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Denver Native (Carol)
10-31-2009, 06:58 PM
http://cbs4denver.com/broncos/denver.broncos.baltimore.2.1283642.html

Broncos Following The Old Ravens Script To Perfect Start

The Denver Broncos are unbeaten because they have the top-ranked defense in the NFL and a quarterback who is very protective of the football.

It's a formula that for years worked quite well for the Baltimore Ravens, who have lost three straight.

One team is undefeated, the other desperate. It should make for a very interesting Sunday afternoon for a couple of well-rested AFC powerhouses coming off a bye.

"It doesn't get any better for football," Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis said. "There are a couple teams left undefeated. I'm OK with not being undefeated, because I want to do some other things. Those guys are in a great position right now. The bottom line is, the Broncos are playing very sound football right now. They have a reason to be undefeated."

Reason No. 1 is a defense that has allowed an NFL-low 66 points, including 10 in the second half. Denver has given up only five touchdowns in 66 possessions and leads the league in third-down defense (27 percent conversion rate).

All of this has come under the direction of coordinator Mike Nolan, who held the same job with Baltimore earlier this decade.

"Mike's a very good communicator," Denver's rookie head coach Josh McDaniels said. "I think that's very important for every coach, and Mike certainly has the great ability to get his players to understand what he's asking them to do and then get it out of them. He's very intelligent."

Nolan's defense has been aided by an offense run by quarterback Kyle Orton, who has thrown nine touchdown passes and only one interception -- on a why-not heave at the end of a half. Orton's careful play has enabled the Broncos to compile a plus-7 turnover differential and, of course, a 6-0 record.

Denver hopes the same philosophy can work against the Ravens (3-3).

"They're very good. I don't think we're going to be intimidated by anybody," former Baltimore receiver Brandon Stokley said. "We will have to be very good on offense, and be smart, to be successful against that type of defense."

The Ravens used to depend on a stingy defense headed by Lewis and a conservative offense that preached running the ball and passing prudently. As recently as last year, Baltimore led the NFL in yards rushing and time of possession, which enabled the defense to stay off the field and resulted in a trip to the AFC championship game.

This year, the offense has stepped it up behind two second-year players. Joe Flacco has thrown at least one touchdown pass in six straight games and running back Ray Rice leads the team with 33 catches. But the pass-happy attack has not been backed by the defense as effectively as in the past.

Baltimore gave up 33 points in a loss to Minnesota before the bye, and the Ravens rank an uncharacteristic eighth in yardage allowed. Thus, Baltimore is 1 1/2 games out of first place in the AFC North after getting off to a 3-0 start.

If it comes down to performance in the second half, then something's got to give. Denver has been spectacular after halftime, but the Ravens have scored 66 points alone in the fourth quarter -- including 21 against Minnesota on the road.

"It's a matter of coming out and playing with responsibility and being physical and maybe coming up with a call or two here or there that makes the difference in any game," Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. "Look at the Broncos. Look how well they're playing in the second half. They've given up two third-down conversions in the second half all year. That's unheard of. So, the second half is going to be very important in this game."

The secret, according to Broncos defensive end Elvis Dumervil, goes beyond the playbook.

"Coach McDaniels emphasizes finishing. A lot of it has to do with conditioning," Dumervil said. "I think guys understand that in the NFL. You just have to continue to outwork your opponent."

The Broncos are underdogs against Baltimore even though they chugged into their bye with wins over Dallas, New England and San Diego. A victory would go a long way toward making believers out of those who simply can't fathom the Broncos have become part of the NFL elite with a first-year coach and Orton, who wasn't nearly this effective with the Chicago Bears.

TXBRONC
10-31-2009, 08:35 PM
"It doesn't get any better for football," Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis said. "There are a couple teams left undefeated. I'm OK with not being undefeated, because I want to do some other things."

I saw the interview where Ray Lewis this and since then I've been wondering what he meant by it.

Lonestar
10-31-2009, 09:17 PM
this game as well as the PHILLY and the Giants game could be the toughest on the schedule..

then comes winning in KC in DEC.. they should be a much better team then and with KCL;) making so much noise there it should be a hard one also.


..

camdisco24
10-31-2009, 09:40 PM
I saw the interview where Ray Lewis this and since then I've been wondering what he meant by it.

Murder?


hahaha jk

But great article Carol, im getting pumped for the game already!

Shazam!
11-01-2009, 01:44 AM
A victory would go a long way toward making believers out of those who simply can't fathom the Broncos have become part of the NFL elite with a first-year coach and Orton, who wasn't nearly this effective with the Chicago Bears.

Even some fans aren't believers yet. And even if they lose they're still on track.

speardog
11-01-2009, 03:26 AM
I'm looking fwd to this game. It is going to be a battle along the lines and I see the Broncos now how the Ravens were last year, strong on defense and capable on offense.

I can't make out what the Ravens are this year.