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Chapter 662 - Fully Prepared

"Beautiful play!"

"Big hit—The Ravens' defense showing top form right from the start. Though Mahomes used superb pocket footwork to avoid the sack, Suggs still leveraged his veteran savvy to land a hit and disrupt Mahomes' throwing motion."

"Kelsey makes an awkward catch but has no room to run. The Ravens force the Chiefs into 3rd and 3 again—another key test."

"We're not even three minutes into this game, and Kansas City's offense has already faced three third downs. This is a slugfest from the jump."

"And this… this is exactly what we wanted to see."

In the CBS broadcast booth, Jim Nantz and Tony Romo were back together calling this game, and it wasted no time getting intense.

The Chiefs vs. Ravens—kickoff at 1 PM on a crisp Sunday afternoon.

Not a primetime game.

The league would've loved a primetime slot, but KC had already played four night games this season—the most of any team.

Stacking more primetime games for the Chiefs risked angering other owners, so Goodell had to compromise, scheduling this showdown for the afternoon.

In some ways, this worked out perfectly.

Because today, winter arrived in Kansas City.

No snow or rain, just clear skies—but temperatures hovering around -3°C (26°F), with a brisk breeze making it feel like -10°C (14°F).

Bitter cold, no warmth despite the sunshine.

The league should count itself lucky this wasn't a night game—temperatures would've plunged even lower.

Dry, cold conditions meant a stiffened football—tougher to grip, tougher to throw.

A game like this usually tilts toward ground attacks.

That would've hurt the spectacle and TV ratings.

And sure enough, this game followed that pattern.

The Ravens won the coin toss and chose to defend the side with the sun in their eyes; KC took the ball first.

Both sides came prepared—

The Chiefs opened cautiously, leaning on short passes and runs.

The Ravens defense was locked in.

On this first possession alone, Baltimore had forced three 3rd downs.

KC converted the first two with slick play calls to reach midfield—

But here came a third.

The intensity, the tempo—building fast.

"Wow," Nantz exclaimed in the booth, his voice rising with excitement.

"We haven't even had time to introduce the Ravens defensive starters… Wait—Mahomes signals for the snap!"

"A run—no! Play-action pass!"

"Pocket collapsing but Mahomes fires a quick throw to Lance—he hauls it in and moves the chains."

"Lance keeps running—"

"Suggs! Brilliant. Suggs and Mosley team up for the tackle, cutting Lance down before he could accelerate."

"The Chiefs convert again but can't find rhythm.

Baltimore's front seven are already imposing their will."

"Harbaugh came into this one fully prepared."

Within just three minutes, the intensity had everyone breathless.

Both sides trading blows at a high level.

KC had converted every third down so far, but each drive felt disjointed—

Short gains, no explosive plays.

Clearly, this was Baltimore's plan.

At least in the early going.

When fans debate the greatest defenses in NFL history, certain names are automatic:

The '85 Bears, '76 Steelers, 2000 Ravens, 2013 Seahawks, '71 Vikings, '91 Eagles.

When talking about franchises synonymous with defense, teams like Chicago, Pittsburgh, Buffalo come to mind—but so do the Ravens.

Even though Baltimore's NFL history only dates to 1996, they've firmly cemented their place as a defensive powerhouse.

This year is no exception.

While their overall record had wobbled—they only recently seemed to find their form—Baltimore's defense had ranked top-tier all season:

4th against the pass, 4th against the run, 3rd overall.

Toughness and resilience—Baltimore's defensive DNA.

Much of the hype over the Ravens' recent 3-game winning streak focused on Lamar Jackson's electric athleticism or Gus Edwards' Cinderella story…

But in truth, it was this defense that fueled their resurgence.

One stat said it all:

In Week 6 against Tennessee—a team that took Kansas City to the brink in last year's playoffs—Baltimore's defense sacked Marcus Mariota eleven times.

Eleven sacks in one game.

They battered Mariota so badly he lost all composure, and the Titans unraveled completely.

Final score: 21-0, Ravens.

That 11-sack performance was tied for the second-most in NFL history.

The only teams to ever record 12 in a game?

The 1990 Chiefs and the 1985 Cowboys.

Three decades had passed since the league had seen double-digit sacks in a game—until this Ravens defense erupted.

And that was no cupcake opponent.

Baltimore's defensive talent and mindset were undeniable.

Clearly, Harbaugh had done his homework.

He studied every snap of Kansas City's games, absorbed lessons from how Doug Pederson's Eagles had tested Reid last year…

Then, he tailored a game plan specifically for this matchup.

Baltimore came into Arrowhead fully prepared.

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Powerstones?

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