Ottawa Citizen

Hit hard, hit often the Raven D’s calling card

‘It’s in our DNA,’ Williams says of Baltimore’s fierce game plan

- HOWARD FENDRICH OWINGS MILLS, Md.

• It was as if linebacker Ray Lewis, safety Bernard Pollard and the rest of the Baltimore Ravens’ defence set out to provide a quarter-by-quarter demonstrat­ion of how they do business.

About 11 minutes into the AFC championsh­ip game against Tom Brady and the New England Patriots, Lewis drew a 15-yard unnecessar­y roughness penalty for a helmet-to-helmet hit that pushed tight end Aaron Hernandez’s chin strap up near his nose.

Then, in the second quarter, linebacker Dannell Ellerbe gave New England another free 15 yards by hitting an offensive lineman in the face mask in response to an afterthe-play shove.

Fast-forward to early in the third, and Pollard was flagged for his team’s third personal foul of the day, thanks to a leaping hit against the helmet of receiver Wes Welker. Two plays later, Welker dropped a third-down pass.

And finally, a couple of minutes into the fourth, Pollard struck again. No penalty was called this time, but his helmet-to-helmet hit on Stevan Ridley resulted in a fumble and left the running back on his back, looking limp and helpless. Ridley left the game with a head injury, while the Ravens recovered the football and were on their way to next Sunday’s Super Bowl against the equally aggressive San Francisco 49ers.

In an age of high-powered offences in the NFL — this season’s games featured 45.5 points, the highest average since 1965 — and increasing­ly safety-conscious officials, a pair of hard-hitting, oft-penalized defences are meeting for the championsh­ip.

Those second-half shutouts of the Patriots and Atlanta Falcons in the conference title games were only the latest reminder from the 49ers and Ravens that defence still matters.

Sometimes it isn’t about some sort of newfangled, complicate­d Xs-and-Os defence, either. It’s about players pushing it to the limit — and, sometimes, perhaps beyond — in a league that has been taking steps to rein in certain kinds of hits.

“Being physical? That’s vital, man. That’s what we live by,” Baltimore cornerback Cary Williams said. “That’s something that Ray Lewis establishe­d here back in ‘96, and we’re going to continue to do that. It’s been, I guess, in our bloodline. It’s in our DNA. We don’t bring in guys that’s timid. We don’t bring in guys that’s not going to hit anybody.”

What about San Francisco’s defence?

“They’re just as physical as we are,” Williams replied, offering what in his mind is probably the highest compliment he could pay another team’s players.

San Francisco defensive lineman Justin Smith deflected a question about whether his defence is as good as Baltimore’s, replying: “I mean, we’re just trying to win a ring.”

Actually, that’s probably better asked about the Ravens: Are they as good as the 49ers?

Opposing offences scored 15.5 points per game against the 49ers, which ranked third in the 32-team NFL in the regular season. The Ravens gave up 20 per game, 11thbest.

The 49ers allowed only two touchdown passes of 20-plus yards, the lowest total in the league. Baltimore allowed six.

During the regular season, the Ravens were whistled for an NFL-high 19 personal fouls. Their team also was penalized more yards overall than anyone else.

The 49ers, for their part, tied for fourth with 15 personal fouls and ranked fifth in penalty yardage.

 ?? JARED WICKERHAM/GETTY IMAGES ?? Cary Williams, left, of the Baltimore Ravens celebrates with Ray Lewis, centre, after intercepti­ng a pass against the New England Patriots in the AFC championsh­ip game.
JARED WICKERHAM/GETTY IMAGES Cary Williams, left, of the Baltimore Ravens celebrates with Ray Lewis, centre, after intercepti­ng a pass against the New England Patriots in the AFC championsh­ip game.

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