San Francisco 49ers at Baltimore Ravens odds, picks and best bets

Previewing the San Francisco 49ers at Baltimore Ravens Week 13 matchup, with NFL betting odds, picks and best bets

Winners of seven straight games, the Baltimore Ravens (9-2) will face their toughest test yet against the visiting San Francisco 49ers (10-1) in Week 13. The game will kick off from M&T Bank Stadium on Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m. ET.

We analyze the 49ers-Ravens odds and lines, with NFL Week 13 betting picks and tips for the matchup.


Get some action on the games by betting at BetMGM. New customer offer: RISK-FREE First Bet (up to $500!) paid in free bets.


49ers at Ravens: Week 13 preview, betting trends and notes

  • The Ravens have won their last five games by a total margin of 202-62, easily covering the spread in each game.
  • The 49ers are 1-2-1 against the spread in their last four games but 5-1 ATS in their last six games against the AFC.
  • The Ravens are 4-0 ATS against teams with a winning record this season.
  • The 49ers are 5-0 on the road.
  • The total has gone over in four of the 49ers’ last five games. The over is also 6-3 in the Ravens’ last nine games
  • The Ravens rank first in the NFL in rushing, and San Francisco is right behind them at No. 2.

49ers at Ravens: Key injuries

49ers DE Dee Ford (hamstring), RB Matt Breida (ankle) and K Robbie Gould (quad) are all questionable to play on Sunday afternoon.

Ravens NT Michael Pierce (ankle) was inactive against the Ravens on Monday night and isn’t certain to play in Week 13. C Matt Skura was carted off with a leg injury, and is out for the year.

49ers at Ravens: Odds, betting lines and prediction

Odds via BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated on Wednesday at 12:30 a.m. ET

Prediction

Ravens 28, 49ers 21

Moneyline (?)

The Ravens have blown out each of their last five opponents and look absolutely unstoppable on offense. Despite having a worse record than the 49ers, they’re the hotter team and most likely the better one.

Take the RAVENS (-278) to win this one outright, defending their home turf behind yet another great performance by Lamar Jackson. The 49ers had trouble against Kyler Murray, and the Ravens are significantly better than Arizona.

New to sports betting? A $10 wager on the Ravens to win outright would return a profit of $3.60.

Against the Spread (?)

The Ravens are 6.5-point favorites over the 49ers at home. They’ve won their last five games by an average of 28 points per game, so they haven’t had any trouble covering the spread lately. It doesn’t help the 49ers that this is a 1 p.m. ET kickoff on the East Coast, either.

The Ravens continue their remarkable streak against a tough 49ers defense, covering the 6.5-point margin. Bet the RAVENS (-106) to beat San Francisco by at least seven points.

Over/Under (?)

The over/under is set at 46.5 points, which is a half-point less than the Ravens scored against the Rams on Monday night. That being said, San Francisco’s defense is outstanding.

Still, bet the OVER (-110). The Ravens haven’t scored fewer than 23 points all season and the fewest points they’ve scored in the last five weeks is 30.

Want action on this game? Sign up and bet at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @camdasilva and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1367]

AFC Playoff Picture heading into Week 13

The AFC playoff picture is clear at the top with the Patriots and Ravens but murky at the bottom with the Bills, Steelers, and Browns.

There are three teams that can truly make a run at the Super Bowl — and maybe really two — and they are the Patriots, Ravens, and Chiefs. Every other squad looks to be fighting for a nice playoff game and an exit. Every division is decided except for the AFC South even though the Texans have to be the heavy favorite. As for the wild cards, those are wide open. The Bills look to have the inside track, but they could slip up. Let’s check out the race by division.

