The RavensâÂÂTitans rivalry is a professional American football rivalry between the Baltimore Ravens and the Tennessee Titans in the National Football LeagueâÂÂs American Football Conference. Originally divisional rivals in the AFC Central, the Ravens and Titans eventually moved into the AFC North and AFC South, respectively. The teams have met in the playoffs five times (the visiting team has won all five games) and are both known for their strong defensive play. The rivalry is one of the tightest in the NFL with the Ravens leading 14âÂÂ13; (the Ravens presently lead in overall points scored 506âÂÂ451), and the road team has won sixteen of the first twenty-seven meetings through 2023. In 2020, CBS ranked it as the No. 7 NFL rivalry of the 2000s.
Furthermore, both teams do not play every year as they play in different divisions; instead, they play once every three years and once every six seasons at each team's home stadium due to the NFL's rotating division schedules during which their respective divisions are paired up, if they meet in the playoffs, or if the two teams finish in the same place in their respective divisions, they would play each other the following season.
The rivalry between the Baltimore Ravens and the then-Houston Oilers began in when the Ravens were founded as a result of the Cleveland Browns' relocation to Baltimore and subsequent deactivation. The Ravens assumed Cleveland's place in the AFC Central, in which the Oilers were also a member. As divisional rivals, the Ravens played the Oilers/Titans twice a year from 1996 through , which encompassed the Oilers' move to Tennessee and name change from "Oilers" to "Titans." The teams met 13 times during these years, including once in the playoffs: a 24âÂÂ10 Ravens win in the .
When the Houston Texans were established in , the now 32-team league realigned into four-team divisions. The Ravens were placed in the AFC North while the Titans were placed in the AFC South. As a result, the two teams would only meet sporadically from this point on. However, despite moving into separate divisions, the strong enmity that the two teams had for each other during the 2000s. The Ravens and Titans would meet in the regular season at least once every three years when the AFC North plays the AFC South in the schedule rotation. During other seasons, the Ravens and Titans would only play each other if both teams finished in the same spot in their respective divisions the prior season (for example, both teams finished second place in their divisions in , so they played each other in ).
Throughout the history of the rivalry, the teams have met in the playoffs five times, with the Ravens leading 3âÂÂ2. The away team has won every playoff meeting. The Titans were twice upset by the Ravens as the AFC's top seed (in 2000 and 2008), while the Titans upset the top-seeded Ravens in 2019.
|- | | style="| Oilers 2âÂÂ0 | style="| Oilers <br /> 24âÂÂ21 | style="| Oilers <br /> 29âÂÂ13 | Oilers <br /> 2âÂÂ0 | Ravens' inaugural season. The rivalry begins as both teams are members of the AFC Central. The only season in the rivalry, the Titans franchise was still in Houston. |- | | style="| Ravens 2âÂÂ0 | style="| Ravens <br /> 21âÂÂ19 | style="| Ravens <br /> 36âÂÂ10 | Tie <br /> 2âÂÂ2 | Oilers' first season in Tennessee. |- | | style="| Oilers 2âÂÂ0 | style="| Oilers <br /> 12âÂÂ8 | style="| Oilers <br /> 16âÂÂ14 | Oilers <br /> 4âÂÂ2 | Meeting in Baltimore was the first meeting at M&T Bank Stadium. It is also the last season that the Titans franchise was named the Oilers. |- | | Tie 1âÂÂ1 | style="| Ravens <br /> 41âÂÂ14 | style="| Titans <br /> 14âÂÂ11 | Titans <br /> 5âÂÂ3 | Meeting in Tennessee was the first meeting at Nissan Stadium and as the "Tennessee Titans". Titans lose Super Bowl XXXIV. |-
