Five Reasons Why The Dolphins Will Beat The Ravens | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

Five Reasons Why The Dolphins Will Beat The Ravens

PhinsPhan122

Ted Hill
Joined
Dec 13, 2005
Messages
1,048
Reaction score
2
Age
38
Location
Miami, FL


5. Jason Ferguson:
In the week seven loss, nose tackle Jason Ferguson was injured in the first quarter and never returned. He anchors Miami's run defense and is the biggest reason for the turnaround in that department. He occupies blockers and disrupts the timing of rush attempts. Backup nose tackle Paul Soliai was suspended from this game as well, which meant the Dolphins played nearly the entire game in a 3-4 defense with no true nose tackle and a very thin defensive line rotation. That was a recipe for disaster. Miami was lost and allowed a big day on the ground to Willis McGahee, which also led to a good performance by Joe Flacco. That won't happen again. The Ravens will have a much rougher time running the ball, specifically in the red zone. The Ravens run the ball about 80% of the time they are in the red zone. Miami's defense has excelled in the that are late in the season forcing field goal attempts rather than allowing touchdowns. Look for that to continue.

4. The Wildcat: I know what you are thinking. Hey, the Ravens completely shut down the wildcat. In the week seven game, the wildcat formation was a big talking point before the game and the Ravens were able to blow it up and dominate it. At that time in the season though, the wildcat was a crutch for our offense. It's success was essential to set up the rest of our offense. The Dolphins were dependent on it. When it was stopped, our offense didn't stand a chance. That is not the case anymore. The formation and plays are thoroughly ingrained into the system and now it is a part of the offense rather than the focal point. Late in the season we have seen less of the wildcat and it now is just another bullet we have to fire if needed. If the Ravens shut it down, no matter, we will move the ball anyway.

3. 27-13, 20-3: 27-13 is the score from the week seven encounter in which the Ravens were looking for revenge for being Miami's sole defeated opponent in 2007. Congratulations. Now the revenge cycle is on Miami's side. They wish to atone for that week seven loss which was just very uncharacteristic of this team. 20-3 is the score from the last playoff game between these two teams and also the last time Miami was in the playoffs period. Even though no Dolphins are left from that team, the story is being brought up in the media and by the fans and the players feel responsibility to right that wrong as well. Miami owes Baltimore and this is the time. Everyone is picking the Ravens, and that's not surprising. I want it that way and so do the players. They like people telling they won't win and that their magical run is coming to an end.



2. Cam Cameron:
When have you ever seen an offensive coordinator get a water cooler dumped on him for winning any game, let alone a regular season game, in the first half of the season? Well that's what happened to Cam Cameron for his initial return to Miami. I hope he's proud of that accomplishment because beating the Dolphins is not in this week's playbook. I already mentioned how the run defense will be better with Jason Ferguson. The pass defense has also vastly improved since that game. The week seven game was an easy one to call because of how poor Miami's defense was. I could have called plays for the Ravens that day and been victorious. Not again. Cameron will have a much tougher time when the run game is not proficient and he will have to put the fate of a playoff game in the hands of a rookie quarterback. Let's also think about his reputation in playoff games. He took the Chargers to two home playoff games in his tenure there and he lost both of them, most notably the 2006 loss to New England after a 14-2 season. He will have a great time with his offense that will fail, forward, fast.

1. Joe Flacco vs Chad Pennington: I like Joe Flacco. I liked him before the draft and I was glad he didn't end up with a team I totally hate. I like what he has done, it has been very impressive. Rookie quarterbacks rarely have success in the NFL but he has done it. But even rarer than rookie quarterbacks having success is rookie quarterbacks having playoff successes. Marino couldn't, Manning couldn't, Roethlisberger couldn't (although he did luckily win one game thanks to epic failures from the Jets kicker) and Flacco won't. Chad Pennington won his first playoff game 41-0 over Peyton Manning's Colts. In 2004 he beat Cam Cameron's Chargers. He's been there, he's won, he's lost, he's seen it all. He is ready. Joe Flacco hasn't seen anything like this, and before you say that he's too dumb to realize the situation and how that's a good thing that pressure doesn't seep into him, well, it's been said before, and it's been wrong before, and it will continue to be wrong. I'll take experienced quarterbacks over rookies in the playoffs every single time.

This is a post from my blog at

http://tedginnandtonic.blogspot.com/2008/12/five-reasons-why-dolphins-will-beat.html.

My cousin is a Ravens fan and his blog is at

http://blogimoreravens.com

He will be talking a lot of smack, but we will win so it's okay.
 
I like those reasons. Don't forget that our secondary is also better than it was at that point in the season. Goodman is now awesome which should help our cause.
 
I like those reasons. Don't forget that our secondary is also better than it was at that point in the season. Goodman is now awesome which should help our cause.
I teased that a little but it could be it's own reason. Goodman is much improved and the unit as a whole has been better. The only area I worry about them is in the spread, but Baltimore doesn't use that much.
 
Agreed with everything. I think its going to be a close game but fins come out on top late in the game and hold on to win.
 
That is a very good post, and I agree with everything you said. Not because i'm a homer, but because I thinks it's all true. We will silence a lot of critics come sunday.:up:
 
Stop the M&M Boys, McGahee & Mason and give them a lot of R&R, Ricky & RonnieThrow in some nice Fasano & Ginn and just a dash of Cobb. That Ladies & Gentlemen is a recipe for success
 
Love the post!! I agree with the whole thing except the Big Ben part. I thought we won a Super Bowl his Rookie year. Correct?
 
Love the post!! I agree with the whole thing except the Big Ben part. I thought we won a Super Bowl his Rookie year. Correct?
No, his first year when they finished 15-1, they beat the Jets in the divisional round (lucky missed kicks) but then lost the AFC championship to the Patriots. It was the following year that they were 11-5, but won three road playoff games and then the Super Bowl.
 
great post you should be posting for the Herald instead of the idiots they have now.
 
