Expectations, now there’s a dangerous word.
Set them too high and disappointment is imminent.
Set them too low and you set the stage for underachievement.
Entering the 2010 season expectations soared for the Ravens offense and why not? The team brought in Anquan Boldin and Donte Stallworth to augment the dependable Derrick Mason. Just prior to the start of the season they added TJ Houshmandzadeh. Todd Heap proclaimed himself healthier than ever and judging from a productive camp, no one doubted him.
Ray Rice was coming off a stellar 2009 sophomore season and with the arsenal of receiving weapons most expected him to be even more dangerous because it was believed that defenses could not commit as many resources to stop him.
Then the Ravens added Jim Zorn, a new quarterback coach who they said could be more impactful having played the game at a high level and having coached many quarterbacks who all echoed his praises. Mix in the consultative contributions of an experienced offensive mind in the form Al Saunders and it all set up so well for the offensive trigger man, Joe Flacco.
With two years of starting experience and a severe leg contusion behind him, Flacco was expected to take a big step forward and show the world why the Ravens pegged him with the 18th pick in the 2008 NFL Draft.
But it hasn’t worked out that way.
While supporters of Flacco will tell you that his passer rating improved by over 5% from 88.9 in ’09 to 93.6 in ’10, the offense produced over 8% fewer points on average. In fact, the team averaged more points during Flacco’s rookie season than it did in 2010 (24.1 v. 22.3) which can be explained by yet another fact that the Ravens’ red zone scoring percentage fell from last year’s mark of 51.56% to 49.02%.
Anquan Boldin has had 5 catches for 26 yards in TOTAL over the last 3 full games. Prior to becoming a Raven Boldin AVERAGED 6 catches for 79 yards per game over the course of his 7 non-Raven seasons!
It wasn’t supposed to work out like this.
If we are talking about a four game stretch of the season, that’s one thing. But this is an entire season of offensive ineptitude given the talent on the Ravens’ roster. This is a body of work and while no one really wants to take “credit” for it, the finger of blame points directly at Cam Cameron.
Can it be corrected in time to take a serious run at Dallas and Super Bowl XLV?
Well anything is possible but don’t count on it from Cameron unless there’s an intervention of some kind.
On the bright side for the Ravens, is that fact that there isn’t a team among the final 12 without flaws. Even the team that currently is a consensus No. 1 pick across the top of all the meaningless power rankings, the New England Patriots, isn’t without their own warts. They just do a better job of covering them than anyone else because they possess something that no Cam Cameron offense has ever had – a killer instinct.
But that said, let’s not forget that the Patriots have the 25th ranked overall defense and they are 30th against the pass. Before they allow you to take advantage of their shortcomings, they make the opposing offense one dimensional by going for kill shots early and often.
There’s something to be said for that Messrs. Harbaugh, Cameron and Mattison. But then again, you guys already are of the opinion that you are what you are and you just need to ride it out.
Look I’m not making this up. After yesterday’s win Harbaugh said, "We are who we are and we have to move forward with that.”
Am I the only one who thinks that is a cop out?
I can’t believe that the quintessential overachiever Steve Bisciotti, of all people, thinks this is acceptable.
Do you believe for even a nanosecond that Bill Belichick said or thought anything remotely similar to this after the Browns, the lowly stinking Browns pummeled his team in Cleveland 34-14?
“We are who we are”? Please!
Adjust! Work harder! Work smarter! Seek another opinion!
Do something!
Take off the gloves. Unlock the handcuffs that bind your quarterback. Your offensive coordinator said back in October that, "Audibling is overrated. It’s good to talk about and I could sit here and let you guys think that we do all of this audibling and how clever we are. It depends on the way teams are playing you.
“We could, if we choose to, audible with [Flacco] every down. But if it doesn’t fit who you’re playing, then why do it?"
Are you buying this garbage Coach Harbaugh! If so I have a really cool 8 Track System you might be interested in.
C’mon coach, think outside of that box. This thing is there for the taking provided you guys stop doing the same failing things over and over expecting different results.
And please stop pointing towards those 12 wins. You can’t keep expecting to give up 200 yards of offense more than your opponent and expect to be bailed out by 5 turnovers. Your 12 wins are a fraud! You nearly lost to a (4-12) team at home for crying out loud!
But…
You can fix this John. It isn’t too late. Demand more. Implore your assistants to give you the same 60 minutes per game that Ray Lewis asks of his teammates.
Maybe you could even learn something from the fans. Let your expectations rival theirs and be what you CAN be, not who you think you already are.
If not what you are, isn’t good enough and you will be home watching the Divisional Playoffs from your "uneasy" chair.