Credit: Greg M. Cooper-USA TODAY Sports

AFC East

New England Patriots 10-1

New England had to go 2-2 in their stretch of games that started with the Eagles and ended with the Chiefs. They are already 2-0. They still can’t slip up since the Ravens have the tiebreaker due to Baltimore’s head to head win against the Pats. The good news is that New England has owned Houston in recent years. The bad news is that the Patriots offense hasn’t looked very good recently and they could struggle to keep up with the Texans and Chiefs. After their next two games, the Patriots final three matchups are all winnable.

Remaining Schedule: @Texans, Chiefs, @Bengals, Bills, Dolphins

Buffalo Bills 8-3

Buffalo gets Dallas on Thanksgiving and then 10 days to prepare for the unstoppable force that is the Ravens. They play at Pittsburgh which will be a rock fight and then at New England. The Bills may need to win their final game of the season against the suddenly surging Jets to make the playoffs.

Remaining Schedule: @Cowboys, Ravens, @Steelers, @Patriots, Jets

4 takeaways from the Rams’ 45-6 loss to Baltimore

The Rams were embarrassed by Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens on primetime. Here are four takeaways from the depressing outing.

The Los Angeles Rams were embarrassed on Monday Night Football by the Baltimore Ravens. It was complete opposite of last year’s barnburner on Monday Night Football against Kansas City. Here’s a few takeaways from the primetime debacle.

Rams’ defense nonexistent

It appears that something must have happened to the Rams over the past week that didn’t allow their defense to practice or come up with a game-plan to stop Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore offense. Maybe Wade Phillips just gave the team the week off. Any excuse as to why the Rams forgot to come up with a game-plan would be less embarrassing than if this was actually their game plan. 

The Ravens scored a touchdown every single time they touched the ball in the first half and Lamar Jackson completed all nine of his passes. The Rams were hopeless every time the defense touched the field.

Something also must have happened at halftime that caused the Rams to make any adjustments, because if they actually attempted to make any adjustments, they were meaningless. Baltimore scored a touchdown on their first two possessions of the second half before Lamar Jackson called it a night.

These games happen to everyone. Good teams get blown out. Bad teams get blown out. Mediocre teams get blown out. The Rams were decimated by Baltimore’s elite offense. It happens. But it certainly stings a little more when it’s on primetime and it drops your record to 6-5.

49ers could get 4 key players back for showdown with Ravens

The 49ers may get healthy just in time for their toughest test of the season.

The 49ers might be as healthy as they’ve been all year when they roll into Baltimore on Sunday for a showdown with MVP frontrunner Lamar Jackson and the Ravens.

Head coach Kyle Shanahan on Monday indicated in his press conference that left tackle Joe Staley, defensive end Dee Ford, running back Matt Breida and kicker Robbie Gould were all progressing well and game-time decisions.

That’s a much better prognosis than last week when it became clear early in the week that San Francisco would face the Packers without their four starters.

The 49ers have survived a slew of injuries thanks to some quality depth on their roster, but they’re not going to reach their peak until they’re at full strength. Getting Staley, Ford, Breida and Gould back would put San Francisco as close to peak health as they’ve been all season.

Staley had surgery a finger he dislocated and fractured against the Seahawks in Week 10. Breida aggravated an ankle injury that same game and hasn’t played since. Ford hurt his hamstring the following week against the Cardinals, and Gould injured his quad in practice leading up to the Seattle game.

Gould told Jennifer Lee Chan of NBC Sports Bay Area that he plans to play Sunday.

Ford’s return would come at a good time after Damontre Moore, who replaced Ronald Blair, broke his forearm Sunday night. San Francisco is suddenly thin at defensive end, and putting Ford back in the lineup would be a nice boost for the pass rush.

The offensive tackles also struggled Sunday night. Justin Skule, Staley’s backup, was pulled in the second quarter in favor of Daniel Brunskill. Staley’s return to the lineup to shore up Jimmy Garoppolo’s blind side would help the offense immensely.

Breida’s insertion back into the lineup would give the running game an element of explosiveness its been missing with him banged up. He’s a home run threat every time he touches the ball. While the 49ers’ other backs are talented, Breida is simply a different type of electric that helps power San Francisco’s rushing attack.

