Preseason Power Rankings : Baltimore Ravens

IE

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Yeah, the Ravens failed to make the playoffs last year. Yeah, they?re facing a degree of transition and upheaval on par with last year?s post-Super Bowl retirements and free-agency defections.

But the Ravens continue to be the Ravens. The franchise that lives by the motto, ?In Ozzie We Trust.? The team with one of the best football organizations the past generation has seen. The group that John Harbaugh led to five straight playoff appearances to start his head-coaching career.

Last year?s performance exposed some issues that needed to be addressed. The Ravens have addressed them, for the most part. Here?s a look at where they are as the 2014 season approaches, and why they landed in the top 10 after failing to qualify for the 2013 postseason.

Strengths.

It?s a quarterback-driven league, and the jury is out on how driven the Ravens? starting quarterback remains after getting a $120.6 million contract in 2013. Does Joe Flacco have the degree of determination that true franchise quarterbacks have shown, year in and year out? Will Flacco act like an unofficial member of the coaching staff, both during the season and when the games aren?t being played?

The answer could be no, at least not for now. Flacco didn?t get together with his receivers before the start of the offseason program, explaining that he didn?t know enough about the new offense to make the effort worth everyone?s time. But he could have learned plenty about the new offense, if he really wanted to. And he could have started the process of teaching it to teammates before the official process for teaching them began, if he really wanted to. (With or without violations of offseason rules that are never enforced.)

And so, while the Super Bowl MVP trophy and the huge contract make Flacco a strength, it?s fair to ask whether he?s the kind of quarterback that makes a team a perennial contender regardless of the quality of the rest of the roster, or whether he has simply been in the right place at the right time with a team that had enough parts around him to allow him to appear to be better than maybe he really is.

The guys expected to catch the passes from Flacco fall into that same ?strong but how strong?? category. Torrey Smith enters a contract year with numbers that have been very good, but without the kind of breakthrough in his third season that would make him one of the best receivers in the league. Steve Smith arrives to put some punch (perhaps literally) into the position, but it?s unclear how much he has left, especially with a balky and banged up knee. Jacoby Jones has shown flashes, but at times he falls into the ?meh? category. And while the tight end room now boasts Dennis Pitta and Owen Daniels, the Ravens claim they coveted rookie Eric Ebron. If they wanted Ebron, how good do they really feel about the guys they have?

Despite plenty of changes in recent years, the front seven on defense sets the tone, led by defensive lineman Haloti Ngata, linebacker Terrell Suggs, and linebacker Elvis Dumervil. Linebacker Daryl Smith became a free-agent steal last year, and he?s now one of the anchors of the unit.

Safety Matt Elam made a big impact as a rookie, helping the secondary weather the departure of Ed Reed. Cornerback Lardarius Webb should be better more than a full year after tearing an ACL, and competition should shake out the rest of an understated but talented depth chart.

On special teams, the Ravens have one of the league?s best kickers in Justin Tucker. Which makes it easier to squeeze out close games premised on field-position battles ? and which could be the difference between making to the playoffs or going home early for the second straight season.

Weaknesses.

The offensive line took a big step back last year. The outcome would have been worse but for the midseason arrival of left tackle Eugene Monroe via trade with Jacksonville. A huge hole currently exists at right tackle with the decision not to bring back Michael Oher, and Gino Gradkowski couldn?t fully fill the shows of the retired Matt Birk. The line will need to get better quickly or the new offense under Gary Kubiak won?t.

At running back, a looming suspension of Ray Rice and an early off-field incident from Lorenzo Taliaferro complicates the depth chart at the start of the season. Rice, who likely will be gone for at least one game if not more, will need to be replaced by Bernard Pierce, Justin Forsett, and/or Taliaferro.

Speaking of Rice and Taliaferro and the various other Ravens who found trouble in the offseason, the franchise currently has earned the title of the reigning NFL renegades. They?ll all undoubtedly pay for it in training camp, thanks to a head coach who has little tolerance for nonsense, but who has been forced to tolerate plenty of it. While a positive reaction from the players could turn that weakness into a strength, the misadventures of multiple players are a problem that needs to be solved.

Changes.

In his first full year as offensive coordinator, Jim Caldwell didn?t do nearly as well as he did down the stretch in 2012. But Caldwell still did well enough to get himself a head-coaching job in Detroit. Gary Kubiak, fired after seven years of coaching the Texans, brings a new system to town, with zone-blocking, one-cut running, roll-out passing, and all sorts of other stuff the Ravens didn?t do on a regular basis last year. The team?s ability to adapt will determine its ability to thrive.

The offense got better with the arrival of Steve Smith and Owen Daniels, and it got worse with the departures of tight end Ed Dickson, fullback Vonta Leach, and Oher. If they can adequately fill the hole at right tackle, the offense should be fine.

On defensive, losing lineman Arthur Jones to the Colts hurts, but when a team has a great collection of linemen it?s impossible to pay them all. Also being paid elsewhere will be linebacker Jameel McClain, cornerback Corey Graham, and safety James Ihedigbo.

Position battles.

A fifth-round pick a year ago, Rick Wagner gets the first shot to replace Oher at right tackle. If Wagner can?t do it, Ryan Jensen provides a Plan B, and Kelechi Osemele could be moved back outside if necessary.

