Both the Ravens and the Steelers are saying all the polite things about Pittsburghโs new starting quarterback Byron Leftwich, who is one of the classiest individuals youโll find in the NFL.
Ravens coach John Harbaugh even went as far as describing Leftwich as having been a โpremierโ quarterback early in his career with the Jacksonville Jaguars, but we all know better. The numbers donโt lie as Leftwich makes his first NFL start since 2009 and possesses a 79.5 passer rating over the course of a disappointing career for the seventh overall pick of the 2003 draft.
If Pittsburgh is to have a chance to beat the Ravens on Sunday night, itโs going to be because Leftwich doesnโt lose the game and the Steelersโ other facets are able to pick up the slack for the depleted passing game. Instead of the frequent throwing seen from Ben Roethlisberger in recent years, the Baltimore defense will likely deal with a ball-control attack from the leagueโs 21st-ranked run offense.
โWe are just doing the best we can with the guys that we have that are healthy,โ Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. โThe quarterback situation is the quarterback situation. The guys that play running back are going to do that, and nothing is going to change in terms of what is expected from them.โ
Despite underwhelming averages of 103.8 rushing yards per game and a 3.8 yards per carry, the Steelersโ by-committee approach โ based largely on injuries โ has improved in recent weeks as running backs have turned in 100-yard performances in three of their last four games. The key to their improvement has been the offensive line, which is still far from an elite unit but is playing better than it has in recent seasons.
In contrast, the Ravens defense ranks 26th against the run and has struggled throughout the season to slow teams using a run-heavy approach, including Kansas City, Dallas, and Houston.
โFirst of all, it starts with the offensive line,โ Harbaugh said. โTheir offensive line is a big, physical offensive line. They maul you. Thatโs their whole thing. The backs are downhill backs. Both [Jonathan] Dwyer and [Isaac] Redman are hard-running guys โ very difficult to tackle. You have to wrap them and take them to the ground. Youโve got to gang-tackle, those kinds of things.โ
As Pittsburgh has dealt with various injuries at the running back position, the Ravensโ front seven has been decimated with the long-term loss of Ray Lewis, the decreased production from an injured Haloti Ngata, and the early-season absence of Terrell Suggs. Until recently, defensive coordinator Dean Pees had received little from younger players, but the likes of defensive lineman DeAngelo Tyson and linebackers Courtney Upshaw and Paul Kruger have emerged since the bye week to contribute to an improved defensive attack up front.
The yardage totals against Cleveland and Oakland werenโt overly impressive, but the Ravensโ 27th-ranked defense ranks first in the league in red-zone defense with opponents scoring touchdowns in only 36.1 percent of their trips inside the Baltimore 20-yard line. The Browns and Raiders went a combined 0-for-8 in trying to score touchdowns inside the red zone as the โbend but donโt breakโ mantra becomes more popular in the second half of the season.
Even with the big-play threat of wide receiver Mike Wallace on the outside, Leftwichโs limitations make it unlikely that Pittsburgh can strike quickly, meaning the Steelers will need to sustain drives and move the ball with modest gains. The Ravens will simply try to continue the trend started in recent weeks by clamping down inside the 20 should the Steelers be able to move the ball on the ground.
โYou donโt want to do something one week and then not do it the next,โ Suggs said. โWe fared pretty well the last two weeks, and weโre just trying to keep it going. Itโs nothing to be happy about. Weโre just going to keep trying to get better around here.โ
The Ravensโ preparation doesnโt change with Leftwich at the helm instead of Roethlisberger, but outsidersโ expectations have been altered dramatically for the type of offensive attack the Steelers will have on display. The Pittsburgh of yesteryear will return with a mentality of โthree yards and a cloud of dustโ with its running game instead of the passing game being on full display.
In past seasons, that would have played perfectly into the hands of the Ravens defense, but that unit will need to prove it can slow the run in order to set up the offense with good field position against an imposing defense on the opposing side.
The names have changed โ along with strengths and strategies in the various phases โ but the Ravens are expecting another fight in Pittsburgh, even with Roethlisberger on the sideline.
And they wouldnโt have it any other way.
โAs soon as we walk in their stadium, theyโre going to lock the gates,โ Suggs said. โBut thatโs what we want. We definitely want them to lock the gates behind us so we can get in there and we can have it out. When the clock reads 0:00, weโll just see what happens. Weโll see how it goes.โ
Ravens likely to see old-school attack from QB-challenged Pittsburgh

Luke Jones
Luke Jones is the Ravens and Orioles beat reporter for WNST BaltimorePositive.com and is a PFWA member. His mind is consumed with useless sports knowledge, pro wrestling promos, and movie quotes, but he often forgets where he put his phone. Luke's favorite sports memories include being one of the thousands of kids who waited for Cal Ripken's autograph after Orioles games in the summer of 1995, attending the Super Bowl XXXV victory parade with his dad in the pouring rain, and watching the Terps advance to the Final Four at the Carrier Dome in 2002. Follow him on social media @BaltimoreLuke or email him at Luke@wnst.net.
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