
The Ravens currently are the best team the AFC has to offer, and they will challenge the 49ers in two ways:
First, the Ravens offense ranks second in the NFL in yards per carry, while the 49ers defense ranks 19th in yards per carry allowed. So the Ravens will commit to the run game, which means they'll commit to exposing the one potential issue on the 49ers.
To be fair, the Ravens lost explosive running back Keaton Mitchell to a knee injury last week and he will not play against the 49ers. But if Arik Armstead or Javon Hargrave or both don't play as they didn't play last week against the Cardinals, then the Ravens should be able to run the ball no matter who they have at running back. Because Lamar Jackson is their leading rusher anyway. And that's why the Ravens almost always lead the league in rushing. Because Jackson functions as a running back, plus he scrambles for big gains. And the 49ers historically have struggled containing quarterbacks who scramble. Just last week, they gave up 49 rushing yards to Kyler Murray, and Jackson is much more difficult to bring down than Murray.
Second, the 49ers have scored the third-most points this season while the Ravens have given up the fewest points of any team in the NFL. Which means the 49ers are accustomed to scoring more than 30 points per game while the Ravens defense is accustomed to giving up fewer than 20 points per game.
Can the 49ers pass the test against an elite team? Not a fraudulent elite team like Dallas and Philly -- a real elite team?
We'll find out soon enough.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!