Derrick Henry Bulldozes Lambeau: 216 Yards, 4 TDs in Historic Ravens Win
King Henry just had the greatest rushing performance by a visiting player in Lambeau Field history. He also passed Adrian Peterson on the all-time TD list. Just a casual Saturday night.
By Sharp Money Mike
Derrick Henry is 31 years old. According to the conventional wisdom, running backs are supposed to fall off a cliff by now. Their legs go, the burst disappears, and they become replacement-level players clinging to roster spots.
Derrick Henry didn't get that memo.
On Saturday night at Lambeau Field, with Lamar Jackson sidelined by a back injury and the Ravens' season hanging in the balance, Henry carried Baltimore on his back — literally. Thirty-six times. For 216 yards. And four touchdowns.
It was the greatest rushing performance by a visiting player in Lambeau Field history. The stadium opened in 1957.
The Quick Hit
- What happened: Derrick Henry rushed for 216 yards and 4 TDs in a 41-24 Ravens win
- The damage: Career-high 36 carries, TD runs of 3, 1, 3, and 25 yards
- Why you should care: Ravens stay alive at 8-8, need Steelers to lose
- The record: Most rushing yards by an opposing player in Lambeau Field history (since 1957)
Breaking Records, Breaking Wills
When a team loses its MVP quarterback, you expect problems. You expect limitations. You expect the offense to grind to a halt.
The Ravens handed the ball to Henry 36 times and said "good luck, Green Bay."
The Packers couldn't stop him. They couldn't contain him. They couldn't even slow him down. Henry's 216 yards came on runs that ranged from physical punishment to pure breakaway speed, including a 25-yard scamper late in the fourth quarter that iced the game.
John Harbaugh called it "one of the greatest performances I've ever seen." He's been coaching in the NFL since 1998. That's not hyperbole — that's perspective.
The All-Time Tracker
Henry didn't just dominate a single game. He made history on multiple fronts.
He now has seven career games with 200+ rushing yards, passing Adrian Peterson and O.J. Simpson for the most in NFL history. Seven. Nobody else has more than six.
He also climbed to fourth on the all-time rushing touchdown list with 122, passing Peterson. Only Emmitt Smith (164), LaDainian Tomlinson (145), and Marcus Allen (123) have scored more rushing touchdowns.
Henry joined Jim Brown as the only players with multiple games featuring 200+ rushing yards and four rushing touchdowns. Jim Brown. The greatest running back who ever lived. That's the company.
Playoff Implications
The Ravens are 8-8 and alive — barely. They need the Steelers to lose their Week 18 matchup against the Browns in order to make the playoffs.
Yes, that means Baltimore is depending on Cleveland. Yes, that's a precarious situation. But the Ravens held up their end of the deal by absolutely demolishing the Packers on the road, and they did it with their backup quarterback.
If the Steelers slip up, this Ravens team — with Lamar Jackson healthy and Derrick Henry carrying 30+ times per game — is going to be a nightmare matchup for anyone.
The Bottom Line
Derrick Henry is not supposed to still be doing this. Running backs don't age gracefully. They don't get better in their 30s. They don't set records after a decade of NFL punishment.
But Henry keeps defying the actuarial tables, keeps running through defenders, and keeps making coaches look stupid for ever doubting him.
Saturday night at Lambeau wasn't just a win. It was a statement. King Henry still has the crown.