Houston Chronicle Sunday

Round 3: Baltimore hopes for redemption

Campbell looks to be edge against Henry, Tennessee

- By Teresa M. Walker

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Defensive end Calais Campbell knows the time has arrived to prove why Baltimore traded for him last March: It’s Round 3 of the Ravens vs. Derrick Henry.

A spot in the AFC divisional round is on the line Sunday.

Henry helped the Titans stun the top-seeded Ravens a year ago in the divisional round as the NFL rushing leader ran for 195 yards, threw a touchdown pass and turned Baltimore safety Earl Thomas into his blocker with a stiff arm at one point.

Baltimore traded a fifthround pick to Jacksonvil­le for Campbell last March, and the six-time Pro Bowl end missed Round 2 on Nov. 22 when Henry ran for 133 yards — 89 on 10 carries in the fourth quarter and overtime — in a 30-24 win capped by his 29-yard TD run.

“Derrick Henry is one of the best running backs to ever play this game, and he’s in the zone right now,” Campbell said. “So, yes - I take pride in the challenge of lining up and trying to shut him down.”

Ravens nose tackle Brandon Williams also missed that game but is available for this one. The No. 5 seeded Ravens (11-5) have won five straight, including last week’s 38-3 rout of Cincinnati.

“Now we get to see them again in the same scenario,” Williams said. “Obviously, we have that sense in it, and we know what happened last year. And, obviously, we don’t want the same thing to happen.”

The Titans (11-5) have the hometown advantage this time around, though that may not help in a rivalry in which neither Baltimore nor Tennessee has won on its own field in four previous games. They do have Henry.

He just became the first back-to-back NFL rushing champ since LaDainian Tomlinson in 2006-07 with a career-high 2,027 yards, and Henry ran for a careerbest 250 yards helping Tennessee clinch its first AFC South title since 2008 with a 41-38 win at Houston.

Now Henry is heading into the postseason, where he has really thrived. Only Terrell Davis (672) and John Riggins (640) have more rushing yards through a player’s first five postseason games than Henry (630).

“We all know what’s at stake, “Henry said. “Win or go home, and when you win you keep playing.”

Stopping Henry is merely the first priority for the Ravens’ defense. There’s also the matter of containing Titans quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill, who threw for 3,819 yards with a careerhigh 33 touchdowns and only seven intercepti­ons during the regular season.

These playoffs include quarterbac­ks Tom Brady, Patrick Mahomes, Russell Wilson, Jackson and several other notable stars. Tannehill may not carry the reputation of those stars, but he’s still a big threat throwing a pair of TD passes in each of the last two games against Baltimore.

The Ravens overcame an outbreak of COVID-19 that forced Jackson and several others to miss at least one game andwas the main culprit in a three-game skid that left Baltimore with a 6-5 record in December.

That’s one big difference in this team from last year’s squad, which entered the playoffs riding a 12-game winning streak. This group, according to Jackson, grew stronger because of that rough stretch.

“We’re motivated from what went on, the adversity with the COVID-19 outbreak - some guys missing games because of it,” Jackson said. “Our team is just hungry right now, and that’s just what we need. We need to be hungry; we need to be doubted. I feel like we play better like that.”

 ?? TerranceWi­lliams / Associated Press ?? Titans running back Derrick Henry (22) ran for a career-high 2,027 yards in the 2020-21 season to become the first back-to-back rushing champion since 2006.
TerranceWi­lliams / Associated Press Titans running back Derrick Henry (22) ran for a career-high 2,027 yards in the 2020-21 season to become the first back-to-back rushing champion since 2006.

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