Los Angeles Times - 26.11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

D6 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2019 LATIMES.COM/SPORTS


NFL WEEK 12:RAVENS 45, RAMS 6


Baltimore..............14 14 7 10 — 45
RAMS.....................0 6 0 0 — 6
First Quarter
Baltimore— Mar.Brown 6 pass from L.Jackson
(Tucker kick), 7:47. Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 5:48.
Key plays: Ingram 10 run, L.Jackson 16 run,
G.Edwards 4 run on 3rd-and-1. Baltimore 7, RAMS 0.
Baltimore— Mar.Brown 18 pass from L.Jackson
(Tucker kick), 1:31. Drive: 7 plays, 61 yards, 3:49. Key
plays: Ingram 19 run, G.Edwards 10 run, Ingram 11
run on 3rd-and-12, L.Jackson 5 run on 4th-and-1.
Baltimore 14, RAMS 0.


Second Quarter
RAMS— Field goal Zuerlein 32, 9:45. Drive: 15
plays, 61 yards, 6:46. Key plays: Gurley 15 run, Goff
10 pass to Cooks on 3rd-and-8, Goff 15 pass to
Everett, Humphrey 5-yard defensive holding penalty
on 3rd-and-11, Goff 5 pass to Kupp on 3rd-and-17.
Baltimore 14, RAMS 3.
Baltimore— Ingram 1 run (Tucker kick), 4:42. Drive:
8 plays, 75 yards, 5:03. Key plays: L.Jackson 13 pass
to Roberts on 3rd-and-6, L.Jackson 12 run, L.Jackson
29 run. Baltimore 21, RAMS 3.
RAMS— Field goal Zuerlein 46, 1:55. Drive: 6 plays,
48 yards, 2:47. Key plays: Natson kick return to
RAMS 24, Goff 17 pass to Woods, Goff 22 pass to
Cooks. Baltimore 21, RAMS 6.
Baltimore— Snead 7 pass from L.Jackson (Tucker
kick), :12. Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 1:43. Key plays:
Littleton 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty,
L.Jackson 12 run, J.Hill 11 run, L.Jackson 16 pass to
Roberts. Baltimore 28, RAMS 6.


GDVJThird Quarter


Baltimore— Ingram 7 pass from L.Jackson (Tucker
kick), 9:46. Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 5:14. Key
plays: L.Jackson 38 pass to Andrews on 3rd-and-8,
G.Edwards 11 run. Baltimore 35, RAMS 6.


Fourth Quarter
Baltimore— Snead 7 pass from L.Jackson (Tucker
kick), 14:43. Drive: 17 plays, 78 yards, 9:04. Key
plays: L.Jackson 10 pass to Roberts on 3rd-and-9,
Ingram 25 run, L.Jackson 10 run, L.Jackson 5 run on
3rd-and-14, LAR 5-yard defensive too many men on
field penalty on 4th-and-9, L.Jackson 15 pass to
Boykin on 4th-and-4, L.Jackson 5 pass to Mar.Brown
on 3rd-and-4. Baltimore 42, RAMS 6.
Baltimore— Field goal Tucker 34, 6:35. Drive: 11
plays, 48 yards, 6:01. Key plays: Peters 22
interception return to Baltimore 36, G.Edwards 1 run
on 3rd-and-2, G.Edwards 1 run on 4th-and-1, Griffin
39 pass to Boykin on 3rd-and-8.
Baltimore 45, RAMS 6.


