Situation: 2Q 9:57, First and 10 on the Ravens' 8 yardline
With the Ravens backed up to their own 8 yardline, the offense came out on first down throwing. They use their 12 personnel package to attack the Texans Quarters coverage look. In order to account for seven potential rushers, the Ravens use "half slide" protection where the 5 OL + 1 RB are responsible for 6 rushers. If seven rushers come, the seventh is on Flacco. This is how it played out:
Both TEs (Gillmore and Daniels) are running short stick patterns to the middle of the field. The outside linebackers follow them in "match" coverage while the two interior linebackers "cross blitz" (also referred to as "Fire X"). This causes havoc for the interior of the protection because they've opened up a lane for the blitzers to penetrate. The protection scheme was built to withstand six rushers, but due to the Texans superior game-plan, they only needed to bring five to hurry Flacco into an errant throw.
This is football, though. You get out-schemed on one play, you adjust, and move on.
However, the very next play:
Situation: 2Q 9:53, Second and 10 on the Ravens' 8 yardline
The Ravens show the same protection scheme against the same Texans front.
This time, the first rusher of the stunting linebackers (often know as the penetrator) times the snap and gets to Flacco before Forsett can step up. The result is intentional grounding and almost lead to a safety.
In a vacuum I would rarely criticize this individual series of plays. However, the Ravens have experience against heavy A-gap pressure teams. The Steelers, Bengals, and (to a lesser extent) the Browns all show interior pressure versus the Ravens twice a year.
Additionally, it wasn't until the 10th(!) pass play that the Ravens changed their 6-man protection call to account for A-gap pressure. Specifically, "full slide" protection needed to be used to at least account for the interior gaps and allow Flacco to more easily throw "hot" off of edge defenders. Full slide protection gives you the luxury of using play-action to lead the running-back to his eventual blocking assignment rather than away from it.
The pass protection, at least prior to the injuries, was a problem early in the game but they certainly can't shoulder all the blame. Receivers dropped open routes in the first two quarters and the run game suffered from interior penetration as well. Sprinkle in receivers slipping, tipped passes, and specific coverage beaters that Flacco simply missed, and you get a disappointing loss to a (slightly) inferior team.
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