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Showing posts with label Ravens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ravens. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

The Fifth Down: Monday Matchup: Ravens at Jaguars

Ravens at Jaguars, 8:30 p.m. Eastern, ESPN
Line: Ravens by 9?

Jacksonville JaguarsBaltimore Ravens

You know a franchise is in sorry shape when even opponents are nostalgic about its past. Ray Lewis sounded almost misty-eyed last week when he talked about the glory days of the Ravens-Jaguars rivalry. The teams played twice a year from 1996 through 2001 in the old A.F.C. Central and had some memorable meetings, including a 6-3 game in 2000 that featured 10 sacks and only 374 yards of total offense. “You know, we did have some great rivalries with the Jaguars for many years — for many, many years,” Lewis said, pining for the days of Fred Taylor, Mark Brunell and Jimmy Smith.

?Baltimore and Jacksonville now meet every three years, and any “great Jaguars rivalries” have receded into the past. The Jaguars are on a five-game losing streak since their narrow 16-14 win over the Titans in the season opener, with the rookie quarterback Blaine Gabbert completing 48.8 percent of his passes while opponents stack the line to stop the team’s one recognizable star, Maurice Jones-Drew. Lewis also had kind words for another figure from the past: Jaguars Coach Jack Del Rio, a former Ravens assistant. “Anytime you play a Jack Del Rio team, you have to know that they’re going to be ready to play,” he said. Even if you’re not certain who they are.

Pick: Ravens?
(Pick does not reflect betting line)


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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Video: CBS Video Ravens vs. Jaguars Preview

Joe Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens hope to keep their winning streak alive as they travel to EverBank Field to square off against the Jacksonville Jaguars. NFL.com’s Pat Kirwan and Jason Horowitz take a look at this Monday night matchup.


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Ravens at Jaguars MNF Injury Report

Baltimore

Out: RB Anthony Allen (thigh), LB Dannell Ellerbe (thigh), WR Lee Evans (back), G Ben Grubbs (toe)

Doubtful: S Tom Zbikowski (head)

Questionable: CB Chris Carr (thigh)

Probable: LB Jarret Johnson (back), WR David Reed (finger), CB Jimmy Smith (ankle)

Jacksonville

Out: S Courtney Greene (hamstring)

Doubtful: T Eben Britton (back)

Questionable: C/G Jason Spitz (quadriceps)

Full participation: DT Tyson Alualu (knee), CB Derek Cox (groin), S Dawan Landry (thigh), T Eugene Monroe (shoulder), WR Kassim Osgood (hamstring), RB Montell Owens (knee), G Will Rackley (knee), LB Clint Session (elbow), T Guy Whimper (hip)


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Monday, October 17, 2011

Ray Rice on Ravens Post-Game Live

CSN Baltimore’s Brent Harris talks about yesterday’s win with one of the stars of the victory – running back Ray Rice.


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Saturday, October 1, 2011

Flacco says Ravens don’t need wake-up call

NFL.com StaffPublished: September 29th, 2011 | Tags: Joe Flacco, Around the League, Baltimore Ravens

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No one we know expected the Ravens to have the perfect season. But after a season-opening win over the Steelers, most didn’t expect the Ravens to get beat up by the Titans in Week 2, either.

While it’s left some to rehash which week we saw the real Ravens, QB Joe Flacco takes exception to the idea his team needed a wake-up call to get back on track.

“I mean, yeah, it was a tough loss, and we didn’t play up to par, to the level that we would like to,” Flacco told “Around the “League” on Thursday. “But, I don’t think we’re a team that needs a wake-up call. I think we went in there, we had a great week of practice, we knew what we had to do. We just didn’t get it accomplished. We didn’t play well enough. I don’t think we need a wake-up call.”

Expectations in Baltimore are no doubt high after three consecutive playoff appearances. But if the Ravens didn’t get caught in letdown mode — as Flacco suggests — then they simply got beat by a team many don’t consider a contender.

