There are indictments in the Baltimore Ravens stat pack as well from 2011. And most of them are related to how badly they tend to play away from Maryland. The Ravens lost at Jacksonville, Tennessee, Seattle and San Diego this season. None of those teams made the playoffs. Baltimore managed just 51 points total in the four games. And while the losses to the Jaguars and Titans are lessened by the passage of time (they happened in September and October), the loss to San Diego on December 18 is a glaring toe-stub from the tail end of the year. Baltimore lost that one 34-14 and it wasn’t even that competitive as the Chargers got up 31-7 by the end of the third. In that game, the Chargers did things similar to what Houston did last week. Pressured quarterback Joe Flacco (five sacks) and created turnovers (two picks). Houston just didn’t have the quarterback to finish Baltimore off.
2011 Patriots Defense was top five in one area that will be useful this weekend
The Patriots defense has been hammered from a statistical perspective all year long, however there’s one statistical ranking that could be a positive sign for this weekend’s matchup against the Ravens.
Football Outsiders has the Pats ranked 4th overall in pass coverage on running backs. Against the Ravens with Ray Rice as their leading receiver this could be a big factor.
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FOOTBALL OUTSIDERS: Divisional Round Quick Reads
FOOTBALL OUTSIDERS: Divisional Round Quick Reads
Great Pats stuff in here, a lot about how the Ravens might try to copy some of the Cowboys’ game plan for Gronk and Hernando.
The Dallas Cowboys may have shown the Ravens how to get the job done back in Week 6. Hernandez and Gronkowski combined for 142 yards in that game. That’s a nice yardage figure, but it came on 21 total targets, a rate of 6.8 yards per target that was the lowest for the duo this season (not counting Weeks 3 and 4, when Hernandez didn’t play). They had 15 receptions on the day, an impressive catch rate of 71 percent. On the other hand, 10 of those receptions gained fewer than 10 yards.
A look at data from Football Outsiders’ Game Charting Project reveals some interesting trends in that game:
Seven of the throws to Gronkowski and Hernandez came with a linebacker or lineman (usually Sean Lee) in coverage, resulting in five completions for 44 yards and one interception.
Seven of the throws came with a cornerback in coverage (most often Orlando Scandrick or Mike Jenkins), producing four completions for 40 yards.
The remaining seven passes were listed with no defender. Twice Gronkowski was uncovered on tight end screens, resulting in gains of 9 and 20 yards.
Four times the primary defender was named as “hole in zone,” and all four balls were caught for a total of 29 yards. And one pass intended for Hernandez was batted down at the line of scrimmage. Three of the six incomplete passes came with Tom Brady under pressure, and a fourth came after Brady scrambled. No defender was credited with a hurry on that play, but Brady rarely leaves the pocket unless under heavy duress.
The Cowboys blitzed Brady with five or more pass rushers only five times. They went with a four-man rush 22 times, and rushed only three on a whopping 17 plays. When we remove the Cowboys’ three sacks from the data, we find that Brady threw to his tight ends 69 percent of the time against a three-man rush, but only 40 percent of the time against four or more pass rushers.
Patriots play bend-don’t-break defense – USATODAY.com
2010 Patriots vs. Ravens Box Score Flashback
This game was won in overtime by the Pats, 23-20. Biggest thing of note from this one is that Gronk wasn’t quite Gronk yet, and only caught one pass all game. The Pats had 2 interceptions and 9 penalties yet still overcame the Ravens because they kept their running in check (99 yards on 34 attempts for 2.9 avg), and had one of their best defensive games of the 2010 season, especially in crunch time.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/2010-patriots-vs-ravens-box-score-flashback-this/
2009 Patriots – Ravens Playoff Box Score Flashback
These numbers just go to show if you can’t stop the run and turn the ball over four times it doesn’t really matter else you do, you’re going to lose.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/2009-patriots-ravens-playoff-box-score/