Post your comment
TheWho
Posted On: 1/5/11 12:37 pm
As frustrating as this season has been I have to say 12-4 is pretty damn good. Some tough games throughout with that said 12-4 is great and we could very well be 8-8. I say that they need to give Flacco a chance to run the offense. Matt Ryan is running the ship in Atlanta and look what he is doing. The boys will come out to play in the playoffs. I see Boldin having a huge Post season and we will run the ball well. Some coaches coach with smarts others force a team to play with heart and leave everything on the field week in and week out. All I'm saying is sometimes it seems like we are not giving 110% and leaving it all on the field. Every game should be played like the Saints game. We left it all on the field that game and it was some damn good football. I would say that as a team we have always played down to the competition and we continued that in the last 2 weeks. Look for a big playoff run and everyone will step up in their respective positions.
Tony Lombardi
Posted On: 1/5/11 9:30 am
Anthony (great name btw)...
It was a question. Please point out where I called him a quitter.
As for me quitting on the team. Maybe we should watch a game together sometime. The emotion is passion and it's the reason this site exists. Trust me, as big a fan as you are, you are not as invested in the Ravens as I am.
Funny how I'm accused of wearing purple goggles by some and being a pessimist by others. I guess that comes with the territory.
One member of the Ravens said I the tenor of my columns/blogs is similar to that of a coach. When the team does well, I tend to point out things that didn't go well in order to become even better; when things go poorly, I tend to find the silver lining.
This game was a mixed bag. They won which most would say is doing well yet I treated it as a loss.
We can probably agree that the team is talented and therein lies the rub for me. I don't think this coaching staff is getting the team to perform to their collective level of talent. And ultimately that falls on Harbaugh. I'm a Harbaugh fan. He's a good coach, not a great one. When his teams become overachievers and not underachievers, then we'll see if he's a great coach.
And as a final note, I'd love to eat every one of these words, put myself out there to ridicule (some may say I already have) while Cam and Harbs prove me wrong.
Right now, I'm not seeing it. I think that's a realist, not a pessimist.
GO RAVENS!
Anthony
Posted On: 1/4/11 6:43 pm
Tony -
Come on dude. John harbaugh has taken us to the playoffs 3 consecutive years in a row with a total regular season record of 32-16. He's won 3 playoff games (on the road) in 2 years and here we are again in Super Bowl contention. To say he's a quitter is kinda sad...to suggest he doesn't know what he's doing is even sadder...to offer your advice as tho Harbaugh needs it is Hilarious!
You know what it sounds like Tony? It sounds like you're the one who quit on the team.
Hate it or love it, it is what it is. This team is too talented to give up on. Don't be the fan that didn't believe...
Pessimism is an emotion not a philosophy. You shouldn't base your articles off of it.
Tony Lombardi
Posted On: 1/4/11 3:31 pm
JD,
I would agree with you and Eric B. that the O-Line play has slipped due to the things he's mentioned below. But if you don't think play calling, cadence, tendencies, personnel groupings, etc have anything to do with the offensive line play, then maybe you might be interested in that 8 track.
Plus, don't blame the running game all on the O-line. The coaching staff has said that Rice's patience has improved, allowing the blocking schemes to develop and that started against the Saints.
JD
Posted On: 1/4/11 12:27 pm
C'mon Tony, you completely fail to mention the most obvious problem the team has on offense, which is the offensive line. Losing Gaither created a domino effect, that has ruined both the pass blocking and run blocking. Michael Oher has struggled mightily at LT, and Chester is a major downgrade from Yanda at RG. Birk has been getting physically blown up routinely as well.
Cam is "handcuffing" the offense because he has no choice. We can't even protect Flacco with 7 guys blocking 4, so how are we supposed to go downfield and make defenses honest?
You seem to have all the answers, yet you aren't on the sidelines. Bad article.
Eric Buckner
Posted On: 1/4/11 12:16 pm
Couldn't agree with you more, except that there is no mention in th ecolumn of the offensive line. Talk about regression. They miss Gaither more than anyone let's on and it impacts 3 positions on the line. Oher is average at best at left tackle, and Yanda is an all pro guard but just an adequate tackle.
The problem exists on the O-Line. Cousins and Moll aren't able to step in. That's the issue.
Tony Lombardi
Posted On: 1/4/11 8:31 am
Ok, perhaps the use of the word "fraud" was a bit harsh but I'll stick by it. Decorated SI columnist Don Banks said the same thing albeit a bit more diplomatically:
"Baltimore won, but it might be the least impressive 12-4 team in recent NFL history."
ravcolt
Posted On: 1/4/11 7:08 am
How much do you want for the 8-track system? I'm sure its in better shape than the joke of an offense. As I said five weeks ago Flacco and the offense are in decline. Should he flounder in the first half against KC Harbaugh owes it to the fans, team and owner to give Bulger a chance. QB ratings are only a measure of what the formula says it is, and wins are not part of the equation. Check out Unitas' QB rating the year the Colts won the SB. Harbaugh is looking more and more like Billick everyday--a sobering and less than confident endorsement.
