The Ravens gave a graduate-level presentation on how to lose a game today, and they filled each chapter with individual tales of ineptitude and sadness.
Let’s look at the grades.
Offense
Overall: C-
They had 383 yards, which is good. And they averaged 6.1 yards per play, which is good. They got their franchise running back going, which is good. Their MVP quarterback made some big plays and gave the team a chance, which is good. Everything else? Bad. Then worse. Then, sometimes, horrific. It was their second uneven showing in a row, which is concerning, but there are some things to like, too, for the future. Just out of sorts all day.
Quarterback: B-
Lamar Jackson was not the reason the Ravens lost today. He was their entire offense during a hard-to-watch-at-times first half, and, for a second there, I thought he might just take that last run to the house for a dramatic win. The pick was not on him at all. But there were a few missed throws I’m sure he’d like to have back, and the offense just couldn’t get anything going there at the end. Again, that’s not on him, but he wasn’t superhuman at the end, either, and they needed that today.
Running Backs: B
It was tough sledding there for a while, with an offensive line that appeared to be more of a nuisance to the Raiders’ front than actually offering any resistance for much of the first half. But Derrick Henry took over the Ravens’ offense for a good chunk of the second half and rushed for 84 yards and a physical rugby-style touchdown. Justice Hill is a really useful weapon, and made his typical two or three big plays today. Patrick Ricard was extremely effective in run blocking the second half, particularly on those runs to the edges.
Receivers: B-
Zay Flowers had a great first half, and had 91 yards and a touchdown catch. Isaiah Likely was not as impactful as last week, but still flashed and made a few big plays. Mark Andrews was more effective this week, with four catches, and Rashod Bateman had three receptions, but let a possible fourth bounce off him for an interception. Bateman got hit as the ball came, and it’s hard to pin all the blame there… but he’s just a magnet for odd plays sometimes. Nelson Agholor continued his pretty quiet start to the season, but nearly connected with Jackson on a long one that got tipped away at the end.
Offensive Line: D+
Let’s get this out of the way — as currently constructed, this offensive line is simply not capable of bottling up the likes of Chris Jones, Maxx Crosby, T.J. Watt or TJ Maxx. Patrick Mekari appeared to have a difficult time all day, and Daniel Faalele participated in a few big mistakes, as well. That being said, I thought Faalele stood out on a few plays, too. He and center Tyler Linderbaum combined on a double team to spring Justice Hill on his 14-yard run to open the second half, and Faalele later had a great seal block on a 9-yard run by Henry in the fourth quarter. I thought Roger Rosengarten battled, which was good, and Ronnie Stanley is drawing some flags early this season, but most of Henry’s big runs, and a clear blind side for Jackson much of the game, suggests he’s blocking pretty darn well. I think Andrew Vorhees is already a good player.
Defense
Overall: C
I thought the defense was lights-out in the first half. Odafe Oweh was everywhere, they held the Raiders to 43 total yards, 1.7 yards per play and only allowed four first downs. But Devante Adams, Brock Bowers and… let me check this note… Gardner Minshew took it to them a little in the second half. The numbers look good, and there were some great performances from individuals out there today, but the defense holds a lot of the blame on this one. Not all of it… but a good amount.
Defensive Line: B
I thought this unit played pretty well. Nnamdi Madubuike was disruptive behind the line of scrimmage, and had a questionable facemask call. Brent Urban and Broderick Washington both made plays in the run game, and Travis Jones had his second consecutive impactful game — he had a tackle for loss and chased Minshew out of the pocket a few times.
Linebackers: A-
My best unit of the game today. Roquan Smith was back to looking like himself, with 11 tackles, a pass defensed and he forced an incompletion on third down with pressure to kill a first-quarter drive. Odafe Oweh was good all game, and it even showed up on the box score this week, as he had five tackles and 2.5 sacks. Trenton Simpson struggled some with Brock Bowers, who looks like an absolute beast. Kyle Van Noy was outstanding, picking up a pair of sacks, three tackles for loss and blowing up a third-and-goal play with instant pressure to force a field goal.
Defensive Backs: C
This is a weird one. Over and over again, I saw Marlon Humphrey and Brandon Stephens in tight coverage, and over and over again, I saw Davante Adams make a terrific catch on a perfect throw. Tough breaks, but the ball skills just weren’t up to Adams’ today. By the way, that sideline catch he made was ridiculous. Marcus Williams and Kyle Hamilton seemed to be in good position, but neither made huge impacts.
