Registered Members experience this forum ad and noise-free.
CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.It is a fallacy that Brady and the offense always struggles vs. the Ravens. They scored 41 points last tie they met (granted it is on the legs of Blount). In the regular season of 2012, the Pats scored 30 points and the Ravens won on a questionable field goal by the Ravens at the end of regulation.
Forget the damned field goal - the pass interference/holding call on McCourty that led to the comeback was AWFUL!
think this is going to be a big test for the Patriots' front in terms of stopping the run. This is a team that is committed to running the football. They're one of the best OL in the league in terms of getting movement along the line of scrimmage. The stat I'm pointing to: In the regular season, they were second in the NFL in terms of yards before contact. So running back Justin Forsett is getting a clean entry into the line of scrimmage. An interesting thing to note is that yards after contact per rush, the Ravens are No. 28. What that means is Forsett is getting through the holes well, but he's an easier tackle. I shouldn't say easy tackle, but let's just say he's not Marshawn Lynch (the Seahawks are No. 1 in yards after contact per rush).
This is the game where I feel Jerod Mayo's presence will be mostly missed. I think the Ravens are going to come out and make the Patriots play regular defense. That means taking a talented secondary player off the field with more base offensive formations, and the Patriots will match that with their regular 4-3 defense. So this is going to be an expanded role for Jonathan Casillas as a third linebacker or Alan Branch as the fifth defensive lineman depending on what package they call on. This isn't a team that spreads you out like Peyton Manning and the Broncos, Aaron Rodgers and the Packers etc.
Not to mention Browner and the best bust pick in the league Collins.I agree 100%. I feel pretty confident in this game, for basically two reasons: 1) Since the loss in 2012, we're adding Gronk and Revis, two absolute game changers. 2) Since the loss in 2012, the Ravens have lost two huge defensive leaders in Lewis and Reed.
But I definitely understand why a lot of fans have a pit in their stomach. It's hard to shake tough losses like that.
To them, yes. Because it was the playoffs.
I don't see the run being a big part of EITHER team's game plan. The Ravens ranked 2nd in the league in run D, and the Pats ranked 9th, and over the last half of they year has been in the top 5. The Ratbirds managed to gleen only 49 yds against a Steeler D that is ranked only marginally better in Rushing D. The Steelers weren't much better only managing 80 against Baltimore
I don't see the run being a big part of EITHER team's game plan. The Ravens ranked 2nd in the league in run D, and the Pats ranked 9th, and over the last half of they year has been in the top 5. The Ratbirds managed to gleen only 49 yds against a Steeler D that is ranked only marginally better in Rushing D. The Steelers weren't much better only managing 80 against Baltimore
That being said, I think the Pats have better rushing weapons in Blount/Gray and Vareen. The Ravens have the better defensive front. All things considered, I'd take that 80 total yds and about 20 carries that Pittsburgh managed without their top offensive weapon. Anything more that those totals I'd take as a very good sign
Just no Matthew Slater bombs on Saturday
i'm not worried about winning the game, i'm worried about the physical toll its going to take. These games are usually a football version of Rock um Sock um Robots. While the pats and ravens beat the hell out of each other denver will play a finesse team in the colts.
That's the biggest reason why I was disappointed Pitt lost. Not because I'm terrified of Baltimore, but because it gives Denver another bye week.
True, being able to consistently make 3rd and 2's on the ground and get into the endzone by rushing inside the 5 will go a lot longer toward determining a winner than who has the most 15 yd gains on the ground.I think whichever team can run the ball effectively will have a significant advantage. It doesn't have to be about putting up big yards, but it will set up play action and keep the blitz in check.
I do think that the Pats play better out of sub than in base, so keeping them in base is a key strategic move.
If Denver thinks the Colts are a bye week, the next time they play will be in July.
I do think that the Pats play better out of sub than in base, so keeping them in base is a key strategic move.
The Colts are not good. Denver can think as lowly as they want and Indy still has about a 10% chance of winning. Maybe less.
Yet the colts almost beat them earlier in the year in Denver....
Meh. Denver had that game won and let up. And Indy hasn't been anywhere near the team they were in September/October for weeks now.
My question is how would Baltimore keep NE out of sub? By going bigger and running more? I can live with that as I think Baltimore's run success is overstated. They played so many terrible run defenses this year (Pitt, Carolina, Cleveland, SD and NO are all in the bottom ten in defensive ypc - if DVOA is your thing, then you'll find Carolina, Cincy, Cleveland, NO and Atlanta in the lower tier) that it is hard to get a legitimate read on them. The only defense they faced all year in the top 10 in both DVOA and ypc carry was Tampa. Houston was next at 10th in ypc and 16th in DVOA.
So, if Baltimore thinks their best shot is just lining up and running at what they perceive to be as a weak NE front, I can live with that.
From our archive - this week all-time:
May 24 - June 8 (Through 26yrs)










