Drake, Houston lead the way as Ravens march over Saints to earn 3rd straight win
Baltimore Drake, Jackson combine for 175 yards, 2 touchdowns on ground
Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens didn't need their full complement of key contributors to stifle the Saints and silence the Superdome.
Jackson passed for a touchdown and frustrated New Orleans (3-6) with his mobility, rushing for 82 yards and exhibiting an array of jump cuts and spin moves while helping Baltimore (6-3) win its third straight and remain atop the AFC North, one game ahead of Cincinnati.
"The human will can only take so much. It was just pounding down in and down out," Drake said. "That's just what this team is all about — just continuing to wear teams down and grind them out with four quarters of football.
"If you can stand up to that, more power to you, but more times than not we're going to win that battle," Drake said.
DOUBLE TIME!!<a href="https://twitter.com/KDx32?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@KDx32</a> finds the end zone for his second time of the night and we're up 27-6! Tune in on ESPN. <a href="https://t.co/bnqlzcYOZU">pic.twitter.com/bnqlzcYOZU</a>
—@Ravens
The Saints entered the game with a chance to pull into a three-way tie atop the anemic NFC South with Atlanta and Tampa Bay. Instead, they were outclassed by a Baltimore team missing several offensive starters, including tight end Mark Andrews and running back Gus Edwards.
The Ravens converted nine of 15 third downs and had 319 total yards. The Saints were 3 of 11 on third down and finished with a season lows of 243 yards and 13 first downs. Baltimore possessed the ball for 37:47.
Andy Dalton passed for 210 yards and New Orleans' lone touchdown to tight end Juwan Johnson, which came when the game was virtually out of reach in the fourth quarter. Alvin Kamara was limited to 62 yards from scrimmage, his lowest output in five games.
"We got just got beat," Dalton said, adding that Baltimore "deserved to win this one. They got after us."
Dalton was sacked four times and his interception came on a pass tipped by Brent Urban. The play set up Drake's second TD.
HAVE A NIGHT, <a href="https://twitter.com/JHouston50?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@JHouston50</a>‼️‼️<br><br>Tune in on ESPN. <a href="https://t.co/2TDHLq8RQW">pic.twitter.com/2TDHLq8RQW</a>
—@Ravens
Baltimore's defence was stifling on New Orleans' first four possessions, limiting the Saints to 13 combined plays.
Consequently, the stamina of New Orleans' defence was tested as the unit contended with the elusive Jackson for 19:31 of the first half. Baltimore's star QB didn't let that time go to waste.
"Traditionally you cover for 3 to 4 seconds and the play is over," Saints safety Tyrann Matheiu said. "But a guy like that is a 7-, 8-, 9-second cover."
Jukes, spins, broken tackles... Another first down run by <a href="https://twitter.com/Lj_era8?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Lj_Era8</a>!! <br><br>Tune in now on ESPN. <a href="https://t.co/WakE5fkNLU">pic.twitter.com/WakE5fkNLU</a>
—@Ravens
While rolling right, Jackson found tight end Isaiah Likely running a flag pattern for a 24-yard score to make it 7-0 in the first quarter.
In the second quarter, Jackson orchestrated a 12-play, 81-yard drive during which he ran for gains of 7, 16 and 12 yards. Drake capped it off by running into the end zone virtually untouched from a yard out for a 14-0 lead.
"I do not take it for granted," Harbaugh said. "I think I said, `Wow,' a couple of times. Lamar plays on a different level. You can't just look at the passing stats."
The Saints did not get on the board until Wil Lutz's field goal as time expired in the half — a couple plays after Dalton overthrew open receiver Marquez Callaway in the end zone.