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Video: CBS NFL Week Four Jets vs. Ravens Preview

After a disappointing loss to the Raiders last week, the Jets hope to bounce back as they travel to M&T Bank Stadium to take on the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday night. Jason Horowitz and NFL.com’s Pat Kirwan analyze this upcoming matchup.


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Friday, September 23, 2011

Will the real Ravens please stand up?

NFL.com StaffPublished: September 22nd, 2011 | Tags: Heath Evans, Baltimore Ravens, Jim Mora, No Huddle

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The Ravens were widely considered among NFL observers to be Super Bowl contenders, especially following their season-opening, dominating win over the Steelers. They didn’t look like contenders in their follow up performance against the Titans.

So what do we make of the Ravens after two weeks? NFL Network analyst Heath Evans isn’t so sure.

“What I thought the makeup, the charachter, the DNA of Baltimore was is in question in my mind now,” Evans said. “Baltimore surprised me in every form and fashion in that game — the intensity, the look in their eyes.”

Evans hasn’t been building a fan club in Detroit lately, so maybe Baltimore is next. But the letdown, which was clear to many, might have been inevitable says former coach Jim Mora.

“The put so much on the Pittsburgh game that they had a natural letdown,” said Mora. “If you’re going to be great, that can’t happen.

“I’m not worried about their DNA. I think they got slapped around a little bit. … They had a letdown. I’m not forgiving them for it, it was wrong. They weren’t playing the Titans, they were playing the Steelers. But, I think in the long run, it will be good for them. It will bring them back down to earth.”

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Ravens at Rams Friday Injury Report

RAVENS

Out: WR Lee Evans (ankle), WR David Reed (shoulder), CB Jimmy Smith (ankle)

Questionable: CB Chris Carr (thigh), G Ben Grubbs (toe)

Probable: C Matt Birk (knee), DT Terrence Cody (head), DE Cory Redding (toe)

RAMS

Doubtful: WR Danny Amendola (elbow)

Questionable: DE C.J. Ah You (wrist), RB Steven Jackson (quadricep), LB Ben Leber (groin), RB Carnell Williams (hamstring)

Probable: TE Michael Hoomanawanui (calf), WR Greg Salas (ribs)


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Wednesday, September 21, 2011

With Ngata signed, Ravens can target Flacco next

The Ravens committed $61 million to All-Pro DT Haloti Ngata on Tuesday, with the bulk of that money ($38 million) guaranteed and during the first two years of the contract. While the deal locks up arguably the Ravens’ best defensive player, its ripple effect will impact the team’s ability to sign other priorities going forward.

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Ravens play-by-play man Gerry Sandusky said Tuesday on NFL Network that signing Ngata puts the team in position to turn its attention toward a deal for Joe Flacco.

“The signing of Ngata does two things for the Ravens,” Sandusky said. “One, it keeps their biggest guy at the point of attack who dominates the line of scrimmage in the Ravens’ future for the next five years, guaranteed. Two, going forward, it gives (Ravens general manager) Ozzie Newsome some cap room to work with because next year you will have contract negotiations coming up with Flacco. So the defense gets taken care of today. Next year, Newsome has a little more latitude to work with.”

The same goes for two other starters, RB Ray Rice and guard Ben Grubbs, both of whom are on rookie contracts that expire after 2011.

“The Ravens are trying to bite the bullet on Ngata now, and they know that come 2013, the (salary) cap will escalate,” NFL Network insider Jason La Canfora offered on “NFL Total Access.” “They’ll be in position to make moves.”

The Ravens balked at giving Flacco a long-term extension during the offseason, as owner Steve Bisciotti went on the record saying negotiations wouldn’t start until after the 2011 season. That didn’t exactly please Flacco, who reasoned that “if you’re not confident with who I am, I’m not sure what (difference) a year is going to make.”

It might make all the difference. The Ravens have locked up Ngata, and Flacco has a good chance of taking the Ravens to the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season to start his career.

Follow The NFL Network on Twitter @nflnetwork.

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Monday, September 12, 2011

Post Game Thoughts on Ravens Beating of the Steelers

Wow.

