The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Fierce 49ers defense vs Jackson’s Ravens highlights Week 13

- AP Pro Football Writer

By Josh Dubow

Lamar Jackson vs. Nick Bosa. The NFL’s most dynamic offense against one of its stingiest defenses. A rematch of a Super Bowl played seven years ago and a possible preview of another.

The game Sunday between the San Francisco 49ers (10-1) and the Baltimore Ravens (9-2) is one of the premier matchups of the entire season, even if it won’t get the national television exposure it deserves.

The game will be played in the early window after the league opted to flex the Oakland-Kansas City game into the doublehead­er slot and kept the matchup between New England and Houston in prime time.

That takes no luster off a matchup between two of the league’s dominant teams.

“They look great,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. “They’re killing people. They’ve got a great football team who you as coaches, we’ve gone to work on them already. We know what we’re up against. We’ve got to get back, we’ve got to get rested and we’ve got to get to work.”

This matchup is unpreceden­ted in many ways, the first time two teams will meet coming off wins of at least 28 points against teams with winning records, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

The 49ers dealt a primetime beatdown to the Green Bay Packers last Sunday, forcing Aaron Rodgers into the least efficient game of his career in a 37-8 victory.

The Ravens answered the next night in Los Angeles by becoming the first team in 11 years to score touchdowns on its first six drives in a 45-6 romp over the Rams.

It’s also the first time since the merger that teams outscoring opponents by at least 15 points per game met this late in the season.

The Niners have done it in large part thanks to a dominant defense that has an NFL-high 44 sacks. A deep line led by Bosa is helping hold opponents to the fewest net yards passing per game (136.9) in 37 years.

The Ravens are relying more on Jackson and the offense. Baltimore is averaging more than 40 points per game over the past five contests, with four of those games teams

Jackson has been nearly unstoppabl­e, averaging 7.1 yards per carry, posting a 111.4 passer rating and accounting for 30 touchdowns in his first full season as a starter.

The showdown between the 49ers and Ravens is one of six games this week featuring a pair of winning teams squaring off, including the Thanksgivi­ng game between Buffalo (8-3) and Dallas (6-5).

On Sunday, Tennessee (65) travels to Indianapol­is (6-5) in a matchup of AFC South teams fighting for the division title or a wildcard spot, New England (10-1) visits Houston (7-4) in a matchup of first-place teams, and Oakland (6-5) visits Kansas City (7-4) in an old-school AFC West battle with first place on the line.

“This is great for NFL fans and football and we’re excited to have a meaningful game this time of year against the Chiefs,” Raiders coach Jon Gruden said.

The week ends with an intriguing Monday night matchup between two of the NFC’s top teams — Minnesota (8-3) at Seattle (9-2).

Week 13 started with a Thanksgivi­ng triplehead­er, with all three visiting teams winning. New Orleans topped Atlanta 26-18 for its third straight NFC South title, Buffalo beat Dallas 2615 and Chicago edged Detroit 24-20.

NEW ENGLAND (10-1) at HOUSTON (7-4)

The Texans have lost eight straight to the Patriots, but both games with Deshaun Watson at quarterbac­k have been one-score contests.

Watson will have his hands full with a Patriots pass defense that has shut coming against with winning records. down almost every opponent. Cornerback Stephon Gilmore held Dallas’ Amari Cooper without a catch last week and likely will get the assignment against DeAndre Hopkins, who’s coming off a two-touchdown game.

The questions in New England are about Tom Brady and the offense for a change. The Patriots have been held to 20 points or fewer in three straight games for the first time in eight years. It hasn’t happened four in a row since 2002, the only year Brady failed to make the playoffs as a starter.

MINNESOTA (8-3) at SEATTLE (9-2), Monday night

The league’s top two rated passers square off when Kirk Cousins (114.8) and the Vikings visit Russell Wilson (112.1) and the Seahawks.

Both teams are in good position to make the playoffs but are hoping to do enough down the stretch to win their divisions rather than get in as wild cards.

Minnesota is tied with Green Bay in the NFC North, while Seattle is a game back of San Francisco in the NFC West.

