ExtremeRavens Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago NFL officials might need to flip a coin at the end of the regular season to decide who represents the AFC North in the postseason. If it’s heads, then the Ravens go. If it’s tails, the Steelers will represent. This division has no juice, as opposed to years ago when it was one of the fiercest in the league. But right now, there is no fire, no electricity. Trash talking is an aberration, certainly not like it was following the three-sack performance by outside linebacker Terrell Suggs against Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger in the 2011 season opener. “God can have his soul, but his [butt] belongs to me,” Suggs said after the game. Come on, that’s great stuff, and what separated this series from others. Players from both teams despised each other and while Suggs was public enemy No. 1 in Pittsburgh, Steelers receiver Hines Ward was at the top of the charts in Baltimore. But that’s no longer the case. The Ravens and Steelers are at the top of the AFC North with identical 6-6 records and are very quiet, as they should be. There is no fear of playing either team any more. They used to be carbon copies of each other. Each team claimed to have the greatest defense. Pittsburgh had outside linebackers Joey Porter, James Harrison, free safety Ryan Clark and eventual Hall of Fame strong safety Troy Polamalu. The Ravens countered with Suggs and eventual Hall of Famers middle linebacker Ray Lewis and safety Ed Reed. Both had strong armed quarterbacks in Joe Flacco and Ben Roethlisberger and stellar running backs in Jerome Bettis and Jamal Lewis during their respective heydays. But that’s no longer the case. Pittsburgh’s defense is ranked No. 28, allowing 365.1 yards per game, while the Ravens are rated No. 26 and give up an average of 350.4 yards, including 232 passing. Both teams struggle with their offensive lines, and neither starting quarterback is playing well. Pittsburgh’s Aaron “too old” Rodgers is 41, and Lamar “I can’t find my way right now” Jackson hasn’t played up to his previous levels, which earned him Most Valuable Player awards in 2019 and 2023. The good news for Baltimore fans is that Jackson still might find his way out of the abyss, but Rodgers and the Steelers are going, going, almost gone. Maybe the NFL needs to borrow a script from WWE and extend the trade deadline until next week so the Steelers can add Flacco, the only team he hasn’t played for in the division. Please, give me something. They don’t trade barbs anymore, like former Ravens tight end Shannon Sharpe calling receiver Plaxico Burress “Plexiglass” in 2001. There was the bounty the Ravens reportedly put on Ward in 2008, and Steelers coach Mike Tomlin trying to trip Jacoby Jones during the 2013 Thanksgiving Day game along the left sideline in Baltimore during a 73-yard return. I loved that play because it went into the lore of this series. Tomlin denied it after the game, but confirmed he did it on purpose a day later and was fined $100,000. But that’s football and that’s passion. It goes back to the old saying, “If you ain’t cheating, you ain’t trying.” There was the time Ravens defensive tackle Haloti Ngata broke Roethlisberger’s nose ($15,000 fine) in 2010, and linebacker Jameel McClain had his paycheck reduced by $40,000 for a concussion he gave tight end tight end Heath Miller in the same game. The Steelers have had their own fines with outside linebacker T. J. Watt losing $25,000 in 2023, and Clark paying out $40,000 for a shot delivered in 2011. And then there were the hits, the legitimate ones, like Ravens linebacker Bart Scott delivering the perfect tackle on Roethlisberger for a sack in 2006 where Roethlisberger appeared to be doing a levitation act here in Baltimore, and then outside linebacker Jarret Johnson leveling Ward in 2011 on an attempted screen pass in the middle. That drew a standing ovation. It was clean, nowhere near the vicious cheap shot used by Ward to wipe out Reed in 2007. That hit eventually led to what is unofficially called the “Hines Ward rule” in 2009 where a receiver can no longer blindside a defensive player. Of all the stories, though, my favorite was in 2003 when Porter had been shot in the rear end in Denver after attending a game at his alma mater, Colorado State. Porter apparently thought Lewis mocked him in a preseason game in the second quarter, and took exception to him mocking him with the right leg extended, Porter’s trademark celebration move. The incident led to Porter and Lewis exchanging words on the bus outside in Pittsburgh, and Porter supposedly tried to enlist Burress and Bettis, but they declined because they had to play against Lewis and didn’t want to make him mad. Lloyd Fox, Baltimore SunRavens' linebacker Ray Lewis hoists the Vince Lombardi Trophy after the Ravens defeated the 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII. Lewis was one of the top defenders in franchise history, although Baltimore's defensive excellence has been hard to find in 2025. (Staff file) Lewis had that kind of respect, but the physicality of both teams are gone now. Buffalo pushed the Steelers around Sunday in the second half of the Bills’ 26-7 victory. Before the game started, the Bills were down two starting offensive tackles, but they still punished Pittsburgh. The Ravens started the season off 1-5, but then won five straight before losing, 32-14, to Cincinnati, on Thanksgiving night as they committed five turnovers. The Ravens have yet to prove they can beat a quarterback in the same class as a Patrick Mahomes, the Rams Matthew Stafford or Joe Burrow, even Detroit’s Jared Goff. Like Pittsburgh, the Ravens have offensive line problems and the defensive group melted down Thursday in the second half against the Bengals. So, it appears those days of Lewis versus Bettis are gone and so are the games where Reed and Polamalu played against each other, two of the best in modern history. But it just isn’t about the players. Both coaches, the longest tenured in the league, are being pressured to win. There were chants to fire Mike Tomlin in Pittsburgh, where he has been the top coach since 2007. In Baltimore, fans have booed coach John Harbaugh for the last two weeks at halftime because of lackluster offensive performances, and the morning talk shows often feature calls asking for his firing after each loss. Harbaugh started with the Ravens in 2008. It’s a new era in football, where fans might care more about the rivalries than the players, but the Pittsburgh versus Baltimore was a good one for many years. The NFL needs more of them. Have a news tip? Contact Mike Preston at epreston@baltsun.com, 410-332-6467 and x.com/MikePrestonSun. READER POLL: Who will win the AFC North? View the full article Quote
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