I’m still shocked at how the Ravens utterly dominated the action today in Baltimore but perhaps no one is more stunned that their opponents today. This was a huge statement game from the purple and black as they drew first blood in the race to the AFC North title.

Here are some other thoughts rattling around my head after today’s shellacking.

I guess the Offensive Line didn’t need to practice together after all.  They allowed Joe Flacco to get quite comfortable with his progressions and were more than solid in the run game. (170 Total Yds. Rushing) That meant that my biggest concern with this match-up was rendered null and void.My second worry was turnovers and that was taken care of as Baltimore’s defense pounded away all day at Pittsburgh to cause seven total while the Ravens did not give the ball away once. There’s your ball game.Baltimore has 20 new players on the roster and they all had a hand in some way in today’s win. The new vets especially, as Bryant McKinnie seemed to swallow up blockers, Vonta Leach was always pushing forward and Bernard Pollard was laying hits in the backfield.

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Monday, January 17, 2011

Steelers, Ravens classic missed just one thing

Adam RankPublished: January 15th, 2011 | Tags: Pittsburgh Steelers, Anquan Boldin, Baltimore Ravens, John Harbaugh, Justin Bieber, Mike Tomlin

The Steelers and Ravens entertaining slugfest disguised as a AFC divisional playoff game had it all: Vitriol. Huge plays on both sides of the ball. And actual scoring.

There was only one thing missing — overtime.

And not just any overtime, but a brand spanking new kind of overtime.

The NFL has enacted new rules for overtime this season, making sure that the game cannot end on a field goal during the first drive of the extra session. So it seemed fitting that the Steelers and Ravens would take the new rules out for a spin. At least that seemed to be the consensus on Twitter after the Ravens tied the game 24-24 with just minutes left to go.

This was like one of those Buffalo Wild Wings’ commercials, nobody wanted this game to end.

But the Ravens’ inability to hold on a third-and-19 cost us all the chance to see how Ravens coach John Harbaugh and Steelers coach Mike Tomlin would have laid down the blueprint for the new rules as the Steelers were able to pull out the win.

Though, after watching Tomlin use his team’s two challenges in the first quarter, Steelers fans are probably thankful they did not get a chance to see how that would have played out.

Instead, Twitter turned Anquan Boldin and T.J. Houshmandzadeh into trending topics after huge fourth-quarter drops by both veteran wideouts. Though both again fell just short, this time losing to #RIP JUSTIN BIEBER.

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Receiver position still a problem for Ravens

Jason La CanforaPublished: January 15th, 2011 | Tags: T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Anquan Boldin, Antonio Brown, David Reed, Derrick Mason, Donte' Stallworth, Emmanuel Sanders, Haloti Ngata, Jared Gaither, Marshal Yanda, Michael Oher, Mike Wallace

Ravens WRs Anquan Boldin and T.J. Houshmandzadeh wanted more targets this season, but both suffered huge drops in the team’s loss to the Steelers. Boldin dropped a touchdown late in the fourth quarter and Houshmandzadeh dropped a game-preserving pass.

Even with these big-name acquisitions, the Ravens still need help at receiver and especially one who can stretch the field.

The Steelers big plays were the result of Antonio Brown and Emmanuel Sanders stretching the field, even when Baltimore’s defense targeted Mike Wallace and forced the Steelers to beat them with the youngsters. They did, especially Brown on a huge third-and-19 play.

The Ravens need a receiver who can do the same.

Donte’ Stallworth was supposed to be the guy to stretch the defense for the Ravens, but he was unable to catch on and never gained the team’s trust, relegated to running reverses down the stretch.

The Ravens will likely commit a high draft pick on a wideout who can stretch the field — and Stallworth and Houshmandzadeh likely won’t be back.

The Ravens also need their young tight ends to step up and David Reed, a rookie who was inactive today with a concussion, is somebody they are high on. Reed can absorb the routes now run by Houshmandzadeh and Derrick Mason. They believe he will be a player.

Some other things the Ravens need to do in the coming offseason:

The Ravens will extend the contract of DT Haloti Ngata, a top personnel priority for them. The Ravens also will extend the contract of coach John Harbaugh, the highest organizational priority.

