Ravens Top 100 Countdown: Nos. 50-41 Include Mosley, Peters, Clowney — Plus Where Madubuike’s Comeback Stands
Ravens Top 100 Reaches the Next Tier of Franchise Defenders
The Baltimore Ravens’ all-time Top 100 countdown moves into a new stretch of names, ranking players 50 through 41. This section skews heavily defensive, and it’s stacked with Pro Bowlers and All-Pros who anchored playoff runs across three different eras of Ravens football — from the Ray Lewis handoff years through the Lamar Jackson era.
The Ravens Top 100 list, at this stage, isn’t measuring today’s roster. It’s a retrospective look back at who built the program, and that distinction matters for at least one name on it.
Nos. 50-45: The Defensive Line and Secondary Anchors
Brandon Williams takes No. 50. Drafted in the third round in 2013, Williams spent nearly a decade as Baltimore’s primary run-stopping nose tackle, eating up blockers so the linebackers behind him could make plays.
Jimmy Smith lands at No. 49 after playing his entire 11-year career in Baltimore. A 2011 first-round pick, Smith battled injuries at times but was a key piece of the Super Bowl XLVII roster when healthy.
C.J. Mosley checks in at No. 48. He stepped into the linebacker room after Ray Lewis retired and made four Pro Bowls in five Baltimore seasons — no small task given who he was replacing.
Nnamdi Madubuike ranks No. 47, built around his 2023 All-Pro breakout after Baltimore took him in the third round in 2020. That ranking reflects his peak production rather than his current standing, which has changed considerably since. More on that below.
Marcus Peters takes No. 46. Acquired via trade in 2019, Peters’ turnover instincts helped power one of the best regular seasons in franchise history almost immediately after he arrived.
Calais Campbell rounds out this group at No. 45. Already a respected veteran when Baltimore signed him in 2020, he earned a Pro Bowl nod and became a locker-room fixture for younger defensive linemen.
Nos. 44-41: Clowney, Queen, Clark and Van Noy
Jadeveon Clowney sits at No. 44 for his 2023 revival — 9.5 sacks while the Ravens fielded the league’s top-ranked defense and reached the AFC Championship Game.
Patrick Queen is No. 43. The 2020 first-rounder had a bumpy start before pairing with Roquan Smith and turning into one of the league’s faster, more disruptive linebackers by the 2023 playoff run.
Chuck Clark checks in at No. 42. A sixth-round pick in 2017, Clark worked his way into the starting lineup and became Baltimore’s defensive signal-caller, filling gaps whenever injuries hit the secondary.
Kyle Van Noy closes the group at No. 41, delivering two productive seasons as a veteran pass rusher who helped stabilize a young defense — including a 12.5-sack 2024 campaign.
| Rank | Player | Position | Signature Achievement |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50 | Brandon Williams | NT | Nearly a decade as Baltimore’s primary run-stuffer |
| 49 | Jimmy Smith | CB | Super Bowl XLVII contributor, 11-year Raven |
| 48 | C.J. Mosley | LB | Four Pro Bowls in five seasons |
| 47 | Nnamdi Madubuike | DT | 2023 All-Pro season, 13 sacks |
| 46 | Marcus Peters | CB | Pro Bowl/All-Pro turnover specialist |
| 45 | Calais Campbell | DL | Pro Bowl veteran leadership |
| 44 | Jadeveon Clowney | EDGE | 9.5 sacks in 2023 revival season |
| 43 | Patrick Queen | LB | Pro Bowl breakout in 2023 |
| 42 | Chuck Clark | S | Defensive signal-caller, sixth-round steal |
| 41 | Kyle Van Noy | EDGE | 12.5 sacks in 2024 |
Where Madubuike’s Status Actually Stands Right Now
Here’s the update the original countdown couldn’t have accounted for. Madubuike suffered a serious neck injury in Week 2 of the 2025 season and missed the rest of the year — a situation Baltimore officials, including then-coach John Harbaugh, declined to detail publicly, saying it was Madubuike’s story to tell.
Reported but unconfirmed by named team sources at the time: multiple outlets, citing ESPN’s Adam Schefter, reported in late April 2026 that Madubuike had undergone neck surgery and that doctors believed he’d be able to return during the 2026 season. General manager Eric DeCosta and new head coach Jesse Minter stayed noncommittal about a timeline at the NFL Scouting Combine in early March, with Minter saying only that the team would “have multiple plans in place.” Owner Steve Bisciotti has said Madubuike’s absence had a “domino effect” across Baltimore’s pass rush, pointing to Kyle Van Noy’s sack total dropping from 12.5 in 2024 to two in 2025.
As of the most recent reporting available, Madubuike was participating in Baltimore’s offseason workout program and described by the team’s strength staff as being in good shape, with optimism building toward a 2026 return — though nothing has been stated as a guarantee by the team itself.
Analysis: Why This Group of Rankings Makes Sense
What ties Nos. 50-41 together isn’t star power in the traditional sense — it’s players who filled specific structural roles that let Baltimore’s defense function at a high level year after year. Williams occupied blockers so linebackers could run free. Clark quarterbacked the back end when injuries piled up elsewhere. Queen and Mosley represent two different points in the same linebacker lineage, each stepping into pressure and producing.
Madubuike’s placement is really a snapshot of his peak, not a verdict on where he stands today. If he does return to full health in 2026, his actual career trajectory could eventually push him higher on a list like this — the countdown just happened to be assembled during the uncertain stretch between his injury and any resolution.
What Comes Next
The countdown continues toward the top 40, where the source material notes the gap between players narrows considerably — a reflection, the original piece argues, of how deep Baltimore’s talent pool has been since the franchise’s 1996 debut season.