Texans-Ravens live blog: 41-7 Ravens — FINAL

The Houston Texans and Baltimore Ravens square off for a Week 11 encounter. Can’t catch the game? Follow along here.

0:00 — The Texans fall to 6-4 on the season and the Ravens improve to 8-2. Houston has to recover quickly as Indianapolis comes in on Thursday night looking for the sweep.

3:55 — QB A.J. McCarron comes in to spell Watson; his day is done.

4:12 — Ravens RB Gus Edwards rushes for a 63-yard touchdown. Extra point is good. The Texans defense allows a 100-yard rusher for the first time since Dec. 31, 2017, when Colts RB Frank Gore rushed for exactly 100. Ravens, 41-7.

7:18 — It won’t be the fourth ever shutout in Texans history, including playoffs, as Hyde rushes for a 41-yard touchdown. Extra point is good. Ravens, 34-7

9:56 — Jackson throws his fourth touchdown of the game as he connects with Ingram for a 12-yard score. Extra point is good. Ravens, 34-0

14:45 — On a fourth-and-2 from the Baltimore 29-yard line, Watson can’t connect with Hopkins.

15:00 — The Texans are going to have to make decisions as to whether or not they want to pack it in considering they host the Indianapolis Colts for a rematch on Thursday night. Reid is out and Johnson is questionable to return.

fourth quarter

1:35 — Tucker hits a 46-yard field goal. Ravens, 27-0

4:57 — It keeps getting worse. Watson throws across his body into traffic and Ravens LB Josh Bynes picks it off and returns it to the Houston 39-yard line.

6:54 — Tucker connects on a 34-yard field goal. Ravens, 24-0

8:03 — Texans S Justin Reid is down and holding his shoulder. Reid is being tended to by trainers.

9:11 — Texans CB Lonnie Johnson appeared to have injured his ankle on the play and is being tended to by trainers.

10:31 — The Texans can’t respond and Watson takes a 13-yard sack on third-and-10 from the Houston 40-yard line. That is Watson’s sixth sack of the game.

11:40 — It’s getting late early. Jackson throws a 25-yard touchdown to Ingram. Extra point is good. Ravens, 21-0

15:00 — The Ravens get the ball to start the second half. A big drive coming up.

third quarter

stats

Texans

Watson: 10/15, 102 yards; 3 carries, 12 yards

Carlos Hyde: 5 carries, 13 yards

Duke Johnson: 3 carries, 11 yards

Hopkins: 5 catches, 43 yards

Stills: 2 catches, 20 yards

Ravens

Jackson: 8/13, 97 yards, 2 TDs; 6 carries, 45 yards

RB Mark Ingram: 8 carries; 32 yards

Andrews: 3 catches, 24 yards, 1 TD

halftime

0:11 — Texans K Ka’imi Fairbairn misses a 43-yard field goal. The Ravens will go into the locker room up two scores, and they get the ball to start the second half.

0:44 — Watson gets sacked for a 7-yard loss and gets his ankle rolled up on. He holds it, trainers tend to him during the Texans timeout. But he stays in the game.

1:22 — WR Kenny Stills comes up with a key 9-yard reception on fourth-and-1 from the Texans’ 47 to keep the drive alive.

2:18 — Jackson finds Andrews for an 18-yard touchdown. Extra point is good. Baltimore will also get the ball to start the second half. Ravens, 14-0

7:27 — The Texans can’t respond to the scoring drive and are forced to punt after Watson takes two consecutive plays of a loss or no gain.

9:24 — The Ravens strike first as QB Lamar Jackson throws a 15-yard touchdown to WR Seth Roberts, capping off a 90-yard drive. Extra point is good. Ravens, 7-0

second quarter

2:05 — The Texans special teams is not fooled by a fake field goal run as S A.J. Moore drops TE Mark Andrews for a 2-yard loss on fourth-and-4 from the Ravens’ 37.

6:39 — Texans coach Bill O’Brien throws the challenge flag, and, surprise surprise, referee Alex Kemp doesn’t overturn the no-call on the field. Ravens ball.