The new collective bargaining agreement will have a lot to say if T Jared Gaither stays. Michael Oher had an up-and-down season at left tackle, and Gaither’s absence forced them to use Marshal Yanda, an excellent guard, at tackle all season.

The team also wants to add another pass rusher and corner.

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Steelers’ Smith out, Ravens’ Birk in for Round 3

NFL.com StaffPublished: January 15th, 2011 | Tags: AFC Divisional Playoffs, Baltimore Ravens, Pittsburgh Steelers

Steelers Pro Bowl safety Troy Polamalu, who has been dealing with an ankle injury, is active for the AFC Divisional showdown with the rival Baltimore Ravens Saturday, as expected. Polamalu was a full participant in practice for the first time Thursday and was listed as probable on the team’s final injury report. He missed games in Weeks 15 and 16 while dealing with ankle and Achilles injuries, but he returned in Week 17 to face the Cleveland Browns.

Cornerback Bryant McFadden (abdomen) participated fully in Friday’s practice and is set to go as well.

Steelers DE Aaron Smith wasn’t ready to come back from a triceps injury he suffered in Week 7 and has been ruled out.

For the Ravens, center Matt Birk missed a two days of practice this week while dealing with a knee injury but will be active. He was listed as questionable, along with cornerback Chris Carr (thigh), who will also suit up after being limited in practice this week.

Safety Tom Zbikowski has been ruled out with a back injury.

Ravens
WR/KR David Reed
S Tom Zbikowski
LB Jason Phillips
DT Arthur Jones
G Bryan Mattison
TE Davon Drew
TE Dennis Pitta
DT Lamar Divens

Steelers
Charlie Batch (No. 3 QB)
RB Jonathan Dwyer
DB Crezdon Butler
OT Chris Scott
OT Tony Hills
DT Steve McLendon
DE Aaron Smith
LB Jason Worlids

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Mason out for Ravens

Frank TadychPublished: December 26th, 2010 | Tags: Derrick Mason, Baltimore Ravens, Week 16 injuries 2010

Derrick Mason has left Sunday’s game against the Browns with what looks to be a right leg injury.

Mason was injured while running a route down the field early during the fourth quarter. He first tripped after his feet got tangled with T.J. Ward, and then after regaining his balance pulled up lame as he made his way to the sideline. It didn’t look like Mason was able to put much weight on his right leg, and he was down in pain on the sideline for several moments.

Mason is the Ravens’ leading receiver today against the Browns with four receptions for 50 yards, and was on the receiving end of one of Joe Flacco’s two touchdown throws.

No official word from the Ravens just yet, but Mason was limited in practice this week due to an ankle issue.

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Ravens clinch playoff spot

Frank TadychPublished: December 26th, 2010 | Tags: Baltimore Ravens, NFL playoffs, 2010 NFL playoff picture

The Ravens are the third team to punch a ticket to the AFC playoffs.

It’s the third-straight playoff appearance for the Ravens, who defeated the Browns 20-10 on Sunday.

The Ravens entered Week 16 as the No. 5 seed in the current playoff picture and will face the Bengals (3-11) in Week 17, while the Steelers (11-4) are on the road against the Browns (5-10).  The Steelers control their playoff destiny, and will win the AFC North if the teams finish tied due to a better division record.

The Ravens do hold the head-to-head tie-breaker with the Jets, who entered the week as the No. 6 seed.

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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Five Hard Truths about the Ravens

Five Hard Truths

Last night’s game against the Houston Texans have left many fans with a bitter taste in their mouths. Sure it was a win in front of a national audience, but when your defense gives up not one but TWO 21 point leads, you have to wonder exactly what’s wrong out at the Castle.

The win over the Texans has showed the world exactly what this team is, and as fans, we learned a lot and must face the harsh realities. I’m not going to sugar coat things here. That’s not the point. Good teams know what they do well, and what they do poorly. As a fan screaming from the bleachers, this is what I feel I learned last night about my beloved Baltimore Ravens.

