Harbaugh Bowl III: Brotherly love and another win for Johnâs Ravens
As the seconds ticked down on Monday nightâs victory over the Chargers, Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh wanted to remind his defense to block out the noise and distractions and not jump offside.
He repeatedly tapped his cupped hands to the sides of his head as if putting on imaginary earmuffs.
Funny, in the week leading up to the hyped-up Harbaugh Bowl â the third iteration of the NFLâs only brother-to-brother matchup of head coaches â the Ravens coach had to heed his own advice. He had to ignore all the outside chatter and focus on the task at hand.
âYeah, absolutely, it was kind of earmuffs in that sense, and I know it was for Jim too,â said John Harbaugh, who improved to 3-0 in games against his younger brother. âBecause in the end itâs meaningful, it matters. Itâs such an incredible thing. Iâm so proud of him. Itâs an amazing thing to look back at where we are, from where we came.
âWe had different paths, and we grew up in the same room. Weâve always lived our lives side by side. But thatâs not what the game is about. The game is about the players.â
The Chargers jumped to a 10-0 lead, but the defense allowed a season-high 212 yards rushing and the Ravens took advantage of second-half mistakes in a 30-23 win.
Despite the obvious love and respect the two have for each other, there was no brother-to-brother backing off, no ostensible sibling sympathy in Baltimoreâs 30-23 victory. Both John and Jim â whose teams very easily could meet in the playoffs in a couple months â were fully invested in the moment.
Thatâs why the Ravens went for it three times on fourth down, succeeding on all three, including once from their 16. Neither coach was taking his foot off the gas.
âThe overriding thing was who we were playing,â said John, 62, 15 months older than Jim. âYouâve just got to try to hang on to possessions as long as you can, because theyâre so good. ⌠Their offense is so challenging and so good, we just felt we were going to need it.â
As the game clock hit 0:00, photographers, camera operators and other media flooded from the four corners of the field to the midfield lightning bolt to capture the brotherly handshake. That was brief, with John and Jim exchanging a few friendly words and a quick hug before heading their separate ways.
If you didnât know what happened in the game, didnât know the final outcome, it would be hard to tell by the postgame media sessions which brother won and which lost. They were both subdued and chose their words carefully.
âItâs every week at this level, everybody pours an incredible amount of effort and everything they have into these games,â Jim said. âI was really pleased with our effort, valiant effort, and their side of the ball had valiant effort as well.â
Just as John has won all three games coaching against his brother â including a Super Bowl victory â quarterback Peyton Manning was 3-0 against his younger brother, Eli. And just as those ballyhooed matchups were excruciating for parents Archie and Olivia Manning, they are tortuous for Jack and Jackie Harbaugh.
The Harbaugh parents attended the first two games pitting their sons, but Monday â which happened to be their 63rd anniversary â they were in Florida, watching from the home of their daughter, Joanie, who is married to longtime college basketball coach Tom Crean.
Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh and his brother John, the Ravensâ coach, can thank their parents, who have been married 63 years, for a wealth of memories.
Both brothers reached out to their parents before the game.
âI wished them a happy anniversary, and I know Jim did the same,â John said. âJim and I texted before the game a little bit. Just so grateful for our parents. When youâre blessed enough to have parents who get along so well, love each other, have been married 63 years, it kind of gives you an idea how itâs supposed to work. Thatâs the gift theyâve given all three of us.
âI know theyâre 100% happy and 100% disappointed at the same time. If you can imagine that, thatâs how they feel right now.â
The Ravens improved to 8-4 with the win, giving them a better record than the 7-4 Chargers and a significant leg up on them in the race for the postseason. There was no gloating from John about that. He opened his news conference by calling his younger brother âthe best coach in the National Football League with how hard they play and what they did.â
He added: âTheyâre going to win a lot more football games this year, and theyâre going to be a major factor in the playoffs.â
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Back when they were kids, sharing a bedroom and occasionally trading punches, the ultra-competitive brothers made an agreement. They divided their room in two.
âJohn came up with this thing where he put a piece of athletic tape across the floor of the room we shared,â Jim, then coach of the San Francisco 49ers, told the Los Angeles Times in 2011. âHe proclaimed that I wasnât allowed to come on his side of the tape, and he wasnât allowed to come on my side.â
Jim agreed to the plan, only later to realize most of the prime items â a record player, radio, desk and alarm clock â were on his brotherâs side of the room. Jim had the closet where they kept their clothes and the bedroom door on his side, yet John was allowed to use those as necessary.
âSo the deal was the deal,â Jim said. âBut there are those 10 or 12 defining moments in your life, and that was one of them. I learned a valuable lesson the hard way: You negotiate a good deal up front.â
As for the tale of the tape now? Itâs more loving but still lopsided.
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