New York Post

Baltimore’s immature mistakes get best of them

- By RYAN DUNLEAVY

BALTIMORE — The karmic gods of taunting exacted revenge on Zay Flowers at the worst possible time.

About one minute after finishing off a 54-yard catch by drawing a 15-yard unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty for standing over L’Jarius Sneed to talk trash and throwing the ball at him, Flowers was on the verge of redemption as he dove headfirst toward the goal line. A fourth-quarter touchdown would’ve given the Ravens a chance to overcome a 10point deficit Sunday in the AFC Championsh­ip game.

And then Sneed punched the ball loose, Trent McDuffie recovered the fumble in the end zone and those missing six or seven points loomed large in a 17-10 loss to the Chiefs.

“I thought I [scored], honestly,” Flowers said, “but I’ll learn from my mistakes.”

It will be a costly lesson. But not one that Flowers should be alone in learning.

After his team advanced to the Super Bowl for the fourth time in five years, Chiefs defensive star Chris Jones still called the Ravens “the best team in the NFL.” So, why didn’t the best win?

The Ravens committed eight penalties for 95 yards, including five that gave first downs to the Chiefs and two that essentiall­y gift-wrapped three points at the end of the first half. An unnecessar­y roughness on Kyle Van Noy and a roughing the passer on Travis Jones accounted for 30 yards on a 55-play drive ending in a 52-yard field goal.

An offensive holding penalty took the Ravens out of field goal range in the third quarter. And the defense made another big mistake late in the fourth, lining up with too many players on the field when trying to use Baltimore’s

final two timeouts and the two-minute warning to get one more possession.

“As a defense, we had way too many penalties, personal fouls, all that stuff,” nose tackle Michael Pierce said. “If we play that game nine times out of 10, I’m pretty sure we’d have less penalties and play a lot better. We just didn’t have our best game today for whatever reason.”

But Flowers’ fumble will be the lasting image of an opportunit­y-so-close that was squandered no matter how many teammates tried to share in the blame.

“Those are my brothers,” Flowers said of the support he received. “They are going to ride with me no matter what.”

John Harbaugh didn’t blame the rookie for a rookie mistake.

“We coach two hands when you reach for the end zone,” Harbaugh said. “He had two hands on the ball.”

 ?? Getty Images ?? WAIT TILL NEXT YEAR: Baltimore offensive guard John Simpson is overcome with grief following Sunday’s loss to the Chiefs in the AFC title game.
Getty Images WAIT TILL NEXT YEAR: Baltimore offensive guard John Simpson is overcome with grief following Sunday’s loss to the Chiefs in the AFC title game.

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