1.) The offensive line is mediocre at best

With all due respect to Mike Oher, Matt Birk, Marshall Yanda, and Ben Grubbs, the offensive line currently protecting Joe Flacco just isn’t very good.

I’m not by any means saying that those four men aren’t good players (they’re four of the best in the league), but as a unit, it’s just not there. Mike Oher has demonstrated very dramatically that he is not well suited to be a left tackle. He takes way to many jump penalties, his footwork is slow, and for the most part he’s getting beaten by the better teams consistently. I never would have thought that the loss of Jared Gaither would be so devastating to this unit, but man alive, they haven’t been the same without him. The offseason focus for the Ravens needs to be on getting another natural left tackle so Mike can move back to the right side. Additionally, it is apparent that the Ravens should start thinking about the future after Matt Birk. He’s an amazing all pro center, but he’s getting up there in years and is really struggling of late. I will say in his defense, that the Ravens are running their best when they run straight up the middle behind his blocking. Marshall Yanda has been out of his natural element all year, so that’s hard to fault, and Ben Grubbs has been helping out with Mike a lot which has left him exposed at times. The unit doesn’t have cohesion and is getting manhandled, especially late in games.

2.) The coaching staff needs a shake up

I love John Harbaugh as a head coach, I think Cam Cameron is one of the most talented coordinators in the league, and above all else, I think the Ravens have a great staff surrounding the club, but honestly, a shake up is needed. Greg Mattison’s scheme is so ill tailored to the personnel on the field that at times it’s difficult to watch. With half the game left to play the Ravens inexplicably stopped getting after the ball and dropped into zone coverage. This allowed Matt Schaub to pick apart the defense and get his team into the game, and eventually into overtime.

Coaches aren’t solely to blame by miles, but the decisions they make are often times baffling. There’s a good reason why the Ravens have dropped so many fourth quarter leads, they get complacent and they play not to lose. On Cam’s side of the ball, it’s amazing how much better Joe Flacco plays out of the shotgun and in the no huddle offense, but it’s rarely if ever used. This doesn’t even point out that Ray Rice runs mile better on the delayed handoff than he does when Joe is under center. Cam’s hubris in failing to make adjustments when adjustments are due is a big part of the reason the offense stalls at times and flat out breaks down at others.

3.) Joe Flacco’s development is likely a five year plan.

For all of the talk about Joe’s talents (and he has many), he is still making the same mistakes, over, and over, and over. He’s holding the ball too long when there’s nothing there, he’s struggling to feel the pressure on his blind side, and he’s still forcing throws into plays that are clearly sniffed out and broken down. I know that there’s a big concern that Joe goes through his progressions to slowly, but I tend to believe that he’s so desperate to win that he’s holding the ball waiting for something to develop. He’s never willing to give up on something if he feels that it could be there. Unfortunately, this is the NFL and you need to understand that an incomplete pass can be made up later. A sack, a fumble, or an interception hurts your team’s ability to make plays and win.

That being said, I don’t believe that Joe Flacco will ever be a truly great quarterback. He will be a very good quarterback, probably for a very long time, but he’ll never ascend to the Brady/Manning level and it’s unfair of us to assume he will. Good quarterbacks can lead teams to Superbowls too. Just ask Eli Manning, Steve McNair, Ben Roethlisberger, Kurt Warner, etc., etc., etc. Joe isn’t going to be legendary, and he shouldn’t be shouldered with that burden.

4.) This team is not a world beater

Let me preface this with saying that the Ravens are a very good football team. They’re 9-4 with 3 weeks left to go, and are in prime position to make the playoffs for a third consecutive year. That being said, the expectations were so high for the Ravens coming into this season that there is no way they could ever legitimately live up to the hype. The bottom line is that this team is good but not great, does a lot of things well but nothing really spectacular, is largely balanced but struggles to put teams away. In short this is a team that is tailored made to never be dominant, but be capable of staying in games and beating anyone. I’m not being a homer when I say this, but if there is one team that is capable of beating the New England Patriots right now, it’s the Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens are so soundly built across the board that there’s no team that can truly blow them out.  The Ravens can beat you so many ways that they’ll be in it till the end no matter who they play, no matter the stage of the season, no matter the venue. If you’re looking for Baltimore to start rolling people over left and right, well you’re in for a world of disappointment. Get used to your team walking the razors edge between feast and famine in ever game between now and February. They’re going to win or they’re going to lose, but I guarantee that in either scenario, the margin of victory or loss will be seven points or fewer.

