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The Beat with Aaron Wilson - Joe Flacco: 'Everybody plays bad games'

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Joe Flacco: 'Everybody plays bad games'

OWINGS MILLS – Joe Flacco smiled at the question, happy for a bit of levity following a dreadful performance where virtually nothing went right for him.

After throwing a career-high four interceptions during a 15-10 loss to the Cincinnati Bengals, the Baltimore Ravens’ quarterback was asked if even if his family wants him to ride the bench.

“I don’t know if they want to bench me,” Flacco said. “Everybody’s just making fun of me for it.”

By any standard, Flacco had a horrible game against the Bengals.

He threw into heavy coverage. He delivered passes off his back foot, a mechanical flaw that has been recurring over the past year. And he held the football too long.

Now, he’s working to correct his mistakes as the Ravens launch preparations for Sunday’s home opener against the Cleveland Browns.

“Hey, we’ve all played bad games and I’ve played bad games before,” Flacco said. “You come back and you do what you always do. You come out there and play football and you expect yourself to play well, your team to play well, and that’s what happens. You go out there and you play well.”

Considering his background during his first two NFL seasons, Flacco’s words have merit.

Following his two previous games where he threw three interceptions, he posted quarterback ratings over 120.0 in each of the ensuing games.

As a rookie, Flacco threw three interceptions against the Indianapolis Colts as he was unable to look off the safeties. The following week against the Miami Dolphins, he completed 17 of 23 passes for 232 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions for a 120.2 rating.

When he threw three interceptions against the Green Bay Packers last December, he rebounded the next week against the Detroit Lions with 13 of 20 accuracy for 230 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions for a 120.8 rating.

“For us players, the game’s over as soon as we leave the locker room,” Flacco said. “There’s not much you can do about it after the fact. You have to move on to the next week, focus on that opponent and try to get a win. You have a couple of slip-ups. It happens.

“Everybody plays bad games, and I’m going to have more bad games. The majority of them, I’m going to play well and I expect myself to. You just have to bounce back, keep your head up and know that you have the ability to do that.”

Flacco has been uncharacteristically shaky through two games while leading an offense that has scored only 20 points and two touchdowns, ranking 24th in the NFL in total offense.

He’s the last-ranked quarterback in the league with a 41.2 rating.

Despite Flacco's struggles, the Ravens have no intentions of inserting $3.8 million backup Marc Bulger.

"You want to put the best guy out there that you feel gives you the best chance to win from week to week," coach John Harbaugh said. "That's why we feel Joe is our guy."

However, no quarterback has thrown as many interceptions as Flacco, who has five interceptions, one touchdown and a lost fumble.

He’s also 31st in completion percentage (48.1), 29th in average gain per pass (5.22), tied for 30th in touchdown percentage (1.3) and 28th in interception percentage (6.5).

"I think the quarterbacks get too much credit when things go well, and they take way too much of the blame when things go bad," wide receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh said. "He’s trying to make a play. If those balls are completions and not interceptions, it's a great play. It just is what it is. If we make more plays, it doesn't happen."

"It's early in the season. It's not like we've lost both games. We haven't played great offensively, but that's why this is the ultimate team game, because the defense has played well and we won a game. We'll get there. If we all make more plays, specifically myself, then a lot of this is old news."

Last season, Flacco wasn’t prone to interceptions.

He only had a dozen interceptions for the entire year.

His quarterback rating of 88.9 set a single-season franchise record.

And his teammates are convinced that Flacco will bounce back from this early-season slump where his play has regressed markedly from last season.

“What he's accomplished in a short amount of time in this league, it's not just a credit to him as a player but his mentality,” center Matt Birk said. “That's where Joe is really special. I love Joe. I believe in Joe.

“Obviously if there's four interceptions on the stat sheet, people will come down on the quarterback. But everybody knows it's a team thing."

Against the Bengals, Flacco’s interceptions broke down this way.

Twice, he threw into coverage.

One pass was deflected by a defensive lineman.

Another interception came on a desperate fourth-down heave.