Andy
Posted On: 1/4/11 4:04 am
Our 12-4 record is a fraud? I've liked many of your articles, but you're too emotional in this one. Our wins have been hard-fought. If you can't appreciate that, I have to question your understanding of the game. Come on - the fact is you can't change an NFL team overnight, so Harbaugh saying, "We are who we are" isn't giving up - it's speaking the truth. It doesn't meant we won't try something new - it means we have some idea of what we're capable right now, and we'll try to make the best of that - which is to say our best is yet to come and it's pretty damn good.
John
Posted On: 1/4/11 12:22 am
I don't disagree with those suggestions, but Cam is the one making the calls. Maybe getting the players more involved in formulating the game plan would have a lasting effect, but other than that it's Cam making the calls. There's no simple answer or they would have changed something already. Cam's system was good for a young QB to have success, but Flacco needs to grow.
Tony Lombardi
Posted On: 1/3/11 10:55 pm
1. I would be sure to gather the input of my offensive players when formulating a game plan. I would want them to buy in because in doing so they assume ownership, at least in part. Assuming ownership invites commitment to the plan.
2. Find the comfort zones of all skill players and play to them.
3. The offensive line has struggled at times. Joe Flacco seems to prefer the no huddle/shotgun approach. Use it and use it often. Flacco seems to find a rhythm more quickly that way and it gives the offensive line an advantage. The more it’s used the more weary defensive linemen become.
4. While running no huddle, rotate your receivers. Force opposing DB’s to work hard, covering deep passes and crossing routes even if they are designed decoys, particularly if they are in man coverage. The fresh rotation of receivers will eventually tire the DB’s and open up a kill shot downfield.
5. Mix the cadence to invite “free” plays and keep the defensive line off balance.
6. Self scout and study your own tendencies. Go against them with formations and personnel groupings. This will force defenses to slow down and when they do opportunities will open up.
7. Work in gadget plays if for no other reason than to again, slow down defenses.
8. Get your unit to the line of scrimmage sooner to provide more time for pre-snap reads and to use false snap counts to get the defense to tip their hand and tip off blitz packages. Oh and give your quarterback some audible options. They really aren’t overrated.
9. Take more shots down field in man coverage or by flooding zones. Todd Heap, Anquan Boldin and TJ Houshmandzadeh all have the ability to go up and get the ball, particularly against smaller defenders. A catch or penalty are possibilities.
10. Find your inner killer instinct and let it breathe for 60 minutes every Sunday.
I’m sure I could think of more but maybe you’d like to help John?
Tony Lombardi
Posted On: 1/3/11 10:53 pm
John, surely you jest…
I don’t begin to profess that my understanding of the game approaches that of John Harbaugh or any of his coaches. I’m pretty sure they’ve forgotten more about the game than I’ll ever know.
Maybe you can relate?
However I have seen the dynamics of management in the workplace and I’ve experienced how managers with close personal ties lose objectivity and their protectionism stymies growth for the others who might count on their competencies.
Before I begin to answer your question, I will admit that the title of this column is unintentionally a bit misleading and I believe those who miss the point will do so because the title is prejudicial. I erred in that regard. Message board members over on The Sun’s message board have certainly reminded me of that.
Now, what would I suggest to Cam?
In no particular order Part I: (cont)
John
Posted On: 1/3/11 7:24 pm
Why aren't you head coach? You're reasoning is flawless, clearly it's that simple.
What exactly would you suggest Harbaugh tells Cam, other than "give it 60 minutes?"
Bob in Parkville (no not that one)
Posted On: 1/3/11 6:20 pm
Eric,miss remedial reading classes?
eric
Posted On: 1/3/11 5:50 pm
Sorry Tony but this column is off the deep end. Our offense is down because our OL without Gaither has been downgraded, not to mention the dropoff in play from Birk. Our WR's can't get deep, our DL can't rush the QB and our secondary was supposed to be the worst in football. This article should be about how our coaches got this team to overachieve to 12-4. Harbaugh walking into his office and saying "Oh come on guys you need to do a better job" and that will fix everything is the sort of jibberish you'd usually read on a message board.
Joey P
Posted On: 1/3/11 4:25 pm
At first I wanted to read this, get pissed off and then bust your ass Lombardi. But after reading it, I think you nailed it and I can feel your frustration. Can you please have a courier deliver this to Harbaugh's secretary?
ravenjoe
Posted On: 1/3/11 3:32 pm
Right on, TL! I am one of the labeled 'naysayers' in the group which says this team has UnderAchieved this year, regardless of their 12-4 record. For once, I'd like to see this team play with some 'fire'. If all combatants would play with the 'fire' and 'intentsity' of messiers Lewis and Mason, for example, we would be resting a lot easier.
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