Your team is what it is. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s the cold hard truth.

5.) Our heroes are fallible.

With the exception of Haloti Ngata and Terrell Suggs (of late), the defense is old, is creaky, and is officially showing its age.

Ed Reed was at least partly responsible for three of the Houston touchdowns last night. Either he was out of position or a step too slow on each play. It was the first time that he has legitimately showed the wear and tear his body has taken the past few years. The Ravens have got to start planning for the future and start working in Zibo and Ruki if they are indeed going to be your heir apparent. Ed Reed is a hall of famer, and probably one of the best free safeties to ever play the game, but last night he dramatically hurt his team’s chances of winning. The same can roughly be argued of Ray Lewis. Ray is invaluable to this team both on and off the field, but perhaps the time has come to reassess his game plan and start rotating him in and out as necessary. More and more teams have begun targeting him in the middle of the field, a thought that would have been unthinkable not three seasons ago. The old war horse still has miles to go in the tank before his eventual enshrinement in the lore and legends of Baltimore, but in the mean time, he has to realize that he has to play smarter football and maybe turn some of his plays over to the younger players


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Ravens CB Washington ruled out vs. Texans

NFL.com StaffPublished: December 13th, 2010 | Tags: Baltimore Ravens, Houston Texans, Week 14 inactives

The Baltimore Ravens will face the Houston Texans on Monday Night Football without cornerback Fabian Washington. He has been nursing a thigh injury and didn’t participate in practice this week. Washington was listed as questionable on the team’s final injury report.

The Texans had no players listed as questionable on their final injury report released on Friday. Ten players were listed as probable and they are all active.

Full inactives list:

Texans
Matt Leinart (No. 3 QB)
WR Dorin Dickerson
CB Brice McCain
S Quintin Demps
OL Kasey Studdard
OL Shelley Smith
TE Anthony Hill
TE Garrett Graham

Ravens
CB Fabian Washington
RB Jason McKie
LB Jason Phillips
LB Dannell Ellerbe
DT Arthur Jones
G Bryan Mattison
DT Lamar Divens
TE Todd Heap

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Thursday, December 9, 2010

Ravens Coach Harbaugh Tells Fans – “Go Root For Another Team”

You had to expect that Ravens fans were not going to be happy this week following a tough defeat to the Steelers.

Sports talk radio has been flooded this week with fans who are still seething over another close defeat to the rival Steelers with playoff implications at stake. No show was immune, not even Head Coach John Harbaugh’s radio program last Tuesday night.

Some of the exchanges got heated and Harbaugh as usual defended his team. He also went one step further and delivered a message to anyone who still isn’t on board with the current regime of the Baltimore Ravens.

“I’m proud of this football team,” Harbaugh said. “I’m proud of our defense. I’m proud of our offense. We will fight our tails off to be the best team we can every single week.”

“If that’s not enough for you then go find another team to cheer for. If you’re not proud of this team then you don’t know football,” Harbaugh said.

I’d be interested to see what are readers think about these comments but let me add my own thoughts here.

Anyone who really follows this team is frustrated. I know I am. The expectations for this team for this season were elevated due to consecutive playoff runs and new additions to the offense. For some it was “Super Bowl or Bust” to be sure.

So far what we’ve seen is that the Ravens are a very good AFC team. They are 8-4 with a two game lead over the next contender for a playoff spot with four games to play. They have proven that they can play with and possibly beat any opponent in the NFL. But the team has had its struggles and last Sunday night’s game simply magnifies any doubts that fans have as to weather or not this is a championship club.