The 49ers won’t practice until Wednesday, at which point we’ll get a better idea of how close each of those players are. Shanahan’s update Monday is optimistic though, and that’s as good as they can hope for given how bad the injury situation has been to this point.

 

Rams Week 12 preview: 5 questions with Ravens Wire

Previewing Monday night’s matchup with Matthew Stevens of Ravens Wire.

The Los Angeles Rams’ season hasn’t gone exactly as planned, with two ugly losses and an underwhelming record of 6-4. The Ravens, on the other hand, are 8-2 and have absolutely rolled over their last four opponents.

Monday night’s matchup is huge for both teams, but the Rams desperately need a win to keep pace with their foes in the NFC playoff picture. Ahead of this Week 12 showdown, we talked to managing editor Matthew Stevens of Ravens Wire about the state of Baltimore’s team.

We discussed Marcus Peters, whom the Rams traded to the Ravens at midseason, as well as Lamar Jackson and the improved Baltimore defense, among other topics.

How has Marcus Peters played since arriving?

Peters has been stellar for Baltimore. It’s not a coincidence the Ravens’ defense has jumped up the rankings after trading for him, holding the No. 1 DVOA since Week 7, when they traded for Peters. He’s been physical and aggressive without being too much of either thing to draw penalties or get burned deep. In return, that aggressiveness has netted him two interceptions, returning both for touchdowns. He’s the perfect complement to Marlon Humphrey, who has arguably been the best cornerback in the league this season, albeit not putting up a ton of interceptions of his own.

Perhaps the best thing about having Peters is that he allows defensive coordinator Don Martindale to be a little more inventive with how he manufacturers pressure. By knowing the cornerbacks have things locked down fully now, he can send blitzes from different spots and at different times to throw off offensive lines and quarterbacks.

What has changed about the Ravens defense the last few weeks?

The biggest change has obviously been Peters, but quite a lot has changed outside of that, actually. The Ravens have added six players since Week 5 that have turned into impact players playing a high percentage of snaps.

Outside of Peters, I contend the biggest and most important defensive change has come at linebacker, seeing Baltimore switch out Kenny Young and Patrick Onwuasor for Josh Bynes and L.J. Fort. That change immediately saw improvements, most importantly in coverage, with Bynes grabbing an interception just a few days after being signed. Much like with Peters, the improved play at linebacker has allowed the rest of the defense to take added responsibilities off their shoulders and just do their individual jobs better. The secondary hasn’t had as many lapses, the run defense is in much better shape and the Ravens have generated more consistent pressure.

Another big reason the defense has improved has simply been because everyone’s getting more comfortable with the playbook and each other. A large portion of the starting defense is made up of newcomers that weren’t with the team just last year — some being signed as recently as last week. As guys like safety Earl Thomas have jelled with the coaching staff and their teammates, the play has steadily improved with it. It both helps and hurts that the Ravens run a more complicated scheme that includes a bigger playbook than most others.

That takes time to digest and turn into muscle memory, but once they get there, there’s a lot to dig your teeth into and play with on the fly. We’re seeing the defense come out on the other side now and putting in performances similar to what we saw last year with their No. 1 ranking.

What is Lamar Jackson’s biggest weakness right now?

I still wonder if Jackson would revert back to some of his bad habits and mechanics if a defense could find a way to throw him off his rhythm or dictate to the Ravens’ offense what they’ll do instead of the other way around. He’s had some of that happen earlier in the season but has generally been improving from Week 4 on, coinciding with his MVP argument strengthening. However, we saw a little dip in the first quarter of Week 11 against the Houston Texans before regaining his mojo and going 13-of-13 the rest of the way.

