Majority of Pundits Predict Ravens to Prevail Over Dolphins
The Ravens’ home opener this Sunday will be the third meeting between Lamar Jackson and the Miami Dolphins. To say Jackson experienced the highest of highs and lowest of lows in the first two meetings would be an understatement.
In the 2019 season opener, Jackson went 17-for-20 with five touchdown passes and posted a perfect 158.3 quarterback rating to lead the Ravens to a 59-10 win in Miami. The Ravens set single-game franchise records for points and total yards (643).
Last season in Miami, the Dolphins blitzed Jackson relentlessly en route to a shocking 22-10 upset. It’s the fewest points the Ravens have scored in a regular-season game since Jackson became the starter.
The pundits are expecting Sunday’s game to be unlike either of the first two. The majority of the prognosticators we looked at (42 of 50) picked Baltimore to win, but of the 31 who predicted the score, 28 have the game being decided by seven points or less, including 14 who have margin of victory at four points or less.
Both teams are coming off convincing season-opening victories.
“I’ve decided I’m giving a slight edge to the Ravens because it’s their home opener,” CBS Sports’ John Breech wrote. “Not only is Lamar Jackson undefeated in home openers (3-0), but the Ravens have won six straight dating back to 2016.”
Here’s a sample of what the pundits are saying about the game:
How the Ravens offense counters the Dolphins’ blitzes will dictate the outcome of the game.
NFL.com’s Gregg Rosenthal: “How Lamar Jackson and the Ravens’ staff handle the Dolphins’ blitzes will be a great litmus test after these teams’ Week 10 meeting last season, when Miami exposed a hole in the Ravens’ passing game that wasn’t (presumably) plugged until the offseason. Baltimore tried more runs under center last week, without great success, but I’ll take Lamar over Tua Tagovailoa if both offenses are in one-dimensional, figuring-it-out mode.”
The Baltimore Sun’s Childs Walker: “The Dolphins ranked second in the league in blitz percentage last season, and they trust cornerbacks Xavien Howard and Nik Needham to press on the outside. Jackson will have to beat them with big plays to achieve a different result this time around. The Dolphins, led by Christian Wilkins and Emmanuel Ogbah upfront, will bring pressure from every angle to try to rattle him.”
Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio: “Last year, the Dolphins flummoxed the Ravens offense by crowding the line. The Ravens will be ready for it this time.”
The Ravens offense will need to be creative and aggressive from the outset.
Baltimore Positive’s Luke Jones: “By their own admission, the Ravens kept it simple and conservative on offense in the season opener, but they cannot allow the Dolphins to dictate how Sunday’s game is played like they did last year.”
S Brandon Jones is the Dolphins’ X-factor.
Will the Ravens be able to run the ball effectively against the Dolphins’ stout run defense?
Walker: “The Jets went all out to stop the Ravens on the ground, and the bad news for offensive coordinator Greg Roman was that they succeeded. The Ravens, using recently signed Kenyan Drake as their primary ball carrier, ran for 63 yards on 21 attempts, their second-worst rushing performance of the Jackson era. … J.K. Dobbins, the team’s No. 1 running back when healthy, has said he hopes to play against Miami. The Dolphins’ aggressive play stifled the Ravens’ run game last year, and they held the Patriots to 78 yards on 22 attempts in Week 1. Former Raven Zach Sieler has grown into the top interior run defender for a productive front seven. With Boyer’s defense crowding the line of scrimmage, this will not be an easy week for the Ravens to get their ground attack on track.”
The Ravens’ secondary is banged up and the Dolphins have two explosive wide receivers in Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle, but Tagovailoa is a question mark.
NBC Sports’ Chris Simms “The Ravens losing Kyle Fuller last week at corner with Marcus Peters not being back yet either, that bothers me a little. But I still think the Ravens’ defense, like the Dolphins’, is damn awesome. And even though they have Waddle and Tyreek Hill … I gotta see it before [Tagovailoa] goes bombs away and really scares teams.”