The Ravens currently rank 27th in the league in passing yards per game (180.6). Over the course of their last 5 games since their Week 10 bye the team has averaged just 169.6 yards per game through the air. Comparatively speaking, the Ravens averaged 233 yards per game in 2021, up from a league low of 171.9 in 2020.
It is a mess!
And all of this during a season when the Ravens were supposed to get a clear read on Lamar Jackson so that they can determine his market value.
I’m not sure what the 2022 season does to Lamar’s market value. Clearly his value to the Ravens is immense. It could be argued that no other team in the league depends more on one player than the Ravens do with Lamar. And they’ve given him little to work with.
Sure, they upgraded the offensive line by adding Tyler Linderbaum and Morgan Moses. But what the team has done at wide receiver amounts to grand larceny. Jackson bet on himself to determine his market value and it has been a colossal failure. The Ravens traded away a 1,000-yard receiver without sufficiently replacing him and then bet on Rashod Bateman to play at a level his draft status suggests and for the other pass catchers in the wide receiver room to step up. Instead, they’ve tripped.
Offensive coordinator Greg Roman has been regularly criticized for the design of his passing attack. Receivers are rarely schemed open and the timing between the quarterback and the receivers is so out of synch that oftentimes, the pass catchers have their backs to the quarterback when he’s set and ready to throw. And at times, that may be just fine if the quarterback and receiver are in synch and the ball is thrown to a spot known to only the QB and WR. That’s called throwing a receiver open. The Ravens QB’s only throw to open receivers, and that’s about as common as a good song by Nickelback.
So how does owner Steve Bisciotti and GM Eric DeCosta determine Lamar’s value when he’s operating in a broken system with receivers from The Dollar Store? Lamar’s passing production is down across the board and THAT is where he needs to improve to justify a franchise-record, perhaps league-record contract. The Ravens collectively have learned absolutely NOTHING about Lamar’s value in 2022. So in that regard, it has been a wasted season.
You can see the frustration in the way Lamar plays. He no longer has that boyish enthusiasm and obvious love for the game. The pressure to perform without the necessary tools around him have seemingly ripped that joy from his soul. Instead of “big truss” and “belee dat” we now see a brooding Lamar on the sideline or when he’s on the field play, clock mismanagement compel him to snap at teammates or punt the ball in frustration. Off the field, he’s laying into a fan on social media.
The pressure is real.
Lamar bet on himself and then the Ravens challenged that bet by emptying the supply closet of the tools needed to win the bet. Go ahead, Lamar. Climb that mountain without boots, rope and crampons. You can do it!
2022 was supposed to provide clarity about a Lamar Jackson-led offense. Instead, the waters are murkier than a snorkeling excursion at The Inner Harbor.
Greg Roman is among the scapegoats in this cluster, but it’s not all on him. That said, enough of it is on him to earn a pink slip. The repeated issues with the play clock and the team’s league-leading delay of game penalties are a joke and a bad one. This should be an embarrassment to the entire staff. I know that I was embarrassed for them all after hearing this gem from Roman shared during his presser on December 1:
“Really, what we’re talking about is a race to be in control. So, it’s not, ‘Hey, how fast can we get to the line and snap it?’ It’s, ‘How can we do what we want to do and be in control of the situation?’ So, if we snap the ball an average of four seconds later than other teams, over the course of a 70-play game, now you’re talking, what, four-and-a-half, five minutes where their offense can’t touch the ball. Those are treasures.”
The man was serious!
If only he was more serious about proper spacing in his passing attack, Lamar and the Ravens would…well, you know.
But it’s all ok. Come Monday, John Harbaugh will remind us of the obvious problems and how they’ll go back to work to fix them.
[BOLD PREDICTIONS: Ravens v. Falcons]
3 Responses
Sad, but true and been developing for too long a time! At this point, it’s not a quick fix either! Way too many issues to address with coaching, personnel and, apparently, a QB biding his time to get out of dodge! And, at this point, Bisciotti has to bear some responsibility as support for Harbaugh continues to wither among the fan base! He was quoted when he fired Billick with three years left on a contract extension worth $5M/yr. as saying it was a gut reaction that said it was time! It turned out to be the right move and, as I’ve opined elsewhere, it’s probably time for another gut check! Unfortunately, just as has happened repeatedly on the field of play, the clock is ticking…..
I don’t believe you can teach accuracy, and that is Lamar’s problem. His career completion % is 63%. Compare that to Burrows (68%) and Mahomes (66%). Lamar was inaccurate in college where he completed 57% of his passes. I will agree that having a Jamar Chase or Stefon Diggs would help improve his % but by how much. It amazes me how inaccurate he is on longer throws. Almost every game there is a receiver wide open, and Lamar throws the ball 5 yards beyond him. Jamar Chase and Justin Jefferson are good, but nobody can catch a pass when it is thrown 5 yards beyond their reach. Unless the Ravens draft a receiver, who becomes an all pro, (which they have never done), no good receiver in their right mind would sign on to this archaic offense.
Another great article Tony, that speaks for a lot of us. And speaking of seeing Lamar brooding on the sideline… who does that remind you of? He’s looking a lot like Flacco did his last few years here. Just completely disheartened. This organization just sucks the spirit out of their QBs. Sad to see.