Las Vegas Review-Journal

Raiders can’t allow Ravens’ superstar Jackson to run free

Dual-threat QB gives defenses nightmares

- By Adam Hill Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

Many coaches who watch game film to prepare to play Baltimore Ravens star quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson compare the experience to watching a nightmare-inducing movie.

Jon Gruden said it is more like watching a more comedic cinematic enterprise.

“It’s like the

‘Dodgeball’ movie,”

Gruden said. “He can dip and duck. I don’t remember the other D’s, but he can go crazy back there. He’s worth the price of admission. It’ll be fun to watch our guys chase him.”

Gruden and his staff put together a film of nearly 400 plays from last season that showed Jackson inflicting damage on defenses in a variety of ways, a reel the Raiders have been watching throughout the summer.

They will take a final exam on their studies Monday night. The Ravens visit Allegiant Stadium for the regular-season opener for both teams.

Jackson is the first quarterbac­k in NFL history to rush for 1,000 yards in back-to-back seasons. He also threw for 26 touchdowns and completed 64.4 percent of his throws last season despite his receivers dropping a league-high 7.5 percent of his attempts, according to QB Data Mine.

It’s the first big test for new Raiders defensive coordinato­r Gus Bradley, who takes over a unit that struggled mightily last season.

Bradley has seen it all in his time running NFL defenses, including Jackson. One of the more intriguing storylines entering this matchup is the success Bradley had in shutting down the dynamic signal-caller when his Los Angeles Chargers met the Ravens in the playoffs three seasons ago.

In that game, Bradley flooded the field with defensive backs to put as much speed in play as possible. He often had six and even seven secondary players with the four down linemen up front, a lineup the Raiders could employ at times on Monday.

But regardless of scheme, the Raiders’ reworked defensive line will need to win individual battles to make it work.

Even then, Jackson’s improvemen­ts over the last two years make the task more daunting.

“He’s just so talented,” Bradley said. “I think there’s a lot of respect around the league about his ability to run and how he makes people miss and extends plays, but his passing abilities now too.

“You look at third down, I think he was like ninth in the league in quarterbac­k efficiency. So, I mean he’s got the whole game now. That’s why he’s so difficult to defend.”

There’s another difference between then and now with the Ravens’ offense.

While Jackson was good in that 2018 season, he went to another level and won the league MVP award in 2019 when Greg Roman took over as offensive coordinato­r and designed a scheme to make better use of Jackson’s skills.

One adjustment was to counter opponents’ plans of stacking the edges by using more tight end motion to extend the defense horizontal­ly and get blockers in front of the play.

“They’re so diverse,” Bradley said. “They can hit you in a number of ways. They can line up and just pound you. They can run the option game. They can come back and go quick. They can go deep. There’s so many things they can get to.”

The common denominato­r in just about every successful strategy against Jackson is getting a lead and making him play from behind. That’s when he has had the most difficulty.

Still, Jackson is 30-7 as a starter. Several Raiders defenders said they can’t focus on Jackson and instead must concentrat­e on gap control and sticking to their individual assignment­s because the price for the occasional mistake is so severe against him.

Rookie safety Tre’von Moehrig will make his NFL debut against the former MVP on Monday.

”We’re going to have to be able to cover, plaster when he’s scrambling and getting outside the pocket,” Moehrig said of defending Jackson. “As long as we do that, I think we’ll be able to be successful.”

It’s also Las Vegas. A little luck couldn’t hurt.

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Lamar Jackson

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