Ravens lose battle at point of attack—Packers 19, Baltimore 17…

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The Baltimore Ravens (now 3-3) lost their push on the offensive line and lost their running game— and as a result, lost a home game which they could have otherwise won against the Green Bay Packers (3-2).

Any time a defense holds Aaron Rodgers to 19 points like the Ravens did this past Sunday, you expect that team to win. But the Ravens' offense sputtered in the running game, WR Torrey Smith was double-teamed and shut out, and the collective ineffectiveness of the Birds' offense cost them the game.

For much of the afternoon, Aaron Rodgers was ducking oncoming Ravens linemen and misconnecting with hurried throws. When it counted, however, Rodgers came up with the big plays.

Rodgers threw a 64-yard touchdown pass to Jordy Nelson, Eddie Lacy ran for 120 yards and Mason Crosby kicked four field goals as the Packers beat the  Ravens 19-17 on Sunday.

Rodgers went 17 for 32 for 315 yards with one touchdown and one interception. He played most of the game without two of his top three receivers — James Jones hurt his left knee on a first-quarter play, and Randall Cobb left for good after being struck on his right knee on a tackle by Matt Elam.

And still, Rodgers was magnificent.

His 64-yarder to Nelson gave Green Bay a 16-3 lead late in the third quarter. After the Ravens closed to 19-17 on an 18-yard touchdown catch by Dallas Clark with 2:04 remaining, Rodgers clinched the victory with a 52-yard completion to Jermichael Finley on a third-and-3.

Rodgers completed only seven passes after halftime, yet those plays totaled 199 yards.

"Days like today remind you of why you love this game so much," Rodgers said. "Offensively, we're struggling a little bit, but we found a way to make enough plays to win."

"Aaron made some really good plays out of the pocket in the second half," Baltimore coach John Harbaugh said. "Early, he held it and took some sacks. Later, he held it and found some openings."

Rodgers received ample aid from a depleted defense. Despite playing without injured linebackers Clay Matthews and Brad Jones, the Packers limited Baltimore to 47 yards rushing and registered five sacks, including three by A.J. Hawk. Are you kidding me? An interior lineman with 3 sacks? That kinda says it all about how out of sync the Ravens offensive line is right now…

"It's kind of been our motto for a long time around here: `Next man up.' We have to make it work," Hawk said. "We had a lot of young guys out there today who really did a good job."

It all added up to Green Bay's first road win following losses at San Francisco and Cincinnati.

"It's important to win on the road in this league if you want to make the playoffs," Rodgers said. "This was a tough environment. This is a team that's defending champs, a football team that's very well-coached, great players on both sides of the ball. This is a great team character-building win."

Green Bay went up 9-0 in the third quarter when Crosby kicked a 50-yard field goal to cap a drive that featured a 43-yard pass play from Rodgers to Jarrett Boykin.

Baltimore answered with its first score, a 23-yard field goal by Justin Tucker following a 59-yard completion from Joe Flacco to rookie Marlon Brown.

Harassed and hurried for much of the afternoon, Rodgers finally came up with a signature moment. He started to his left, then rolled right before lofting a perfect spiral to Nelson, who had gotten behind Lardarius Webb.

Down 16-3, the Ravens began playing with a sense of urgency. Flacco directed a 10-play, 80-yard drive that ended with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Jacoby Jones with 11:52 remaining. Jones, who missed the previous four weeks with a knee injury, finished with two catches for 42 yards and had a 35-yard kickoff return.

Looking to enhance Green Bay's 16-10 lead, Rodgers and the Packers held onto the ball for just over 7 1/2 minutes before Crosby kicked a 31-yard field goal with 4:17 remaining. It turned out to be the game-winner.

Flacco went 20 for 34 for 342 yards and got no help from the running game — Ray Rice finished with 34 yards on 14 carries and was stuffed three straight times inside the 5 during the second quarter.

"We've got to be better on first and second down," Flacco said.

Baltimore accumulated only 36 yards of offense during the first quarter, zero on the ground.

In the second quarter, a peculiar sequence of events began when Green Bay's Ryan Taylor blocked a punt. The ball bounced beyond the line of scrimmage, was touched by John Kuhn of the Packers and recovered by Baltimore at its own 41-yard line. The Ravens subsequently got a first-and-goal at the Green Bay 4, but four straight runs failed to get the ball into the end zone.

Late in the half, Flacco was sacked and lost the ball. It was new left tackle Eugene Monroe's biggest mistake of an otherwise okay debut for the Ravens as he leaked on his assignment and failed to pick up the pass rush on his side. Green Bay's Datone Jones recovered and Crosby connected on a 31-yard field goal as time expired for a 6-0 lead.

Ravens' rushers were hit in the backfield on nine of their 21 designed runs Sunday. The Ravens haven't been hit as many times in the backfield since Week 1 of the 2010 season against the Falcons.
 
The Ravens went 2-of-14 (14%) on third down Sunday, needing at least 10 yards to convert on nine of those plays. The Ravens averaged 11.2 yards to go on third down Sunday.
 

Team Stat Comparison

 
GB
 
BAL
 
1st Downs 15 15
Passing 1st downs
9 11
Rushing 1st downs
6 2
1st downs from Penalties
0 2
3rd down efficiency
6-17 2-14
4th down efficiency
0-0 1-2
Total Plays 65 61
Total Yards 438 360
Yards per play 6.7 5.9
Total Drives 15 13
Passing 298 313
Comp – Att
17-32 20-34
Yards per pass
9.3 9.2
Interceptions thrown
1 0
Sacks – Yards Lost
3-17 5-29
Rushing 140 47
Rushing Attempts
30 22
Yards per rush
4.7 2.1
Red Zone (Made-Att) 0-4 2-4
Penalties 8-55 6-40
Turnovers 2 1
Fumbles lost
1 1
Interceptions thrown
1 0
Defensive / Special Teams TDs 0 0
Possession 31:22 28:38

 

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