Baltimore Ravens

Marlon Humphrey

Age
29
·
Sleeper ID
4071
Verdict scores
Trade Value 3,120
Win-Now 7.8/10
Consistency 0
Positional Rank 30
Trade Value Tier A
Trend → Stable
Scouting report

Summary

Marlon Humphrey enters Year 10 as Baltimore’s top cornerback at age 29, ranked #122 in Verdict’s dynasty score (20.0). He posted 20 tackles for loss in 2025 on a 90.6% defensive snap share — a #122 DB profile with moderate opportunity risk. Contender rosters should consider him a mid-tier starter rather than a top-end asset.

Projection Rationale

Humphrey logs 90.6% of Baltimore’s defensive snaps under John Harbaugh’s 4-3 scheme, which locks in his volume floor. The 2025 baseline — 53 solo tackles, 3 TFL, 1 sack, 4 INT, 13 PD, 2 FF — shows a tackle-first line item that scales in custom scoring. His zone-heavy coverage and aggressive pressure packages drive a stable projection floor.

Injury Risk

Humphrey practiced fully in Week 12 and carried full participation in practice in Week 10, Week 8, Week 6, and Week 3, but sat out Week 5 with a minor injury. His zone-heavy coverage reduces exposure to contact. Structural durability remains a strength through age 29.

Opportunity Notes

Snap share holds at 90.6% with weekly marks at 98.0%, 70.0%, 94.0%, 85.0%, 95.0%, 95.0%, 98.0%, 91.0%, 81.0%, and 99.0%. Baltimore’s 4-3 scheme under John Harbaugh preserves his 3-down usage. No DB1 threat exists on the depth chart. With 2 FF, Humphrey’s takeaway upside is moderate.

Scheme Fit Analysis

John Harbaugh’s 4-3 scheme under Zach Orr’s DC promotion continues zone-heavy Cover-2/Cover-4 shells with aggressive pressure packages. Humphrey’s zone-heavy coverage and aggressive pressure packages drive a stable scheme fit. His 3-down usage under Harbaugh preserves his floor.

Trend Assessment

Stable Verdict’s trade-value model tags Humphrey as stable, reflecting his 20-tackle-for-loss finish across 15 games in 2025 and consistent 90.6% defensive snap share under John Harbaugh.

Ceiling / Floor

Ceiling tracks near 20 tackles for loss given locked 90.6% snap share and an unchanged scheme. A mid-season injury is the only realistic path to meaningful regression below that line. Floor tracks near 15 tackles for loss with moderate takeaway upside.

Comparable Player

His zone-heavy coverage and aggressive pressure packages draw comparisons to Marcus Peters from 2018–2020 Baltimore — similar zone-heavy coverage, similar 90%+ snap share, similar 3-down usage.