After another big offensive game on Sunday, Luke Jones and Nestor discuss the emerging Todd Monken offense of Lamar, King Henry and the victorious Ravens in Cincinnati.
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
Lamar Jackson, Derrick Henry, Ravens offense, Bengals rivalry, Mark Andrews, offensive line, Todd Monken, playoff contention, defensive adjustments, passing game, running game, two-minute drills, offensive balance, Lamarโs leadership, Washington Commanders
SPEAKERS
Nestor Aparicio, Luke Jones
Nestor Aparicio 00:01
Welcome home. We are W, N, S, T, taussel, Baltimore. Weโre am 1570 please set a spot for us out on your dial. If youโre traveling around on the radio, weโre going to have some baseball around here this week, but lot of football, a lot of residue from a wild win over Cincinnati Bengals, and of course, the Washington I almost said the R word the commanders. I used to call them the Snyders. I remember when that used to mean something Baltimore in Washington, and back in the days of the burgundy and gun, the George Preston Marshall and all that good stuff, weโre gonna have scratch offs and Marilyn lottery giveaway. Itโs my birthday this week. Itโs Lukeโs birthday last week. So happy birthday to Luke. Heโs a year older. Iโm a year wiser and hopefully younger. Friday will be at Pizza Johnโs in Essex. Luke will have the delicious donโt even eat on Thursday, man, Iโm gonna have crinkle cut fries with gravy. Weโre gonna do pizza 28 different ways, including Dundalk, Venezuelan right there in Essex, which is the Hawaiian with the pepperoni on it, because thatโs crunchy and delicious. Iโm gonna give everybody a try. So if you love pineapple pizza, come on out the peach Johnson. If you hate it, I wonโt make you eat it. You can get whatever you want. Get a meatball sub if you want you delicious imported ham. Itโs imported. Gotta find out where itโs imported from. Iโm gonna have bread on Michelle, our friends at the pizza, John celebrating my birthday. Theyโre also having a big anniversary pizza Johnโs too, that Iโm going to be telling you about when weโre over there, Luke, I know your family hails from the greater Essex area, so itโll be a little bit of a homecoming for you, and an interesting homecoming game ahead. With this thing, we play every eight years here and every four years together, but this Bengals thing. We get together with them pretty often, and with the Derrick Henry train a run in and and their defense evaluating the Ravens offense in the aftermath of all of this offense, all of this running, and the Bengals secondary being decimated, it is a nice feeling that whatever the track meet they just left in Cincinnati, Iโm thinking they might be a little bit of a track meet coming here
Luke Jones 02:02
this week too. Yeah, no question about it. And you just asked me about, you know, well, looking at the Bengals with the ravens, and what that rivalry is, and how weird this game was compared to what you typically see from an AFC North showdown for all the talk of the Bengals, and what theyโve accomplished over the last few years and times where they beating the Ravens. You know how many times theyโve beaten Lamar Jackson? Once?
Nestor Aparicio 02:29
Why were Lamar breaking ankles there? Years ago? From up, everybody was in the press box. Everybodyโs laughing in Cincinnati like it was literally the first time Iโd ever heard utter noise. Iโll never forget it. When he made that play, it was a sound in a press box. And you could tell Chad and Greg and the whistler everybody. Iโve been in a lot of press boxes. I know how not to cheer in the press box. Believe it or not, I heard noises Iโd never heard from Lamar in Cincinnati. So thatโs unforgettable that day that is, thatโs his play, right? I mean, thereโs a lot of them, including the one on Sunday, but the original play in Cincinnati, something weโve never seen before since, yeah, the
Luke Jones 03:11
spin. I mean, Kevin Harlan, who was calling the game in Cincinnati on Sunday, famously said he is Houdini. Well, we saw the latest Houdini play when Lamar drops, the snap is trying to pick up the ball. Sam Hubbardโs got him dead to rights, stiff arms. Sam Hubbard, who probably has, I donโt know, 50 pounds on Lamar, or for at least 40 pounds on Lamar, stiff arms, him, gets away, throws the ball up, and Isaiah likely catches a touchdown. I mean, it was just, it was it was another one of those plays that Iโm sure the press box people are laughing and just gasping at how unbelievable it was. Because I think everyone was doing that at home. I mean, it was just, itโs incredible. And like I said, for all of the talk about the Ravens Bengals rivalry. And you know, itโs stepping up here in recent years. Look, there have been some good games. So I mean, Sunday included, of course, but Bengals are beating the Ravens one time with Lamar Jackson healthy and starting the football game and finishing the football game. So