
Five thoughts on the Ravens’ 31-13 preseason loss to the Washington Redskins Saturday night at M&T Bank Stadium:
Scoreboard Didn’t Tell Whole Story
This was one of those nights when the scoreboard didn’t tell the whole story. When the starters were in early, the Ravens dominated, opening a 13-0 lead that could have been bigger. ![]()
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Smith Shouldn’t Lose His Cool, But He Didn’t Need To Play Anymore Anyway
If the Ravens are going to get into a fight, the smart money is on Steve Smith Sr. being involved. A highly emotional player who loves trash talking, Smith plays with an edge. Thus, it wasn’t exactly shocking to see him become the only Baltimore player to get ejected when tempers flared and a mini-brawl broke out. Although a number of players were involved, Smith and Washington cornerback Chris Culliver kept mixing it up the
Jackson Electric On Kick Return, But Job Not Set In Stone
Asa Jackson made his case to become the No. 1 kick returner. Near the end of the first half, he fielded a kickoff in the end zone and ran it back 103 yards before being brought down just short of the goal line. Although the Ravens failed to turn the opportunity into points, Jackson made his point with his electric runback. Opposing kickers have given the Ravens’ returners few chances in the preseason, but Jackson finally got a shot and made the most of it. He obviously has the speed for the job, and it appears he’s got the playmaking touch, too. Ironically, later in the game he showed his inexperience as a punt returner, trying to make a play when defenders were bearing down on him. His bad decision-making resulted in a fumble, and it could lead the coaches to wonder about him as a punt returner, a job he seemed to have locked up. Jerry Rosburg, the Ravens’ special teams coach, said recently that the “ideal” situation is for one guy to handle both return jobs. Jackson is closer than anyone to making that happen, but nothing is set in stone because he violated the “no turnover” commandment.
Ravens’ Run Defense Rebounds
After getting gashed repeatedly on the ground in Philadelphia last week, the Ravens’ starting defense fared much better against the run, limiting Washington’s Alfred Morris, a prolific back, to four yards on seven carries early in the game. I’ve gone on record saying I think the Ravens’ run defense will be fine without Haloti Ngata because they’ve assembled enough young talent to carry on, but that prediction didn’t hold up last week in Philadelphia. This was more like it. Ravens nose tackle ![]()
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Quick Takes
Penalties negated a spectacular 33-yard catch-and-run touchdown pass from Flacco to tight end ![]()
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