The problem with trying to replicate that success against Jackson is that it almost seems to be self-created rather than what a defense has done to him thus far. Even last week against the Texans, it was Baltimore’s miscues that threw everything off in the first quarter. Once they settled down as a team, they got right back to form and never flinched again. Part of the reason for that rhythm is that the Ravens’ offense is a pick-your-poison style that creates mismatches in a few spots and then picks apart wherever a defense is pulling from to cover elsewhere.

If you use a safety to spy Jackson, it’s going to leave passing lanes open to Marquise Brown and Mark Andrews. If you have a stout defensive line and you commit to shutting down the power rushing attack, you probably don’t have the outside speed to keep Jackson from running around you or the speed on the field to protect against the intermediate passing attack inside. If you throw more defenders into the secondary to cover everyone and keep Jackson contained, they’ll bludgeon you with running backs Mark Ingram and Gus Edwards)

What happened in the Ravens’ two losses? How did the Chiefs and Browns win?

Both of those games were before Baltimore’s defense underwent a dramatic change in personnel. In fact, those two games were the reason the Ravens made such drastic changes, starting in Week 5. In both games, the secondary had major lapses that left guys completely uncovered for touchdowns, something you can’t have against talented offenses. Combine that with little in the way of a pass rush, and it allowed two really good quarterbacks to just sit back and pick apart an already battered secondary.

On both sides of the ball, Baltimore had penalties at the worst possible times. It killed their drives while sustaining drives for their opponents, and further wore out a defense that was dealing with injuries that kept out quite a few starters. Against the Chiefs, a close loss very well could have been a win if they get a few calls their way or some questionable penalties aren’t called at all. Against the Browns, it allowed what was already set to be a close division matchup to turn into a blowout in favor of Cleveland. Losing the turnover battle that week didn’t help them either.

What’s your prediction for Monday night?

As has been the case for the last few weeks, I’m not sure if the Rams have the defensive talent to take away everything the Ravens can do. They have one of the best defensive lines in the league, which should do wonders against Baltimore’s physical power-rushing attack. But they’re going to either have to sell out to contain Jackson, which will open up the pass or they’re going to have to let Jackson run all over them and hope they can limit the damage. We’ve seen defenses try to do both and ultimately no one has been able to really shut them down yet.

So it’s going to come down to whether Los Angeles’ offense can beat the Ravens’ defense, which has been arguably their best unit over the last three weeks in spite of Jackson and the offense getting all the praise. Considering Jared Goff has more turnovers than touchdowns through 10 games this season and Todd Gurley’s usage continues to draw questions and criticism, I’m not sure the Rams have what it takes to win a shootout. And when Baltimore gets out to a two-score lead in a game, opponents have gotten desperate and only dug themselves further into the hole like quicksand.

I think that’s exactly what happens here as well. It’ll be a close one for the first half, but the Ravens take a big enough lead in the third quarter to force the Rams into abandoning the run and leaning on Goff, which only causes more problems as Baltimore’s opportunistic defense makes them pay. Which then, in turn, gives the offense a short field, and they pile on the points quickly.

Ravens 38, Rams 17

Rams’ 3 biggest causes for concern vs. Ravens

The Rams have to be worried about containing Lamar Jackson on Monday night.

Tommy Gilligan-USA TODAY Sports

The Rams will face their toughest test yet on Monday night when the Baltimore Ravens come to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. It’s a prime-time matchup between two teams that are at very different points in their season.

The Ravens are trying to lock up an AFC North title in the next few weeks, while the Rams are simply trying to survive in the NFC playoff race. They need this win more than Baltimore, but the Ravens are rolling and have won six straight.

Here are the Rams’ three biggest causes for concern against a red-hot Ravens squad.

Containing Lamar Jackson

Jackson is a headache for every opposing defense and coaching staff. Wade Phillips said it himself, adding that he’d have white hair from preparing to face the Ravens if he didn’t already. Jackson is the cog that makes this engine go, and he’s truly one of the most dangerous players in the NFL right now.

