Ravens-Bucs: Lamar Jackson tosses 5 TD passes, Baltimore reels off 34 straight points in victory over Tampa Bay

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Lamar Jackson tied his own Ravens record with five touchdown passes on Monday. (Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images)

Through one quarter Monday night, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers held their own and opened up a 10-0 lead against the Baltimore Ravens.

Ultimately — as it has throughout the season — Baltimore’s offense proved inevitable. The Ravens closed the first half with a 17-0 run. They then opened the floodgates after halftime to secure a 41-31 win in a Monday night showdown of division-leading teams that started the season 4-2.

By the time Tampa Bay scored again in the fourth quarter, Baltimore had reeled off 34 unanswered points.

It was another offensive clinic by the Ravens in a season filled with them. Again, Lamar Jackson was the star on a night when he threw five touchdown passes, tying his Ravens record. It added up to another strong entry in Jackson’s campaign for a third NFL MVP award in six seasons.

After two sacks of Jackson derailed Baltimore’s opening possession, the Ravens struck quickly on their second. They needed just six plays and 2:33 to move 70 yards and cap the drive with a 9-yard touchdown pass from Jackson to Mark Andrews. The score cut Baltimore’s deficit to 10-7.

Baltimore’s next possession took just four plays and 1:47 off the clock to drive 80 yards and find the end zone. Jackson set up the score with a 59-yard pass on the run to Rashod Bateman after escaping the Tampa Bay pass rush.

Two plays and a penalty later, Justice Hill ran the ball in on a screen pass from Jackson for an 18-yard touchdown to give the Ravens a 14-10 lead.

A pair of Justin Tucker field goals bookended halftime before the Ravens found the end zone again on their second drive of the third quarter. They did it on four plays in 57 seconds for 55 yards. The star again was a deep ball from Jackson to Bateman. This time, Jackson unleashed a 49-yard laser on second-and-17 that Bateman caught in stride after breaking the top off the Tampa Bay secondary.

The touchdown pass was Jackson’s third of the night and extended the Ravens’ lead to 27-10.

At this point, Baltimore had done its damage without much usage from Derrick Henry. The NFL’s leader in rushing yards and rushing touchdowns carried the ball just four times for 23 yards before halftime. He was fresh for the second half.

On the first play of Baltimore’s next possession, Jackson handed off to Henry inside the Ravens’ 10-yard line. Henry broke free to the left sideline and rumbled 81 yards before being tackled at the Tampa Bay 11-yard line.

Four plays later, Jackson found Andrews again for their second touchdown connection of the night. The score ballooned Baltimore’s lead to 34-10 and all but iced the game with 2:53 remaining in the third quarter. The stats on this drive: five plays for 92 yards in 2:05.

The Ravens weren’t perfect down the stretch as they allowed three Bucs touchdowns in the final quarter. A Jackson fumble set up Tampa Bay’s first touchdown of the second half to cut Baltimore’s lead to 34-18 early in the fourth quarter. Baltimore then found the end zone again on a drive that ended with a Jackson touchdown pass to Derrick Henry.

The Bucs answered with another touchdown and then another after a successful onside kick to cut the Ravens’ once 24-point lead to 41-31.

Baltimore recovered Tampa Bay’s next onside kick and didn’t allow the Bucs to score again.

Jackson finished the night completing 17 of 22 passes for 281 yards with five touchdowns. Henry ran 15 times for 169 yards and added a 13-yard touchdown catch.

Andrews caught four passes for 41 yards and two scores. Bateman tallied four catches for 121 yards and a touchdown. The Ravens posted 508 yards of total offense and averaged 9.4 yards per play.

Baker Mayfield completed 31 of 45 passes for 370 yards with three touchdowns in leading Tampa Bay’s comeback effort. But two first-half interceptions helped spark the Baltimore run.

A rough night for the Bucs on the scoreboard was made even more difficult by two injuries to critical players. Leading receiver Mike Evans left in the first half with a hamstring injury.

Then, with less than a minute remaining, Tampa’s No. 2 receiver Chris Godwin sustained what head coach Todd Bowles indicated was a dislocated ankle in garbage time. He left the field on a cart with 43 seconds remaining and his left leg in an air cast.

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