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Five Ravens predictions for rest of 2018 season

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(Editorโ€™s note: This post was completed before news broke about Joe Flaccoโ€™s hip injury Friday afternoon.)
The story is all too familiar with the Ravens.
An encouraging start followed by a dreadful October leaving Baltimore too little margin for error down the stretch. Only this time around feels like the final stand for 11th-year head coach John Harbaugh and a number of aging veterans with high salary-cap numbers.
A look back at my preseason predictions brings mixed reviews at best as I envisioned the Ravens having their best year since 2014, but a return to the playoffs isnโ€™t yet out of the question with a seemingly pedestrian field competing for the second AFC wild card. At the same time, this hasnโ€™t been the ideal year to face a very strong NFC South after the 2014 Ravens went undefeated against that same division, the difference in them making the playoffs.
Will the Ravens miss out on the postseason for the fourth straight year and fifth time in six tries since their victory in Super Bowl XLVII that feels like a long time ago?
Below are five predictions for the remainder of the 2018 season:
1. Lamar Jackson will see increased snaps and even throw a couple touchdown passes. This one isnโ€™t exactly going out on a limb based on Harbaughโ€™s recent comments, but how it looks is key. I donโ€™t expect the rookie to become the starter โ€” then again, I also didnโ€™t expect the organization to draft a first-round quarterback this year โ€” as long as the Ravens are in the hunt, but Marty Mornhinweg needs to be willing to call for Jackson to throw the ball more frequently if heโ€™s going to be taking upwards of 10 to 12 snaps per game. The current offense is too predictable, so why not mix it up and allow Jackson to take a deep shot to John Brown? If it means heโ€™s the only quarterback on the field at times, so be it.

2. The running game will perform at a league-average rate the rest of the way. The Ravens have quietly improved running the ball by averaging just under 4.1 yards per carry over the last five games, but thatโ€™s coincided with four losses. Baltimore must find a way to run effectively from its โ€œtraditionalโ€ offense because itโ€™s becoming too obvious that Joe Flacco is passing the ball when heโ€™s at quarterback and the Ravens are running when Jackson lines up there. The recently-acquired Ty Montgomery will provide some help to go with Alex Collins while the Ravens will keep Orlando Brown Jr. at right tackle and move James Hurst to left guard. Those changes will bring steadier production.
3. More takeaways and sacks will finally come โ€” at home. Iโ€™ve written at length about these subjects recently, but I still believe this defense is too talented and has also been unlucky to have only five interceptions โ€” despite ranking second in the NFL in passes defended and first in batted balls at the line of scrimmage โ€” and two fumble recoveries in nine games. Opportunities will come at home with Oakland, Tampa Bay, and Cleveland ranking in the top 11 in giveaways, but the problem is their three road opponents (Atlanta, Kansas City, and the Los Angeles Chargers) have committed a total of just 19 turnovers. My confidence in the pass rush isnโ€™t as high as 22 of their 28 sacks came against Buffalo, the Browns, and Tennessee, whose lines rank in the bottom five in Football Outsidersโ€™ adjusted sack rate.

4. Flacco will not just lose his job lying down. His future in Baltimore largely depends on what the organization is seeing with Jacksonโ€™s development, but I donโ€™t expect the 33-year-old to play out his potential final weeks with the Ravens without a fight. Flacco has historically performed better in the second half of most seasons, and his next five opponents rank in the bottom 10 in Football Outsidersโ€™ weighted defense metric, meaning thereโ€™s little excuse not to improve after averaging just 5.8 yards per passing attempt over the last five games. Flacco wonโ€™t get to 25 touchdown passes as I originally predicted, but heโ€™ll play well enough to keep the door open for his 2019 return or create optimism about his offseason trade value.

5. History will repeat itself as the Ravens finish 8-8 and miss the playoffs, prompting substantial changes. Didnโ€™t I sound so optimistic in the previous points? Baltimore is 16-29 on the road since the start of the 2013 season after going 21-19 in away games from 2008-12. Since 2013, Pittsburgh is 27-16-1, New England 31-13, Kansas City 28-17, and Cincinnati 21-23 on the road, a sampling that illustrates how this franchise has fallen behind even the Bengals in terms of AFC relevance. I expect the Ravens to take care of business in their remaining home games and to play hard as they almost always have under Harbaugh, but they own a total of five road wins against opponents finishing a season with a record of .500 or better since 2013. Theyโ€™ll need at least one against the Falcons, Chiefs, or Chargers just to get to 9-7, and thatโ€™s needing a perfect 4-0 home mark. I just donโ€™t see it, which is why I thought the Ravens needed to be 6-3 at the bye to finish 10-6. Weโ€™ll look back at the Week 5 road loss to the Browns as the dagger sparking Steve Bisciotti to begin a reboot.

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