Ravens End Losing Streak With Tyler Huntley-Led Win Over the Chicago Bears


The crisp autumn air at M&T Bank Stadium carried a palpable hushed tension before Sunday’s kickoff—an urgency born not of playoff hopes, but of survival. For the Baltimore Ravens, the stakes weren’t hypothetical: a four-game losing streak, a season slipping farther from expectation, and a home crowd longing for one spark. Into that moment stepped Tyler Huntley, the veteran backup thrust into the starting role and tasked with igniting a turnaround. Under those lights, with pressure crackling through the stadium, the Ravens delivered: a 30-16 win over the Chicago Bears—and a long-awaited exhale for Baltimore.
Uneasy Beginnings, But a Shift in Momentum
Baltimore entered the game clinging to hope rather than confidence. Their offense looked stagnant, the defense shaky, and the cumulative weight of defeat was visible in the locker room. Meanwhile the Bears, on a four-game win streak, looked to build further momentum on the road. Early on, Chicago seemed to have the Ravens’ number—twice driving deep into Baltimore territory yet leaving only two field goals behind. By the end of the first quarter, the Bears enjoyed lopsided numbers in possession, yardage, and tempo. chicagobears.com+2PressBox+2
But the game’s narrative began to bend. While the Bears racked up front-page stats, the Ravens held strong when it mattered most—red zone stops, pivotal third-downs, and a defense that wouldn’t buckle. The decisive shift came on a fourth-quarter interception by cornerback Nate Wiggins, which set up a touchdown pass from Huntley to tight end Charlie Kolar and extended Baltimore’s lead beyond reach. PressBox+1
By then, the Ravens weren’t simply playing to break a skid—they were playing to reclaim identity.
Huntley Seizes the Moment
When the season began, Huntley’s name ranked quietly behind the more familiar face of Lamar Jackson, sidelined this week with a hamstring injury. Coach John Harbaugh had hinted the offense needed a spark—but few expected such a clear pivot. Huntley completed 17 of 22 passes for 186 yards and a touchdown, and added 53 rushing yards. Crucially: no turnovers. Reuters+1
The visual: Huntley jogging out of the huddle with clear eyes, the decisive roll-out and strike to Kolar, the leg-drive run that picked up a gutsy first down. Each play conveyed a message to teammates and fans alike—he was ready, and so was this team. As Harbaugh put it post-game, “Tyler was the answer for today’s game.” PressBox
In the stands, Ravens supporters whispered it among themselves: “Finally.” After weeks of near-misses and frustration, Huntley’s execution delivered more than points—it delivered hope.
An Offensive Rebound Anchored by a Legend
While Huntley directed the show, the offense found its physical identity through Derrick Henry. The now-veteran running back churned out two touchdowns, moved past Hall-of-Famer Walter Payton into fifth all-time in rushing touchdowns, and restored a facet of Baltimore’s power game that had seemed dormant. Reuters+1
But it wasn’t simply the stat line. On key drives, Henry’s north-south carries forced the Bears’ defense into rugged terrain. The offense balanced tempo and structure, mixing in veteran pass-catchers like DeAndre Hopkins and fresh breakout plays from young weapons like Zay Flowers. The result: the Ravens didn’t just win—they looked like a unit believing in itself. The second quarter, in particular, showcased this turnaround: Baltimore outgained Chicago 138-43 across plays in that period. PressBox

Defense, Momentum & the Undercurrent of Change
On the defensive side, the Ravens finally flipped one of their most troubling scripts: tackling in the red zone, creating turnovers, and pressuring the QB. Rookie edge rusher Mike Green logged his first career sack; Wiggins’ interception offered a clear momentum spike; and veteran linebacker Roquan Smith—against his former team—led with 12 tackles and thundered through runs when needed most. baltimoreravens.com+1
The significance: after weeks of defensive breakdowns, the Ravens held a 4-3 Bears offense—previously efficient—to just 16 points. It was their lowest total allowed this season. Their front-seven, for once, took the initiative rather than reacting. And after a bye week of self-scrutiny, they seemed refreshed. baltimoreravens.com
It wasn’t perfect. The Ravens still face questions about consistent pass rush and red-zone efficiency—but for one game, the pieces clicked.
A Crowd, a City, and an Exhalation
From the moment the clock ticked to zero, the exhale in Baltimore was audible. Fans rose, cameras flashed, and players embraced once strangers became teammates. In the locker room, Harbaugh allowed himself a measured smile—knowing that this win, though significant, didn’t erase the holes. “By no means does this mean that things are over,” he reminded. “But… this was a really important game for our team.” baltimoreravens.com
For the city that lives and breathes Ravens football, it was more than a scoreboard flip—it was a narrative reset. The franchise’s identity has long been carved from hard-nosed defense, power running, and opportunistic offense. After a start that lacked each piece, this win felt like a rediscovery of self.
What Now? A Short-Week Test & a Chance to Build
While Sunday’s result offers relief, it also opens the door to fresh challenge. The Ravens now face a short-week matchup on the road against the Miami Dolphins—a game that looms large for their trajectory. According to Harbaugh’s post-game comments, he hopes Jackson returns for that contest; but whether he does or not, the Ravens need to prove this isn’t a one-off. PressBox+1
They now stand at 2-5. That’s hardly where a contender wants to be. But in football, the next win matters as much as the last. If this victory can pivot into a two-game streak, suddenly the conversation shifts from “recovery” to “credibility.”
Huntley isn’t the long-term solution—Jackson remains the cornerstone—but for now, he offers clarity and momentum. The running game feels revived. The defense flashed its old ferocity. The fan base remembers what happens when all three phases click.
Final Reflection
In sports, as in life, the return of belief often precedes the return of success. For the Ravens, Sunday offered a moment of collective breath—in a season that had often felt like holding one. Tyler Huntley’s poised performance, Derrick Henry’s landmark milestone, the defense’s resurgence—all combined to form more than just a win. They formed hope re-ignited.
Now the architecture of the season lies ahead: showing whether this game becomes an inflection point or simply a footnote. For Baltimore’s players, coaches and fans, the next 48 hours will feel lighter, the walk to the stadium less burdened. The question is: will the Ravens carry this uplift forward?
Because one win won’t define them—but one win done the right way might just begin to.