The motto this year for the
Baltimore Ravens' defense has been "next man up."
When Chris McAlister and Samari Rolle went down
with injuries this season, they had players step
up and fill the void - a system defense, if you
will.
The system? Ray Lewis.
The linebacker, who in his 13th NFL season should be in
the twilight of his career, instead remains one of the
best at his position in the league and is again leading
a powerful Ravens defense that has not allowed a
touchdown in the last 10 quarters.
It is a defense with great talent, from perennial
All-Pro Ed Reed at safety to outstanding linebackers
Terrell Suggs and Bart Scott and a tough defensive line
led by Trevor Pryce and Haloti Ngata.
But the brains and brawn of the defense the Washington
Redskins will face Sunday night is the same as it was
when the Ravens marched through the 2000 season on
their way to a Super Bowl championship - Lewis.
At the Ravens' training facility Wednesday, Suggs was
asked about his defense's ability to put points on the
board.
"Our chances are better when we have the defense making
plays," Suggs said, adding, "and it always helps when
you have Ray Lewis."
The presence of the nine-time Pro Bowl linebacker and
two-time NFL defensive player of the year has not
appeared to wear thin. If anything, Lewis' impact on
this team is stronger than ever, as he has grown to be
a tremendous on-field defensive coordinator.
"Just watch the man before the snap," Suggs said. "He
has a lot going on. That is why he is the leader. He
pretty much kind of guides us. I kind of tend to guess
sometimes, but he knows. He tells me, 'This is coming,
that is coming.'"
His ability to read defenses frustrated Bengals wide
receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh during Baltimore's 34-3
win over Cincinnati last week so much that
Houshmandzadeh felt compelled to ask Lewis about it on
the field.
"T.J. came up to me after seven straight plays and
asked, 'How do you know what every play is going to
be?'" Lewis said. "I said, 'I do a lot of studying.' He
said, 'No, it's something you're watching, something
you're seeing.'"
Lewis said he works harder than ever to be prepared for
each opponent, not just for his position but to make
the calls for everyone else on defense as well.
"I sit down and go through films for hours, so it is
second nature for me," Lewis said. "I can say, 'OK,
I've seen this before.' It is about getting my players
in the right position so they can make plays."
Someone asked Lewis how many plays can he see coming.
"It's a high amount," he said.
That is no idle boast. Lewis leads the team with 84
tackles. The Ravens' run defense, ranked third in the
NFL, hasn't allowed a 100-yard rusher in 31 games.
Baltimore is second in turnovers this season with 23
and has the top-ranked defense on third down. It ranks
among the league leaders in nearly every defensive
category.
Lewis is careful to spread the credit around, including
Baltimore's defensive coordinator, Rex Ryan.
"We have a mentality that everybody has bought into,
and that is to find the football," Lewis said. "We just
are playing where we are supposed to be.
"The run we are on comes with a lot of guys really
buying into the system," he said. "Rex is doing an
incredible job of getting us in the right schemes and
things like that. There is a lot of credit to go
around. And the offense is controlling the ball a lot.
We're not going three-and-out. So it is a lot of
different things, the way we are playing right now."
Ryan is the third defensive coordinator Lewis has
played for. The one constant throughout the Baltimore
Ravens' era of defensive excellence has been Lewis. In
fact, Lewis - even with the stain of an obstruction of
justice conviction in a fatal 2000 stabbing - has
become the identity of Baltimore sports.
The Lewis era doesn't appear to be close to ending,
either. When asked whether he thought he had a season
like this left in him, when it appeared he was on the
downside of his game, the 33-year-old Lewis replied:
"Men and women lie, but numbers don't. You just keep
playing football. You don't care what people say.
Bottom line is you line up and ask the people playing
against me. You just play the game the same way and
approach it the same way you did in Year one as you do
in Year 13 with the same passion, the same dedication."
(washigtontimes.com)