6:39 — On fourth-and-2 from the Ravens’ 33, the Texans go for it rather than try a K Ka’imi Fairbairn field goal. Watson looks for Hopkins deep, and CB Marlon Humphrey tackles Hopkins before he can even for a chance to catch the ball in the corner of the end zone. Ruled incomplete and a turnover on downs.

8:22 — WR DeAndre Hopkins records his 600th NFL catch, just the second-youngest receiver in NFL history to do so. Youngest is Larry Fitzgerald.

10:02 — The Texans gets off the field and the Ravens send K Justin Tucker out for a 43-yard field goal. Tucker doinks it off the right upright no good.

11:44 — QB Lamar Jackson doesn’t need to use his elusive skills as he stands all day in the pocket and finds TE Hayden Hurst for a 12-yard gain on third-and-8 from the Texans’ 39.

12:22 — QB Deshaun Watson scrambles around for about 10 seconds, and it ends badly as he fumbles from a LB Matt Judon sack and the Ravens recover at the 41-yard line.

15:00 — Baltimore won the toss and will defer. The Texans will defend the east end zone.

first quarter

The Houston Texans and the Baltimore Ravens take each other on for a Week 11 showdown at M&T Bank Stadium. Early positioning for the No. 2 seed in the AFC is on the line as a win would give both teams a 7-3 record and Houston the tiebreaker.

Have you set your fantasy lineups? There is still time.

Steven Mitchell is inactive for the Texans, which means there could be more reps for Keke Coutee.

Are you sure you can’t catch the game conventionally? Let our friends at FuboTV help.

Here are 10 factors to keep in mind when watching the game with one of the big ones being Laremy Tunsil’s false starts.

Texans Wire countdown to Ravens: 10 factors to watch

The Houston Texans and Baltimore Ravens vie for early positioning for the No. 2 seed in the AFC. Here are 10 stats to watch as the game goes along.

WHEN: 12:00 p.m. CT

WHERE: M&T Bank Stadium

FORECAST: Mostly cloudy, 44 degrees, 11 mph winds

FOLLOW: @therealmarklane, @averydduncan, @MrRadioMann

LISTEN: Sports Radio 610 [KILT-AM] and 100.3 The Bull [KLOL]

WATCH: CBS (Ian Eagle and Dan Fouts)

Red: Houston-Baltimore

Blue: Denver-Minnesota

Green: Buffalo-Miami

Yellow: Jacksonville-Indianapolis

 

10. ravens qb lamar jackson’s rank for touchdown passes

The second-year field general from Louisville is just as dangerous through the air as he is on the ground. His 15 touchdown passes are tied with Daniel Jones and Carson Wentz for the 10th-most in the NFL. If the Texans can take away his proficiency through the air and make him one dimensional, it should help them try to steal a road win.

 

9. ravens cb marlon humphrey’s pass breakups

The Baltimore cornerback has broken up nine passes this season, tied for the 11th-most in the NFL. Wherever Deshaun Watson decides to go with the football, he is going to have to be aware of Humphrey. One method that could negate Humphrey’s defense is to outlast the initial wave of pass rushers, because no one can cover forever.

 

8. ravens rb mark ingram’s rushing touchdowns

The former New Orleans Saint is tied with Derrick Henry for the fourth-most in the NFL. Ingram’s ability to find the end zone makes him one of the best additions of the offseason. The Texans will have to keep him bottled up inside the red zone and take him away as a viable rushing option.

 

7. texans rb carlos hyde’s rank for first downs rushing

The 29-year-old has tallied 37 first downs on the ground in 2019, tied with Jackson and also Nick Chubb for the seventh-most in the NFL. Hyde will need to make his presence felt and keep the Texans offense diverse so they can’t key in on Watson.

 

6. texans lt laremy tunsil’s false starts

The solution to protecting Watson’s backside has incurred six false starts this season. Houston can’t avoid to give away free yards that could kill drives against the Ravens, especially in the red zone.

 

5. ravens te mark andrews’ touchdowns

Andrews has been a viable target for Jackson, and he is their leading receiver in every main statistical category. Even though the Texans defense is good at defending tight ends, they will have to take away Jackson’s best target if they hope to come away with a win.