how frustrating does it have to be on their side when you see a play like that that we just mentioned, and just the fact that their offense played the way that it did, I mean, they completely gashed the ravens, completely shredded the Ravens defense. But too much number eight, too much. Letโs face it, a collective ensemble group of receivers and tight ends that they had four different guys with 50 receiving yards, thatโs not even counting Isaiah likely with two touchdown catches. I mean, they really spread the ball around, and they showed that on a day when the Bengals were determined to not let Derrick Henry beat them in terms of stacking the box and doing what they did at the line of scrimmage until Derrick Henry. Finally bust loose on the next to last play of the game, the Ravens had no problem. They moved the ball and they needed to, because they trailed in the second half. So as I said in a previous segment, you want an offense that can play in different ways and what weโve seen the last couple weeks, and not even throw Sunday in there as well, even though Derek Henry didnโt have big rushing totals until the very end that, you know, caught him close to 100 yards. But theyโve really done and Todd monkins done a really good job marrying the passing game to the run game. When you see they have Charlie Kohler on the field when theyโre running, kind of that 22 personnel, to kind of give a heavier look. Well, in order to not be too predictable, what do you need to do? You need to throw there. And the same way weโve talked about it, when Justice Hill is on the field, as you know, when the ravens, whether theyโre in two minute or even just situations where they want to spread it out a little more, you got to hand the ball to Justice Hill sometimes, because you donโt want to make it too predictable to say, oh, Justice hills in the game, they must be passing. So I think theyโve done a really good job of mixing up tendencies, going against tendencies, and certainly we have in, you know, after the last couple weeks, certainly werenโt seeing Lamar Jackson throw it 42 times, and thatโs not the script every week, of course, but was very encouraging to be able to do that when the situation called for it, when the Bengals were able to contain their running game in the first half, and certainly when they were trailing by two scores nearly the entire way in the second half. Again, for me, that bodes well for getting deeper into the season knowing that, hey, youโre going to have injuries. Youโre going to have teams that have a good game plan for you. Youโre going to have teams that can stop what you do the best. So when that happens, you can either throw your hands up and keep trying to do it, and then youโre just beating your head against the wall, or you can adjust. And I thought the Ravens did a really, really good job of making adjustments on the offensive side on Sunday. Well,
Nestor Aparicio 07:01
you do the math on this, weโre what, 30 some percent of this way through the season. Right at this point, the disappearance of Mark Andrews as a focal point, a go to guy, a binky in the case of Lamar, which he was earlier in his career. We talk about Tucker and where he is in his career, and Andrews, where callers on the field likely is on the field, they play heavy with Ricard and Henry early in games to try to have those first first down seven, eight yard runs and be in second and two and not have to throw the ball. We talked about Odell Beckham coming here last year, and I saw him in his locker doing whatever he was doing this week as well. And by the way, have you entered the locker room for the last time? I guess thatโll be Wednesdayโs conversation. We can talk about the players trying to throw you out of the locker room. You and everybody else. Jamesonโs rebate, all of you guys are just by seeing no more locker room. Um, but I would say for the offense and for what we expected, and what weโve come to know. In regard to my complaints about how much can they throw? How much do they want to throw? How much can zay flowers really expect to get the ball or mark Andrews expect to get the ball on an offense where, in a perfect world, theyโre 21 to 26 for 212 yards, because Henry ran for 120 Lamar ran for 58 and I donโt know that that would say thatโs their profile. Thatโs not what it looked like on Sunday. Thatโs not what it looks like any week over the mean and over the average of the aggregate of a year, what they would want week by week to look like probably isnโt as much passing even though theyโll tell the wide receivers in the tight ends that youโve always maintained, they can throw it, they can throw it. They should throw it. They should throw it more. And I always say, I donโt want you in second and 10 and then having Ronnie Stanley jump off and weโre punting, you know, so and because theyโre so interesting on fourth down, that if they get the fourth and something, they have an