OWINGS MILLS, Md. -- The Baltimore Ravens figured their miserable 2015 season was merely an aberration.Instead, it appears to be the start of a trend.Plagued by the same problems they experienced last season -- injuries, inexplicable mistakes and close defeats -- the Ravens are stumbling through their worst stretch since coach John Harbaugh arrived in 2008.A 24-16 loss to the struggling New York Jets last weekend ended a winless October for the Ravens (3-4), who entered bye week with their first four-game losing streak since the days of Brian Billick.Under Harbaugh, Baltimore has been a perennial contender. Last season, however, the Ravens finished 5-11, their first losing record in eight years.The reason appeared obvious: Season-ending injuries to stars Joe Flacco, Terrell Suggs, Steve Smith and Justin Forsett contributed to eight defeats by eight points or fewer, along with a minus-14 turnover differential.After assessing the damage, owner Steve Bisciotti expressed confidence the team would improve.I have a lot of faith that well get it straightened out, he said. I hope we dont have as many injuries and I hope we (create) a whole lot more turnovers. I think those kind of differences would get us back to where we want to be.Just like last season, the injury problems began this season in the summer.In 2015, top draft pick Breshad Perriman sustained what would be a season-ending knee injury on the first day of training camp. Last August, tight end Benjamin Watson had his season end with a torn Achilles tendon.Still, with Flacco, Suggs, Smith and Forsett healthy again, the Ravens bolted to a 3-0 start. Each game was close, and on every occasion Baltimore made the decisive plays in the closing minutes.Then came October. Four losses, each by no more than eight points.In the wake of a perfect September, Forsett was cut, Smith was downed by a sprained ankle, Suggs tore his triceps and Flacco played through a shoulder injury.Left tackle Ronnie Stanley (foot injury) missed the entire month, and Pro Bowl guard Marshal Yanda (shoulder) sat out the past two games after playing 53 in a row.Two interceptions and a lost fumble proved pivotal against the Jets. All three turnovers occurred in the second half, including a game-changing fumble by Timmy Jernigan while he foolishly attempted to run from the end zone with a Jets fumble.Although the Ravens didnt have Suggs against the Jets and sack specialist Elvis Dumervil has played only two games -- ineffectively -- because of a foot injury, the defense has been sound.Problem is, the Ravens cant score touchdowns. Harbaugh fired offensive coordinator Marc Trestman after a 16-10 loss to the Redskins and handed the job to quarterbacks coach Marty Mornhinweg, but the Ravens scored only two TDs offensively in their past two games.Part of the problem can be attributed to the absence of Stanley and Yanda, but thats not the extent of it. Untimely holding penalties, a poor running game and inconsistency at quarterback are all factors.Right now, we just have one guy here and there doing something that is a little bit off -- myself included -- and it halts a whole drive, Flacco said.When that happens throughout the course of the game and you have a good amount of those, it leads to what we have been dealing with, which is not putting any points on the board.The Ravens rank 26th in yards rushing and 25th in points scored. Flacco is 42nd among quarterbacks with 6 yards per attempt and has six interceptions compared to five touchdown throws. But Harbaugh remains steadfast in his support of the 2012 Super Bowl MVP.On offense, hes the key to the whole thing, Harbaugh said. He can do all of the things we need to do. We need to make sure that we give him a chance to do that. We need to protect him. We need to run routes. We need to create confidence in our passing game. We need to run the ball well.Thats quite a list. Yet, if the Ravens heal during their bye, perhaps they can regroup.After all, Pittsburgh leads the AFC North by only a game and still doesnt know when quarterback Ben Roethlisberger will be back from knee surgery.We can accomplish everything we want to accomplish, Harbaugh said. Thats the thing thats exciting.---AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org and http://twitter.com/AP-NFLFake NBA Jerseys 2019 .com) - Christian Ponder will get another chance to prove himself for the Minnesota Vikings, with head coach Leslie Frazier announcing Wednesday that the struggling quarterback will start this weekends game against the Green Bay Packers. Fake Nike NBA Jerseys . Supported by three-run homers from Jayson Werth and Wilson Ramos, the young right-hander went seven strong innings in the Washington Nationals 8-4 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Friday night. http://www.fakenbajerseys.com/ . -- Aldon Smith believes he is on the path to being sober for good. Fake NBA Jerseys China . Woodson said during a radio interview Thursday that the Knicks Carmelo Anthony doesnt get the same calls as other superstars. Wholesale Fake NBA Jerseys .875,000, avoiding arbitration. Clippards deal Monday means all eight Nationals players who filed for arbitration wound up settling before a hearing. As we enter the 2016 regular season, we asked our NFL Nation reporters to analyze the job security of the 32 NFL head coaches, with each receiving a rating of 1 to 5.Heres the scale each coach was rated on:5: Hot seat -- Out if the season is a big disappointment. 4: Warm seat -- Not safe if the season is a disappointment. 3: Lukewarm seat -- Not under fire, but not disaster-proof. 2: Cool seat -- Safe barring a total disaster. 1: Cold seat -- No way hell get fired.Rating: 5 = Hot seatDetroit LionsJim Caldwell: 5Caldwell seems to have a good relationship with new general manager Bob Quinn, but this is still Quinns first year as a GM. If Caldwell doesnt produce on the field, Quinn could decide to look for his own guy to replace Caldwell. While Caldwell is beloved by Lions players and is genuinely a good man, he needs to show the franchise is headed in the right direction this season. Otherwise, Quinn might look to go another way. -- Michael RothsteinJacksonville JaguarsGus Bradley: 5Owner Shad Khan is expecting victories in Season 4 of the rebuild. While he hasnt put an exact number on it, its not a stretch to think Bradley needs to win eight or more games -- and have the Jaguars in contention in the AFC South -- to keep his job. The Jaguars are just 3-20 under Bradley in games played in September and October, so a good start in 2016 is imperative. Obviously injuries, especially to QB Blake Bortles, can change things, but that may be the only acceptable excuse for a poor season. -- Mike DiRoccoSan Diego ChargersMike McCoy: 5After a 4-12 season that included going winless against the AFC West, McCoys seat is scorching. With the pressure of a stadium vote in November, the Spanos family could make a midseason change if the Chargers struggle to start the season. The effort and enthusiasm of his team has been better during training camp, but that has to translate into wins for McCoy to keep his job in 2016. -- Eric D. WilliamsRating: 4 = Warm seatBuffalo BillsRex Ryan: 4Speculation has been rampant since the end of last season about Ryans future in Buffalo after his 8-8 record fell short of expectations in Year 1. Even franchise icon Jim Kelly publicly stated that Ryan would likely be fired if he missed the playoffs in 2016. But Ryans job security might actually be helped by injuries to his first two draft picks, Shaq Lawson and Reggie Ragland, giving Ryan an opportunity to sell ownership on having a chance to coach his healthy, hand-picked defensive prospects in 2017. -- Mike RodakLos Angeles RamsJeff Fisher: 4The Rams brass wants to sign Fisher to an extension so that the longtime coach doesnt go into this season with an expiring contract. That obviously buys Fisher some time, but the fact remains that Fishers teams have finished below .500 in each of his four prior seasons with the Rams. And the pressure is greater now, with the team moving to Los Angeles and trading up to take Jared Goff with the No. 1 overall pick. -- Alden GonzalezRating: 3 = Lukewarm seatDallas CowboysJason Garrett: 3Garrett is 40-40 since becoming the Cowboys full-time head coach, and he has just one playoff appearance. He has attempted to rebuild the Cowboys on the fly and has had some success, but he needs to win and he will have to do it without Tony Romo for a few games. Last seasons 4-12 finish can be excused, but Garrett wont be able to use a prolonged Romo absence as the reason why the Cowboys didnt win in 2016. Owner Jerry Jones has been patient with Garrett, but if the Cowboys flounder this season, that patience could run out, even with three years remaining on Garretts deal. -- Todd ArcherIndianapolis ColtsChuck Pagano: 3Pagano has led the Colts to the playoffs in three of his four seasons. Owner Jim Irsay gave Pagano a contract