 

4. deshaun watson’s rank for quarterback rating

The Pro Bowl field general has generated a 107.1 passer rating, good for the fourth-best in the NFL. Watson has melded his big playmaking skills with also protecting the football. The former 2017 first-round pick will need to amplify this skill as he takes on a tough Ravens defense.

 

3. kenny stills’ rank for yards per target

This is a stat from two weeks ago against the Jacksonville Jaguars, but it is still true even after the bye week. The former New Orleans Saint and Miami Dolphin has a 13.1 yards per target, which is the third-highest in the NFL. Stills has filled in as the deep threat for Will Fuller, who is recovering from a hamstring injury. The Texans will need Stills to make a bevy of those 13.1-yard type catches to beat the Jaguars.

 

2. ravens’ rank for blitzing

The Baltimore defense has sent a defender on a blitz 175 times, the second-most in the NFL. The dividends haven’t exactly paid off as they have generated just the fourth-fewest sacks in the NFL with 16. If Watson can survive the first wave, he can find the open man downfield.

 

1. ravens’ rank for points per game

The Ravens defense scores 33.3 points per game, the most in the NFL. The Texans have had two games above the 30-point mark in Week 5’s 53-32 win over the Atlanta Falcons and Week 6’s 31-24 win at the Kansas City Chiefs. It will take that level of keeping the Ravens down for Houston to have a chance to win the game.

Fantasy sits and starts for Texans versus Ravens

The Houston Texans and the Baltimore Ravens face one another in Week 11, and there are fantasy football sits and starts to be had.

The Houston Texans and Baltimore Ravens hook up for a Week 11 encounter that is for early positioning for the No. 2 seed in the AFC. Here are some recommended fantasy football sits and starts from the battle between the leaders of the AFC North and AFC South.

Starts

Texans QB Deshaun Watson — The hopes for Houston depend on how well Watson can move the football. Though the Ravens defense has a formidable back end with safety Earl Thomas, cornerbacks Marlon Humphrey and Marcus Peters, Watson can outlast the initial pass rush to find the open man. The Ravens don’t really have one to speak of, and this also allows Watson to make plays with his feet.

Texans RB Carlos Hyde —Baltimore’s defense gives up 4.3 rushing yards per game, which is in the middle of the pack compared to the rest of the league. Nonetheless, it is enough that Hyde, who has a 4.7 yards per carry on the season, ought to be able to find some running lanes. The 29-year-old has tallied three games with at least 80 yards rushing in his last four contests.

Ravens RB Mark Ingram — By the same token, the Houston defense gives up 4.1 yards per carry, which is around average in terms of league rankings. Ingram only has 619 rushing yards on the year, which are 13th-most and actually behind his quarterback, Lamar Jackson, for the most on the Ravens. However, Ingram’s eight rushing touchdowns are tied with Derrick Henry for the fourth-most in the NFL.

 

sits

Texans WR DeAndre Hopkins — Sunday isn’t going to be one of those games where Hopkins takes over and has the fantasy points that make him one of the most sought after receivers every draft. Hopkins will have one of those games where he’s producing “dirty yards” with a low yards per target. The two-time All-Pro will assuredly make plays to help Houston win the game, just not enough to help anyone win their fantasy matchups.

Ravens TE Mark Andrews — The Texans defend tight ends pretty well with just 366 receiving yards surrendered, the fifth-fewest in the NFL, and two touchdowns to tight ends given up, also the fifth-fewest in the league. The combination of safeties Tashaun Gipson, who will be back in the lineup, and Justin Reid make it a tough proposition.

Texans defense/special teams — Baltimore quarterback Lamar Jackson is such a playmaker that he will find ways to beat the unit either through the air or with his legs. The pass rush still has a lot to prove with J.J. Watt out of lineup for the rest of the year. Much like at the beginning of a season when defenses start to develop their identity, it is the same for the Watt-less Texans defense. Best to let them develop their identity without Watt over the next couple of games rather than keep buying in.

