Logo

Beloved Ravens Super Star Signs One-Day Contract to Retire at 30 in Purple & Black

Article image

M&T Bank Stadium welcomed home one of its steadiest workhorses on Wednesday, as beloved running back Gus “The Bus” Edwards signed a symbolic one-day contract to retire as a Raven at 30.

For the Ravens Flock, it was more than ceremonial paperwork—it was an emotional homecoming for a back who ran with grit, humility, and relentless consistency. Edwards, known for his bruising style and 230-pound frame, was never about flash. But when Baltimore needed tough yards, The Bus rumbled forward. His punishing north-south runs became a heartbeat of the offense and a chant that rolled through the stands on cold AFC North nights.

Undrafted in 2018, Edwards clawed his way onto the roster through sheer persistence and quickly embodied the Ravens’ smash-mouth identity—converting third-and-short, grinding clock in the fourth quarter, and wearing down defenses alongside Lamar Jackson. From 2018–2022, he averaged nearly 5.0 yards per carry, placing him among the league’s most efficient backs. His signature moments came in the grind-it-out wins: clock-killing drives in Pittsburgh, tackle-shedding sprints under primetime lights, and steady production when injuries ravaged the backfield.

Though roster moves and cap realities eventually took him elsewhere, Edwards’ heart never left Baltimore. Even in another jersey, he spoke of the Ravens as family and of Charm City as the place that gave him his shot.

Gus was the embodiment of Ravens football,” head coach John Harbaugh said. “Tough, reliable, humble—he gave everything for this team and this city. He’ll always be a Raven.”

For Ravens fans, the one-day contract is more than closure—it’s recognition of years of bruising carries and a warrior’s spirit. Edwards’ retirement cements a legacy written not with headlines, but with heart and hard yards.

 

Ex-Eagles Super Bowl Champion Safety Takes Pay Cut to Join Ravens
The Baltimore Ravens have officially added one of the NFL’s most disruptive defensive playmakers to their secondary — a veteran safety whose range, instincts, and edge bring immediate attitude to the back end. The move underscores Baltimore’s urgency to stabilize a banged-up defense and keep pace in a tightening AFC North race. That veteran is C.J. Gardner-Johnson, a recent Super Bowl champion in Philadelphia known league-wide for his ball skills and versatility at nickel, free safety, and dime. He joins the Ravens’ practice squad after a late-September release by Houston and is expected to elevate quickly once he’s acclimated to the scheme. Reports note he owns 18 career interceptions and 300+ tackles, with league-leading (tied) 6 INTs in 2022 and another 6 during last season’s title run with the Eagles.  Through the first month of the 2025 season in Houston, Gardner-Johnson appeared in three games, logging 15 tackles as the Texans stumbled out to 0–3 before parting ways. The release followed role-related friction, per multiple reports. Baltimore’s calculus is simple: the secondary needs proven production while stars recover. With Kyle Hamilton, Marlon Humphrey, and others dealing with injuries, the Ravens view Gardner-Johnson as a low-risk boost who can moonlight across roles and bring takeaways back to a defense that thrives on them. The team announced the practice-squad signing Tuesday.  Financially, this is a classic “fit over cash” move. Because Houston remains on the hook for his fully guaranteed 2025 salary after a recent restructure, Baltimore’s cap exposure is minimal — effectively a practice-squad contract with upside if/when he’s elevated. In other words, Gardner-Johnson accepts a pay cut on the Baltimore side to chase the right opportunity, while the Ravens secure a veteran ball-hawk at bargain cost.  Ravens head coach John Harbaugh and the staff have emphasized adding versatility and takeaways to weather the injury storm. Gardner-Johnson checks both boxes: a tone-setter who can match in the slot, range over the top, or heat up the pocket as a blitzer — all hallmarks of Baltimore’s most menacing defenses.  Reflecting on the move, Gardner-Johnson framed his decision bluntly:“At this stage, it’s about winning the right way. Baltimore’s identity fits my game — physical, disciplined, and hunting the ball. I’m here to help this team finish.” For a Ravens team trying to steady the back end and reassert its defensive standard, adding C.J. Gardner-Johnson may be the spark that restores swagger and pushes Baltimore deeper into the playoff conversation.