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Monday, September 21, 2009

Philip Good Game, SD Defense Not So Much


Source: September 20, 7:40 PMSan Diego Sports ExaminerGerald Nicdao


When a team amasses 474 total yards against the Baltimore Ravens, usually that team gets the victory—except when that same team goes 0-for-5 in red zone touchdown attempts.

That’s what the San Diego Chargers did in their home-opening loss against the Ravens on Sunday.

San Diego had five possessions inside the 20 and came away with four field goals and one turnover.

However, the Chargers were fluid and electric outside of the red zone.

Quarterback Philip Rivers passed for a career-high 436 yards. Rivers completed nine passes for over 20 yards (including an 81-yard touchdown to Darren Sproles on a swing pass and a 35-yard strike to Vincent Jackson in the end zone).

But inside the 20, San Diego was pedestrian, unable to run the ball and unable to get the ball in the end zone.

Four times did the Chargers settle for field goals. The last red zone venture ended with Ray Lewis stuffing Darren Sproles on a fourth-and-second on the 15-yard line.

If you don’t score in the red zone, you don’t win football games, no matter how many yards you put up on one of the best defenses in the NFL.

But why did San Diego fail inside the 20? The same reason why the Chargers almost lost last week against the Oakland Raiders—they’re soft.

The Ravens are known for their physicality. Not as fast as San Diego—which is why the Chargers were able to score the big play multiple times—Baltimore was stout with its back against the wall.

With not much room to operate, the Chargers’ skill and speed was neutralized when they were 20 yards from pay dirt. The Ravens’ brute strength dominated San Diego’s offensive line—which was missing two starters (center Nick Hardwick and rookie guard Louis Vazquez).

Rivers was sacked in San Diego’s first trip to the red zone for a loss of 10 yards.

Sproles was tackled twice behind the line of scrimmage in the Chargers’ second red zone possession.

San Diego shot itself in the foot with a delay of game penalty in the third try inside the red zone, with the ball on the 1-yard line.

And Sproles was stuffed for a loss of five yards on the Chargers final possession.

(By the way, why do you run a power formation against arguable the strongest defense in the NFL on fourth and short with the game on the line?)

How that all happened was Baltimore penetration and a lack of push by San Diego’s offensive line.

"They pressure down there so you're trying to sort things out of how to block," Rivers told the Associated Press after the game. “They brought as many as they could bring on some of them. I think it was more a lack of execution than anything and those delays that killed us."

Rivers and the rest of the Chargers were dazzling, despite rushing for only 53 yards the entire game. San Diego’s talent was too much for Baltimore outside the 20-yard line.

But inside, the Chargers lack of toughness was exploited.

San Diego’s talent helped it overcome the Raiders’ physicality, but against teams that are just as physical and more talented, the Chargers have no shot.

Just ask Baltimore.

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