The offense has been a concern since the days this franchise began and while they have shown improvement under Cam Cameron the first two seasons, this season they are back to being a middle of the pack unit – even with more talent.

Something has to give. Is it the play-calling? Is it the coaching? Is it execution? Is it player personnel? It’s probably a bit of all these things but it’s clear something needs to change.

I don’t really take too much stock in what Harbaugh says. I was shocked that he admitted publicly that he felt the offense was subpar. It’s the first time I can remember that he’s shown that type of honesty with the media and the fans as to his feelings about his team.

He’s never really shown much regard for those that cover the team or the fan’s knowledge of the game he coaches anyway. In some respects he’s right to be testy and upset when most don’t really know what they’re talking about. But his behavior is also consistent with who he is – a bit smug and self-assured and at times treats people with less than the respect they might be due. Just ask anyone at WNST.

But you have to expect those questions and commments when you have a public radio show. Otherwise why do it if not for the some extra money.

It’s up to you coach. If you don’t want to hear it then do something to fix it. It may mean making some hard choices at the end of the season but it’s time for you to step up and lead.


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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Beware of Ravens during stretch run

After watching the Ravens dismantle the Panthers last week, I left the stadium very impressed with the team from Baltimore. Right now, I think they’re as good as any team in the AFC, and most importantly they’re ascending.

The Ravens play what I call great complimentary football, where the offense knows how to protect the defense, and the defense knows how to defend until the offense gets going.

What the Ravens did to the Panthers was a great example. Yes, it is the Panthers, but the Ravens did exactly what they were supposed to do. The Ravens had scored only three points in the first quarter of their five road games this season, so the goal of Cam Cameron’s offense was to get going early. They did just that on the first possession on a 56-yard touchdown pass to T.J. Houshmandzadeh. That series really got the offense going.

The Ravens also played very well defensively, making big plays in their typical fashion while delivering the knock-out blows on back-to-back possessions during the fourth quarter. First it was the interception by Ed Reed, who lateraled it to Dawan Landry for a touchdown. On the very next play from scrimmage, Ray Lewis brought back another pick six.

Where the Ravens had lost fourth-quarter leads against the Bengals, Patriots and Falcons, they knew they had to close this game out, and they did it decisively. The Ravens are ready to move forward, with four of their next six games at home.

Beware of the Ravens down the stretch.

The Ravens are a well-coached team in terms of understanding where they need to improve. It’s something that John Harbaugh has his team work on weekly. I know everyone will look back at the losses to the Falcons and Patriots, but the Ravens will be an improved team when December rolls around. If you ask any of the teams they’ve played — even the ones they’ve lost to — no one will want to face the Ravens again. Their schedule sets up nicely, and after already beating the Steelers on the road, the next round is at home.

When teams are stacked up as closely as they currently are in the AFC, you have to look at where teams are going and who they will be in the final month of the season more so than where they’re at now. I’m already impressed with the direction the Ravens are going, and when it matters most in six weeks, they’re capable of being the best team in their conference.

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No-name Panthers scoring on Ravens

Adam RankPublished: November 21st, 2010 | | Tags: Baltimore Ravens, Brian St. Pierre, David Gettis, Mike Goodson

Congratulations Ravens defense, you just made the list. No longer a must-start fantasy defense, the Ravens are not even taking advantage of a glorious matchup against the Panthers.

What happened to you?

Oh and don’t look now, the venerable fantasy connection of QB Brian St. Pierre and WR David Gettis just went deep for 88 yards. Even RB Mike Goodson is getting loose as he closes in on 100 rushing yards.

Not your father’s Ravens, that’s for sure. Although, that would make them the Browns, rights? In any event, the Ravens are performing so poorly, fantasy enthusiasts are allowed to openly root against Baltimore.

UPDATE: The Ravens just scored a defensive touchdown. But you know what, you still let St. Pierre score a touchdown on you. It’s too little, too late.

UPDATE II: And there’s Ray Lewis running in a interception for a touchdown. Obviously my pep talk has inspired the Ravens in the closing moments. But will keep the Ravens on the list to keep them motivated.

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