Caldwell on tweaking the Ravens’ new offense…

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A Super Bowl defending champ OC suddenly finds his revamped offensive unit under attack..

Welcome to Jim Caldwell's world…

The Ravens’ first-team offense may have the most to prove in Thursday night’s third preseason game against the Carolina Panthers.

The unit is expected to see its most extensive action of the preseason, and after two somewhat flat games, it’s hoping to find a rhythm.

“We want to see our effectiveness and our execution climb up a notch or two,” Offensive Coordinator Jim Caldwell said.

In his first full offseason as the Ravens’ offensive play caller and chief schemer, Caldwell has seen his unit get off to a bit of a rocky start.

The starting offense is working with some new targets at wide receiver and tight end, but Caldwell didn’t use that as an excuse for notching just seven points (on a 77-yard touchdown run and catch by Torrey Smith) and six first downs in three quarters of work.

The offense particularly struggled in the first half of last week’s game against Atlanta.

“We didn’t play well, because we were inconsistent,” Caldwell said. “We just were up and down, and more often than not, when you look at things, it oftentimes is what you do to yourself.”

The Ravens offense has been plagued by penalties. A 10-yard illegal block penalty stalled one of its two drives in the first preseason game in Tampa Bay. A 15-yard penalty on center A.Q. Shipley on the offense’s very first play from scrimmage against Atlanta doomed that drive. A false start by Shipley two drives later exacerbated poor starting field position.

According to Ryan Mink of Ravens.com, Baltimore’s offense has also had too many negative plays. There was a sack for a loss of 10 yards on an unchecked blitz up the middle in Tampa Bay. Running back Ray Rice was stuffed twice for a combined 9-yard loss by Atlanta.

“We’d have a good play, and then we’d have a poor play. So, we can’t put all that together,” Caldwell said. “I think our guys have been working hard to do so, both in the run game and the passing game. We have to get real precise, and I think that’s forthcoming.”

Thursday’s third preseason game may be the final opportunity for the offense to get on the same page before the regular-season opener in Denver on Sept. 5. Flacco hasn’t played in the fourth preseason game since his rookie year in 2008.

“I think it’s very important just for us to play well, more so than anything else,” Caldwell said. “Any unit that takes the field, we want them to go out there and be in sync, move the ball and put some points on the board. We’re looking forward to that.”

Caldwell is a master. They haven't schemed any of these games. They're just looking to find out who can play. Scores didn't matter. We know the Ravens' offensive second team is among the best in the NFL… they  have shown it.

The return of one offensive lineman can change the whole landscape…..see McKinnie last year, see Yanda this year. Those 4 OL guys are close to being the best line unit in the NFL…..if one is missing they are average. When you put them on the field, Joe becomes Montana. Anyone disagree?

Ravens coaches are sneaky, like foxes. We'll see the goods when it matters. And only when the coaches are good and ready.

 

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