extension last January, but his job isnt safe by simply leading the Colts to AFC South titles. Irsay didnt give quarterback Andrew Luck a $140 million contract to just win the division. He expects this team to be among the NFLs elite teams sooner rather than later. -- Mike WellsRating: 2 = Cool seatBaltimore RavensJohn Harbaugh: 2Harbaugh is the sixth-winningest active coach (.608 win percentage), and he has the second-most playoff victories (10) by an NFL coach in his first eight seasons. He also won Super Bowl XLVII. That track record combined with the organizations long history of continuity (only three head coaches in a 21-year existence) says Harbaugh is safe. There have been a few ruts recently. The Ravens havent made the playoffs in two of the past three seasons. But it would take another disastrous season in 2016 for Harbaugh to feel any heat. -- Jamison HensleyChicago BearsJohn Fox: 2The Bears handed Fox way too much power and control to fire him after two seasons. Unless Fox retires, which would come as a total shock, he probably coaches the Bears until at least 2018. It will be interesting, though, to see what happens if the Bears regress in the fall. Fox received a free pass after going 6-10 last season, but people wont be so patient the second time around. Fox doesnt have to show the same kind of improvement in Year 2 that he did in Carolina and Denver, but the Bears are expected to hover around the .500 mark. Anything less will be a major disappointment. -- Jeff DickersonCincinnati BengalsMarvin Lewis: 2Lewis is 0-7 in the playoffs, and the Bengals melted down against the Steelers in the wild-card round last season. But Bengals owner Mike Brown has continued to stand by Lewis over the years, and that shouldnt change in 2016. Lewis, the longest-tenured NFL coach behind Bill Belichick, is safe unless the Bengals have a total meltdown this season, and even then, I still would be skeptical they make any change. Its just not how the Bengals operate. -- Katherine TerrellGreen Bay PackersMike McCarthy: 2How can a coach who has led his team to seven straight playoff appearances be anything other than a 1? Well, it has been five years since the last Super Bowl appearance, the past few years have featured playoff meltdowns and Aaron Rodgers window of opportunity for another title is slowly starting to close. Still, the Packers management likes McCarthys consistency. As team president Mark Murphy regularly says, you cant win it if youre not in it. -- Rob DemovskyHouston TexansBill OBrien: 2The Texans would have to have a disastrous season and perform way below the level they are capable of for OBrien to be in danger of losing his job. OBrien is 18-14 through his first two seasons as an NFL head coach and works for a forgiving owner in Bob McNair. I think there is a better chance OBrien signs an extension after the season. -- Sarah BarshopNew Orleans SaintsSean Payton: 2Sure, a 2 ranking is pretty generous for a coach coming off back-to-back 7-9 seasons. But so was the five-year contract the Saints just handed Payton for more than $9 million per year. Eventually, they will need to see better results. But Payton led this franchise to its only Super Bowl win, and they continue to have faith in him as the best man to oversee their next rebuilding effort. -- Mike TriplettNew York JetsTodd Bowles: 2Bowles won 10 games as a first-year coach, earning the respect of the locker room. The arrow is pointed up, so it would take an utter collapse -- and then some -- for Bowles to get fired, even though this is a win-now team that hasnt made the playoffs since 2010. -- Rich CiminiOakland RaidersJack Del Rio: 2In just his second year, Del Rio has transformed the Raiders from a unit hoping to get over the hump to one expecting to make a playoff run. Of course, that should be the mantra of every coach. But as fullback Marcel Reece?put it, Del Rio, with his staff heavy on former players, has changed the culture in Silver and Blackdom, and current players have totally bought in. Only a total disaster would warm the seat under Del Rio, who grew up in the shadow of the Oakland Coliseum as a fan of the Raiders in the late 1970s. -- Paul GutierrezPhiladelphia EaglesDoug Pederson: 2Questions persist as to whether Pederson is ready to effectively lead an NFL team. Barring a total disaster, though, you would think owner Jeffrey Lurie would give Pederson more than a season to prove his worth. Still without a Super Bowl trophy on the shelf, Lurie might