TEAM STATISTICS BAL LAR
FIRST DOWNS................................31 14
Rushing........................................17 2
Passing........................................13 8
Penalty...........................................1 4
THIRD DOWN EFF........................9-15 2-9
FOURTH DOWN EFF........................3-3 1-1
TOTAL NET YARDS .........................480 221
Total Plays.....................................74 48
Avg Gain......................................6.5 4.6
NET YARDS RUSHING....................285 22
Rushes.........................................48 9
Avg per rush.................................5.9 2.4
NET YARDS PASSING .....................195 199
Sacked-Yds lost..........................3-13 2-13
Gross-Yds passing ........................208 212
Completed-Att...........................16-23 26-37
Had Intercepted...............................0 2
Yards-Pass Play.............................7.5 5.1
KICKOFFS-EndZone-TB.................8-6-6 3-3-3
PUNTS-Avg..............................1-48.0 4-50.0
Punts blocked..................................0 0
FGs-PATs blocked..........................0-0 0-0
TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE..................74 48
Punt Returns..............................3-45 1-4
Kickoff Returns.............................0-0 2-44
Interceptions..............................2-29 0-0
PENALTIES-Yds............................8-66 8-56
FUMBLES-Lost..............................1-0 1-0
TIME OF POSSESSION................39:56 20:04


INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
RUSHING: BALTIMORE, Ingram 15-111, L.Jackson
8-95, Edwards 14-55, Hill 8-27, Griffin 3-(minus 3).
RAMS, Gurley 6-22, Cooks 1-1, Brown 1-0, Goff
1-(minus 1).
PASSING: BALTIMORE, L.Jackson 15-20-0-169,
Griffin 1-3-0-39. RAMS, Goff 26-37-2-212.
RECEIVING: BALTIMORE, M.Brown 5-42, Roberts
3-39, Boykin 2-54, Andrews 2-45, Snead 2-14, Boyle
1-7, Ingram 1-7. RAMS, Woods 6-97, Kupp 6-35,
Higbee 5-20, Gurley 3-(minus 3), Cooks 2-32,
Everett 2-23, Reynolds 2-8.
PUNT RETURNS: BALTIMORE, D.Thomas 3-45.
RAMS, Natson 1-4.
KICKOFF RETURNS: BALTIMORE, None. RAMS,
Natson 2-44.
TACKLES-ASSISTS-SACKS: BALTIMORE, Peters
6-2-0, Ferguson 5-0-0, Humphrey 5-0-0, Carr 4-0-0,
Clark 3-1-0, Smith 3-0-1, Judon 2-0-1, Bynes 1-2-0,
Wormley 1-1-0, Bowser 1-0-0, E.Thomas 1-0-0,
Onwuasor 0-2-0, Williams 0-1-0. RAMS, Weddle
8-1-0, Rapp 6-4-0, Ramsey 6-0-0, Littleton 5-7-0,
Brockers 4-4-1, Hill 4-3-0, Fowler 4-0-0, Ebukam
3-4-1.5, Joseph-Day 2-1-0, Gaines 1-3-.5, Christian
1-0-0, Long 1-0-0, Matthews 0-2-0, Donald 0-1-0,
Fox 0-1-0, Smart 0-1-0.
INTERCEPTIONS: BALTIMORE, Peters 1-22, Smith
1-7. RAMS, None.
FIELD GOALS MISSED: None.
Officials — Referee Craig Wrolstad, Ump Steven
Woods, HL Patrick Turner, LJ Tripp Sutter, FJ Terry
Brown, SJ Jeff Lamberth, BJ Scott Helverson, Replay
Darryll Lewis.
Attendance — 72,409.