Commit to stopping the run and he’ll throw accurately all over the field. Drop back and play extra defenders in coverage and he’ll dominate as a runner. With Jackson, it’s about picking your poison, and neither is a good choice.

The Rams have to be worried about keeping him at bay because so few teams have been able to do that. They do have good athleticism and speed all over the defense, but Jackson is a different player than the quarterback they face twice a year in Russell Wilson.

NFL Week 12 picks: Who the experts are taking in Rams vs. Ravens

The experts are heavily favoring the Ravens on Monday night.

For just the second time all season, the Rams are underdogs. And for the first time since 2017, they’re home underdogs. That’s the sort of threat the Ravens pose in Week 12, playing like the best team in the league over the last month.

The Ravens are the favorites in the eyes of the oddsmakers, but do NFL experts see it the same way? In short, yes.

According to NFL Pick Watch, a whopping 86% of experts this week are taking the Ravens to beat the Rams straight-up; this isn’t against the spread. That’s the third-highest number for a road team in Week 12, with 99% picking the Steelers to beat the Bengals and 93% picking the Lions over the Redskins.

The Rams have won three of their last four games, but they haven’t played any teams that pose much of a threat. They beat the Falcons, Bengals and Bears, and lost to the Steelers two weeks ago.

The Ravens have won four in a row, averaging 39 points per game in that stretch. They lead the league in scoring and are on pace to set NFL records in both points per drive (3.03) and total punts in a season (34).

The Rams have been searching for a signature win – besides the one over the Saints earlier this season – and this would certainly be one on Monday night.

[vertical-gallery id=625819]

Chiefs sign DE Demone Harris to 53-man roster from Ravens practice squad

The Kansas City Chiefs have opted for some practice squad poaching to reinforce their depth at the defensive end position.

The Kansas City Chiefs have made a signing to reinforce the depth at the defensive end position.

After bringing in several veteran free agents for workouts, the front office has opted to go a different route. As first reported by NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the Chiefs are poaching defensive end Demone Harris from the Baltimore Ravens practice squad.

Harris entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent out of the University of Buffalo in 2018. He originally signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and shuttled between their active roster and practice squad. During the 2019 preseason with the Bucs, Harris accumulated 11 total tackles, one sack and multiple QB pressures while playing the outside linebacker position in a 3-4 defensive scheme. He was cut last month, and the Ravens signed him to their practice squad on Oct. 22.

Harris has the prototypical size for a Steve Spagnuolo defensive end at 6 feet 4 and 272 pounds. He’ll likely even be able to reduce down to the inside when Spagnuolo runs his signature “NASCAR” packages. At first glance, Harris seems to be more comfortable putting his hand in the dirt and getting after the quarterback from a three-point stance.

In order to make room for Harris, the Chiefs have waived defensive tackle Joey Ivie. Ivie was called up from the Kansas City practice squad just a few weeks ago. The Chiefs will likely try to bring him back there if he clears waivers.

It’s easy to see what the Chiefs like about Harris from a football standpoint, but he is regarded as a good character guy too. A story about him rewarding a housekeeper who found and returned his misplaced engagement ring has been making the rounds. He’s also been regarded as a hard worker. For instance, he was a walk-on at the University of Buffalo. He was released multiple times by the Bucs once he made it to the NFL, but he never wavered. Now he’ll get his chance to go out and prove that he belongs on a 53-man roster.

[vertical-gallery id=53668]

Rams preparing for Lamar Jackson with John Wolford as scout team QB

The Rams know they can’t emulate Lamar Jackson, but they’re going to try.

There isn’t a quarterback in the NFL right now who can do what Lamar Jackson does. His combination of speed and vision as a runner, as well as his accuracy and decision-making as a passer make him one of the most dangerous players in football – regardless of position.

His unique skill set makes him far more difficult to prepare for than a traditional pocket quarterback, which teams have learned all year long. The Rams will do their best to simulate him in practice, but not with Jared Goff or Blake Bortles.