At inside linebacker, 2013 second-rounder Arthur Brown and 2014 first-rounder C.J. Mosley will square off for the starting job and total reps. If the Ravens thought Brown could get it done, they wouldn?t have had to draft Mosley. That said, we?re told that Brown had a very strong offseason, possibly responding to the challenge presented by the addition of Mosley.

At cornerback, Asa Jackson and Chykie Brown will battle for the nickel job, and Darian Stewart and Terrance Brooks will compete for a starting safety job, with Stewart getting the first shot.

Prospects.

At a time when the best teams in the NFC have the physicality to routinely pilfer the juice-box money of the best that the AFC has to offer, the Ravens are one of the few teams that can match the muscle of the likes of the 49ers and Seahawks. But before the Ravens can face the NFC champion, they need to climb the playoff tree. Before they can do that, they need to qualify for a seat at the postseason table.

They definitely can get there. And their placement at No. 7 as the season arrives means that we think they will.
 

gardenweasel

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7 seems pretty optimistic given their serious ?? at runningback and rt tackle......this team continues to stockpile players at positions that aren`t necessarily weaknesses(on defense) while filling offensive holes with old guys on the downside of their careers or coming off serious injuries(daniels/steve smith) and players that couldn`t crack the starting line-up last year(ricky wagner)....

that`s not to say that I`m disappointed in the signing of steve smith and owen daniels.....they will provide flacco with desperately needed support(particularly in the chain-moving aspect of the short passing game)......but they absolutely whiffed in the second round this year when they opted for another def tackle(Jernigan) and eschewed filling the obvious hole at running back(they had their choice of any running back in the draft)......ray rice WILL be suspended(don`t know for how long) and is coming off a horrible year(he`s not a young kid anymore and has been ridden hard by the ravens)......there`s no guarantee that rice will return to form when he finally comes back off suspension and there`s no guarantee that Bernard pierce will ever be able to stay healthy..... to fill the rice gap early they picked up perennial journeyman Justin forsett and drafted Lorenzo Taliaferro(best qualification is pass protection).....disappointing that they had the opportunity to potentially fill the void at the position with a quality back for years to come.....

granted,newsome`s track record is solid overall,but,the offense was horrific last year(not only because of injury but mainly because that side of the ball has been neglected the last few years in the draft)...they aren`t building from the ground up on offense....it`s patchwork every year and theres very little continuity...

I feel sorry for flacco...he got the big contract but the front office doesn`t seem to want to invest in the resources to help flacco gain the consistency that I honestly think he can achieve(given a little support).....

they did this last year when the great(I never realized just how great until he left) matt birk retired and the ravens decided to go with his back-ups(guys already on the roster).... It was a total disaster and for this year they`re going with a center they acquired from tampa(Jeremy zuttah) who at best graded out as a lower middle-of-the-pack center and ricky wagner whose ability to handle edge speed rushers is extremely ??.....

lot`s of question marks offensively...a new offensive coordinator..your top rb suspended early with very sketchy support.....it all has to meld together fairly quickly...

one good thing is that they`ve utilized so many resources drafting young defenders in the early rounds the last few years that the defense will be a bit of a disappointment if it isn`t a top 5-ish unit this fall......everybody seems to think the bodies are there for the defense to be formidable...


top 7,eh?......i`m a cynic but i hope they`re right...
 
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gardenweasel

el guapo
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$120.6 million contract in 2013

:0002

no man is an island......without help,even the best aren`t going to be the best(not saying flacco`s the best,or even close....he needs complementary pieces around him)....

the ravens don`t seem to think that`s very important...

this front office hasn`t evolved with the nfl rule changes that have given offense the advantage over defense....the fact that seattle won with defense last year is a major anomaly that we`ll be seeing less and less of as time goes on(imo)....:0074
 

Old School

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all true gw..

but that man ain't no where near worth that kind of money..

a safety falling on his ass made Joe a very very rich man..

he's second tier at best..

but he does need some help..

and the TD'S thrown this year will approach arena ball numbers..

had "Jimmies" today that were huge..

$ 90.00 a bushel straight off the boat out of Back Bay

had 14 myself..
 

gardenweasel

el guapo
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Jan 10, 2002
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"the bunker"
all true gw..

but that man ain't no where near worth that kind of money..

a safety falling on his ass made Joe a very very rich man..

he's second tier at best..

but he does need some help..

and the TD'S thrown this year will approach arena ball numbers..

had "Jimmies" today that were huge..

$ 90.00 a bushel straight off the boat out of Back Bay

had 14 myself..

if you look back at the qb`s the ravens put on the field during their relatively brief nfl tenure,you`ll understand why they wrote the check.......not ozzie`s strong suit...

and we may have the worst passing back-up in the nfl(tyrod taylor)...why in god`s name did marc bulger retire?...he had a nice cushy job sitting behind flacco and he could actually win off the bench.......always wanted to see bulger play a little when he was here...

I think one of the reasons (aside from the horrible qb picking instincts of the front office,the horrid back-up etc)they decided to open the wallet is that flacco is durable...and when he has help,he can win in the playoffs...

I know many don`t like him,but,he`s been pretty successful...last year was a bad year...the offense around him was a joke....and imo,they didn`t do enough to shore up all the holes this past offseason.......

but it should be batter this year......I hope....:lol:
 
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