San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Chargers, Ravens happy to be back in postseason

- By David Ginsburg

BALTIMORE — It’s been six years since the Ravens hosted a playoff game, so forgive Pro Bowl guard Marshal Yanda for forgetting protocol regarding the distributi­on of tickets. “Somebody was asking me if we got tickets during the playoff games, and I couldn’t really remember,” he said during the week. “I was like, ‘Uh, it’s been a little while.’ ”

The last time Baltimore was at home in the postseason was in 2012, when linebacker Ray Lewis and quarterbac­k Joe Flacco engineered a 24-8 victory over Indianapol­is to launch a surprising Super Bowl run.

Lewis is now in the Hall of Fame, and Flacco will be on the bench when rookie Lamar Jackson and the Ravens (10-6) face the Los Angeles Chargers (12-4) in a wild-card game Sunday.

It’s a rematch of a pivotal contest two weeks ago, when Baltimore took control of the AFC North with a 22-10 victory that dropped the Chargers to the No. 6 seed. The Ravens’ top-ranked defense limited Los Angeles quarterbac­k Philip Rivers to 181 yards passing with two intercepti­ons.

“You know they’re going to come back with changes, with wrinkles, and they’re going to play that much harder, because they know what happened the first game,” said Ravens safety Eric Weddle, who played nine years with the Chargers before signing as a free agent with the Ravens in 2016.

With the Chargers’ linebacker­s undersized because of injuries, the defensive line will need another good game. Joey Bosa has four sacks in six games since missing the first 10 with a foot injury.

The Chargers had three sacks in the first meeting against Baltimore, but Jackson also had plenty of plays in which he was able to move up in the pocket to complete throws in his lone 200-yard passing game.

The game plan is important, but minimizing errors is

Sunday’s games 10 a.m.:

L.A. Chargers at Baltimore /95.7

Philadelph­ia at Chicago /95.7

1:30 p.m.:

what really counts.

“I don’t think it’s going to be a big secret as to what everyone is doing,” Los Angeles coach Anthony Lynn said. “It’s just whoever executes the best is going to win this game.”

If experience means anything at quarterbac­k, the Chargers have the edge. Rivers, 37, has been flinging the football in the NFL since 2004 and has started nine playoff games.

Jackson, a junior at Louisville just a year ago, has been a starter for just under two months. The 21-year-old will be the youngest quarterbac­k ever to start in the postseason.

But the Ravens are 6-1 with Jackson as a starter, and his ability to run has turned Baltimore’s offense into a very efficient unit.

“There’s no substitute for experience,” Ravens offensive coordinato­r Marty Mornhinweg said. But he quickly added: “Now sometimes, it’s the quality of experience as well. Man alive, look at all the things he’s done — a very mature young man for that age in many, many ways. And, he’s a very confident guy.”

This is the Chargers’ first postseason appearance since the 2013 season, and second since 2010.

“When you’re younger you think this is it; you get a shot every year,” Rivers said. “Then when you go once in the last nine or 10 years, you realize how fleeting it is and how hard it is to get in.”

Baltimore is coming off a three-year playoff absence.

“Coming into this league, playing these games, this was what you hoped for,” said Ravens linebacker Matthew Judon, who broke into the NFL in 2016.

David Ginsburg is an Associated Press writer.

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