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Ravens vs. Chiefs score, takeaways: Lamar Jackson ends losing skid vs. Mahomes in wild shootout victory

The Baltimore Ravens overcame a slow start and ended the night with their first victory over Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs, evening their record at 1-1 thanks to a thrilling 36-35 comeback victory in front of the home crowd at M&T Bank Stadium. 

Lamar Jackson was picked off both on the opening drive of the game and later in the first half -- each time by Tyrann Mathieu -- but he battled back, tossing a touchdown pass and running for two others, and also picked up a game-sealing first down with less than a minute to go in the game. Jackson's heroics put the Ravens in position to win the game, but it was rookie edge rusher Odafe Oweh who made what might have been the biggest play of the night, forcing a Clyde Edwards-Helaire fumble with the Chiefs in field-goal range and the clock winding down.

Here are some takeaways from Sunday night's prime-time clash:

Why the Ravens won

You have to start with Jackson. Early on, he looked as if he might be the reason the Ravens would lose, throwing a pair of picks to Mathieu -- one of which came against triple coverage near the end zone. But as the night wore on, he got better, and his legs were in peak form during crunch time, leading Baltimore's rushing attack and sealing the victory with both the go-ahead score and clinching fourth-down conversion. He was clearly motivated to prove himself here, and it showed. Coach John Harbaugh also deserves plenty of props for putting the ball in Lamar's hands with the game on the line, choosing to trust his playmaker rather than give Mahomes and Andy Reid spare time for a comeback. Push from the O-line helped, as did some nice gains from all three pieces of the team's makeshift running back rotation, as well as steady separation from Marquise Brown. The defense was arguably just as impressive, even on a night in which it allowed 35 points. For a while, the unit held Mahomes and Co. to shorter stuff, and then, despite injuries on the back end, stood tall with late-game pass deflections and a pick -- Mahomes' first-ever in September.

Why the Chiefs lost

Aside from Mathieu, who stayed around the ball, their defense was a step behind for much of the contest. That's often true of teams who play Jackson, but even knowing Baltimore would be run-heavy, they couldn't contain Ty'Son Williams, Latavius Murray or even Devonta Freeman. If they got any significant push up front, it wasn't evident. Offensively, Mahomes was Mahomes, and the Chiefs were obviously in the mix until the end, but No. 15 got a little too silly with some of his acrobatic efforts, throwing a late pick and nearly tossing another rather than living for another down. Edwards-Helaire, meanwhile, coughed up the ball at probably the worst time late in the fourth.

Turning point

The Chiefs moved easily into Ravens territory for the final two minutes of action, threatening to run out the clock on their way to a game-winning field goal. In possession with 1:25 to go, from Baltimore's 32, they instead fell victim to Ravens rookie Oweh, who beat Orlando Brown Jr. to force the Edwards-Helaire fumble, then recover the ball himself. From there, the Ravens went on to run the clock out themselves.

Play of the game

This game was chock-full of big plays (it's Lamar and Mahomes!), but let's give Travis Kelce some respect for sprinting and bouncing his way through the entire Ravens defense, before Baltimore came back to win it:

What's next

The Ravens (1-1) will hit the road in Week 3, when they visit the Lions (0-1), who close out Week 2 on Monday against the Packers. The Chiefs (1-1), meanwhile, will return home for a divisional showdown with the Chargers (1-1), who are fresh off a close defeat at the hands of the Cowboys.

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Live updates
 

Every once in a while when Mahomes tries to make magic happen, it backfires on him. Tavon Young comes down with the pick. I thought a replay might show his knee down before he threw it but doesn't look that way.

 
@Ravens via Twitter
 
@Ravens via Twitter
 
@Chiefs via Twitter
 

...and then Sorenson comes on a blitz and gets a sack on Lamar. Right on a cue.

 

Daniel Sorenson is a really underrated player for the Chiefs. He can play next to both Tyrann Mathieu and Juan Thornhill. Nice tackle on Devonta Freeman right there.

 
@Chiefs via Twitter
 

Every time the Ravens send a blitz, the Chiefs find a way to score. That was an absolutely outrageous run after the catch from Travis Kelce. I'm not even going to bother trying to count the number of broken tackles. 

 
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@Ravens via Twitter
 

Brandon Williams is Baltimore's best run defender, and he's being examined on the sideline. CEH has had some success tonight but if you're the Ravens you'd probably rather Kansas City run it than throw it. 

 
@Ravens via Twitter
 
@Ravens via Twitter
 
@Ravens via Twitter
 

Huge answer drive for the Ravens after the Chiefs marched right down the field. Hollywood Brown is having himself a night: six catches for 113 yards and a score. 

 

Not sure how you leave the best pass-catcher on the opposing team that wide open on second-and-24. Big catch-and-run gives the Ravens a much more manageable third-down try right here.

 
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@Chiefs via Twitter
 

That was very, very quick. And those are some bad angles taken by the Ravens in the secondary. Anthony Averett got beat off the line and then nobody else was able to get close to Byron Pringle, who went right to the end zone for a 40-yard TD.

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@Chiefs via Twitter
 
@Chiefs via Twitter
 

The Ravens are now down Marcus Peters, Chris Westry, and DeShon Elliott in the secondary. Not ideal against this opponent.

 
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@Ravens via Twitter
 
@Ravens via Twitter
 
@Chiefs via Twitter
 

That's a huge drive for the Ravens, both confidence-wise and in terms of making the game closer before the Chiefs get the ball out of the break. 

 
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If the Ravens hurry up, they have a chance to get themselves into scoring position. There's plenty of time.

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