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Home » This Week » Ravens OC Todd Monken says he ‘didn’t coach Lamar [Jackson] well enough’
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Ravens OC Todd Monken says he ‘didn’t coach Lamar [Jackson] well enough’

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: January 9, 2026 1:48 pm
Yeti NewsBot
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Ravens OC Todd Monken says he 'didn't coach Lamar [Jackson] well enough'

Ravens OC Todd Monken Takes Full Blame: “I Didn’t Coach Lamar Jackson Well Enough”

In the high-stakes world of the NFL, accountability is a currency as valuable as talent. Rarely, however, is it paid out so publicly and so unequivocally. In a stunning moment of introspection, Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken has shouldered the full burden for the team’s disappointing 2025 season, placing the onus squarely on his own shoulders for the statistical regression of franchise quarterback Lamar Jackson. His candid admission, “I didn’t coach Lamar well enough,” reverberates through a Baltimore offseason shrouded in unexpected uncertainty, forcing a hard examination of what went wrong and what must be rebuilt.

Contents
  • A Stark Admission in the Aftermath of a Lost Season
  • The Statistical Decline: Quantifying a Step Back
  • Expert Analysis: Beyond the Numbers, a Relationship in Need of Repair
  • Predictions and Pathways for the 2026 Ravens Offense
  • Conclusion: Accountability as the First Step Toward Redemption

A Stark Admission in the Aftermath of a Lost Season

The 2025 NFL season was a paradox for the Baltimore Ravens. Coming off a 2024 campaign where they boasted the league’s top offense and Lamar Jackson delivered an MVP-caliber performance, expectations were at a zenith. The crash back to earth was jarring. An 8-9 finish, third in the AFC North, marked the team’s first absence from the postseason since 2021. While injuries were a pervasive theme, Monken refused to use them as a crutch in his recent conversation with Ryan Ripken.

“I didn’t coach Lamar well enough,” Monken stated bluntly. “I didn’t have as good of a relationship as I could have. I didn’t do the things we needed to do this year to win enough games to give ourselves a chance. I believe that.” This level of coaching accountability from a high-profile coordinator is a powerful, if sobering, starting point for the Ravens’ autopsy. Monken didn’t cite Jackson’s nagging injuries, which limited him to 13 games, or the inevitable wear and tear on the roster. He pointed directly at the mirror, framing the season’s failure as a coaching failure first and foremost.

The Statistical Decline: Quantifying a Step Back

Monken’s admission is underscored by a dramatic shift in Lamar Jackson’s production. The quarterback who seemed to have mastered Monken’s system in 2024 looked out of sync and constrained for much of 2025. The numbers paint a clear picture of a disrupted rhythm:

  • Passing Yards Per Game: Fell by 49.3 yards (from 245.4 in 2024 to 196.1 in 2025).
  • Touchdown Passes: A staggering drop of 20 touchdowns, from 41 to 21.
  • Completion Volume: Threw fewer than 200 completions for the first time since his 2018 rookie year.
  • Offensive Output: The Ravens’ offense, which led the NFL at 424.9 yards per game in 2024, fell out of the top 10.

“I really wish Lamar would have been healthy and seen what we kept building on,” Monken lamented. “Where we went from ’23 to ’24, and then we just never got it going. That’s what you have to live with.” This sentiment highlights the core frustration: the offensive stagnation wasn’t just about Jackson’s health, but about an inability to adapt the scheme to the personnel available and to maintain the explosive momentum they had meticulously built.

Expert Analysis: Beyond the Numbers, a Relationship in Need of Repair

Monken’s reference to his relationship with Jackson is perhaps the most telling part of his mea culpa. The coordinator-quarterback dynamic is the engine of any modern NFL offense. When that synergy falters, the entire operation sputters. Analysts point to several potential fissures:

Injury Adaptation: Did Monken fail to adequately tailor the offense when Jackson was less than 100% mobile, robbing the QB of his dual-threat foundation without providing a reliable alternative structure?

Philosophical Drift: After a 2024 season that saw Jackson thrive as a prolific passer within the system, was there an over-correction or a loss of the creative, unpredictable elements that make Jackson uniquely dangerous?

Communication Breakdown: Monken’s “relationship” comment suggests a possible disconnect in play-calling, game planning, or in-game adjustments. The trust required for a QB to play freely seemed diminished.

This offseason introspection is critical for the Ravens’ future. Jackson is the franchise cornerstone, and ensuring he is in an ecosystem that maximizes his otherworldly talents is non-negotiable. Monken’s comments, while jarring, at least establish a baseline of honesty from which to rebuild that essential partnership.

Predictions and Pathways for the 2026 Ravens Offense

Where do the Ravens go from here? Monken’s future with the team is now the subject of intense speculation, though his contract situation remains unclear. His statement—”I’m going to fight like hell for the next job I get and I’m going to root like hell for the Ravens”—has an air of finality, suggesting he anticipates moving on.

If Monken departs, Baltimore will be seeking a coordinator who can:

  • Re-engage Lamar Jackson philosophically and personally, rebuilding the trust and collaborative spirit.
  • Design an offense that seamlessly blends Jackson’s transcendent dual-threat capabilities with a consistent, efficient passing structure.
  • Demonstrate superior in-game adaptability, especially when dealing with the inevitable physical challenges Jackson faces over a 17-game season.

If, against the odds, Monken returns, the mandate is even clearer. He must act on his own diagnosis. The entire offseason program must be dedicated to reforging that relationship, studying the 2024 tape to recapture what worked, and honestly assessing the 2025 miscues. The front office must also assist by bolstering the offensive line and receiving corps to provide Jackson with more margin for error.

Conclusion: Accountability as the First Step Toward Redemption

Todd Monken’s public self-critique is a rare and powerful moment in the NFL. In a league where blame is often diffused, he consolidated it. “I didn’t coach Lamar well enough” is a sentence that will define this Ravens offseason. It validates the concerns of fans who watched a soaring offense plummet, and it respectfully absolves Lamar Jackson, the team’s most important asset, from shouldering the narrative alone.

The 2025 season is now a stark lesson in how fragile NFL success can be. A top-ranked offense, an MVP-level quarterback, and proven coaching can unravel quickly without synergy, health, and adaptation. For the Ravens, the path back to AFC supremacy begins with fixing the core relationship between coach and quarterback. Whether Monken is the one to repair it or a new voice is brought in, his candid admission has set the stage for a pivotal offseason in Baltimore. The goal is no longer just to build an elite offense, but to build one that is resilient, relationship-driven, and capable of carrying the weight of championship expectations—with a healthy, empowered Lamar Jackson at its center.


Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.

TAGGED:2020 NFL draftBaltimore RavensLamar Jackson and Harbaugh relationshipNick Sirianni offensive coordinatorTodd Monken
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