To say Saturday’s loss was devastating would be a major understatement. Losing to a bitter archrival in such an embarrassingly ugly way after having the game in control is about as easy to take as a 3 hour lecture from the Terrible Towel waving Dan Dierdorf.
Today we are left to study the carnage, assess the damage and to begin the healing process.
Clearly there’s plenty of blame to go around for the Ravens from the non-clutch play of the supposed franchise quarterback to questionable play calling; from some shoddy pass protection to allowing a receiver to get behind a prevent alignment; from dropped passes to a grossly incompetent display of how to protect the football.
This one hurts like hell!
Sunday morning was as welcoming for me as sunlight to the characters of True Blood. I didn’t want to get out of bed. I tried to convince myself that that loss was just a bad dream – a nightmare.
It wasn’t!
Fortunately the dust has begun to settle. Clarity draws near along with a sobering reality – the Ravens are a good team but they aren’t good enough. They are like a B student from whom we are expecting A’s. They have “A” potential but somehow along the way, the student and teacher just aren’t connecting.
After the game, the Ravens’ battery mates had some interesting comments.
"The bottom line is [The Steelers] are better at winning right now than we are”, according to Joe Flacco. “We have to improve. We're just not there yet."
When asked to evaluate the Ravens' 13-5 season, six-time Pro Bowl center Matt Birk replied: "It's hard to frame it right now. It definitely hurts. I think that we're the best team in football, but it's the best team on game day that wins and gets to advance."
The best team in football…
Hmmm…
It’s hard to argue with Birk really. The Ravens are loaded with talent yet they lack direction. They are a bit like a Lamborghini only grandpa is behind the steering wheel. And if someone doesn’t take the keys away from grandpa the team will never get to where they should be going and they’ll continue underachieving.
Or worse. They might even crash.
Whether in life or in football when results fall short of expectations changes have to be made. That may come in the form of a new strategy or approach or it may come in the form of new personnel.
Cam Cameron has held the keys to the Ravens offense for the last three years. His “ride” has been retrofitted with some performance enhancers yet he struggles to consistently get the offense out of second gear, particularly against formidable opponents.
Despite the additions of Anquan Boldin, TJ Houshmandzadeh, Donte Stallworth and 2 promising rookie tight ends the Ravens fell from the 13th ranked offense in 2009 to the 22nd ranked offense in 2010. Perhaps even more telling is their record against the elite teams in the AFC.
The perennial AFC powerhouses are undeniably the Colts, Patriots and Steelers. When facing those three teams during Cameron’s tenure the Ravens are 3-11 with 2 of those wins courtesy of the Ben Roethlisberger-less Steelers. And the scary truth is this won’t change unless the Ravens change.
Sources close to the team will tell you that Cameron is a control freak and that Joe Flacco has few pre-snap bail out options. After all this is a coordinator who believes that audibles are overrated. For all intents and purposes Flacco has been reduced to little more than a robot on the receiving end of Cameron’s remote control.
So how does Flacco grow?
If he’s asked to simply do as he’s told how will he learn from someone else’s mistakes?
Quarterbacks coach Jim Zorn was suppose to deliver a former player’s insight and perspective to the Ravens’ signal caller and train him to be more explosive in the pocket. Maybe he too has felt the stifling effects of Cameron’s controls because Zorn looks more like a candidate for the lead role in the Weekend at Bernie’s sequel than he does a mentor for Flacco.
More concerning however, is the waning confidence the players have in Cameron’s system, something that is pretty apparent in the expressive body language of Messrs. Boldin, Houshmandzadeh and Derrick Mason. If they don’t believe in the system, how can they produce results?
If you’ve paid attention at all to these players over the course of the season, you get the feeling that they harbor a sense of responsibility to their teammates and that they need to deliver in order to pick up the defense from time to time – one that has essentially carried the team for years.
Should Cameron return for the 2011 season and he fails early on, it isn’t hard to imagine the offense once again becoming a collection of underachievers who continue to lose to the likes of the Colts, Patriots and Steelers. And that’s exactly what will continue to happen unless the Ravens make the right changes. To keep doing the same things over and over and expecting better results amounts to little more than the quintessential definition of insanity.
Cameron has to change or be changed. There’s really no way around it.
Otherwise, the Ravens will become the Philadelphia Eagles. Sure, they’ll be in the postseason mix pretty regularly and like the Eagles they’ll be sent home fairly early just as regularly.
If that’s good enough for John Harbaugh, Ozzie Newsome and Steve Bisciotti then the rest of us will all have to reset our level of expectation. But something tells me that Bisciotti will rally his veteran offensive players for a little pow wow to discuss Cameron similar to the way he discussed Brian Billick’s future 3 years ago.