Special Teams: C-
The issue with Justin Tucker and his inability to hit 50-plus-yard kicks is actually becoming a problem. He has earned the benefit of the doubt as much as any player who has worn the purple and black, but it is getting concerning… and costly. Jordan Stout has been looking better this season, until that awful punt of 24 yards to give the Raiders a short field on their game-winning drive. Deonte Harty had a nice 15-yard punt return, but John Kelly Jr. made a poor decision to take a kick out of the end zone. It cost the Ravens 10 yards. Chris Board had a great open-field tackle on the opening kickoff, but later had a (questionable) penalty.
Coaching: C-
I loved when the offense adjusted, and started running to the edge behind Ronnie Stanley and throwing quick passes over Crosby as he was rushing upfield. I also liked seeing Jackson switch from under-center to shotgun and back, changing it up. I hated both challenges. I hated the fancy play call to put Charlie Kolar under center on third-and-one and I hated starting that drive with about 4:00 left in the game with a pass when Henry was gaping a seemingly-tired Raiders defense. Time to get back in the lab.
9 Responses
This offense will struggle all season with this OL! We usually win when Lamar runs, but today he didn’t run much suggesting that he was pretty banged up in the first game and probably why he missed a couple of days of practice last week! As for Harbaugh, his game day decisions are consistent to the point where I just read that he now holds the record for the most blown double digit fourth quarter leads of any HC since 1991! So, while it’s early, it does not appear that this team is the equal of last season’s, especially with the same HC…..
How you let a team that rushed for 4 yds thru three quarters gash you in 4th on PLAY ACTION is mind boggling!!!!!. Who the hell is falling for that when they cant run the freaking ball! Hopefully this season finally makes fans appreciate how much fun great reg seasons are and don’t only care about January
Great article! I saw some improvement from the OL, but I am not convinced Faalele should be a guard. Defense went belly up in the 4th quarter, no idea why. I’m not as hard on the HC as some of you are because this is a really young group. Winning isn’t easy in the NFL. That being said, I believe Eric and Harbaugh both said, “BY SEASONS END, you’re gonna be happy with our OL”. I don’t want our guys to get discouraged, I want them to rise to the next challenge. Those games are over now, let’s move onto the next one and get better.
He’s been making bad game day decisions for 17 years! Has nothing to do with the players!
“offensive line” this and that…the problem with the offense is years old…when we need a drive at the end…whether it be to control clock or finish a game,it many more times than not never happens….the raiders with minshrew scored 13 unanswered points to end the game…we did nothing…and yes that has been a constant in important games with mvp jackson….the offense hibernates at the worst times…might be why we have all of 2 playoff wins in 6 long years…
unacceptable…
10 times losing games in the 4th quarter by double digits in the last 4 years. The pass defense giving up more yards than only 2 other teams in the league this season so far. This bend, don’t break defense of last season getting broken and exposed in the first 2 games.
Changes need to be made and in game adjustments seem bad if there are any being made. No excuses. This DB room has so much talent. Hopefully Wiggins is well soon. It’s time to throw him out there.
While our run defense is good and our pass rushing is trending up, our secondary is losing us games. Let’s hope Orr’s secondary improves very quickly or we’re headed for more of the same. It’s broke. FIX IT!
I’m generally not a blame-it-all-on Harbaugh critic but I think it’s obvious through 17 years game-time decisions, Xs and Os, are not his strong point. It feels like he’s an elderly driver from whom you need to take the keys. But this owner doesn’t do intervention. On another note, Dobbins has 266 yards, 10 yards a carry through 2 games. It will be interesting to watch going forward how the Henry decision plays out. Clearly, Harbs and EDC decided it was better to spend $16 million on Henry and put him behind an inexperienced line, than invest in the OL, and pay pennies to retain an injury-risk Dobbins. We’ll see.
JK would not have those yards behind this Ravens O-Line. I haven’t watched the Chargers this year, but I bet GRO has made some adjustments to his run game. Also, having Herbert, a true NFL passer, keeps the defense honest and doesn’t allow them to stack the box.
Meh,
The coaches challenge has always been a problem for Harbaugh. I honestly think he does it to give the team confidence and a longer timeout.
Stanley’s error are a big problem he gets penalized far to often for a “pro bowler”.
I’m often disappointed with Jackson’s accuracy, but truth be told he takes over games and makes things happen. Would love to see a dominant receiver who makes circuits catches on this team (aka Adams)