Instead, it’ll be quarterback John Wolford, who’s currently on the practice squad.

“John Wolford’s going to do a great job for us. We’ll see if he found some extra speed this week, too,” McVay said. “You can’t ever really, truly emulate this guy, what he’s done and what they’ve done as a team. As a team, but then when you’re individually talking about their offense and Lamar Jackson, it’s been impressive. It’s fun to watch, it’s exciting, it’s going to be a great challenge and I know our defensive guys are excited about that challenge.”

Wolford is an athletic quarterback, as we saw in the preseason. He’s quicker than fast, though, as he ran a 4.77 40-yard dash at his pro day. His 4.18-second short shuttle time would’ve been the third-best at the combine in 2018, and his 6.78-second three-cone would’ve been the fastest at his position.

Obviously, Jackson is on another level, but Wolford is a better scout team quarterback before facing the Ravens than Andy Dalton is. He has a good combination of mobility and arm strength, as he showed on this play in the preseason.

As McVay said, you can’t truly emulate Jackson in practice, but the Rams are going to do their best with Wolford. Monday night’s matchup will come down to slowing Jackson as a runner because that’s where he and the Ravens offense are most dangerous.

Sean McVay weighs in on Eric Weddle’s decision to keep Ravens’ secrets

Eric Weddle won’t give away anything on his former team, and Sean McVay respects that.

When Eric Weddle signed with the Rams, one of the first games he probably circled on the schedule was a matchup with his former team, the Ravens. It was always going to be an intriguing matchup, but with Baltimore 8-2 and looking like one of the best teams in the NFL thanks to Lamar Jackson, the implications of this game have been heightened – especially for the 6-4 Rams.

Weddle knows the Ravens better than anyone outside their locker room, but Sean McVay and Wade Phillips shouldn’t expect any inside information from their starting safety. He said back in August that he won’t share any of his former team’s secrets – a startling revelation to Rams fans everywhere.

“I can’t give all the secrets away. Those are my guys. I can never turn my back on my guys over there,” Weddle told Andy Benoit in a film breakdown video. “Coach McVay knows what he’s doing. He doesn’t need much.”

Weddle respects his former teammates too much to give away secrets about their scheme.

“What kind of man would I be if I rat out my guys that I played three years with?” Weddle asked. “I cherish every relationship I made on that defense, on that team. The minute I say, ‘Here are all of their calls’ or ‘here are the checks to this,’ then what am I at the end of the day? I lose everything that I gained from there. And that means more to me than anything.”

McVay was asked by reporters on Wednesday if he’ll pick Weddle’s brain this week in advance of their Week 12 matchup with the Ravens. McVay knows Weddle said in the past that he won’t share any inside details about Baltimore’s scheme, and the coach respects that.

“I think what you respect about Eric is he’s one of those guys that you pick his brain just because you want to talk some football. But in terms of some of the intricacies, I think he’s got a lot of loyalty to those guys even if he’s not there anymore,” he said. “And I think those are things that I think he would probably say, ‘I like talking ball with you,’ but I don’t want to do something that takes away from his ability to try to unfairly give information with the Ravens and I know that’s something that he’s communicated. So I haven’t talked to him about it.”

McVay was then asked whether that would be regarded as unfair.

“I think this, it’s totally at each person’s individual approach. I think with his reasoning, I think it’s a small demonstration of why he’s a special guy. But we’ll talk some ball, we’ve talked before. Maybe I already asked those questions in the free-agent visit, he just didn’t realize it,” McVay said, smiling.

Schemes change every year and there are certainly differences between what the Ravens did last year when Weddle was there and what they’re doing now. In reality, there probably isn’t much of an advantage Weddle can give the Rams, because players still have to go out and execute the plays called.

Monday night will mostly come down to stopping Jackson, and if the Rams can’t do that, they’re going to be in for a long night – regardless of what Weddle might (or might not) tell them.

[vertical-gallery id=625819]