“The second one I threw was bad,” Flacco said. “I don’t want to throw any of them, but I don’t think they were bad throws.”

The Ravens upgraded their receiving corps during the offseason with the intention of providing Flacco with the weapons to take the next step as a quarterback in his third season.

Despite acquiring wide receivers Anquan Boldin and Houshmandzadeh and retaining wide receiver Derrick Mason, the Ravens’ goal of becoming a more dynamic attack hasn’t materialized.

"If you don't make these mistakes, you'll never get them corrected. He's a guy that's willing to work," running back Ray Rice said. "He's a playoff quarterback. He's a winning quarterback. I know he's going to get the job done. I have full faith in him."

There are plenty of theories about why Flacco isn’t playing well.

Many believe that Flacco misses the guidance of former quarterbacks coach Hue Jackson, who left to become the Oakland Raiders’ offensive coordinator.

Some have questioned the play-calling of offensive coordinator Cam Cameron or whether Flacco is placing too much pressure on himself.

Regardless, Flacco figures to get back on track Sunday against the Browns.

He has never lost in four starts against Cleveland and Baltimore swept the Browns last season by a combined margin of 50-6.

In the locker room, teammates haven’t witness any changes in Flacco.

He’s the same low-key, stoic personality.

“I haven't noticed anything different in him at all. He's about the same to me: real quiet, real chilled," Houshmandzadeh said. "They say you want your quarterback to keep an even keel, not too high, not too low. That's him all the way. That's a good thing. You never want to get too emotional."

 

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John
Posted On: 9/24/10 10:43 pm
@jws

Please, don't talk about what you don't understand. Not a single player, QB or coach would have issue with a player saying "there are going to be bad games." To think that there aren't is just naive. If they had your mindset, a loss would shatter their confidence.

Don't talk about Flacco at Pittsburgh. What do you know about the situation he was in there? How do you know what the coaches were thinking? The only people I've ever heard mention him leaving Pittsburgh as being relevant to his NFL career are Steelers fans (surprise). I hope you're a Steelers fan, because I would hate to know that someone like you is a Ravens fan. Just embarrassing.
Jerry Bj
Posted On: 9/23/10 10:54 am
For starters, they're puting to much pressure on Flacco to "carry the offense"! He's still only in his third year and he's playing behind a porous "O" line that's struggling to protect him. Better to resort to the running game to set up the pass at this point. That being said, it's a little disconcerting that they "messed" with his mechanics in the offseason and that they're paying a quality backup QB considerably more money than their starter. Could be signals of a lack of confidence at some level. There's too much talent on this team to squander as they did during the Boller years, so, if Flacco continues to struggle, I would expect to see Bulger.....sooner, rather than later!
jws
Posted On: 9/23/10 8:50 am
Anyone including coaches,fans,other players that think what Flacco says and does is exceptable is a loser. "Everyone has bad games, everyone does bad,I will have more bad games." These are statements of a loser. Better QBs in this league have already been benched this season. Sure the Browns will make him look good again and have all these Boller whoops sorry Flacco lovers saying how great they are,both him and Boller ( Kyle had good games too)! This is the same Flacco that after a short time of failing with the coaches seeing his many glowing fundemental weaknesses did not play him in college so he quit at Pittsburgh and went to a non competitive situation at Delaware. These Raven coaches and mangement are slow to make changes especially failed quarterbacks drafted #1. Look for more of the same poor performances against good teams and in the red zone all year. You want Flacco to start you got him but you may not have the playoffs and you sure do not have a SUPER BOWL with this guy!
Riomurphy
Posted On: 9/23/10 8:20 am
Housh is right. The QB should never get too emotional. It seriously effects his play. Joe will be able to shake it off, concentrate and perform up to his standards. Throwing 4 INT's? It happens. But it's over now, and time to focus on this week. Glad to see the coaches have faith in Joe too and will keep him in. If they start changing QB's in the 2nd week, it looks like we are confused and grasping at straws. It's too early to over-react. Keep your cool, focus on 1 week at a time, have patience, wind Joe up, and let him go! Go Ravens!



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