Then it was determined, and rightfully so, that change was needed.
Unfortunately for Cameron, change is calling once again.
Post your comment
Rob Moffett
Posted On: 1/18/11 12:35 pm
Unfortunately, the Ravens have more problems then Cam being afraid to let our offense do what they need to win.Our defense is great, but is aging.And we need someone to protect Flacco to do his job. And having Rice run the ball on every play against a team like the Steelers was pure stupidity.If Flacco cant throw the ball and have someone catch, we won't ever make it to the superbowl.As much as people hate Roethlisberger, the man takes care of business, and is in complete control over his offensive players, which should be a lesson to the Ravens owners.I believe Harbaugh is doing a great job, but disagree when He says that Cam Cameron stays.Its either shape up and play like the winning teams, or keep getting knocked out in the playoffs, which was luck we went that far when you consider how we played in some of the games this season. Neverless, I'm a die hard Ravens fan, and continue to give my support to the team. It would just be nice to go all the way again.
Sean Mitchell
Posted On: 1/17/11 11:29 pm
While I certainly have no problem with getting rid of Cameron, I think Raven fans have to come to grips with the possibility that our franchise QB may not be able to get the job done. People can cite all the stats they want, but the fact is that in crunch time last Saturday, Flacco crumbled. First, he throws a God-awful "Romo-esque" INT. He then fumbles the snap. This is the second time in two weeks that he fumbled the snap, he also did it in the KC playoff game which cost the Ravens a TD. He has now played in 7 playoff games and looked dreadful in 6 of them. He has never beaten Manning or Big Ben and the only game that he beat Brady, he complted 4 passes with an INT. BTW, Mark Sanchez has beaten Manning, Big Ben, and Brady (twice) this year. Winning Super Bowls isn't just about you passer rating, it is about making the plays or not making the plays that cost you games when it counts. Flacco has given me no indication that he is capable of doing this. He is not a rookie, he is a 3rd year QB. The defense gave him a 14 point lead. He should have been able to manage the game into a victory
Eric Buckner
Posted On: 1/17/11 10:01 pm
Thanks for recognizing the "shoddy pass protection". Note that the offensive line is the main reason that the playoff run ended where is did. Without Gaither and 2 others playing different positions than they did last year, the team finished 28th in the league in rushing yards per carry. The run blocking was below par and the pass protection is inadequate against good teams.
It's easy to ask Cam to turn in the keys, but the car won't run without an engine, i.e. an offensive line.
Robert
Posted On: 1/17/11 11:34 am
I've been calling for Cam's head for 3 years. I never understood the theory of in taking a man that was 1-15 as a head coach (Miami) and making him our offensive coordinator. It seems pretty obvious he just doesnt have what it takes to be successful in the NFL.
Robert Lester
Posted On: 1/17/11 11:24 am
We have no one on the offensive side who is a take charge kind of person such as Ray Lewis,when have ever seen emotion come from cameron ,flacco has no fire in him,unless he makes a great play ,you need a team leader on both sides of the ball,to fire up the team,show some life,there seems to be no since of urgancy to huddle up and get going ,how many delay of game do you need to have ,whats up with trying to run rice up the middle time and time again ,its like trying to drive a car through a brick wall and back up and do it again its a no brainer go arround
Phil (not Savage) from Frostburg
Posted On: 1/17/11 10:58 am
Well, TL, you've hit the nail on the head about the offensive philosophy. Nuff said, really. Whether one agrees or disagrees, it has to change just for the sake of changing or the team will implode next year at the first sign of any struggle. Cam is clearly too inflexible and stubborn, and that's a recipe for disaster. The most important thing that has to change is giving more autonomy to Flacco. It's just too easy for defenses to gameplan against us right now. If Hue Jackson is not hired by the Raiders, he should be our next coordinator.
The 2nd thing that needs to change is the draft philosophy. I don't know what that philosophy is exactly, only that whatever it is, it ain't working. This team is old in the starting 22, with very few of the younger players looking like potential quality starters. The team needs to rehire Phil Savage as director of scouting. Let DeCosta remain heir apparent to Ozzie as director of personnel or whatever, but get Phil back to run the scouting department and get this team back to where it used to be in that department. These last two drafts in particular but frankly most of them under DeCosta have been way below average. It would be nice to draft wide receivers and tight ends who can actually contribute on offense, not just cover on special teams. (If DeCosta thinks that's harsh, then he should agree that Cameron didn't use his draft picks properly and should be replaced.) In the last two drafts, the only guy whose performance has exceeded his draft position has been Webb. Even Oher looks like a bad 1st rounder at the moment once the league figured him out.
