Ravens' Wild Card mission? Stop Derrick Henry
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[January 09, 2021]
By Amy Tennery
(Reuters) - The Baltimore Ravens'
elaborate defensive agenda in Sunday's Wild Card matchup against the
Tennessee Titans could possibly boil down to a singular objective:
Stop Derrick Henry.
The leading rusher during the regular season by an enormous margin,
the Titans' ferocious running back earned a spot in the NFL's
"2,000-yard club," an elite group of just eight running backs to
cross that threshold in one season, and presents perhaps the biggest
threat to Baltimore's postseason ambitions.
"It's the greatest challenge every play. Let's make no mistake about
it – he's the best running back in football," Baltimore defensive
coordinator Don Martindale told reporters this week. "We know it. He
knows it. We're just getting ready to go for the challenge ahead on
Sunday."
The Titans ended the Baltimore Ravens' playoff run a year ago in a
28-12 shock AFC Divisional game upset over the heavily favored
number-one seed, in which Henry ran for 195 yards and even tossed a
three-yard touchdown pass in an inspired bit of red zone trickery.
With a top-10 rushing defense that allowed an average of 18.9 points
per game this season, the 11-5 Ravens hope not to repeat history in
Tennessee on Sunday, and help their fleet-footed, 2019 league MVP
quarterback Lamar Jackson clinch his first-ever playoff win.
"They're one of the top teams for a reason," said head coach John
Harbaugh, who has heaped praise on Titans' quarterback Ryan
Tannehill's play-action abilities as well.
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Tennessee Titans running
back Derrick Henry (22) on the sidelines against the Cleveland
Browns at Nissan Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-USA
TODAY Sports
"It's really important to be able to run the ball in the red zone,
and then the ability to extend plays is really critical, which, of
course, (Tannehill) can do very well."
The former Dolphins quarterback is coming off of a prolific,
3,819-yard season - one of his strongest yet - with seven
interceptions and 33 touchdowns.
"They do a good job of moving around and getting open on the
extended play and scramble. Of course, (Tannehill) keeps the ball a
lot of times down inside the 10-yard line," Harbaugh told reporters.
"So, all of those things are why they're so good. It's going to be
up to us to try to get them stopped."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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