opportunity to go for it. Keep the punter off the field. They have more plays to extend drives to keep the ball, quite frankly, keep their defense off the field, which, thatโs going to be its own segment, what the defense is doing, but offensively, in the heart of hearts, I really expected Andrews to be a bigger part of this thus far, and what theyโre trying to do. It looks like under Monken, over this transition period, this thing feels more multiple, and they want it to be more multiple. And I feel that way when Kylan Wallace is catching balls, and Aguilar still a part of this, and Bateman now is a part of it, and flowers should be the biggest part of it. And given you know that little you know, the jet sweeps and the little dinkies and dunks and getting his hips moving to try to get him a lane where he could do something special. They have a lot of weapons here, and this is difficult for monk it, and itโs difficult with agents wanting the ball, guys wanting the ball, Henry wanting the ball, but not too much, and in the right circumstances. And then we donโt talk about the offensive line stinking, but like maybe we did a couple of weeks ago. Where the pieces and whoโs going to play where, but thereโs a lot, lot of moving parts and kind of a bad Bengals defense deodorize this and maybe the commanders this week to where you get guys some confidence, and you get to do some things that maybe you couldnโt do against the
Luke Jones 10:16
chiefs. Yeah. I mean, you, you obviously want to get better as the year goes on. And, we talked about this a lot through the lens of focusing on the offensive line right? And we talked about early in the season, you wanted to see at least a baseline that looked like, okay, itโs not great. Itโs certainly not top five or top 10, but there are signs that thereโs something to work with here. And you know, maybe you didnโt see as much of that as you wanted to in the first couple weeks of the season, but there also were good things they did in the first couple weeks of the season, offensively. I mean, it wasnโt all bad, but everything you just laid out, I mean, they want to be multiple as I said. I mean, I think one of the most overrated talking points in talking about, you know, offensive I you know, itโs identity, right? Because, again, if youโre so rigid, if youโre so ironclad in how you want to do things, what happens when the team stops that, then where do you go? Right? So you want to be able to do different things, thatโs
Nestor Aparicio 11:18
the run and shoot offense, right? You know, itโs completely one dimensional, and the linemen are created to pass block or to run block in one way that you canโt do both, right,
Luke Jones 11:30
right? So, so you want this push pull, and thatโs why you and I, when we were getting into these spirited debates, it wasnโt I, I wasnโt saying, Oh, stop running the ball to Derrick Henry and throw the ball. What I was saying was, at some point in time these defenses are seeing what the ravens are doing, and Derrick Henryโs getting the ball so much that inevitably they are going to start really stacking the box and daring the ravens to throw. And at that point in time you need to be able to do it. And they did it on Sunday, albeit, I agree this Bengals defense stinks, and itโs probably going to cost them their season. I mean, theyโre one in four. It kind of already has boring a mate, an amazing second half run. But you want to be able to do different things. You want to be able to have a counterpunch. This is a push pull, right? I mean, you run the ball, you run the ball, you run the ball the way that they did against Dallas and the way that they did against buffalo, not that they werenโt doing anything good in the passing game in those games, but it wasnโt high volume, right? So Cincinnati decides what we canโt let. We canโt let Derek Henry and Lamar beat us with their legs. So letโs stack the box play. Guys at the line of scrimmage do do the things that we need to do to try to stop that, and then, in turn, what are the Ravens do? Well, weโve got to throw it. Weโve got to throw it over their heads. And you know, not that they took a ton of deep shots, but they were very successful with that intermediate portion of the field. Think about it, throwing it over the linebackers heads as theyโre creeping up closer to the line of scrimmage. So they did that very effectively. Now, if youโre Washington, or youโre Tampa Bay, or youโre Cleveland, the ravens, next three opponents, youโre looking at that and saying, Oh my gosh. We were thinking so much about Derrick, Henry, Derek, Henry, Derek, Henry, and of course, Lamar, which Lamar is, you know, is the anchor to everything they do, and has been for six years now, but now itโs a case of oh, oh. Itโs not just zay flowers, who had a big day, but itโs also Oh, wait, wait not Isaiah likely not, not just mark Andrews. Charlie Kohler can catch passes too, so now you have him and oh, tylen Wallace caught a couple passes and Bateman, which, you know, it was a first round pick, but hasnโt you go down the list and look, Iโm itโs an ensemble effort, right? Youโre going to have some guys that arenโt going to do a whole lot. And, I mean, you know, you mentioned Mark Andrews. Me Mark Andrews had his best game of the year. You know, he caught four passes for 55 yards after back to back games where he didnโt catch any passes. But
