Ravens and Bears show off defence
Jackson’s Baltimore edge Chicago 17-16 in Hall of Fame game to open 2018 pre-season
>> OHIO: The goals were to let the backups play and learn, and to be inspired. Missions accomplished.
The Ravens and Bears honoured their great linebackers Ray Lewis and Brian Urlacher with some defence to make them proud in the Hall of Fame game that opened the NFL’s pre-season on Thursday night. Baltimore held on for a 17-16 victory.
“Ray is the greatest linebacker of our time,” said 2016 Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson, who quarterbacked the second half for the Ravens. “That was a big thrill and exciting stuff.”
Oh, there was a little spark of offence, some provided by Baltimore’s first-round draft pick. Jackson’s seven-yard touchdown pass to fellow first-rounder Hayden Hurst came after the Ravens’ defence recovered a fumble.
Chicago put together their best drive in the final minutes and journeyman Tyler Bray connected with Tanner Gentry for a 10-yard score to cap a 92-yard march. But the twopoint conversion pass fell incomplete.
Otherwise, D was the letter of the day: there were six turnovers in all, and 12 sacks, eight by the Bears.
“To represent Ray in this game to our guys meant even more,’’ Ravens coach John Harbaugh said.
“It was a special moment for our organisation,’’ noted new Bears coach Matt Nagy.
The teams exchanged tipped interceptions on the first two possessions of the preseason.
Chicago moved swiftly downfield only to have Chase Daniel’s pass to Josh Bellamy deflected to safety Chuck Clark at the Baltimore 6. He returned it 15 yards, then the Ravens replicated the turnover.
Robert Griffin III, attempting a comeback after sitting out 2017, had his pinpoint throw go off the hands of receiver Breshad Perriman, then off rookie cornerback Michael Joseph. DeAndre Houston-Carson dived to make the pick at the Ravens 34.
The Bears soon converted when Michael Burton caught a four-yard scoring pass from Daniel.
Baltimore tied it, sparked by two big gainers by undrafted rookie running back Gus Edwards. Griffin found Maxx Williams for a four-yard score.
“It felt great,’’ Griffin said. “I can’t tell you how grateful I am to play the game again.’’
Then Lewis’ old unit gave him a thrill. On the next play from scrimmage, linebacker Kamalei Correa sped 19 yards with an interception to the Chicago 9. But Urlacher’s former defence made him smile, sacking Griffin on third down to hold Baltimore to a 31-yard field goal by Kaare Vedvik.
Generally, it was a sloppy affair among backups marred by a slew of dropped passes, poor protection for the quarterbacks, and misthrows by those QBs.
But something Lewis and Urlacher would approve, the defences hit hard and tackled well.
Nagy, of late the offensive coordinator in Kansas City, made his head coaching debut with the Bears. He has said his new offence is in the early steps of development, and it looked that way all night.
Of course, with backups playing it’s nearly impossible to gauge progress. But he was optimistic.
“The arrow is pointing up for us,” he said. “We definitely took steps in the right direction.”
The first application of the NFL’s enhanced enforcement of penalties for players lowering their helmet to make a tackle occurred early. Ravens linebacker Patrick Onwuasor was flagged for his hit on Benny Cunningham, earning a 15-yard penalty that helped set up Chicago’s first touchdown.
Correa got nailed for the same violation in the third quarter, but he also had a sack that forced a fumble in that period, and three sacks overall.
“It was great to see him break out,” Harbaugh said of Correa’s overall performance. “His work ethic and attention to detail, to see it pay off like that, a coach loves to see it.”