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What to know from NFL Week 9: Nobody is playing better than the Ravens (Pt 1 of 2)
Washington Post Analysis by Adam Kilgore November 6, 2023
At times, it felt as if Week 9 were trying to tell us that experience is overrated. The Vikings won with a quarterback who had been on their team for five days. The Texans won with a kicker who plays running back. The Raiders won with a coach whose NFL coaching experience had consisted of 1½ seasons leading linebackers. Here is what to know.
The Baltimore Ravens are the most complete team in the NFL. Two weeks after they dismantled the Lions, the Ravens thumped another leading NFC contender. They pounded the Seahawks, 37-3, and dominated in a fashion rarely seen in the NFL. Baltimore outgained Seattle 515 yards to 151. The Ravens earned 29 first downs and allowed six. They rushed for 298 yards. They possessed the ball for more than 40 minutes.
The Ravens put their comprehensive excellence on full display. They have an MVP candidate at quarterback, one of the league’s deepest pass rushes, a coach with a Super Bowl on his résumé, pass coverage that Pro Football Focus grades as the best in the NFL, the best pass-catching tight end this side of Travis Kelce, the greatest kicker in NFL history and an ascending receiving corps that includes Odell Beckham Jr., who scored his first touchdown as a Raven on Sunday.
They also have undrafted rookie running back Keaton Mitchell, who could provide a season-changing emergence. Mitchell, who went to East Carolina, had a great training camp before an injury sidelined him. The Ravens were excited about his speed, and Sunday he showed what it could add to Baltimore’s offense: He blazed 40 yards to score a touchdown in the third quarter, then added a weaving, 60-yard run in the fourth. Mitchell ran nine times for 138 yards, and his style will provide an ideal complement to the bruising Gus Edwards.
The Ravens’ plus-115 point differential is the best in the NFL, and at 7-2 they are tied with the Chiefs for the AFC’s top seed. Nobody is playing better.
You don’t need a kicker if you have C.J. Stroud. In the wildest game of the year, Stroud cemented his rookie of the year front-runner status and played one of the best games ever for a rookie quarterback. He threw for 470 yards, a rookie record, and five touchdowns. His Texans took over at their 25-yard line with 46 seconds left, trailing by four after the Buccaneers scored a gut-punch touchdown. Stroud steered Houston into the end zone in six plays, throwing two stunning passes to fellow rookie Tank Dell, including a 15-yard touchdown with six seconds left that gave Houston a 39-37 victory.
The circumstances made Stroud’s performance even more epic. The Texans lost kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn to a quadriceps injury late in the first half, which meant Houston went for two no matter the circumstances and usually went for it on fourth down in field goal range. On fourth and goal from the 9-yard line in the fourth quarter, Stroud lasered a touchdown pass to tight end Dalton Schultz, then powered into the end zone himself for the two-point conversion.
Texans running back Dare Ogunbowale took over kickoff duties and provided this week’s reminder that NFL players are athletic marvels. He banged three touchbacks and, midway through the fourth quarter, booted a go-ahead, 29-yard field goal, which Coach DeMeco Ryans opted for on fourth and goal from the 11.
Ogunbowale’s field goal would have won the game had Baker Mayfield not led Tampa Bay on a 10-play, 61-yard touchdown drive on which the Buccaneers overcame a third and 23. It only set the stage for Stroud, who has delivered the Texans into a promising new era. Kirk Cousins and Tua Tagovailoa are the only quarterbacks with more passing yards per game than Stroud’s 283.8. If Stroud stays on pace and the Texans challenge for a playoff spot, rookie of the year won’t be the only award he contends for; he may receive MVP consideration.
The Miami Dolphins still have something to prove. They are exciting, explosive and scary to play. At their best, they have looked like a powerhouse. But Sunday morning provided more evidence that they cannot be considered part of the NFL’s elite. Miami lost to the Chiefs, 21-14, in its latest missed chance to show it can compete with the league’s best.
In Germany, the Dolphins nearly pulled off a galvanizing victory. They recovered from Tyreek Hill’s calamitous fumble right before halftime, which the Chiefs returned for a touchdown with the help of a lateral, turning a 21-0 halftime deficit into a close game. But on the final possession, the Dolphins’ drive ended with a fumbled shotgun snap.
In six games against teams with losing records, all victories, the Dolphins have won by an average of 18.2 points. In three games against teams with winning records, all defeats, they have lost by an average of 16.3 points. The Bills outclassed them, the Eagles outmuscled them, and the Chiefs outlasted them.
There are many reasons the Dolphins haven’t beaten good teams. Miami’s offensive line has been shredded with injuries. Jaylen Waddle has been playing at less than full health, and sensational rookie running back De’Von Achane is on injured reserve. Jalen Ramsey, who played his second game of the season Sunday, is still working his way back from offseason knee surgery. But every NFL team faces injuries, and the Dolphins have not measured up against the best. We will know whether they can by January — they end the regular season against the Cowboys, Ravens and Bills.