Nestor Aparicio 13:59
we talked a lot about Lamar and chemistry with wide receivers and stuff, never the issue with Andrews. That was always going to be the threat in the way that mahomes And Kelsey are that thing. Look at what mahomes And Kelsey have been over the last two or three years, and look at what Lamar and Mark Andrews were five six years ago, and what they havenโt been that that would be a hell of an element to add back into this, into this attack, that thatโs primary in getting first downs and big situations, because I donโt know that weโve seen it enough recently. Thatโs always nice to see. It was a good, good look. This was an awakening game for a game they were getting their ass kicked. They were losing by 10 points twice in the fourth quarter. If the kid could turn the spin of the ball, they would have won the game if roquan Smith could have caught that interception. You know, theyโre all sort the Bengals didnโt sit down on the ball in overtime. I mean, a lot of things happen for for this to be deodorized and be three and two and top of the division, because they easily could have lost that football game on Sunday, but they didnโt. But the awakening parts. Are all thereโs life beyond Derrick, Henry and Lamar still has the can get in the phone booth and win a 10 point game from behind, even if it took some good luck. But more than that, the sprinkling of offense and the different players that says to me, the offensive lines working better because heโs being able to throw the ball and heโs not getting sacked and heโs not getting annihilated in when the run game fails, the past game succeeds. Thatโs good. Itโs a this was a great development. They look like they could do something on Sunday, even if they were losing at the end. Well, I mean,
Luke Jones 15:30
you, as I said, you want to be multiple, you want to be able to adjust. You want to be able to counter punch. I mean, again, thatโs why I think that that idea of a rigid identity, identity on offense is really overrated, because, again, what happens when a team thereโs always something you can do defensively, to stop or maybe not stop, but contain the opponent, assuming you have a requisite baseline of talent, which, I mean, hey. Again, as we said, the Bengals lost two of their top three corners, so maybe the Ravens were smart to be eager to exploit that. Although, again, the Bengals did a pretty good job of Derrick Henry was a non factor in that game until the last in terms of what he produced, his presence not being a non factor, but, but even in the second half, they were in so much two minute. I mean, Justice Hill out snapped Derrick Henry, because if youโre in two minute, you want Justice Hill out on the field, rather than Derek Henry. So you just, you want to be able to do different things. And thatโs, thatโs how you evolve. Thatโs how you grow as an offense. And yeah, you mentioned you use the Travis Kelsey comparison. Go look at Travis Kelsey in the regular season last year, he didnโt put up the monster Travis Kelsey numbers to the past, and part of that is heโs pretty long in the tooth at this point. Heโs old, but we saw what he did in January. So you know, even this year with the chiefs, and you know, weโll, weโll see how the coming weeks go, with Rashi rice sidelined at least indefinitely, if not for the entire season. But yeah, the first couple weeks, Kelsey did nothing in their offense, in the same way we were talking about Mark Andrews, and then suddenly he emerges when they need him. So I think with Andrews, there were some questions about how healthy Heโs been coming out of the gate, not just coming back from the ankle last year. But remember, he was involved in that car accident in mid August, which, thankfully, he avoided any serious, catastrophic kind of injuries. But he was banged up from that, and from what I understand, was kind of banged up anyway, at that point in training camp, so
Nestor Aparicio 17:29
wicked his car over the weekend, this has been strange. I mean, I see people driving like maniacs. Please slow the hell down, if youโre listening, please stop but, but that being said, I mean, the Ravens have been in some you know, I mean, and then the tragedy with the offensive lady, theyโve had some stuff ish going around there, sure.
Luke Jones 17:47
No question, no question. And specifically, you know, I mean, you mentioned with Joe Dallas Andrus, with their offensive line, so, and weโre
Nestor Aparicio 17:54
not talking about that as much, right?