Fantasy football: Week 11 sits/starts for the Ravens

A look at what Ravens players to start, and which to sit, for Week 11 against the Houston Texans.

Sunday sees a clash between two division leaders as the Baltimore Ravens lock horns with the Houston Texans at M&T Bank Stadium. The Ravens have won their last five games at sit atop the AFC North with a 7-2 record. The Texans are on a two-game winning streak and are fresh from a bye following their rout of the Jacksonville Jaguars in London two weeks ago.

Here, I’ll offer my thoughts on players to start and players to sit this week. As ever, Lamar Jackson is playing, so if you’ve got him you’re starting him.

SIT – RB, Mark Ingram

Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

Running backs have not enjoyed a great deal of success against the Texans in 2019. A tailback hasn’t scored more than 12.4 PPR points against them since Week 5. They’ve allowed only two running back rushing scores as well.

Ingram continues to operate as the lead back for Baltimore. But it would be inaccurate to describe him as a workhorse. He has gone four games since his last 20 opportunity game (carries + targets), and he’s been held below 50 rushing yards in four of his last five outings. He remains largely dependent on touchdowns with regards to his fantasy output and has finished higher than RB31 just once in games in which he didn’t find the endzone.

The Texans have been slightly more welcoming to running backs in the passing game, with seven running backs catching at least five passes against them this year. However, Ingram has commanded more than two targets in a game only three times this season and has exceeded 22 receiving yards just once since Week 3.

[vertical-gallery id=36838]

4 ‘musts’ for the Texans to beat the Ravens in Week 11

The Baltimore Ravens present a tough-task for the Houston Texans on Sunday. The Texans can beat them by accomplishing these four musts.

In 2019, the Houston Texans have participated in their fair share of thrillers. Sunday’s AFC showdown with the Baltimore Ravens is presumed to be yet another addition to the stock-full cabinet of Texans thrillers. This time, with Houston coming in as underdogs.

The 7-2 Ravens, led by MVP candidate Lamar Jackson, sports star-level talent on both sides of the ball. The flock are favorites to win against the 6-3 Texans, led by fellow MVP candidate Deshaun Watson. Houston can change the course if they accomplish these four “musts.”

1. Play disciplined football

texans-whitney-mercilus-dazzled-jaguars-doug-marrone
(AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

The ultimate cliché in football: play disciplined defense. While resorting to a cliché maybe unoriginal, it’s true; the Texans must play with sound gap-control, keep their eyes on the ball, set the edge consistently, wrap-up with their tackles and, most importantly, know what No. 8 is up to.

Sounds like playing good defense, huh?

Pretty much.

The Lamar Jackson-led Ravens are a triple-threat on offense. They can dink-and-dunk down the field with RPOs and play-action, run at will with Jackson and Mark Ingram and, with the previous two in-account, give defenses trouble with the threat of Jackson’s legs and his arm talent.

Baltimore is a nightmare to defend. There has yet to be a defense that can contain and Jackson and Co. for an entire game. Playing like a well-coached front-seven would undoubtedly help.

Another perfect game for Lamar Jackson and other bold predictions for Week 11

The writers at Ravens Wire toss out their bold predictions for the Ravens vs. Texans, including big performances from Lamar Jackson.

The Baltimore Ravens take on the Houston Texans in what could very well be a preview of a future playoff matchup. With both teams in the thick of the AFC playoff picture this season, the winner of this Week 11 game is a pretty big deal.

Since this matchup features two of the best young quarterbacks in the game right now, most of the bold predictions coming from the Ravens Wire writers has to do with Lamar Jackson and Deshaun Watson. Take a look at the big and bold predictions we’ve got for Week 11 between the Texans and Ravens.

Matthew Stevens:

Lamar Jackson has another perfect game

Jackson has gotten far too much criticism for his passing ability through the early part of his career. And on two out of the nine games this season, Jackson has been statistically perfect. You’d think that would have shut the haters up but here we are in Week 11 and Jackson still has plenty of people continuing to doubt him. He does what no other quarterback in the history of the sport has done and that’s post his third perfect passer rating in a single season.