Washington Post Analysis by Adam Kilgore November 6, 2023
At times, it felt as if Week 9 were trying to tell us that experience is overrated. The Vikings won with a quarterback who had been on their team for five days. The Texans won with a kicker who plays running back. The Raiders won with a coach whose NFL coaching experience had consisted of 1½ seasons leading linebackers. Here is what to know.
The Baltimore Ravens are the most complete team in the NFL. Two weeks after they dismantled the Lions, the Ravens thumped another leading NFC contender. They pounded the Seahawks, 37-3, and dominated in a fashion rarely seen in the NFL. Baltimore outgained Seattle 515 yards to 151. The Ravens earned 29 first downs and allowed six. They rushed for 298 yards. They possessed the ball for more than 40 minutes.
The Ravens put their comprehensive excellence on full display. They have an MVP candidate at quarterback, one of the league’s deepest pass rushes, a coach with a Super Bowl on his résumé, pass coverage that Pro Football Focus grades as the best in the NFL, the best pass-catching tight end this side of Travis Kelce, the greatest kicker in NFL history and an ascending receiving corps that includes Odell Beckham Jr., who scored his first touchdown as a Raven on Sunday.
They also have undrafted rookie running back Keaton Mitchell, who could provide a season-changing emergence. Mitchell, who went to East Carolina, had a great training camp before an injury sidelined him. The Ravens were excited about his speed, and Sunday he showed what it could add to Baltimore’s offense: He blazed 40 yards to score a touchdown in the third quarter, then added a weaving, 60-yard run in the fourth. Mitchell ran nine times for 138 yards, and his style will provide an ideal complement to the bruising Gus Edwards.
The Ravens’ plus-115 point differential is the best in the NFL, and at 7-2 they are tied with the Chiefs for the AFC’s top seed. Nobody is playing better.
You don’t need a kicker if you have C.J. Stroud. In the wildest game of the year, Stroud cemented his rookie of the year front-runner status and played one of the best games ever for a rookie quarterback. He threw for 470 yards, a rookie record, and five touchdowns. His Texans took over at their 25-yard line with 46 seconds left, trailing by four after the Buccaneers scored a gut-punch touchdown. Stroud steered Houston into the end zone in six plays, throwing two stunning passes to fellow rookie Tank Dell, including a 15-yard touchdown with six seconds left that gave Houston a 39-37 victory.
The circumstances made Stroud’s performance even more epic. The Texans lost kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn to a quadriceps injury late in the first half, which meant Houston went for two no matter the circumstances and usually went for it on fourth down in field goal range. On fourth and goal from the 9-yard line in the fourth quarter, Stroud lasered a touchdown pass to tight end Dalton Schultz, then powered into the end zone himself for the two-point conversion.
Texans running back Dare Ogunbowale took over kickoff duties and provided this week’s reminder that NFL players are athletic marvels. He banged three touchbacks and, midway through the fourth quarter, booted a go-ahead, 29-yard field goal, which Coach DeMeco Ryans opted for on fourth and goal from the 11.
Ogunbowale’s field goal would have won the game had Baker Mayfield not led Tampa Bay on a 10-play, 61-yard touchdown drive on which the Buccaneers overcame a third and 23. It only set the stage for Stroud, who has delivered the Texans into a promising new era. Kirk Cousins and Tua Tagovailoa are the only quarterbacks with more passing yards per game than Stroud’s 283.8. If Stroud stays on pace and the Texans challenge for a playoff spot, rookie of the year won’t be the only award he contends for; he may receive MVP consideration.
The Miami Dolphins still have something to prove. They are exciting, explosive and scary to play. At their best, they have looked like a powerhouse. But Sunday morning provided more evidence that they cannot be considered part of the NFL’s elite. Miami lost to the Chiefs, 21-14, in its latest missed chance to show it can compete with the league’s best.
In Germany, the Dolphins nearly pulled off a galvanizing victory. They recovered from Tyreek Hill’s calamitous fumble right before halftime, which the Chiefs returned for a touchdown with the help of a lateral, turning a 21-0 halftime deficit into a close game. But on the final possession, the Dolphins’ drive ended with a fumbled shotgun snap.
In six games against teams with losing records, all victories, the Dolphins have won by an average of 18.2 points. In three games against teams with winning records, all defeats, they have lost by an average of 16.3 points. The Bills outclassed them, the Eagles outmuscled them, and the Chiefs outlasted them.
There are many reasons the Dolphins haven’t beaten good teams. Miami’s offensive line has been shredded with injuries. Jaylen Waddle has been playing at less than full health, and sensational rookie running back De’Von Achane is on injured reserve. Jalen Ramsey, who played his second game of the season Sunday, is still working his way back from offseason knee surgery. But every NFL team faces injuries, and the Dolphins have not measured up against the best. We will know whether they can by January — they end the regular season against the Cowboys, Ravens and Bills.