SUMMARY


WEEK 1
Sept. 8

LAR 30


CAR 27


Win, 1-0
Road: 1-0

WEEK 2
Sept. 15

LAR 27


NO 9


Win, 2-0.
Home: 1-0

WEEK 3
Sept. 22

LAR 20


CLE 13


Win, 3-0
Road: 2-0

WEEK 4
Sept. 29

TB 55


LAR 40


Loss, 3-1
Home: 1-1

WEEK 17
Dec. 29

VS. ARI


1:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710

WEEK 16
Dec. 21

AT SF


5:15 p.m.
TV: NFLN
R: 710

WEEK 15
Dec. 15

AT DAL


1:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710

WEEK 14
Dec. 8

VS. SEA


5:15 p.m.
TV: Ch. 4
R: 710

WEEK 13
Sunday

AT ARI


1 p.m.
TV: Ch. 11
R: 710

WEEK 12
Nov. 25

BAL 45


LAR 6


Loss, 6-5
Home: 3-3

WEEK 11
Nov. 17

LAR 17


CHI 7


Win, 6-4
Home: 3-2

WEEK 10
Nov. 10

PIT 17


LAR 12


Loss, 5-4
Road: 3-2

WEEK 9

OFF


WEEK 8
Oct. 27

LAR 24


CIN 10


Win, 5-3*
Home: 2-2

WEEK 7
Oct. 20

LAR 37


ATL 10


Win, 4-3
Road: 3-1

WEEK 6
Oct. 13

SF 20


LAR 7


Loss, 3-3
Home: 1-2

WEEK 5
Oct. 3

SEA 30


LAR 29


Loss, 3-2
Road: 2-1

RAMS RESULTS, SCHEDULE * in London


NATIONAL CONFERENCE
West W L T Pct. PF PA
San Francisco 10 1 0 .909 332 163
Seattle 9 2 0 .818 292 263
RAMS 6 5 0 .545 249 243
Arizona 3 7 1 .318 248 317
North W L T Pct. PF PA
Green Bay 8 3 0 .727 258 242
Minnesota 8 3 0 .727 289 205
Chicago 5 6 0 .455 188 188
Detroit 3 7 1 .318 260 291
South W L T Pct. PF PA
New Orleans 9 2 0 .818 272 230
Carolina 5 6 0 .455 259 291
Tampa Bay 4 7 0 .364 312 335
Atlanta 3 8 0 .273 242 297
East W L T Pct. PF PA
Dallas 6 5 0 .545 295 210
Philadelphia 5 6 0 .455 243 247
N.Y. Giants 2 9 0 .182 217 308
Washington 2 9 0 .182 144 269


AMERICAN CONFERENCE
West W L T Pct. PF PA
Kansas City 7 4 0 .636 308 256
Oakland 6 5 0 .545 228 284
CHARGERS 4 7 0 .364 224 218
Denver 3 8 0 .273 175 217
North W L T Pct. PF PA
Baltimore 9 2 0 .818 386 202
Pittsburgh 6 5 0 .545 216 212
Cleveland 5 6 0 .455 233 252
Cincinnati 011 0 .000 157 292
South W L T Pct. PF PA
Houston 7 4 0 .636 265 249
Indianapolis 6 5 0 .545 244 226
Tennessee 6 5 0 .545 245 217
Jacksonville 4 7 0 .364 209 264
East W L T Pct. PF PA
New England 10 1 0 .909 300 117
Buffalo 8 3 0 .727 231 173
N.Y. Jets 4 7 0 .364 198 258
Miami 2 9 0 .182 163 346


THURSDAY _##TABLE##_11
Chicago at Detroit...................................9:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Dallas.....................................1:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Atlanta.............................5:15 p.m.
SUNDAY
RAMS at Arizona........................................10 a.m.
Tampa Bay at Jacksonville............................10 a.m.
Cleveland at Pittsburgh................................10 a.m.
Green Bay at N.Y. Giants..............................10 a.m.
N.Y. Jets at Cincinnati..................................10 a.m.
Tennessee at Indianapolis............................10 a.m.
Washington at Carolina...............................10 a.m.
San Francisco at Baltimore..........................10 a.m.
Philadelphia at Miami.................................10 a.m.
CHARGERS at Denver...............................1:15 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City.............................1:15 p.m.
New England at Houston...........................5:15 p.m.
MONDAY
Minnesota at Seattle................................5:15 p.m.


