OWINGS MILLS, Md. — The Baltimore Ravens are back in a familiar place. They’re looking at a defense filled with big names at a critical juncture of the season and hoping it can carry them to a happy ending. Quarterback Lamar Jackson has been the player largely responsible for handling those expectations for most of the past four seasons. He’s now dealing with a knee injury and relying on that defense to be precisely what it has the potential to be.
It’s no secret the Ravens have been up and down on defense. Baltimore has blown three fourth-quarter leads this season, and two of their defeats came in contests where they had advantages of 17-plus points. These are the kind of meltdowns that would make Ray Lewis throw up in his mouth. The Ravens won both of their championships this century — in the 2000 and 2012 seasons — by routinely beating up on opposing offenses and closing out games in a consistent fashion.
This year’s team certainly has the talent to be that overwhelming. After Sunday’s 16-14 win over Pittsburgh, the question is whether they’re ready to take over down the stretch.
“It’s easier said than done, but the talent is there, the scheme is really good, and the coaches do a great job of putting us in position to be successful,” defensive end Calais Campbell said last month, before the team’s Week 11 game against Carolina. “They listen to our feedback and what we have to say and put it in the game plan. We have a lot of guys who can make plays. It just comes down to high-level execution.”
The Ravens, now 9-4, easily could be in the discussion for the AFC’s top seed in the playoffs if they hadn’t suffered a 28-27 loss to Jacksonville in Week 12. They seized a nine-point lead early in the fourth quarter of that contest before Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence pulled off a late comeback. That’s the only Ravens defeat in the last seven games. This team also faces only one opponent with a winning record the remainder of the season: the Bengals, in a regular-season finale that likely will decide the AFC North.
As Campbell said, Baltimore has everything it needs on defense to stay hot. They’ve got perennial Pro Bowl players (cornerbacks Marcus Peters and Marlon Humphrey) and savvy veterans who are playing at a high level (edge rusher Justin Houston has nine sacks in his 12th season). They’ve seen key players return from injuries (linebacker Tyus Bowser and safety Marcus Williams) while a new star arrived at midseason (linebacker Roquan Smith came via a trade with Chicago). The numbers also have been impressive; the Ravens rank second in the league with 23 takeaways and eighth in points allowed.
This is why the earlier problems were so confounding. There was always going to be an adjustment period under new defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, who replaced Wink Martindale in that role this season. But the Ravens learned just how difficult that change was going to be in those letdown losses, when they were failing to fully grasp the new wrinkles in Macdonald’s scheme, and younger players were blowing assignments. As Campbell said going into Week 11, “We all took turns making our mistakes.”