Chad had his worst game of the year in this game. The key game changer was the pass he threw which was intercepted and run back by Suggs. I don't think Chad ever saw him and it's one of the few mistakes he has made all year. Despite how poorly we played we were only down 20-13 in the 2nd half, but we just didn't do much out of the Wildcat.

We kept running RB up the middle and they stuffed him....we didn't try any flea flickers, reverses...it was just plain vanilla and they were waiting for it. At the Raven's fan forums they are already talking about winning the Superbowl and they are dismissing Miami. I guess they forget how Cleo Lemon beat the same defense last year and how we won our only game last year against the RAVENS....how soon they forget.
 


5. Jason Ferguson:
In the week seven loss, nose tackle Jason Ferguson was injured in the first quarter and never returned. He anchors Miami's run defense and is the biggest reason for the turnaround in that department. He occupies blockers and disrupts the timing of rush attempts. Backup nose tackle Paul Soliai was suspended from this game as well, which meant the Dolphins played nearly the entire game in a 3-4 defense with no true nose tackle and a very thin defensive line rotation. That was a recipe for disaster. Miami was lost and allowed a big day on the ground to Willis McGahee, which also led to a good performance by Joe Flacco. That won't happen again. The Ravens will have a much rougher time running the ball, specifically in the red zone. The Ravens run the ball about 80% of the time they are in the red zone. Miami's defense has excelled in the that are late in the season forcing field goal attempts rather than allowing touchdowns. Look for that to continue.

4. The Wildcat: I know what you are thinking. Hey, the Ravens completely shut down the wildcat. In the week seven game, the wildcat formation was a big talking point before the game and the Ravens were able to blow it up and dominate it. At that time in the season though, the wildcat was a crutch for our offense. It's success was essential to set up the rest of our offense. The Dolphins were dependent on it. When it was stopped, our offense didn't stand a chance. That is not the case anymore. The formation and plays are thoroughly ingrained into the system and now it is a part of the offense rather than the focal point. Late in the season we have seen less of the wildcat and it now is just another bullet we have to fire if needed. If the Ravens shut it down, no matter, we will move the ball anyway.

3. 27-13, 20-3: 27-13 is the score from the week seven encounter in which the Ravens were looking for revenge for being Miami's sole defeated opponent in 2007. Congratulations. Now the revenge cycle is on Miami's side. They wish to atone for that week seven loss which was just very uncharacteristic of this team. 20-3 is the score from the last playoff game between these two teams and also the last time Miami was in the playoffs period. Even though no Dolphins are left from that team, the story is being brought up in the media and by the fans and the players feel responsibility to right that wrong as well. Miami owes Baltimore and this is the time. Everyone is picking the Ravens, and that's not surprising. I want it that way and so do the players. They like people telling they won't win and that their magical run is coming to an end.



2. Cam Cameron:
When have you ever seen an offensive coordinator get a water cooler dumped on him for winning any game, let alone a regular season game, in the first half of the season? Well that's what happened to Cam Cameron for his initial return to Miami. I hope he's proud of that accomplishment because beating the Dolphins is not in this week's playbook. I already mentioned how the run defense will be better with Jason Ferguson. The pass defense has also vastly improved since that game. The week seven game was an easy one to call because of how poor Miami's defense was. I could have called plays for the Ravens that day and been victorious. Not again. Cameron will have a much tougher time when the run game is not proficient and he will have to put the fate of a playoff game in the hands of a rookie quarterback. Let's also think about his reputation in playoff games. He took the Chargers to two home playoff games in his tenure there and he lost both of them, most notably the 2006 loss to New England after a 14-2 season. He will have a great time with his offense that will fail, forward, fast.

1. Joe Flacco vs Chad Pennington: I like Joe Flacco. I liked him before the draft and I was glad he didn't end up with a team I totally hate. I like what he has done, it has been very impressive. Rookie quarterbacks rarely have success in the NFL but he has done it. But even rarer than rookie quarterbacks having success is rookie quarterbacks having playoff successes. Marino couldn't, Manning couldn't, Roethlisberger couldn't (although he did luckily win one game thanks to epic failures from the Jets kicker) and Flacco won't. Chad Pennington won his first playoff game 41-0 over Peyton Manning's Colts. In 2004 he beat Cam Cameron's Chargers. He's been there, he's won, he's lost, he's seen it all. He is ready. Joe Flacco hasn't seen anything like this, and before you say that he's too dumb to realize the situation and how that's a good thing that pressure doesn't seep into him, well, it's been said before, and it's been wrong before, and it will continue to be wrong. I'll take experienced quarterbacks over rookies in the playoffs every single time.

This is a post from my blog at

http://tedginnandtonic.blogspot.com/2008/12/five-reasons-why-dolphins-will-beat.html.

My cousin is a Ravens fan and his blog is at

http://blogimoreravens.com

He will be talking a lot of smack, but we will win so it's okay.



I like Jason Ferguson but he is not the ideal candidate that you would want a 3-4 nose guard, but he is better than having an undersized starks.

Cam Cameron deserves to lose due to the fact that he caused so much redicule to this franchise. Great guy but sooner or later you will have to pay. We shoudl have a better rapport in regards to his play calling this sunday.
 
Games from last year are meaningless right now. Teams change, the coaches change, and the entire philosophy is different. Last year, the Ravens were playing not to lose and of course they loss. This year they are playing to win and will hurt anybody who is in there way. Of course I can't tell you the keys to beating the Ravens, but I would have to respectfully disagree with trying to link last season and this season. It just doesn't make any sense.
 
Back
Top Bottom