsburgh Steelers W 16–13 (OT) 3–7
70,601
12 November 27 at Cincinnati Bengals L 42–29 3–8
65,680
13 December 4 Houston Texans W 16–15 4–8
69,909
14 December 11 at Denver Broncos L 12–10 4–9
75,651
15 December 19 Green Bay Packers W 48–3 [[#endnote_mnf_record{{{3}}}|[a]]] 5–9
70,604
16 December 25 Minnesota Vikings W 30–23 6–9
70,246
17 January 1 at Cleveland Browns L 20–16 6–10
69,871
[[#ref_mnf_record{{{3}}}|^]] Largest margin of victory in Monday Night Football history

Standings[]

Template:2005 AFC North standings

References[]

Advertisement