- Jamison Hensley  - Jamison Hensley - ESPN Staff Writer - Jamison Hensley is a reporter covering the Baltimore Ravens for ESPN. Jamison joined ESPN in 2011, covering the AFC North before focusing exclusively on the Ravens beginning in 2013. Jamison won the National Sports Media Association Maryland Sportswriter of the Year award in 2018, and he authored a book titled: Flying High: Stories of the Baltimore Ravens. He was the Ravens beat writer for the Baltimore Sun from 2000-2011.
 
- Marcel Louis-Jacques  - Marcel Louis-Jacques - ESPN - Marcel Louis-Jacques joined ESPN in 2019 as a beat reporter covering the Buffalo Bills, before switching to the Miami Dolphins in 2021. The former Carolina Panthers beat writer for the Charlotte Observer won the APSE award for breaking news and the South Carolina Press Association award for enterprise writing in 2018.
 
Oct 30, 2025, 11:09 PM ET
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. -- If there had been any doubt, Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson made sure the football world knew he was back.
In his first game in 32 days, Jackson threw four touchdown passes in a 28-6 win over the Miami Dolphins on Thursday night. The two-time NFL Most Valuable Player had missed the past three games with a hamstring injury, but he didn't show much rust in his return.
Jackson completed 18 of 23 attempts for 204 yards as he once again celebrated in South Florida, where he grew up. Of Jackson's 13 games with four or more touchdown passes, three have come against the Dolphins -- his most against any team.
In winning their second game in five days, the Ravens improved to 3-5 and appear set to go on a run. Baltimore's next four opponents -- at the Vikings and Browns and home against the Jets and Bengals -- are a combined 9-22 (.290). The Ravens are now 1.5 games back of the AFC North first-place Pittsburgh Steelers (4-3), who play host to the Indianapolis Colts (7-1) on Sunday.
Here are the most important things to know from Thursday night for both teams:


Baltimore Ravens (3-5)
What to make of the QB performance: There was a question on how much Jackson would run coming off a hamstring injury. He only had five rushing attempts but his 13-yard scramble in the third quarter converted a third down to extend what would be a touchdown drive. Jackson was elusive in the pocket and threw three touchdown passes when under duress, which are the most by a quarterback this season.
Trend to watch: The Ravens held a team under 17 points or fewer in three straight games, which ties the longest steak by any team this season. This is quite a turnaround for a Baltimore defense that had been heavily criticized after allowing an NFL-worst 35.4 points per game in the first five weeks of the season. It can be chalked up to the Ravens defense getting healthier and not having to face the likes of Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes and Jared Goff, which they did in the first month of the season. With two forced fumbles and an interception, the Ravens recorded their most turnovers since they had three in their last meeting against the Dolphins in 2023.
Stat to know: Andrews certainly enjoyed the return of Jackson, catching touchdown passes of 2 and 20 yards in the first half. This was Andrews' 12th career game with multiple touchdown catches, which are the most by any tight end since he entered the league in 2018. Andrews has caught 48 touchdown passes in Jackson's 90 starts and has totaled five touchdown receptions in 21 games when Jackson was sidelined. -- Jamison Hensley
Next game: at Minnesota Vikings (1 p.m. ET, Nov. 9)

Miami Dolphins (2-7)
Even if Thursday night was the first Dolphins game you watched all season, don't worry -- you've essentially seen them all.
The Dolphins outgained Baltimore in the first half, won the time of possession battle, averaged nearly 6 yards per play and held a Lamar Jackson-led offense to just 109 yards -- but still trailed 14-6 at halftime thanks to a series of all-too-characteristic miscues.
There were the ones that were their fault: a false start on fourth-and-one that set up a missed 35-yard field goal, an incomplete pass on fourth-and-two from deep in the red zone, and a lost fumble on their own 18 that set up Baltimore's first touchdown of the night. There was also the one that wasn't their fault -- a questionable tripping call on running back Ollie Gordon II that wiped out a 36-yard catch.
The frustration on the sideline wasn't just palpable -- it was filmed in high definition. Both coach Mike McDaniel and Gordon were shown mid-outburst in the first half, all while the Ravens looked like the team destined to turn around their sub-.500 start to the season. Miami now enters a 10-day mini-bye before hosting the Buffalo Bills in Week 10 and travelling to Madrid to play the Washington Commanders in Week 11. With the trade deadline coming Tuesday and a 2-7 record weighing down any optimism for this season, it's reasonable to wonder how different this roster -- or coaching staff -- will look the next time Miami takes the field.
QB Breakdown: One week after carving up the Falcons' league-leading pass defense for 4 touchdowns, Tua Tagovailoa came down to earth a bit against Baltimore.
His connection with receiver Jaylen Waddle looked sharp in the first half, and he showed a burgeoning chemistry with tight end Greg Dulcich. But Miami struggled to stretch the field outside of Waddle and the Ravens largely kept the ball in front of them. Tagovailoa got the ball out quickly, but struggled when his first read wasn't there. On pass attempts within 2.5 seconds of snapping the ball, Tagovailoa completed 17-of-23 passes for 197 yards. On attempts that took longer than 2.5 seconds, he completed just 5-of-11 passes for 35 yards with a -23.2% completion percentage over expectation. He finished 25 of 40 for 261 yards with no TDs and the pick.
Biggest hole in gameplan: The Dolphins ran the ball 37 times in last week's win over the Falcons; obviously, the game script impacted its playcalling Thursday night but Miami ran the ball 20 times against the Ravens with De'Von Achane handling 14 of those attempts. Before the game got out of control, the Dolphins failed to set the tone at the line of scrimmage like they did in Week 9, turned the ball over three times without taking it away, and came away empty-handed in three red zone trips. That's a nearly guaranteed recipe for losing a game.
Most surprising performance: All of it. Miami turned in a complete effort last week in what players and coaches called one of their best complementary games under McDaniel. They spoke all week about staying consistent and not allowing that win to be a one-off. But all three phases fell flat Thursday. Miami didn't look like a team ready to turn the corner; it looked like a 2-7 team.
Turning point: On second and 1 early in the second quarter, Tagovailoa found Waddle for a 36-yard gain that gave Miami the ball at the Ravens' 7-yard line -- but any celebration was cut short by flag in the backfield. Gordon was penalized for tripping Ravens linebacker Mike Green, but he had appeared to slip and accidentally fall into Green. The Dolphins punted two plays later and Gordon was seen irate on the sideline. Miami managed to cut its deficit to 14-6 on its following drive but failed to convert on fourth down from the Ravens' 13-yard line just before the half. The Dolphins' felt lifeless after that and failed to put points on the board for the remainder of the night. -- Marcel Louis-Jacques
Next game: vs. Buffalo Bills (1 p.m. ET, Nov. 9)
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