
The Baltimore Ravens did not wait long into the offseason program to make another free agency addition, this time signing defensive back K'Von Wallace.
Baltimore Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta continues to surprise with free agency additions. While Calais Campbell was recently brought back to the organization to bolster the defensive line, the defensive back unit just received some more depth.
Per the official Ravens social media and site, the team has officially signed veteran and former Houston Texans defensive back K'Von Wallace.
Wallace appeared in three games with the Texans in 2025 and started one. In that time, he secured nine total tackles and two tackles for loss.
Previously, Wallace also played for the Seattle Seahawks, Arizona Cardinals, and Tennessee Titans, and spent the first three seasons of his career with the Philadelphia Eagles.
In total, Wallace has appeared in 74 games, with 20 starts, and secured one interception, eight passes defended, 177 total tackles, and four tackles for loss.
The Ravens have Kyle Hamilton, Jaylinn Hawkins, and Malaki Starks leading the way as the core safety group, so Wallace would more than likely be up for the fourth safety spot alongside Keondre Jackson and Jahquez Robinson.
Depth is never a bad thing, and it appears DeCosta is continuing to evaluate the roster alongside Minter to ensure that there is plenty of competition to look at when training camp begins.
OTAs are set to start at the end of the month for most teams, and Baltimore will have plenty of position battles to look at with the incoming rookies and UDFAs. Considering the team did not draft a safety, Wallace was brought in to act as competition and depth for the defensive back unit.
There is a chance that more free agent players will be coming in over the course of the next few weeks and months. DeCosta did indicate that a veteran pass rusher may not be in play, but he wouldn't rule it out.
The most pressing need still remains at the center position, and it will be interesting to see if the Ravens address that sooner rather than later.


