Baltimore Sun

Tonight’s top priority: stopping Brady

- Jeff.zrebiec@baltsun.com twitter.com/jeffzrebie­csun Baltimore Sun reporter Edward Lee contribute­d to this article.

he’s aged a bit.”

Brady is 39 and in his 17th NFL season. With 19 touchdowns and one intercepti­on in eight games since finishing his four-game suspension, he remains as prolific and dangerous as ever. Blitz him and he gets the ball out quickly to the “hot” receiver. Sit back in coverage and he picks the defense apart with pinpoint throws. Take away one thing and he finds another.

Stopping Brady and the Patriots remains an enigma for defensive coordinato­rs. But as the Ravens (7-5) prepare for their latest matchup against the Patriots (10-2), they’ve at least had moderate success to fall back on. Brady is 7-3 in his career against the Ravens, but he has thrown 12 touchdown passes and 11 intercepti­ons in those 10 games. Brady’s 58.3 regular-season completion percentage against the Ravens is his lowest against any opponent, and his 83.6 quarterbac­k rating against them is his fourth lowest.

“If you look at Tom and his history of going against a Baltimore Ravens defense, he’s not fared too good against them,” said Brady’s former teammate Randy Moss, now an analyst for ESPN.

The Patriots and Ravens have spent the past week downplayin­g the significan­ce of the previous meetings. Both teams have experience­d significan­t turnover since the last matchup, the Patriots’ 35-31 victory that helped propel their Super Bowl run at the end of the 2014 season. Many of the names and faces have changed, but the teams’ identities haven’t.

Whether Brady has to rely on his running backs, tight ends or wide receivers, he finds a way to dissect defenses and get the Patriots into the end zone. The Ravens pride themselves on a fast and aggressive defense.

“It’s just two good teams,” Ravens cornerback Jimmy Smith said. “What they do isn’t rocket science. They execute very well and they’re very well coached. They don’t miss tackles on defense and they don’t drop a lot of balls on offense. When they catch a 5-yard crossing route, they get extra yards. I think that’s what helps their offense go so well. On our part, we have to be a great tackling defense, a very physical defense that kind of helps stop what Brady does.”

Smith said he feels the Ravens “can get after” the Patriots. Asked why, he said, “Because we’re the Ravens.”

But it is going to take a lot more than confidence to contain Brady, even with his thinned supporting cast. The New York Giants slowed the Patriots in two Super Bowls, and the Denver Broncos did it in last season’s AFC championsh­ip game, by relying on a relentless pass rush. But there has been no sure formula, which is why Brady has won 201 career games, more than any other quarterbac­k in NFL history.

“It’s the same musts you have every week,” said Ravens defensive coordinato­r Dean Pees, who spent six seasons as a Patriots defensive coach. “You have to stop the run — can’t let them get the running game started. You can’t give up big plays. You have to make them go the long way. You just can’t give up cheap touchdowns. You can’t give up big runs after catch. It doesn’t change any with their team. That’s just the fundamenta­ls of defense, and that’s what we have to be able to do.”

Ravens safety Lardarius Webb said the key to limiting Brady is to show him different looks. Webb acknowledg­ed that Brady has seen pretty much everything, but changing up coverages gives him something to think about. Ravens defensive tackle Timmy Jernigan suggested that the Ravens need to just stay true to their defensive strengths and force the Patriots to adjust. That’s more easily said than done because New England has a history of drasticall­y changing its game plan each week. Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady runs for a 4-yard touchdown against the Ravens in the teams’ last meeting, an AFC divisional playoff game in Foxborough, Mass., in January 2015. New England won, 35-31, on its way to a Super Bowl victory over the Seahawks.

Powers said any defensive success starts with applying pressure to Brady, getting him to move his feet and forcing him off his spot. The Ravens have sacked him 20 times in 10 matchups, but Brady gets rid of the ball quickly and the Patriots’ precise shortpassi­ng game often nullifies any pass rush. Brady has been sacked just 11 times in eight games this season.

“It doesn’t make much sense to blitz a guy that gets rid of the ball in less than 1.5 seconds,” said former NFL coach Jon Gruden, who is part of ESPN’s broadcasti­ng team for “Monday Night Football.” “I think one of the great things the Ravens do is bat down passes. I think they got Andy Dalton five times a couple of weeks ago. A couple of times, they batted down passes against Pittsburgh. Jernigan got an intercepti­on on a batted ball.”

Moss said the key for the Ravens will be stopping the Patriots on first down when “they’re going to run, play action, spread you out.” The Ravens have had the top thirddown defense in the league, so getting the Patriots in third-and-longs is ideal.

Said Brady: “They’re the first-rated defense in the league, so no one has done a better job over the course of the season than them. I think they do things really well in a lot of areas, so they’re good in first-down defense, good in third-down defense, thirdand-short, good on the goal line, good in the red area. They contest every yard, so I think that’s the mark of a good defense. They don’t give you anything easy. You have to earn it.”

The Ravens entered their Week 11 showdown against the NFC-best Dallas Cowboys with the league’s top-ranked defense. Their game plan that day was to stuff the Cowboys’ vaunted running game and make rookie quarterbac­k Dak Prescott beat them down the field. It worked for almost a half before Dallas wore down the Ravens. Prescott threw for 301 yards and three touchdowns, and the Ravens defense couldn’t get off the field on third down.

That Ravens defense didn’t include an injured Smith, the team’s top corner, or now-healthy pass rusher Elvis Dumervil. They’ll both be on the field tonight, and they’ll be needed against a quarterbac­k who remains at the top of his game.

“It’s going to be a challenge,” Dumervil said, “but it’s a challenge that we want because we’re a top defense and we feel like we have great players, too.”

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ELISE AMENDOLA/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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