QUINIX Sport News: Four Verts, wild-card edition: Is this finally the year for a Ravens run? Plus the Packers are one heck of a 7 seed

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Baltimore has become a well-oiled machine on both sides of the ball, Green Bay has a legit shot to upset the Eagles on the road, and why Vikings-Rams might be the coolest matchup of the weekend.

Wild-card weekend is upon us, and even though there were a lot of bad teams this season, the good ones are now the only ones left playing.

This week’s Four Verts column looks at four storylines that caught our eye heading into the weekend.

Baltimore is right back where they usually are — near the top of the AFC. The Ravens were shaky to start things off this season, but finished with a record of 12-5 and won the AFC North in the final week of the season. Lamar Jackson had an MVP-caliber campaign and Derrick Henry had a dominant season in his first year with the team. At the end of the day, this team just had too much overall talent to have a truly down year from start to finish and they were able to position themselves for yet another shot at a Super Bowl run, thanks in no small part to a defensive resurgence.

The Ravens were forced to make a switch at defensive coordinator this season with the departure of Mike Macdonald to the Seahawks, swapping in former Ravens player and linebacker coach Zach Orr into the role. Much like MacDonald’s start with the Ravens, Orr got off to a rocky start in the first few weeks of season. The Ravens’ defense was a machine in giving up big plays, with even teams like the Browns and Raiders able to sustain drives against them earlier in the season.

Over time, those issues began to fix themselves through Orr’s problem-solving and the natural talent that the Ravens had accumulated on defense over the past few years. Kyle Hamilton made a move to deep safety, Ar’Darius Washington had a breakout year, rookie cornerback Nate Wiggins was borderline dominant in the second half of the season and they were able to get far more pressure on the quarterback. Since Week 11, the Ravens have had arguably had the best defense in football and they have developed into one of the most complete teams in the league.

Of course, their postseason hopes live and die on the arm and legs of Lamar Jackson, who hasn’t been able to engineer a big-time run through the postseason just yet and will be without one of his top weapons in Zay Flowers vs. the Steelers on Saturday. Of course, Jackson has the skill level to overcome that. Any quarterback who can throw for 4,000 yards, 41 touchdowns and four interceptions while chipping in another 900 yards on the ground is capable of taking over the whole world — let alone winning a Super Bowl. Henry may be the equalizer here that eventually lets Jackson hoist the Lombardi, but the fact that Jackson hasn’t had a Super Bowl run doesn’t mean he isn’t capable of it. (Same goes for Josh Allen and Buffalo, whom the Ravens could play later on.)

Baltimore has become a well-oiled machine that’s capable of going the distance for a Super Bowl, thanks to their defense rounding into championship form. For the sake of future discourse, let’s hope they can get to the second round of the playoffs.

One of the perks of a season that featured a glut of teams at the bottom of the standings is the handful of actual good teams that made the playoffs at the end of the season.

That is most definitely true in a playoff game that features a rematch from the season opener in Brazil, with the Packers hitting the road to take on the Eagles. In the new-ish seven-team playoff format, it’s been unusual for a team of any quality to actually be in the seventh seed, but the Packers find themselves here due to playing in the unbelievably loaded NFC North this season — and they have a chance to replicate what they did last year in terms of winning on the road as a No. 7 seed.

Green Bay walks into this game with different expectations than they had a year ago. The Packers were just a bunch of upstart kids last season, sneaking their way into the playoffs on a hot streak while not actually playing a whole bunch of great football throughout the entirety of the season. This year was different, where a freaking 11-6 record means third place in the NFC North and the seventh seed in the NFC playoffs. Still, the Packers were one of the best teams in the league this season.

Jordan Love and Josh Jacobs were the perfect tandem for head coach Matt LaFleur to play the style of football that he wanted. Jacobs came over from the Raiders and made an immediate impact on the Packers ground game, rushing for 1,329 yards and 15 rushing touchdowns. LaFleur’s offense has always been built around being able to run the ball, so getting Jacobs in free agency this year fundamentally changed the Packers and what they were able to accomplish.

With those two, and a growing group of receivers around them, the Packers were able to rank eighth in expected points added per play on offense (0.08), 12th in success rate (43.3%), sixth in points per drive (2.50) and third in explosive play rate (13.2%). The ceiling on this offense is through the roof and they still have room to improve heading into the playoffs, as their recent loss against the Vikings showed.

Those guys will need to play well as the Eagles have arguably the best defense in the league and rank in the top three or five of the majority of defensive statistics. The Packers’ defense faces a tall task corralling Saquon Barkley and A.J. Brown, so the offense will really have to step their game up and go toe-to-toe with the Eagles to get to the next round, but they certainly have the facilities to do so.

The most important thing revolving around this game will be the recovery of the greater Los Angeles area as five wildfires tear through the city and force thousands of people to flee their homes for safety. That wildfire may make the NFL move the location of the Rams vs. Vikings game, but nothing has been decided as of Thursday. When and wherever that game is played, there will be a nice opportunity for people to distract themselves a bit and tune into what may be the coolest matchup of the weekend.

Once again, the Rams look like the wild-card team that nobody wants to play, with a game against the Vikings, and former Rams assistant Kevin O’Connell, looming large. This is one of the best matchups of the weekend, particularly as it’s concerned with the Rams offensive attack with the Vikings’ fast-paced, blitz-happy defense.

 

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