But, there's one thing that I hate more than the hated Ravens: Jay Cutler's face. Maybe there's two things. Jay Cutler's face and picking the hated Ravens to beat the Steelers. I already went on record picking them in this week's Pick Em, but I wanted to go on record here and explain how much picking Baltimore to win Sunday night sucked.
I think the hated Ravens are going to win and I hate saying that.
Now I'm going to talk about what the Steelers need to do to win. It's not as impossible as it might seem.
Consider the following:
- The Steelers are 4-0 at home (sure, they haven't beaten any good teams there yet, but they're undefeated.)
- Baltimore is 2-2 on the road and their two road wins are against the Chiefs (with a Orioles-Royals score of 9-6) and the Browns (25-15).
- The Unibrow sucks on the road this season. Home numbers: 113-173-1612-10-3-108.3. Road numbers: 71-136-719-3-4-62.7. He gains 45 quarterback rating points and four yards per attempt at home. Or, more importantly, he loses four yards an attempt and 45 rating points on the road.
- For the first time in recent memory, the hated Ravens aren't defending the run well. They rank 26th in the league in yards allowed, giving up 132 rushing yards a game.
- In four home games, the Steelers have given up an average of 12.3 points per game.
- Avoid getting off to a slow start.
- Not turn the ball over.
- Make it a low scoring game.
- Run the ball effectively and frequently.
I think they'll get off to a slow start. The hated Ravens know the Steelers almost as well as they know themselves. They know that this team can't come back from a big deficit without Ben Roethlisberger. Baltimore's primary objective will be to get off to a fast start and get the Steelers off balance as quickly as possible.
Byron Leftwich won't be as bad as he was against the Chiefs. He'll have a full week of practice under his belt for this game and Todd Haley will put together a game plan that works with Leftwich's strengths. There has been a lot of chatter about the fact that Leftwich is a bad fit for Haley's offense. But, the fact of the matter is that Haley designed this year's offense -- and last week's game plan -- around Ben Roethlisberger and the other personnel the Steelers have on the roster. When they hired him as offensive coordinator, I wrote about the fact that he's a personnel guy, not a system guy. When he had Kurt Warner and a bunch of great receivers in Arizona, he called a lot of passes. When he had Jamaal Charles and Thomas Jones in Kansas City, he called a lot of runs. When he realized that the Steelers had a bunch of explosive playmakers at receiver and an offensive line that had trouble protecting its quarterback, he called a lot of quick timing passes and screens. When Roethlisberger Monday night's game, they already had the game plan installed and he couldn't start calling stuff that was completely different than what they had practiced all week. On Sunday night, his game plan will be optimized to make the most of what Leftwich brings to the table. The problem there is that it's not just Leftwich.
Antonio Brown will probably miss this game. Rashard Mendenhall will probably start after a long layoff. The offensive line still has pass protection issue. There are a lot of moving parts that are either unavailable or rusty. Couple that with the fact that Baltimore will want to do whatever they can to start fast and shut the Steelers down early and you can see how it's hard to imagine that they'll avoid getting off to slow start.
I think that they can keep the game low scoring even if they get off to a slow start, but I don't think that means they'll win. If they fall behind 14-0 or 10-0, they'll eventually rally, but I think they'll fall short.
Running the ball effectively and frequently is the last thing on the list, but it's also the most important. It affects whether or not they'll be able to accomplish #1 and #4. If they start out running the ball well, that takes the early pressure off Leftwich. If they keep running the ball well, that helps keep the ball away from Unibrow and the ever-deadly Ray Rice. It also sets up the play action passing game, which will slow down the pass rush of the hated Ravens and make things easier on Leftwich.
But... the Ravens know all this, which is why they'll stack the box, look to stop the run at all costs, and force Leftwich to beat them. They'll also bring a lot of extra defenders on the blitz when Haley does call a pass, knowing that they don't have the personnel to cover the Steelers receivers for more than three seconds.
Most of the pressure will come up the middle, since Leftwich doesn't have the mobility to break outside the tackle box and extend the play like Roethlisberger does. That's a problem because the interior linemen -- though they've done an exceptional job blowing up big holes between the tackles in the running game -- have had some serious issues in pass protection.
So... if the Steelers can run the ball well out of the gate and if they don't turn the ball over and if the hated Ravens defense doesn't embed Leftwich into the Heinz Field turf in the first half and if they can keep Ray Rice contained, they'll be able to win a close game.
And, while I'm asking for stuff, I'd like a pony.
Prediction:
Hated Ravens 17, Steelers 10
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