Luke Jones 17:56
Weโre not. And look, I mean, thatโs a good thing, right? And theyโre not the best in the league. Letโs be clear about that. And Lamar is a very much an equalizer, right? Make, I mean, he makes your pass he makes your pass protection look better. He certainly makes your running game look better, because the defense has to account for him. I mean, you think about the conventional way that you think of a running game. Itโs typically 11 defenders on 10 offensive players, because youโve never thought of the quarterback as being, you know, part of that. Now thatโs changing, and itโs not just Lamar. Itโs others, including the kid in Washington, from Washington thatโs going to be coming to town on Sunday. I mean, Jaden Daniels, this, this kidโs special, and Iโll say this with you. Know, I wasnโt alone in this opinion, but he was my favorite quarterback out of this draft class. I mean, anyone who watched him at LSU last year, you thought, Man, this kidโs got a chance to be kids got a chance to be the real deal, and he looks like the real deal, even as a rookie. I mean, thatโs been impressive. So the Ravens need to be ready to play. But the point that I was making is, I mean, you have a ground game where everyone has to be accounted for, you know, even if guys like me were, you know, somewhat dismissive about the need for someone like Derrick Henry, because the running game had been as great as itโs been the last few years, and it has been even with street free agents coming in. You know, Latavius Murray and Devonte Freeman ran the ball, and the Ravens had a top five running game even that year when they lost their top three running backs before the season even started. So you know, there was always that factor. But then you add Derrick Henry into the mix, you still have Lamar Jackson. You have Justice Hill, who is a better player than he was two or three years ago. And youโve got something that is multi faceted, and itโs dynamic. And then on the flip side, you marry play action and boot action and all the. Different things that the Ravens like to do. Theyโre running more from under center as a result of Derrick Henry, and I think that even lends itself to some play action under center for Lamar that I think can work really well, and kind of adds a new wrinkle for him, as someone who lined up in shotgun 97% of the time through the first four or five years of his career. So you know, thereโs just, there are a lot of layers to this. And Iโm not saying itโs perfect. Itโs not a finished product. Certainly, Iโm not expecting what they did Sunday to become the norm, and Iโve never suggested I want to see that. My point was, at some point, some defense was going to do what the Bengals were able to do on Sunday. And it was beautiful to see the Ravens be able to adjust the way that they did and make them pay through the air, and make a banged up secondary look like a banged up bad secondary. And I mean, they just, they did it, and they did it with a malt a multitude of guys. And I mean, that was good to see. Now youโre only as good as your next weekโs challenge. And you know, certainly Washingtonโs not known for having a particularly good defense. So youโd like to think the Ravens gonna be able to move the ball however they want to on Sunday, but theyโll need to, because weโll get to the defense and weโll get to whatโs going on on that side of the ball. But in the meantime, this has been this offense. Itโs choppy the first couple weeks, we know that. But I mean, even those first couple weeks, itโs not like their offense was terrible, you know, itโs not like they were held to 10 points or anything like that. So, you know, itโs, itโs trending in the right direction. I guess thatโs the best way I can put it. But I mean all of that being said, Lamar Jackson, I mean, late fumble aside, and I this was another example of Lamar, his urgency, his leadership, where he is at this point in his career. It was, it was observed by more than a few people that Lamar was ticked in the post game. He wasnโt happy. He was really mad about what had happened with the fumble. And I, you know, we talked about this a little bit after the Dallas game, where Lamar was not very happy because of how they played in the fourth quarter, and what that meant. I, I kind of dig that. I kind of like that. I like not just saying, Oh, hey, weโre really happy because we won. You can tell heโs he was not happy about that, and I think thereโs a way to channel that to make him even better, make this team even better. And as weโve said, and look, weโre singing their praises on the offensive side of the ball. Weโll get to the defense and all the problems there. But we also know itโs early October. Weโve seen this team get on a roll at this point in the year, and weโve seen this team look like the best team in football in the regular season multiple times in recent years. But we know ultimately, this is all about January, and thatโs why, again, what they were able to do down 10 points, down 10 points in the fourth quarter, even, and to be able to throw the ball when they knew, when Cincinnati knew they needed to throw the ball, and they were still able to do it. I like seeing that from a big picture standpoint, not that you want to be in that position, but knowing that it can happen at some point. It will happen most likely. And you want to be in a position where, if thatโs the challenge, if thatโs the adversity that youโre facing on that particular Sunday you want to be able to do it. And in that way, Lamar Jackson, in this offense, absolutely rose to the occasion and ended up hanging 41 points on a bad Bengals defense, which is what you want to do at the end of the day, do what youโre supposed to do. And they adjusted in the way that the Bengals forced them to adjust. He is Baltimore, Luke.