|- | rowspan="2"| | style="| Titans <br /> 14âÂÂ6 | PSINet Stadium | rowspan="2"| Titans <br /> 6âÂÂ4 | |- | style="| Ravens <br /> 24âÂÂ23 | Adelphia Coliseum | Ravens' win snapped the Titans 13-game home winning streak. |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2000 Playoffs | style="| Ravens <br /> 24âÂÂ10 | Adelphia Coliseum | Titans <br /> 6âÂÂ5 | AFC Divisional Round. Both of the Titans' home losses on the season were at the hands of the Ravens. Only postseason meeting as AFC Central rivals. The Ravens broke a 10âÂÂ10 tie in the fourth quarter on a 90-yard blocked field goal return and a 50-yard interception return. Ravens win Super Bowl XXXV. |- | rowspan="2"| | style="| Ravens <br /> 26âÂÂ7 | PSINet Stadium | rowspan="2"| Ravens <br /> 7âÂÂ6 | |- | style="| Ravens <br /> 16âÂÂ10 | Adelphia Coliseum | Last meeting as AFC Central rivals. Ravens take their first lead in the series of the rivalry. |- | | style="| Ravens <br /> 13âÂÂ12 | Ravens Stadium | Ravens <br /> 8âÂÂ6 |The Ravens stay in the newly named AFC North, while the Titans are moved into the newly created AFC South. |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2003 Playoffs | style="| Titans <br /> 20âÂÂ17 | M&T Bank Stadium | Ravens <br /> 8âÂÂ7 | AFC Wild Card Round. Gary Anderson kicks the game-winning field goal with 29 seconds remaining as the Titans advance. |- | | style="| Titans <br /> 25âÂÂ10 | The Coliseum | Tie <br /> 8âÂÂ8 | |- | | style="| Ravens <br /> 27âÂÂ26 | LP Field | Ravens <br /> 9âÂÂ8 | Steve McNairâÂÂs only game against his former team.<br>Ravens overcame a 26âÂÂ7 deficit and block a potential game-winning 43-yard field goal by Titans kicker Rob Bironas. |- | | style="| Titans <br /> 13âÂÂ10 | M&T Bank Stadium | Tie <br /> 9âÂÂ9 | |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2008 Playoffs | style="| Ravens <br /> 13âÂÂ10 | LP Field | Ravens <br /> 10âÂÂ9 | AFC Divisional Round. Matt Stover kicks the game-winning field goal with 57 seconds remaining as the Ravens advance. Ravens' QB Joe Flacco becomes the first rookie quarterback to win two playoff games. The Titans get upset as the #1 seed in the divisional round for the second time at the hands of the Ravens. |-
|- | | style="| Titans <br /> 26âÂÂ13 | LP Field | Tie <br /> 10âÂÂ10 | |- | | style="| Ravens <br /> 21âÂÂ7 | M&T Bank Stadium | Ravens <br /> 11âÂÂ10 | |- | | style="| Titans <br /> 23âÂÂ20 | Nissan Stadium | Tie <br /> 11âÂÂ11 | |- | | style="| Ravens <br /> 21âÂÂ0 | Nissan Stadium | Ravens <br /> 12âÂÂ11 | |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2019 Playoffs | style=""| Titans <br /> 28âÂÂ12 | M&T Bank Stadium | Tie <br /> 12âÂÂ12 | AFC Divisional Round. Titans avenge previous playoff losses to the Ravens as the #1 seed by dominating the 14âÂÂ2 Ravens and halting their 12-game winning streak. First time in NFL history that the away team wins the first four meetings in any postseason matchup between two franchises. Also marks the third time that the #1 seed has been eliminated in the divisional round in the rivalry (2000, 2008, 2019), and the first time following that criterion that the Titans beat the Ravens.<br>Titans' win snapped the Ravens 12-game winning streak. |-
|- | | style="| Titans <br /> | M&T Bank Stadium | Titans <br /> 13âÂÂ12 | Referees had to break up a pregame argument between Ravens head coach John Harbaugh and Titans CB Malcolm Butler. Titans rally from a 21âÂÂ10 deficit midway through the third quarter. First overtime meeting in the rivalry. |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2020 Playoffs | style="| Ravens <br /> 20âÂÂ13 | Nissan Stadium | Tie <br /> 13âÂÂ13 | AFC Wild Card Round. Ravens overcome early 10âÂÂ0 deficit to avenge their playoff loss to the Titans the previous season. The away team has won all five postseason meetings to date. |- | | style="| Ravens <br /> 24âÂÂ16 | Tottenham Hotspur Stadium | Ravens <br /> 14âÂÂ13 | Game played as part of the NFL International Series, officially a Titans home game |-
|- | Regular Season | Tie 11âÂÂ11 | Tie 5âÂÂ5 | Tie 6âÂÂ6 | |- | Postseason games | style="| | Titans 2âÂÂ0 | Ravens 3âÂÂ0 | AFC Wild Card: , <br>AFC Divisional: , , |- | Regular and postseason | style="| | Titans 7âÂÂ5 | Ravens 9âÂÂ6 | |-