Did Ravens mismanage Haloti Ngata’s injury?

Print Ravens 2013 Schedule
Haloti Ngata

Limping to the mid-way point of the NFL season, Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes goes from a jingle players sing to their children, to a refrain sung to team doctors when they ask, “what hurts?”

Haloti Ngata is amongst those leading the choir as he has been battered and bruised the past few weeks. In particular, Ngata has a shoulder injury and during the win over the Dallas Cowboys, Ngata sprained the MCL in his right knee.

Ngata’s ability to play through pain is admirable – especially given the injuries to the Ravens defense – but at a certain point, his contributions have to be evaluated.

In the Ravens 25-15 victory on Sunday over the Cleveland Browns, Ngata was held without a tackle. He played stiff, slow, and was hardly a threat to the Browns offense. The previous week against the Texans, he was held to only two tackles.

When healthy, Ngata is a frequent candidate to draw the attention of multiple players; in Cleveland, that wasn’t the case. Out of his 53 snaps on Sunday, Ngata only drew a double team 15 times (28%).

As the Ravens face their most crucial test on their schedule between Weeks 11-13, as they play the Steelers twice, Ngata’s injuries and lack of time to heal could become costly.

John Harbaugh and the Ravens training staff are evaluating Ngata on a frequent basis. When asked how they’ll manage Ngata, Harbaugh replied, “day-by-day and week-by-week.”

Given that the Ravens didn’t take advantage of an extended time off for Ngata following the bye, it seems as if they’re planning on keeping him activated and starting. “We need to win every game,” said Harbaugh.

The Ravens aren’t expected to go undefeated for the rest of the season but they may find themselves on the losing end more often than not if Ngata is injured and continues playing like he is now through that latter part of the season.

No disrespect to the Browns or Raiders but neither of those teams pose as big of a threat as the Pittsburgh Steelers do during Weeks 11 and 13. Sandwiching a cross-country trip to San Diego to face the Chargers doesn’t make the task any easier.

All of these are reasons having Ngata healthier than he is now come Week 11 is crucial, but the Ravens may have missed their opportunity.

While it may have sent a “we’re quitting’ message, pulling Ngata from the game at halftime with the team trailing 29-3 to the Houston Texans would have been a best-case scenario for Ngata. Had he not returned until Week 11’s game against the Steelers, Ngata would have had almost four weeks to recover and 10 fewer quarters of football on his worn down body.

The Ravens have already missed the boat on giving Ngata a significant amount of time off but how much he plays is and always has been up to the coaches and training staff.

One thing that was evident is that Ngata isn’t healthy and he isn’t effective. If he’ll continue to produce limited results as he did against the Texans and Browns, the team may be better suited to give him time off this Sunday as the Ravens host the Raiders.

Even when Ngata is active, the Ravens don’t have much success rushing the quarterback, and with Raiders running back Darren McFadden sidelined with a high-ankle sprain, the Raiders may not pose much of a threat to the Ravens defensive line.

Deactivating Ngata on Sunday will allow his body some limited time to heal. After reviewing the game film, you have to wonder if the Ravens would do things differently knowing how limited of a contribution Ngata would make against the Browns.

Regardless, there are people far more qualified, aware, and smarter making these decisions, so the fan base will just have to accept them – no matter how good of a Monday morning quarterback, or doctor, they may be.

2 Raves on “Did Ravens mismanage Haloti Ngata’s injury?

  1. Little Mugsy06 on said:

    It was short-sighted to have Ngata play against Houston. He would have had an extra week of rest to get healthy. Instead, he won’t have time to heal and will likely be a non-factor down the stretch.

  2. HKusp on said:

    I think part of the problem with giving him time off up until this last week was that Kemo was hurt too. Now you have an injured McPhee and the defensive line is very thin. They like to rotate players in, and in order to do that, you have to have bodies. It sucks, but if he is healthy enough to go, they are going to play him.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Hot off the street

For fired radio hosts, punishment doesn’t fit crime

Unless you're a fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers, you'll usually have a hard time offending me. However, I was pretty taken aback on Monday as news broke from the actions of three Atlanta-based radio ho...read more

Castillo makes Ravens O-line higher tech

Juan Castillo has a bureaucratic kind of title for a football coach: run game coordinator. But to the Ravens offensive linemen who hear from him at each practice, he’s no bureaucrat. “His passi...read more

“Little” Ray ready to help fill leadership shoes left by “Big” Ray

When linebacker Ray Lewis retired following the Super Bowl XLVII, the Ravens didn’t just lose one of the greatest linebackers to every play the game, they also lost arguably the greatest team leader...read more

A fresh secondary in Baltimore

The Ravens Secondary has changed with the departures of Ed Reed and a few others, but the goal is still the same: shut (or at least slow) down the opponent’s passing game. Remember a few months a...read more

Plenty of chances for fans to watch Ravens’ 2013 training camp practices

The Baltimore Ravens' 2013 training camp, connected by Verizon, will feature for the second-consecutive year free individual practices to be held at M&T Bank Stadium, Navy-Marine Corps Memorial St...read more

View More