Will Texans-Ravens ultimately be decided by a fourth down?

The Houston Texans and Baltimore Ravens have been fabulous on fourth down conversions in 2019. Will their Week 11 encounter come down to one?

The best team in the NFL at converting fourth downs is the Baltimore Ravens at 76.9%.

The Houston Texans are tied for second-best at 70.0%, and they face the Ravens Sunday at 12:00 p.m. CT at M&T Bank Stadium.

Houston coach Bill O’Brien broke down for the media Friday what considerations go into going for it on fourth down.

“What are you anticipating from them when you put your personnel out there? What do you think they’re going to do? What is the distance? Where is the ball on the field? How is the weather, if it’s an outdoor game, quite obviously. Do you want to punt it? Do you want to kick a field goal, relative to where you are on the field? How good do you feel about the play that you would run? I mean, I could stand up here all day,” O’Brien said.

In an age where there are analytics galore, O’Brien believes the key is to use the analytics within the context of how the game is playing out that week.

“I think you use the analytics as a guide and you try to do the best you can to make the best decision for the team, but at the end of the day, you have to go with how the game’s being played, what you anticipate, from a preparation standpoint, what it might be,” said O’Brien.

One notable fourth down call was in Kansas City in Week 6. Facing a fourth-and-3 from the Chiefs’ 27-yard line and 2:00 left in the game, the Texans needed to pick up a first down to secure their 31-24 victory. A turnover on downs would give quarterback Patrick Mahomes and their quick strike offense a chance to send it to overtime. Rather than kick the field goal, O’Brien went for it, and Watson executed with an 8-yard pass to receiver DeAndre Hopkins.

“We went with a decision that it was fourth-and-3 and we said, ‘We have a good play. This is what I believe that they’ll do,'” O’Brien explained. “We’ve executed it in practice against what we think they’re going to do. So, we went ahead and did it.

“It was successful, but at the end of the day you try to do the best you can to make the best decision with all those factors weighed in.”

O’Brien and the coaching staff will have to make their best decisions against the Ravens as they seek to match last year’s 7-3 start.

How the Ravens can contain Deshaun Watson and other questions for Texans Wire

I talk with Texans Wire managing editor Mark Lane to get the inside scoop on what to expect from Ravens vs. Texans in Week 11.

The Baltimore Ravens get a near clone of themselves in Week 11 when they take on the Houston Texans. With a quarterback also in the discussion for the NFL’s MVP award, a tough rushing attack and a defense that has gotten the job done but hasn’t necessarily looked the greatest along the way, the Ravens are in for a taste of their own medicine.

To get a closer look at what Houston has going for them this season and where Baltimore might look to attack, I turned to Texans Wire managing editor Mark Lane.

1) Deshaun Watson has been having a great season but has also had a few mediocre games. How have opposing defenses been able to contain him in those efforts?

There are two tricks to slowing down Watson. The first is to generate a pass rush up the middle that is so overwhelming that he can’t evade his way out of the problem. The second way is to have really great coverage and force him to sit on some passes. One of the best things Watson does is get the ball out quickly and also avoid the first wave of pass rushers. Another element that helps is to stuff the run game. If the run game isn’t working, and Watson is all they have on the ground, that also allows the defense to key in on him and shut him down.

Lamar Jackson vs. Deshaun Watson 2.0 could be another fireworks show

As Lamar Jackson and Deshaun Watson square off for the second time, history points to a shootout for the Ravens and Texans in Week 11.

The last time Lamar Jackson and Deshaun Watson were on a field together was a little more than three years ago, though they were wearing different jerseys. Jackson and Watson were trading figurative blows as Louisville and Clemson fought for supremacy through a shootout and four lead changes.

Jackson and Watson combined to run for nearly a quarter of the combined total yards in that game, putting up 253 rushing yards and two of the four rushing touchdowns scored. In one of the most exciting college games in recent history, they threw for a combined 601 yards, six touchdowns and four interceptions en route to a 42-36 Clemson win.