OAKLAND (6-5) at KANSAS CITY (7-4)

This game lost a little luster when the Raiders stumbled last week in a 34-3 loss at the Jets. But they can still rebound and move into a tie for first with a win at Arrowhead.

The problem is Oakland has lost six straight in Kansas City, including all five with Derek Carr at quarterbac­k. All of those games have come in December or January when Carr typically struggles in colder weather.

Gruden is at a loss for how to simulate those conditions in California.

“I’m not a genius,” he said. “I’m not Thomas Edison, I don’t know how to do that. We’re just trying to show pictures of people that are cold that deal with cold. I don’t know. We’re not going to overanalyz­e it.”

TENNESSEE (6-5) at INDIANAPOL­IS (6-5)

The Titans have won four of five since switching from Marcus Mariota to Ryan Tannehill at quarterbac­k and are in the thick of the playoff race. Tannehill is fourth in the league in passer rating (114.9) since becoming the starter and Tennessee is fourth in the league in scoring over that span at 29.4 points per game.

The Colts have lost three of four since a promising start to the season.

CLEVELAND (5-6) PITTSBURGH (6-5)

The second game in three weeks between these AFC North rivals will be notable more for who’s not playing than who is, even though both teams remain in the AFC wild-card race.

The first meeting won by Cleveland was marred by a brawl at the end of the game that featured Cleveland’s Myles Garrett ripping off Pittsburgh quarterbac­k Mason Rudolph’s helmet and hitting him in the head with it. Garrett has been suspended indefinite­ly, Pittsburgh center Maurkice Pouncey will serve the final game of his two-game suspension for kicking Garrett at in retaliatio­n, and Rudolph has been benched for Devlin Hodges after throwing five intercepti­ons the past two games.

LOS ANGELES RAMS (65) at ARIZONA (3-7-1)

This game features two quarterbac­ks picked No. 1 overall going in very different directions. Los Angeles’ Jared Goff, the top pick in 2016, has regressed after throwing 60 touchdowns the past two years and leading the Rams to the Super Bowl last season. He has no TD passes and five intercepti­ons in November and his three straight games with no TD passes and at least one intercepti­on are tied for the longest streak in the NFL since Curtis Painter did it four games in a row for Indianapol­is in 2011.

This year’s top pick, Kyler Murray, is improving each week and has thrown only one intercepti­on in his past seven games. He has a 106.7 rating his past three games, including two marks in excess of 100 against the NFL’s stingiest pass defense in San Francisco.

GREEN BAY (8-3) at NEW YORK GIANTS (2-9)

The Packers’ bid for a first-round bye in the NFC took a serious blow with a loss in San Francisco in which Rodgers has the least efficient game of his career — an average of 3.2 yards per pass attempt.

Things should come much easier against a Giants

team that has one of the league’s worst defenses and allowed Chicago’s Mitchell Trubisky to throw for 278 yards last week.

WASHINGTON (2-9) CAROLINA (5-6)

Rookie Dwayne Haskins is coming off his first career win, against Detroit last week, but is getting more attention for missing the final kneeldown because he was taking a selfie with a fan.

That might be a good thing because Haskins wasn’t very effective, even in a winning cause. He went 13 for 29 for 156 yards and an intercepti­on, but did lead the drive for the winning field goal.

Carolina has lost three in a row and quarterbac­k Kyle Allen has thrown nine intercepti­ons in his past five games after having none in his first five career starts.

NEW YORK JETS (4-7) at CINCINNATI (0-11)

After hitting rock bottom with a loss at winless Miami in the beginning of November, the Jets have responded in big fashion with three straight victories, scoring 34 points in each of them.

Second-year quarterbac­k Sam Darnold has gone from “seeing ghosts” in a four-intercepti­on prime-time meltdown against New England last month to posting a 117.2 passer rating the past three games for the fourth-best mark in the league. at

 ?? KYUSUNG GONG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Baltimore Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson runs against the Los Angeles Rams during the first half of an NFL football game Monday, Nov. 25, 2019, in Los Angeles.
KYUSUNG GONG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Baltimore Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson runs against the Los Angeles Rams during the first half of an NFL football game Monday, Nov. 25, 2019, in Los Angeles.

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