Ravens inch closer to playoffs sans style
BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Ravens didn’t force a turnover, scored only two touchdowns and were dangerously close to going into overtime at home against lowly Indianapolis.
“We didn’t play our best game,” Coach John Harbaugh readily acknowledged.
Though the Ravens’ performance Saturday was not particularly artistic, they perceived the final result to be a thing of beauty: Ravens 23, Colts 16.
Baltimore (9-6) scored on its first two possessions and held off the skidding Colts (3-12) in a windy, rain-soaked second half.
The Ravens will reach the playoffs as an AFC wild card by defeating Cincinnati at home Dec. 31. Striving for its first postseason berth since 2014, Baltimore has won five of six after a 4-5 start.
“We found a way to win it. That’s the thing, it’s a win,” Harbaugh said. “It doesn’t matter. You have to find a way to win in this league.”
Joe Flacco threw for 237 yards and two touchdowns, Justin Tucker kicked three field goals and the Ravens did just enough to squeeze out a victory.
“I wish we had gotten into the end zone one more time,” Flacco said. “It’s not always pretty.”
Indianapolis closed to 1613 in the third quarter before Flacco threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Maxx Williams with 8:40 remaining.
It was 23-16 when Anthony Walker blocked a Ravens punt, giving the Colts the ball at the Baltimore 27 with 2:36 left. Indianapolis moved to the 10 before a third-down sack and a fourth-down incompletion ended the comeback bid.
“We had a great chance to win this game,” Colts quarterback Jacoby Brissett said. “We just didn’t get it done down there.”
Flacco, who went 29 for 38, has thrown for 7 TDs with just 1 interception over his past 4 games.
“We’re a very excited, a very confident football team,” Flacco said.
The Colts have lost six in a row for the first time since 2011, when they opened 0-13. That was the year before they drafted quarterback Andrew Luck, whose absence this season with a shoulder injury contributed heavily to the team’s slide into the AFC South cellar.
“There are no moral victories. We understand that,” Coach Chuck Pagano said. “But this is a resilient bunch and a group that, disappointment after disappointment after disappointment, they keep coming back, they go to work and they compete and prepare.
“They played their guts out today. They played their hearts out, and we came up short again.”
Brissett completed 16 of 33 passes for 215 yards and Frank Gore had 68 yards rushing and 1 touchdown catch for Indianapolis. More importantly, the Colts did not commit a turnover against a team that leads the NFL with 33 takeaways.
Flacco went 16 for 22 for 157 yards to help the Ravens take a 13-7 halftime lead.
Adam Vinatieri kicked three field goals for the Colts, but he had one blocked and came up short on a 60-yard try at the end of the first half.
“We seem to be playing well enough to stay in games,” Vinatieri said. “We’ve played some good teams very tough, but we haven’t been able to win.
“This may sound old, but this is the best 3-12 team that I’ve ever known of. When you look at a team that has a 3-12 record, you think these guys are terrible. But we aren’t, and any team that plays us knows that.”
After kicking a field goal on its first possession, Baltimore blocked a field goal try by Vinatieri. The Ravens then launched a 71-yard drive that ended with Flacco tossing a 6-yard touchdown pass to Michael Campanaro for a 10-0 lead.
Brissett answered with a 14-yard TD pass to Gore, and Tucker kicked a 39-yard field goal for Baltimore after the two-minute warning.