Ravens self-destruct in loss to Colts

If the Ravens wanted to resemble the exact opposite of the team that took the field last week in New England, then they accomplished their mission on Saturday night in Indianapolis.
Baltimore turned the ball over four times in its 20-3 Divisional Round playoff loss to the Colts. If you count Ed Reed’s fumble (what a tremendous play by Pierre Garcon, by the way) following an interception of Peyton Manning, then the Ravens fumbled the ball three times tonight. Ray Rice was a small disaster, while Joe Flacco threw two interceptions and averaged just 5.4 yards per passing attempt.
The Colts deserve a ton of credit for playing fundamentally sound for most of the night. But this game should have been closer then the final score indicates and there’s little doubt that head coach John Harbaugh will lose some sleep tonight thinking about how many opportunities his team coughed up. What happened to the Raven team that marched into Foxboro last week and gave the Patriots the beating of a lifetime? What happened to the team that was so focused, so mentally prepared to play that many people thought they would pull off the upset in Indy?
The Colts once again proved that they match up extremely well with Baltimore. The Ravens beat themselves throughout the night, but it’s not like their offense was moving the ball at will either. They had a couple of nice drives that ended in turnovers, but for the most part the Ravens looked completely out of sync offensively.
Baltimore reminded everyone tonight why it finished 9-7 this season. They were too inconsistent throughout the year to make a deep run in the postseason and maybe we should have seen this outcome coming.
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Posted in: NFL
Tags: Baltimore Ravens, Ed Reed, Indianapolis Colts, Joe Flacco, nfl playoff scoreboard, Peyton Manning, Pierre Garcon, Ray Rice
“Ray Rice was a small disaster…” Aren’t you being a little hard on him? 13 carries, 67 yards (5.2 ypc), nine catches for 60 yards. He was 46% of the team’s offense. Sure, he had the fumble, but he was the only Baltimore offensive player that played well, outside of maybe Derrick Mason (4-64).
BAL just didn’t have the WRs to gain separation and Flacco was really inaccurate. It was ugly.
Yeah, probably. Maybe “letdown” is what I should have written.
Considering how good he was last week, how much the expectations for him raised and how he killed a big scoring drive with a fumble, I don’t think his final stats paint the entire picture. If you just want to look at the stats, then “small disaster” is harsh.
Regardless, we don’t need to focus on that one line. That wasn’t the crux of the piece.