Ravens fans will love Lamar Jackson's playoff message after Jets win
The Baltimore Ravens have continued their winning ways, with a tough, gritty 23-10 win over the New York Jets.
In a game that won't live long in the memory, Lamar Jackson and Co. did just enough to squeak past Aaron Glenn's team, thanks to Derrick Henry's two rushing touchdowns.
Now at 6-5 after starting 1-5, the Ravens, somewhat incredibly, are now tied for first place in the AFC North with the Pittsburgh Steelers, who continue to stumble after being 4-1 earlier in the year.
The Ravens' train is back on track, and with the franchise still having to face the Steelers twice this season, playoffs are now very much on the agenda.
But Lamar isn't looking too far ahead.
“Feel great,” Lamar said. “Wish we was in a better situation, but five, five, and 0 keep we got to just keep it going. It's a tough division, tough league, we just got to keep going.”
More: AFC North standings: How Ravens win, Steelers loss shake up division race in Week 12
Ravens on incredible run towards division title
It is no secret that even at their lowest point at 1-5, the Ravens' locker room never lost belief, and now, while they aren't firing on all cylinders, they are winning games, which is all that matters right now.
Yes, there are still some tough division games, along with the New England Patriots and Green Bay Packers on the schedule, but the Ravens have now given themselves a genuine shot at the postseason.
A five-game winning streak was the bare minimum, and that is exactly what John Harbaugh's team has done.
Like the Kansas City Chiefs, the Ravens are one team the rest of the AFC hopes misses the playoffs, because who wants to play them in the first week of the postseason?
Vikings Must Consider Trade for $34 Million QB as JJ McCarthy’s Struggles Continue

The Minnesota Vikings don’t have any answers at quarterback outside of JJ McCarthy, which isn’t a situation the franchise is likely to leave absent remedy heading into the 2026 campaign.
After a surprising road win over the Detroit Lions in his return from an ankle injury that sidelined him for the better part of two months, McCarthy has lost his last three starts. In those three losses, McCarthy has completed just 51.6 percent of his passes for an average of 162 air yards per outing to go along with two TDs and six INTs. Minnesota has averaged 14 points per contest across that stretch.

The Vikings turned to Carson Wentz (2-3) for five games during McCarthy’s injury, but Wentz is out for the year following shoulder surgery. Minnesota’s current QB2 is undrafted rookie Max Brosmer who has yet to start an NFL game.
Head coach Kevin O’Connell and general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah bet huge on McCarthy by letting Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones leave in free agency, and McCarthy’s play to this point has cleaned them out and effectively ended the team’s chances at a postseason berth with a 4-7 record in one of the better divisions in football this year.
The Vikings are going to have to make some tough personnel decisions in 2026 due to salary cap issues (currently $37 million in the red), so drafting another QB in the first round is unlikely given all the other needs the team is likely to have. A big and expensive free agency swing doesn’t track either, given Minnesota’s financial situation and the lack of signal-callers headed to the market.
As such, the best move is likely a trade for a high-talent player in need of a fresh start, and Indianapolis Colts QB Anthony Richardson fits the bill.
Anthony Richardson Trade Represents Far Cheaper Option for Vikings Than Signing Quality Free-Agent QB

GettyQuarterback Anthony Richardson of the Indianapolis Colts.
The former No. 4 overall pick of the Colts in 2023, Richardson is still just 23 years old.
He lost his starting job to Jones during the preseason and has made noise about wanting out already. Should the Colts re-sign Jones to a multiyear contract, which appears likely after an 8-3 start and legitimate playoff aspirations, Richardson makes sense as a trade candidate.
Richardson will not be nearly as expensive as even a middle-of-the road veteran free agent would be. He will play the fourth and final year of his $34 million rookie contract in 2026, assuming whichever team holds his deal come next spring decides not to option the fifth-year attached to the initial agreement of every first-round pick.
Kevin O’Connell, JJ McCarthy Reaffirm Confidence in Coach-QB Relationship

GettyMinnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell.
Richardson is a project with an extensive injury history across a short professional career, exactly the same as McCarthy. The difference is Richardson has at least as talented an arm as McCarthy and far more explosive abilities than McCarthy will ever possess.
The Vikings need some QB insurance, and O’Connell and Adofo-Mensah will risk losing their jobs if they throw away two seasons in a row with a playoff-caliber roster because they doubled down on McCarthy in 2026 without a viable backup plan.
McCarthy made it clear that he’s still confident following a six-point showing in a blowout loss to the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, November 23.
“Confidence is always high, no matter what, because the guys in that room, because of the trust and faith in my abilities,”
However, O’Connell acknowledged the difficulties his young QB is experiencing and the kind of pressure that puts on everyone else on the roster to play essentially perfect football.
“[You want to] give him a chance to grow but not [put] the game totally in his hands, where the variance of a young quarterback will cost our whole team,” O’Connell said. “And I think there’s a needle to thread there.”