NFL odds Week 2: How to bet Dolphins-Ravens, pick

The Miami Dolphins will travel to the Baltimore Ravens for a Sunday afternoon matchup following an impressive opening week of football by both teams. 

Miami is coming off an impressive Week 1 victory where Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle combined for 12 receptions and 163 yards, while Tua Tagovailoa completed 66.7% of his throws. 

Baltimore controlled the New York Jets on Sunday, behind three passing touchdowns by Lamar Jackson and an evenly-distributed day by their receiving core. The Ravens hope to build on their momentum by defeating a talented Dolphins team.  

Here’s everything you need from a betting perspective on the Dolphins-Ravens game, from the point spread, moneyline, total over/under and expert pick (odds via FOX Bet):

Miami Dolphins @ Baltimore Ravens (1 p.m. ET Sunday, CBS)

Point spread: Ravens -3.5 (Ravens favored to win by more than 3.5 points, otherwise Dolphins cover)
Moneyline: Ravens -189 favorites to win (bet $10 to win $15.29 total); Dolphins +145 underdogs to win (bet $10 to win $24.50 total)
Total scoring over/under: 44.5 points scored by both teams combined

Miami Dolphins

MIA

Baltimore Ravens

BAL

Insights from FOX Sports Gambling Expert Warren Sharp:

Let’s discuss the concerns with both offenses based on what we saw Week 1: 

First, both offensive lines were atrocious in getting run-blocking lanes open for the running backs. 

In the first half against the Jets, the Ravens running backs averaged -0.86 EPA/att and 1.2 YPC. Both ranked worst in the NFL. 

They averaged -0.5 yards before contact per attempt, meaning their offensive line allowed penetration and the RBs to be hit a half a yard in the backfield. 

Things didn’t improve much in the second half, and throughout the entire game, their RBs ranked third-worst in rushing efficiency.   

And that was against a Jets defense that ranked 26th in rushing efficiency last year.

Left tackle Ronnie Stanley’s ankle injury still wasn’t healed enough, and they just lost Ja’Waun James, who started in his place at left tackle. The Ravens will have to find an offensive tackle to help support depth and are down to their third-stringer. 

Overall, the Ravens ranked No. 28 in yards before contact per attempt, and the running backs ranked No. 24. 

The Dolphins were not much better on the other side of the ball. Miami’s backs ranked No. 26 in yards before contact per attempt.   

Looking at both of these run games, their RB ranks on early downs were:

Yards before contact/rush: No. 24 and No. 26 
Yards after contact/rush: No. 27 and No. 30 
EPA/rush: No. 27 and No. 29 
Longest rush: No. 27 and No. 29 

While the Ravens faced more stacked boxes (fifth-highest rate of seven-plus man boxes), and that can explain some numbers, the Dolphins faced the eighth-lowest rate of seven-plus man boxes. And yet they still couldn’t generate much on the ground. 

As a result, I’m concerned with both run games and what that will mean for both quarterbacks.   

Last week for Lamar Jackson, it meant it was on his shoulders. 

Yes, he threw three TDs, but his success rate was 22nd in the NFL, and he averaged the NFL’s highest air yards in the league last week. 

But Lamar was also bottled up on the ground. And most of all, he wasn’t scrambling. 

Lamar scrambled twice for eight total yards. His EPA per scramble ranked below Matt Ryan against the Jets. 

He also had two designed runs which gained -0.22 EPA per attempt. 

How does this compare to 2021? 

In 2021, he averaged 6.5 designed runs per game in the games he started and finished. And he averaged 4.7 QB scrambles per game. 

In 2021, QB scrambles produced +0.28 EPA/att and designed runs produced -0.01 EPA/rush. 

It only was one week, so we shouldn’t take much from the game. I’m as big a Lamar stan as there is, but the lack of running was interesting, and I’m curious what happens this week against the Dolphins. 

I’m also interested to see what Greg Roman tries to do differently against the Dolphins this year because we remember what happened in the last Ravens game against the Dolphins. 

Lamar’s -0.29 EPA/dropback on 48 dropbacks was his worst of 2021.   

His total EPA on dropbacks was -14.1, which was the worst game of his entire NFL career. 

He averaged 5.5 YPA, which was the fifth-lowest in his career.   

He was hit six times and sacked four times. Miami harassed him consistently, and Baltimore better have an answer for that defense this year. 

Per Rich Hribar’s Worksheet, when these teams met in Week 10 last year, they blitzed Jackson on a career-high 60% of his dropbacks.   

The Jets blitzed Lamar just five times last week. But the problem? They got pressure on 60% of blitzes, which ranked No. 1 in the NFL.   

The Dolphins got in some practice last week, blitzing Mac Jones on 30% of his dropbacks (11th-highest rate). 

On the other side of the ball, there are still concerns with the Dolphins’ offensive line based on what emerged vs. the Patriots. 

On dropbacks that New England DID NOT BLITZ, they got pressure 43% of the time. That ranked No. 1 in the NFL.   

For context, the best defense in the NFL last year was at 35% on the season, and the average was 28%. 

And when the Patriots DID BLITZ, they got pressure at an equal 43% rate.   

As a result, no quarterback was under pressure more often last week than Tua Tagovailoa.

Which is quite problematic when going up against a more talented defense of the Ravens. 

In terms of general offensive efficiency: 

The Dolphins had just one offensive touchdown against the Patriots, and it came on a fourth-and-7 at the New England 42 with 24 seconds left in the first half. 

Miami’s second-half drives:   

8 yards and punt 
50 yards and FG 
9 yards and punt 
9 yards and punt 
47 yards, kneels to end the game 

Meanwhile, the Ravens had a whopping 12 drives on Sunday vs. the Jets. 

Only two of 12 drives gained 35-plus yards. 

Only three of 12 drives gained more than one first down. 

And only one of 10 drives that started in Ravens territory made it out of Ravens territory. 

These numbers are SHOCKINGLY bad. 

This is why the Ravens led just 3-0 with four minutes left in the first half. The offense was simply unproductive in every which way possible. 

So while it looked AWESOME that Lamar Jackson threw three touchdowns after not getting the contract he deserved, and the perception was incredible, this was a bad Ravens offensive output. 

And while it looked AWESOME that Mike McDaniel won his first game of his career and soundly defeated the nemesis Patriots 20-7, this was anything but a solid Dolphins offensive performance. The team had 18 first downs and was forced into 14 third-down attempts. Overall, 22% of the Dolphins’ offensive plays were third downs, which ranked fifth-worst in the NFL last week. And only 21% of their early-down plays gained first downs, which ranked ninth-worst in the NFL. 

I’m interested to see which team turns it around offensively first Sunday. 

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