Baltimore Ravens WR Free Agent Targets 2026

The Baltimore Ravens enter free agency with a clear offensive identity built around Lamar Jackson’s mobility and a run-first philosophy that still needs consistent vertical and contested receiving threats.

While they have DeAndre Hopkins and Tylan Wallace hitting the market, it’s trending towards both not being back on the team if the price is right. Besides that, the receiver group is headlined by standout Zay Flowers, but has a lack of depth with Devontez Walker, Lajohntay Wester, Rashod Bateman, and Dayton Wade.

Targeting a veteran wideout in free agency would be a shortcut to adding proven playmakers rather than waiting on the draft. Three names that repeatedly surface in offseason chatter are Tyreek Hill, Mike Evans, and Deebo Samuel: each offering a distinct profile that could reshape Baltimore’s passing game. 

Lamar Could Use Some Speed

Hill remains one of the most explosive receivers in the league when healthy. His release from Miami has made him an immediate headline in free agency and opened the door for teams willing to pay for elite downfield separation and return of big-play production.

Hill’s recent knee injury and age complicate contract structure and availability, but his ability to stretch defenses vertically would complement Jackson’s improvisational style and force opponents to respect the deep ball.

DraftKings listed the Ravens among the early favorites to land Hill, signaling league belief that Baltimore is a realistic suitor, especially if he doesn’t reunite with Patrick Mahomes in Kansas City.

Baltimore Needs More Contested Catch Threats

Evans brings a different, more traditional skill set: size, catch radius, and a long track record of scoring in the red zone. Even as his yardage totals have fluctuated, Evans remains a reliable target on third downs and in tight spaces where contested catches matter most.

For the Ravens, Evans would provide a dependable vertical and red-zone complement to Jackson’s scrambling and the team’s run game, potentially improving touchdown efficiency without requiring a wholesale schematic change.

Ravens Could Use a YAC Demon

Samuel’s hybrid usage as a receiver and runner makes him a unique chess piece. He creates mismatches in the slot, on jet sweeps, and in short-yardage situations where his contact balance and YAC ability turn routine plays into chunk gains.

Baltimore could use that versatility to design more creative packages for Jackson, adding a physical element to the receiving corps that can also relieve pressure on the running game. Wear-and-tear is a consideration given Samuel’s usage history, but his upside as a multi-dimensional weapon is clear.

Baltimore Ravens FA Targets

Each of these free agents would materially alter the Ravens’ offense in different ways. Hill would inject elite speed and vertical threat; Evans would stabilize contested catches and scoring; Samuel would add versatility and physicality.

The choice between these targets comes down to need, cap flexibility, and risk tolerance. Hill is the highest-ceiling, highest-risk option who immediately changes how defenses play Baltimore. Evans is the steadier, lower-risk veteran who improves red-zone efficiency. Samuel offers schematic flexibility and toughness but may command a premium for his unique role.

Baltimore’s decision will reveal whether the team prioritizes explosive upside, dependable scoring, or schematic creativity as it chases another title. The Ravens’ front office must weigh short-term championship windows against long-term roster balance when structuring any deal.

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Andrew Kim
Andrew Kim

Baltimore Ravens, NFL, and Fantasy Football Writer