STANDINGS


enough to hold down the
job.
A year ago, Ravens coach
John Harbaugh was on his
way out the door, Joe Flacco
was the struggling starter,
and Jackson was running
the scout-team offense.
The Rams, meanwhile,
had a scorching offense,
were 10-1 and on a trajectory
that ultimately would land
them in the Super Bowl.
What an ankle-snapper
of a reverse. The Rams are
now reeling and the Ravens
are revolutionary, with the
most electrifying offense the
NFL has seen in years. Not
that you’d know that talking
to Jackson after the game.
The quarterback who
breaks all the rules (and
records) on the field stays
strictly within his lane off it.
“That was a physical
team, a great team,” he said.
“We just came to play
tonight.”
It’s not as if this came
against a lousy Los Angeles
defense. Since trading for
cornerback Jalen Ramsey in
mid-October, the Rams’
defense had allowed just
one touchdown in each of
four consecutive games.
In this one, though, it
was a field general versus
the Washington Generals.
Jackson’s final numbers:
15 for 20 for 169 yards and
five touchdowns with a lofty
passer rating of 139.4. He
also ran eight times for
95 yards.
The Rams, like a lot of
NFL teams, have a game on
the video board during
breaks in the action where
there are three helmets and
one football. The helmets
move and spin and rotate,
and fans have to follow
where the hidden football
goes.
That, in a nutshell, is the
Baltimore offense.
“What they’re doing on
offense, a lot of times I
wouldn’t know for a few
seconds after they snapped
it, if he handed it or he still
had it,” said Weddle, who

played for the Ravens last
season. “Imagine the whole
defense. You’re trying to
play your rules and play the
guy, and these guys are just
coming downhill and dou-
bling and getting extra gaps,
and you’re trying to figure
out what’s going on.”

Midway through the
fourth quarter, after an
interception by former
Rams cornerback Marcus
Peters — indignity on top of
indignity — Jackson was
replaced by backup Robert
Griffin III.
The Ravens are 15-3 since

Jackson took over as their
starting quarterback near
the end of last season. His 15
regular-season victories are
tied with Seattle’s Russell
Wilson for the most during
that span.
Jackson made a convinc-
ing case in this showcase to
push the pause button on
the season so the NFL can
name him its most valuable
player right away.
Wilson is fabulous, but
Jackson is otherworldly.
After the game, Jackson
walked to a wall near the
mouth of the locker room
tunnel to greet a large clus-
ter of Ravens fans. He gave
them his wrist bands,
signed some autographs
and shook some hands.
They serenaded him with
chants of “M-V-P.”

“It’s OK, but I’m trying to
win the Super Bowl,” he said
later. “You take it a game at
a time. I’m not worried
about MVP.”
It’s entirely possible that
Sunday’s matchup between
San Francisco and Balti-
more will be a Super Bowl
preview pitting the NFL’s
most smothering defense
and most dynamic offense.
That would be a rematch
of Super Bowl XLVII in New
Orleans, when it was 49ers
coach Jim Harbaugh versus
his older brother, John.
Baltimore won that thriller
34-31. Maybe the most mem-
orable part of that game
was when the lights went
out at the Superdome.
The lights didn’t go out
at the Coliseum on Monday
night. It just felt that way.

Jackson’s night is otherworldly


[Farmer,from D1]

RAVENS QUARTERBACKLamar Jackson, here looking to pass while Rams linebacker Clay Matthews pur-
sues him, threw for five touchdowns with a passer rating of 139.4 and rushed for 95 yards in eight carries.

Wally SkalijLos Angeles Times

problems that we did have,”
coach Sean McVay said, “but
allowing it to set ourselves
back is what this team will
not do.”
The Rams, who fell to 6-5,
probably have to win their
remaining five games — and
get some help from other
teams — to make a third con-
secutive postseason appear-
ance.
That seems about as
likely as it would have been
for former Rams cornerback
Marcus Peters to not cele-
brate after his fourth-quar-
ter interception.
The Rams play the im-
proved Arizona Cardinals
on Sunday on the road. The
Seattle Seahawks come to
the Coliseum before the
Rams travel to play the Dal-
las Cowboys and then the
San Francisco 49ers. They
conclude the season at
home against the Cardinals.
“We just got to get ready
for Arizona,” said running
back Todd Gurley, who
rushed for 22 yards in six
carries. “Thank God it’s
Thanksgiving, so hopefully
we forget about this loss by
Thursday.”
Monday night’s defeat
hearkened to an early-sea-
son loss at home. After start-
ing the season with three vic-
tories, the Rams lost to the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 55-
40 at the Coliseum. Initially
dismissed as an anomaly, it
instead began a three-game
losing streak.
On Monday night, Jack-
son was even more impres-
sive against the Rams than
Buccaneers quarterback
Jameis Winston. His per-
formance might have eclips-
ed Seahawks quarterback
Russell Wilson’s outstand-
ing game against L.A.
Jackson completed 15 of
20 passes for 169 yards and
rushed for 95 yards in eight

