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Ravens News 11/6: Winning Formula

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By: Vasilis Lericos

Jessica Rapfogel-USA TODAY Sports

2023 NFL season, Week 9: What We Learned from Sunday’s games

Kevin Patra, NFL.com

Baltimore Ravens 37, Seattle Seahawks 3

Baltimore beats down another NFC division leader. Two weeks after shellacking the Detroit Lions at home, the Ravens destroyed the NFC West-leading Seahawks. Baltimore’s defense dominated the line of scrimmage, stuffing Seattle’s run game and discombobulating Geno Smith on nearly every dropback. Baltimore generated pressure on 54.5% of Smith’s dropbacks, holding the QB to 5 of 13 for 29 yards and an INT when under pressure, per Next Gen Stats. The Ravens earned four sacks and forced two turnovers. Kyle Van Noy has been a big midseason pickup, sacking Smith on back-to-back plays late in the second quarter, including a strip-sack. Baltimore’s D comes in waves, and the exotic pressure packages make life miserable for opponents. The Ravens have proven they can shut down anyone.

Next Gen stat of the game: The Ravens’ offense rushed for 298 yards and three touchdowns on 27 carries for a season-high +157 rushing yards over expected in Week 9.

NFL Research: The Ravens are 3-0 in 2023 versus teams that entered the game with a winning record. Week 4 at Cleveland (28-3), Week 7 versus Detroit (38-6), Week 9 versus Seattle (37-3). The Ravens did not trail in any of those games.

The Breakdown: Brown’s Five Thoughts on Ravens Pummeling Seahawks

Clifton Brown, BaltimoreRavens.com

Baltimore’s Rushing Attack Keeps Rolling

Baltimore amassed 298 yards rushing, the fourth-most in franchise history.

Plenty of players are providing juice, and the headliner in this game was undrafted rookie Keaton Mitchell, who busted out for 138 yards in just nine carries, showing his take-it-to-the-house speed. Mitchell had a 40-yard touchdown run in the third quarter and a 60-yard gallop in the fourth quarter.

Meanwhile, Gus Edwards ran like a tank again, scoring two touchdowns to bring his total to five in two weeks. If you’re trying to bring down Edwards in the open field these days, arm tackles won’t get it done. During his 42-yard rumble in the third quarter, Edwards had Seattle bounding off his body like bowling pins before he was finally brought down.

Offensive Coordinator Todd Monken talked during the week about how important the running game would be to the Ravens entering the second part of the season. “You can’t control the game if you can’t run the football,” Monken said.

Monken has always attacked through the air as a coordinator during his career, but he’s never strayed from incorporating the running game. The Ravens will be most lethal if they’re balanced, and right now that formula is working.

NFL Week 9 Game Recap: Baltimore Ravens 37, Seattle Seahawks 3

Gordon McGuinness, PFF

Offensive spotlight: Lamar Jackson was efficient as a passer, going 21-of-26 for 187 yards, but the rushing attack was the story of the day for the Ravens’ offense. Jackson notched 60 yards on the ground, Gus Edwards had 52 yards and two scores, Justice Hill ran for 40 yards on 13 carries and undrafted rookie Keaton Mitchell racked up 138 yards and a touchdown of his own.

First-half turnovers were the biggest issue for the Ravens — a strip-sack on Lamar Jackson and an Odell Beckham Jr. fumble where he held the ball in one hand and paid the price. Beckham made up for it in the fourth quarter, though, catching his first touchdown as a Raven to finish the day with five receptions for 56 yards and a touchdown.

Defensive spotlight:

For the Ravens, safety Geno Stone extended his NFL lead with a sixth interception on the year, taking advantage of an overthrow by Geno Smith and finding the ball over the top. Baltimore’s schemed pass rush was ferocious again, with Justin Madubuike and Odafe Oweh registering a sack each, Kyle Van Noy securing two and forcing a fumble, and Travis Jones, Michael Pierce and Jadeveon Clowney combining for four batted passes.

Rookie spotlight:

Keaton Mitchell broke out in the Ravens’ backfield, rushing nine times for 138 yards. Wide receiver Zay Flowers had a quiet game, seeing just one target, which he caught for 11 yards.

Report card: Position-by-position grades for Ravens’ 37-3 win over Seahawks

Mike Preston, The Baltimore Sun

Offensive line

Center Tyler Linderbaum and left guard John Simpson were outstanding in knocking the Seahawks off the ball. Right guard Kevin Zeitler struggled early but was sound in the second half. Right tackle Patrick Mekari was solid in relief of injured starter Morgan Moses but left tackle Ronnie Stanley struggled again. After having trouble with power rushers a week ago against Arizona, he had a hard time with speed rushers Sunday. The Ravens changed up their game plan and gave him a lot of help with double teams and chip blocks. Grade: B

Secondary

Even though Smith seemed lost, the Seahawks came into the game with one of the best groups of receivers in the league. But except for a 50-yard reception by DK Metcalf in the first half, the Ravens shut them down. Both safeties, Geno Stone and Kyle Hamilton, had strong performances and cornerbacks Marlon Humphrey and Brandon Stephens shadowed Metcalf and receiver Tyler Lockett all over the field. Stone had the game’s only interception, his league-leading sixth of the season. Grade: A

Judging biggest overreactions for NFL Week 9

Dan Graziano, ESPN

The Ravens will be the No. 1 seed in the AFC playoffs

If the season ended today, the Ravens would be the No. 2 seed. They have the same record as the Chiefs, and Kansas City would win the tiebreaker based on a better record in conference games. But the season does not end today, and while recent history tells us it’s a bad bet to predict the AFC Championship Game will be held anywhere but Kansas City, the Ravens have to have your attention.

Baltimore has played three teams this season that entered the game with a winning record, and not only has it beaten all three, but it has done so by a combined score of 103-12. For the season, Baltimore is allowing 13.8 points per game. The last time the Ravens were this stingy in their first nine games was 2000 — when they went on to win the Super Bowl.

Verdict: NOT AN OVERREACTION

Originally posted on Baltimore Beatdown – All Posts