Fast forward to 2019, and both Jackson and Watson are two of the best young quarterbacks in the NFL. Jackson is in his first full season as the starter, leading the Baltimore Ravens to a 7-2 record and talk of an MVP award. Watson is in his third season with the Houston Texans and has them at 6-3 in the thick of the playoff hunt.

With the Texans and Ravens meeting on the field in Week 11, we could be in for a replay of that wild 2016 game.

Much like that Clemson-Louisville game from three years ago, Watson and Jackson have been huge parts of their respective offenses. Jackson leads the Ravens on the ground, accounting for just under 40% of the team’s total rushing yards. He’s been efficient as a passer, completing 65.9% of his passes with a 3-1 touchdown-to-interception ratio. Watson accounts for just under 22% of Houston’s rushing yards but has completed 70.2% of his passes while throwing 18 touchdown passes to just five interceptions.

Combined, Jackson and Watson total 5,449 total yards (rushing and passing), 33 passing touchdowns and 11 rushing touchdowns while leading the first- and eighth-ranked scoring offenses in the NFL.

But the opposite side of the ball has been less spectacular. The defenses for both Houston and Baltimore have been suspect at times this season. Though both units have gotten the job done well enough to have them in the playoff race, neither defense is on par with what we’ve come to expect from these franchises.

They rank near the middle of the league (15th for the Ravens and 19th for the Texans) and have had some terrible outings this year. Baltimore has allowed 500-plus yards while giving up 30-plus points twice this season. Houston has given up 500-plus yards once and has allowed 30-plus points three times.

Both Jackson and Watson have unique abilities to avoid a pass rush, often making defenses look foolish for trying to pressure them. But with J.J. Watt on injured reserve for Houston and Baltimore not having a star pass rusher of its own, neither Jackson nor Watson should have very much trouble this week. That should free up both offenses to throw from the pocket and use their mobile quarterbacks as weapons on the ground.

Combine these suspect defenses with the multitalented quarterbacks and it seems like a recipe for fireworks reminiscent of that Clemson-Louisville game.

Texans must utilize their hurry-up offense against the Ravens

The Houston Texans face a tough task on Sunday, the Baltimore Ravens. However, they can escape with a win if they run the no-huddle a bit.

The Houston Texans are preparing to face the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday. Though not an easy task, there are methods to besting the 7-2 black birds in Baltimore.

According to Sharp Football Stats, the New England Patriots found a susceptible wrinkle in the Ravens defense in Week 9: the hurry-up offense.

In their Week 9 loss, New England found their most success running the no-huddle, tallying a 62% success rate with it (58% pass, 73% run) as compared to 46% success rate without it (45% pass, 50% run).

For Houston, the Patriots’ success in Week 9 is a green light to run the NFL’s best fast-paced offense.

No NFL team runs the no-huddle better than the Texans. Per Sharp Football, they boast a top-ranked 85% success rate when playing hurry-up offense. Their hurry-up success includes an 82% successful pass rate and 89% on run plays.

The Texans gain an average of 7.1 yards on pass attempts and 6.8 yards per rush while running the hurry-up. They possess a perfect success rate on both first- and third-quarter hurry-up offense utilization.

Logically, the Texans will attempt to go fast in the first- and third-quarter while closing out each half with lengthy drives. That’s the hope, at least.

Naturally, one would conclude the Texans would run more hurry-up offense on Sunday. However, in 2019, that has not been the case, as they are doing so at the 29th-highest rate in the NFL.

Nonetheless, on Sunday, the Texans should consider turning the page by letting the offense run quickly. Of course, they won’t do so on any drive — they can’t against a run heavy offense that thrives on controlling the clock. However, if stuck in a pickle, they know where to go.

If one were to bet on when the Texans hurry it up, it would be on their first drives of the first- and third-quarters, as previously stated. Not only do they thrive running the hurry-up in each respective quarter, it would allow them to punch Baltimore in the mouth, then control the clock in their ensuing possessions.

Houston running the hurry-up on Sunday won’t be an every-down, drive or quarter thing. However, it’s a potential favorable matchup for an offense that must keep-up with a high-powered opposing offense.