carries. Running back Mark
Ingram rushed for 111 yards
and a touchdown in 15
carries and also caught a
touchdown pass.
Rams safety Eric Weddle
and linebacker Clay
Matthews were among sev-
eral defensive players fooled
by Jackson’s deft fakes.
“When you get on the field
and you get to the speed of
what they run, it’s tough,”
said Weddle, who played the
previous three seasons with
the Ravens. “I mean, some of
the plays I didn’t know who
had the ball because they
run it so efficiently.

“He’s one of a kind; he’s
pretty special.”
Said Matthews: “I was in
the backfield so fast and you
have to kind of pick your poi-
son as far as who you take.”
Matthews, an 11th-year
pro, referenced a young
Colin Kaepernick, Cam
Newton and Robert Griffin
III when assessing Jackson.
“He’s doing as well as
anybody right now,”
Matthews said.
The Rams defense had
been stout the last four
games, but it was no match
for Jackson and a team that
improved to 9-2 with its sev-

enth consecutive victory. In
the fourth quarter, Ravens
fans were chanting, “M-V-P!”
The Ravens scored on all
four first-half possessions,
and limited the Rams to two
field goals, en route to a 28-6
halftime lead.
Jackson extended the
margin with a touchdown
pass to Ingram on the first
possession of the second
half, and continued the on-
slaught with another to re-
ceiver Willie Snead early in
the fourth quarter.
Peters put what
amounted to the finishing
touch on the rout when he

intercepted a Jared Goff
pass early in the fourth
quarter.
He and his teammates
celebrated by running to the
end zone at the peristyle end
of the Coliseum, where Pe-
ters spun the ball on the turf
and mugged for the cam-
eras.
After the game Peters
and Rams cornerback Jalen
Ramsey got into a verbal al-
tercation that required
them to be separated as they
exited the field into the Coli-
seum tunnel.
Peters was traded before
the Rams acquired Ramsey
last month.
After a 17-7 victory over
the Chicago Bears, Goff had
said that the offense
“needed to be better than
that, and it starts with me.”
But the Rams managed
only two Greg Zuerlein field
goals against the Ravens.
The Rams did not get the
hot start they needed and
the game got away from
them, said Goff, who com-
pleted 26 of 37 passes for 212
yards, with two intercep-
tions.
How can an offense that
was the envy of the NFL in
2018 get rolling?
“A million things,” Goff
said. “There’s no one thing.
It’s just be better consis-
tently.”
One thing is clear: Jack-
son and the Ravens are set-
ting a new standard for of-
fense.
In the first half, Jackson
completed all nine of his
passes for 87 yards and three
touchdowns, and rushed for
80 yards in six carries.
The Rams went three
and out on the first pos-
session and watched Jack-
son and the Ravens run
away with a victory.
“Reality is, we got rolled,”
Matthews said. “It’s time to
bounce back.”

Rams routed at home by Ravens


MARCUS PETERS,who picked off a pass Monday night, taunts Josh Reynolds
and his former team after a penalty in the fourth quarter at the Coliseum.

Wally SkalijLos Angeles Times

[Rams,from D1]

Making the most of his throws


In Monday’s win over the Rams, Baltimore’s Lamar
Jackson became the fifth NFL quarterback since 1950 to
throw for five or more touchdowns while accumulating
fewer than 200 yards passing.
Ye a r Player Te a m Cmp.-Att. Yd s TDRating
2019 Lamar Jackson Balt. 15-20 169 5 139.4
1989 Boomer Esiason Cin. 17-28 197 5 121.6
1962 George Blanda Hou. 13-24 190 6 102.4
1962 Eddie LeBaron Dallas 9-15 158 5 96.0
1962 Frank Tripucka Denver 12-20 168 5 87.1
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