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Malik Harrison Calls Ravens “Terrible,” Says Steelers Signing Is About Revenge

Linebacker Malik Harrison didn’t hold back when asked about his decision to leave the Baltimore Ravens and sign with their AFC North rivals, the Pittsburgh Steelers. In a recent interview following OTA workouts, Harrison stunned reporters by calling his former team “terrible” — and made it clear that joining the Steelers was about payback.

“I was stuck in a terrible situation in Baltimore,” Harrison said. “No direction. No trust. Coming to Pittsburgh isn’t just a fresh start — it’s personal.”

From Third-Round Pick to AFC North Firestarter

Drafted by the Ravens in the 3rd round of the 2020 NFL Draft, Malik Harrison spent four seasons in Baltimore, where he was often used in rotational roles despite showing flashes of starting-caliber ability. While his raw stats weren’t eye-popping, he was known for his consistency against the run and ability to track sideline-to-sideline.

But according to Harrison, the problem wasn’t playing time — it was culture.

“They didn’t know how to use me. They didn’t want to believe in me. I got tired of it,” he said. “This year, they’ll see what happens when I’m actually unleashed.”

Steelers Embrace the Edge

The Pittsburgh Steelers have never shied away from adding players with a chip on their shoulder — and Malik Harrison fits the mold. Head coach Mike Tomlin praised Harrison’s “focus and hunger” in minicamp and said he expects him to be a contributor from Day 1.

Pairing Harrison with Patrick Queen, another former Raven now wearing black and gold, gives the Steelers one of the more intriguing linebacker duos in the AFC.

“We know where we came from. But we’re here now,” Harrison added. “And I’m locked in.”

Rivalry Just Got Personal

Pittsburgh Steelers Sign Another Baltimore Ravens LB

The Ravens-Steelers rivalry has always been one of the fiercest in football. It’s known for physical hits, playoff implications, and generational grudges. But Harrison’s comments might add a whole new layer of intensity to the next matchup.

The Steelers and Ravens are set to face each other twice during the 2025 regular season, with the first clash scheduled for Week 9 at M&T Bank Stadium.

“I circled that date the second I signed,” Harrison said.

Fan Reactions Mixed

Ravens fans were quick to fire back on social media, calling Harrison “bitter” and “overrated,” while Steelers fans largely embraced his fire.

One top-liked reply summed it up:

“Nothing wrong with a little hate if it fuels the win. Let’s ride, Malik.”

Cowboys WR Admits Heartbreaking Truth About “Meaningless” Breakout After Bitter Week 14 Loss to Lions
Ryan Flournoy just dropped 115 yards and a 42-yard touchdown in place of an injured CeeDee Lamb… and then told everyone it means absolutely NOTHING. The Dallas Cowboys rookie wide receiver, who has now posted back-to-back impressive games, was brutally honest after the crushing Week 14 defeat to the Detroit Lions: “Not sweet, it’s bitter,” Flournoy said. “I did all that to win. None of them stats really impressed me.” From a forgotten depth piece to sudden WR3 contender in just two weeks: 34 yards vs Chiefs on Thanksgiving 115 yards + 1 TD vs Lions in Week 14 Dak Prescott trusted him on multiple third-down conversions and hit him for the explosive score, yet Flournoy refuses to celebrate. “I just want to go out there, play with these guys, have fun, and WIN,” he added. “Losing makes everything pointless.” While fans and analysts are calling it his official “coming-out party,” Flournoy basically threw his own breakout performance in the trash because the scoreboard didn’t end in Dallas’ favor. This raw “win-or-it’s-worthless” mentality has Cowboys Nation buzzing: Is Flournoy putting too much pressure on himself as a rookie? Or is this exactly the fire Dallas desperately needs in a season derailed by injuries? One thing is crystal clear: Ryan Flournoy doesn’t care about your fantasy points or highlight reels. He only cares about one thing, VICTORY. Next week, all eyes will be on “Flo” again. Can he finally turn that bitterness into something sweet? Drop your thoughts below: Is Flournoy’s mindset genius… or dangerous?