
Five thoughts on the Ravens’ 35-6 loss to the Seattle Seahawks Sunday at M&T Bank Stadium:
Elite Seahawks On A Whole Other Level
Toto, we’re not in Miami anymore. Or Cleveland. This was a game against the two-time defending NFC champions, an elite squad gathering momentum for a playoff run. The Seahawks were dominant on defense, slick on offense, way too good for a Baltimore team reaching into the bowels of its depth chart at key positions. The Ravens needed a whole lot to go right if they were going to make things interesting, but they didn’t check off any of the boxes. They had to avoid turnovers, but lost a key fumble in the second quarter. Their offense had to produce under its third starting quarterback in four games, but it never reached the end zone. The defense needed to dial up a strong performance against Russell Wilson and Seattle’s offense, but the Seahawks moved the ball all day and Wilson threw five touchdown passes. “It was bad,” Ravens Head Coach John Harbaugh said, “the worst we played all year by far.” As a result, the Ravens’ run of last-second losses came to a thudding halt. This one was over early in the third quarter.
The Seahawks’ top-ranked run defense came as advertised, stuffing the Ravens’ ground game. Baltimore backs gained 28 yards on 14 carries, sending a clear message that the Ravens had to move the ball in the air if they were going to move it at all. That put quarterback ![]()
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A Move That Could Have A Major Long-Term Effect
On a dismal day, the Ravens made a move that could have major, long-range implications. They moved Osemele from left guard, where he has played all season, to left tackle, replacing ![]()
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Worst-Case Scenario Before Half
The Ravens were down by just four points when they forced a punt and started a drive at their 23 with exactly 60 seconds left in the first half. They went aggressive, calling a timeout to stop the clock before the punt and then attempting a pass on first down. The aggressiveness was no surprise, but I wouldn’t have minded seeing Clausen take a knee, especially after a penalty set the offense back – a four-point halftime deficit seemed like a triumph. Yes, the Seahawks still had all three timeouts left, so they might have used them and forced a punt, but in any case, the worst-case scenario ensued when Buck Allen fumbled and the Seahawks recovered at the Baltimore 14. It took them just two plays to score a touchdown, and they then took the second-half kickoff and drove to another touchdown, effectively blowing the game open. “If you give up turnovers against a team like that, you have no chance,” Harbaugh said.
Short Takes
You know it’s a rough day when your most-talked-about play is a by-the-hair tackle. Receiver ![]()
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