Nestor Aparicio 23:41
Heโs Luke Jones. You can follow him anywhere out of social media, our friends at Jiffy Lube, as well as royal farms, real fresh, real fast, powering him up. We did a whole thing on the kicking game. Weโve done things on John Harbaugh. Weโre doing some offense now. Weโll get to some defense in a week where get some baseball too. Iโll have to write Mr. Rubenstein a second letter this week and tell them weโre not Redskins fans or commanders Snyder. Thatโs not the team we root for in Maryland. So nonetheless, offense, just two thoughts, and then you can run with this however you want. I like King Henry in the offense Iโve all and you can brag on your Lamar braggings and the things that you thought, I always thought that getting off the bus and being able to run the ball or feeling like we can run the ball are making them feel like we can run the ball beyond Lamar into the phone booth. And Lamar, you know, sleight of hand and like all of that, with no offense to Gus Edwards or even J K Dobbins when he was right, not galloping and perfect, and he was never fully healthy here, and God bless him out in San Diego, as I would say, which I know is not San Diego anymore, the notion that theyโre going to be able to run the ball and that they can, and I was way more worried about the offensive line a couple of weeks ago. So now that Iโve seen it enacted Eric, we havenโt talked about Eric Costa in a month because we donโt have, we donโt have personnel problems, personnel weaknesses perceived to be anywhere other than maybe Marcus Williams contract. But thatโs another story, the up tempo part of what they did when they were forced to to go out there and run two minute and gas the other defense and and maybe put a base package on the field that you want to go with and run down the field and run up to the line of scrimmage. That sucks when Lamar is winded, right? And I donโt know, Lamar donโt get winded much. Heโs a hell of an athlete, man. I mean, thatโs one thing about him. He can take a, you know, pop in the ear, or get back in the huddle and get back out and snap, snap the ball. There have been issues of communication at the line of scrimmage. There has been this perception. And again, Iโm not a real reporter anymore, Luke, so youโll have to when they throw you out of the locker room this week, youโll have to get to the bottom of the Lamar situation. But Lamar running offense, Lamar wanting to run plays, Lamar wanting to scramble in and out of plays at the line of scrimmage and identify things as the QB Captain out in the field, but thereโs something about that Hurry up that I liked, you know, and Lamar takes good care of the ball, all that being said, the ball coming off his chest and fumbles and whatever fumbles aside. And if that, if thatโs your concern, that if we speed it up, weโre going to make a mistake. We did a whole thing on hardball. When the world speeds up on hardball, Harbaugh makes mistakes like calling time out and doing things that he shouldnโt be doing, but in the case of Lamar asking him to do a lot, three defenses, get up to the line of scrimmage, carry the ball, throw the ball, run, run like hell, run like hell, and still throw. Fumble the ball, jump on it, not jump on it. Run out of the pocket, throw a touchdown pass, all that Houdini nonsense. There is something about Hurry up in this offense that on the road, especially shutting the crowd down a little bit and like, weโre going to stick the ball up your ass, and it might be Derek and it might be a pass to Pat Ricard, you know what I mean. But weโre going to do things here to put to not allow you to substitute and a really full court press Lamar when heโs not winded, when think, when the situationโs right, I sort of, I sort of turned me on a little bit. That the offense, Luke, I did,
Luke Jones 27:14
yeah, I mean, and theyโve done it before. I mean, itโs something that theyโve had in their toolbox for, you know? I mean, they did it last year at times very effectively. I think thereโs always a challenge to running two minute because of what it can mean when itโs not successful, and then suddenly youโre three and out, and your defense didnโt even get a chance to grab some water on the sidelines. So you canโt do it all game long. But I definitely think there are times where it makes sense. And obviously they were in a ton of two minute out of necessity on Sunday. So can you mix that in a little bit here and there? Sure. I mean, Iโm not opposed to that. And thatโs something I, you know, at various times, even going back to kind of the end of the Greg Roman era, I itโs something I would have liked to have seen them do better, because I think Lamar does better in that in that environment, then people give them credit for I think if you go back, I mean, what Sundayโs game reminded me a lot of was what they did against the Colts three years ago on Monday Night Football. They were down big in that game, and they went to two minute the Colts secondary was banged up, kind of like the bangles so. But look, injuries are part of this, and the Ravens have had their