Now let's mention something good, the defensive philosophy. Mattison has taken a lot of heat after a shaky start to 2009, but the last half of 2009 and all of this year the defense greatly overachieved. With a shaky secondary and one legit pass rusher, the defense schemed its way to a very solid season. They had a great gameplan against the Steelers each of the three games and almost stole the playoff game before Cam's crew gave it back. They need another pass rusher and more quality youth and team speed, but there's nothing wrong with the coaching here.
As to the rest of the front office, great job in addressing the secondary weaknesses and the WR position, but they get an F for failing to address the OL at all. Everyone knew there was no OL depth at the start of training camp and as soon as Gaither went down, their first priority should have been to find somebody better than Cousins and Moll who could let Yanda remain at guard.
This loss will take a while to get over, but it feels worse to me because I have a sense the team doesn't have the youth and the backups in waiting to sustain some of the veterans and pending free agents who naturally will cycle out. Also, this was the most injury-free year I can ever remember. Consider what the Steelers and Colts have gone through. A team rarely gets that lucky two years in a row.
Tony Lombardi
Posted On: 1/17/11 10:14 am
Last week I was forwarded an eye opening stat by a member of the Ravens' organization. When the Ravens rush Ben Roethlisberger with 4 or less over the course of the last 3 seasons (Saturday's game excluded) he has a passer rating of 62 and 1 TD to go with 3 INT's.
When the Ravens bring 5+ Ben has a passer rating of 121 with 4 TD's and 0 INT's. So obviously his size and strength enables him to avoid the rush and make plays down field.
However facing 3rd and 19, rushing 3 was ridiculous and perhaps even more ridiculous when in a prevent, Lardarius Webb allowed Brown to get behind him. While Mattison's call was a bad one, Webb's execution was even worse.
Lisa G
Posted On: 1/17/11 10:03 am
Well said!! I agree with this and I also agree with Jim M - the O and the D coordinators must go ! 3rd and 19th - you only send 3 on the line - no no that game belongs to us ! Ok dropped balls, rare fumble - we still had the chance to win - just hold their offense - the Defense did a great job! I don't blame them at all you have a big ben as QB who we all know he can escape many tackles and you only send 3 men? How is it that $70,000 + see it and he can't? They can't be expected to win every game! Let Joe earn the Ravens wings and fly! Cam and Matt need to go!
jim m.
Posted On: 1/17/11 8:33 am
Remember there were 2 dropped passes 1 for a Td the other for a first down (thanks Mr. I want the ball TJ)and a penalty that denied a TD that came out of nowhere(I surely didn't see it). But I've hated Cam camrons calls all year long. Also don't forget the defense. Everytime we rushed 3 against the Steelers "Big Ben" had plenty of time to pick us apsrt and make big plays. So I think both O and D Coordenators should be looking for a new job. If I can see rushing 3 people against anybody for the Ravens doesn't work how can't a guy that studies our defensive game film see that. It's plain stupidity!!!!
Lisa G
Posted On: 1/17/11 7:48 am
I've never read a better statement to describe the Ravens....The Ravens are like a Lamborghini only with grandpa behind the wheel. Spot on! Bring on change please....we need it! Great post!
Jerry B
Posted On: 1/17/11 6:32 am
Great article, TL! You already know where I stand on this subject because I've been disappointed in Cameron's ultra-conservative philosophy since last year! But, he's not the only inept coach on the Ravens. It's been equally clear since last year that Greg Mattison is in over his head, too, playing a passive "soft" defense that may work in college where QBs are less accurate, but just doesn't work against most NFL QBs who, given time, will wait for a receiver to work open and then hit him like clockwork! The talent on this team is as good as any in the league and better than most. But when you are programmed to play "not to lose", mistakes are just too difficult to overcome. The Steelers managed to overcome their mistakes because they are programmed to win, while the Ravens managed to beat themselves because they....aren't! And, yes, it's time for changes unless, as you point out, we're willing to settle for mediocrity! 40% of NFL teams make the playoffs each year with a losing record actually winning a division this year, so merely making the playoffs is no longer a lofty enough goal.......
Linda Tolley
Posted On: 1/17/11 5:52 am
Tony, I couldn't agree with you more! During the 2nd half of the game, I'm YELLING, "JOE, DON'T LISTEN TO CAMERON" "PLEASE PLEASE MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS". I have been saying this same thing for some time now, Cameron needs TO GO! The Ravens ARE A GREAT TEAM being held down by Cameron's calls. It's like he doesn't care about a Win or a Loss as long as he gets to call the shots! I hope to see on your next post, "Cameron Packs His Bags And LEAVES The Ravens"!
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