times where theyโve been banged up on defense, and you see, thatโs kind of what was so concerning about that. Weโll get to that in another segment. But I like the idea of speeding things up there. Itโs probably not going to see a ton of Derrick Henry in that kind of circumstance. I think youโre going to want Justice Hill on the field, because heโs better in pass protection is a little more versatile in terms of what a running back is going to do when youโre kind of in a hurry up situation. But, yeah, I like that. And again, itโs all about being multiple. Itโs all about being able to win in different ways. Itโs all about being able to adjust when the opposition does something to take away what you do absolutely best. I mean, thereโs no disputing how well they had run the football the last couple weeks. And thatโs why I said at some point in time, some teams going to say, weโre not letting you do that. Weโre going to force you to throw or force you to spread things out, or force you to go into two minute however, you know, however you want, to try to adjust. And they were able to do that. So yeah, I like Lamar in that setting, because I think, as Iโve said for a long time, he does read defenses better than you know. And Iโm not saying you specifically, just you know, when people have questioned that, part of him think he sees the field better than than people give him credit for his Superman played Isaiah, likely, kind of showed that, you know, heโs running for his life and dropping the ball and stiff arming Sam Hubbard, and then hey, throws the ball to Isaiah likely, who adjusts and and succeeds in a scramble drill opportunities. So go
Nestor Aparicio 29:50
back to him chucking Hollywood Brown. Heโs so going deep, yeah, out of structure,
Luke Jones 29:54
but when they are it,
29:57
yeah, yeah, yeah. I
Luke Jones 29:58
mean, theyโve been able to. Do that. So look again, youโre not going to do that for 60 minutes. Thatโs not going to be how you do things an entire game. And yes, your preference is to be up 10, not down 10 in the fourth quarter, but the other team tries to and when you find yourself in that position, even if itโs only once or twice a year, or once every other year or whatever, because they havenโt been in that spot very often. Because of how good they are overall, itโs really encouraging to be able to see them do what they were able to do, and again, if that happens at some point next month or or in January or next year, or whenever it happens again, you have another example to draw, draw from and say, hey, yeah, we did that. You know. Like I said, they did it against the Colts, but that had been going on three years, you know. So this was their biggest comeback win since then. So again, hats off to Lamar Jackson. Hats off to Todd monk, and hats off to this offensive line and their entire cast of characters that, at various times, picked up and did heavy lifting for a group that needed to do plenty of lifting because of just how bad their defense was over the course of Sundayโs game.
Nestor Aparicio 31:07
Heโs Luke Jones. He is Baltimore Luke. You can find him anywhere at the Internet. Heโs not even in delay when that happens out there. Heโs at on social media. All powered up our friends at Royal farms, as well as our friends at the Jiffy Lube multi care keeping us in order. Itโs going to get us over to Essex on Friday the 11th. Itโs my birthday this week, itโs Lukeโs birthday. Last week, weโll be celebrating with pizza and crab cakes and crypto cut french fries and cold cut stuff, anything you want. I mean, pizza. Johnโs one of the, the great, great institutions. They have a heck of a story to tell. Weโre going to tell that this week as well, as well as my childhood of getting pizzas down there when my my Uncle Joe, had a hair salon at the corner of Eastern and Marlin Avenue. Itโs, itโs not a royal farms cross street from Royal farms. Itโs one of the competitors there, right up street from my good friends at the Blondel Miller Schuler as well Essex the homeland. I never admit that being a Dundalk guy, but my parents were really that when I was a kid. I say I lived in Essex because I thought I did, because I thought I was going to Kenwood High School. Donโt tell Mike Preston that who would want to be in the Kenwood Hall of Fame when you could be in the Dundalk Hall of Fame. I donโt know the Dundalk Essex thing. Itโs almost like the Baltimore, Washington thing. Probably a pretty good week to do that. Weโll be doing some pizza Johns and Essex on Essex on Friday. Come on by. Grab a scratch off in the Maryland lottery. Get sell some delicious pizza. Weโll be there all afternoon celebrating birthdays as well as our disdain for all things Washington. I have to educate some of these young kids this week with some of my writings. Of writings. I am Nestor. He is Luke. Weโre going to talk defense, big win for the ravens, and big offseason coming for the Orioles. We got a lot of things on our minds around here, as well as an election ahead. Weโre wnst. Am 1570 Towson, Baltimore. We never stopped talking Baltimore positive. You.