not be as patient as he was when hee bought the team back in 1994.dddddddddddd. But a reactionary move like firing a coach after one year would be out of character. -- Tim McManusSan Francisco 49ersChip Kelly: 2Kelly comes to the 49ers from Philadelphia, where his every move was scrutinized, but he still won more games than he lost. He also is walking into a situation in which San Francisco just fired Jim Tomsula after one year. Even if the Niners struggle this season, its hard to imagine a scenario in which they would want to have another coach for just one year. That type of instability would only delay the rebuilding process and force them to start from scratch again. If changes are made after a rough season, expect the attention to be placed on the front office this time. -- Nick WagonerTampa Bay BuccaneersDirk Koetter: 2The Bucs were so encouraged by what they saw from Koetters offense last season that they promoted him to head coach and let go of Lovie Smith. Because its his first year, his seat is cool, but because the past two head coaches got only two years before they were fired, its clear that ownership doesnt have a lot of patience. That is why Koetter gets a 2 instead of a 1. -- Jenna LaineTennessee TitansMike Mularkey: 2General manager Jon Robinson has bonded with Mularkey, and the two are completely aligned. Barring a disaster for the coach and his staff in their first season, Robinson would likely see a change as a setback that would cost the franchise valuable developmental time. The desire is big for continuity from Robinson and controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk. -- Paul KuharskyWashington RedskinsJay Gruden: 2Few seats have really ever been cold under owner Dan Snyder, but coming off a six-win improvement and an NFC East title, Gruden is in a good position entering his third season. Had last season unfolded differently -- if Kirk Cousins hadnt developed; if they hadnt won big -- the seat would have been hot in 2016. But it did unfold well and the Redskins are slowly building a good team. Grudens offense has taken advantage of the talent in the passing game to build a potentially explosive attack. So barring a total collapse, Gruden will return in 2017. -- John KeimRating: 1 = Cold seatArizona CardinalsBruce Arians: 1Arians is on the ice cold seat, and not just because hes the coolest coach in the NFL. Arians has won 34 games in three years, taking the Cardinals to the playoffs in the past two seasons, including a berth in the NFC Championship Game last season. He also changed the culture of what was once a chronically losing franchise. If theres any pressure, its on Arians to keep winning. The need to get to the Super Bowl and win a title will start to grow with every winning season. -- Josh WeinfussAtlanta FalconsDan Quinn: 1Quinn enters his second year with higher expectations, but I dont see his job being in jeopardy unless the Falcons totally bomb and have another four-win season like in 2013. Owner Arthur Blank said this about Quinn after the team imploded last season: Ive got complete confidence in Dan. Hes going to be a great head coach for us for many years. The guy on the hot seat is general manager Thomas Dimitroff, who is almost certain to go if the Falcons miss the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season. -- Vaughn McClureCarolina PanthersRon Rivera: 1If a zero was available, that would be it for Rivera. He has won the NFL Coach of the Year award twice in the past three years. He has taken the Panthers to the Super Bowl. He has a strong nucleus of Cam Newton, Luke Kuechly, Greg Olsen and Thomas Davis that should keep him winning for several years. Rivera hasnt been on the hot seat since team owner Jerry Richardson contemplated pulling the trigger during a 1-3 start to the 2013 season after consecutive 6-10 and 7-9 records. -- David NewtonCleveland BrownsHue Jackson: 1Few coaches are safer in the NFL than Jackson, thus he gets a rating lower than the lowest. The Browns brought in Jackson amidst much fanfare, and he has brought energy and excitement to the job. After hiring and firing coaches with regularity, the last thing Jimmy Haslam will do is give Jackson one year as coach. Hes the most secure coach in any level of football. -- Pat McManamonDenver BroncosGary Kubiak: 1Kubiaks seat is as cool as his Super Bowl ring. Kubiak navigated weekly quarterback drama in 2015, when Peyton Manning was recovering from a foot injury. The coach also dealt with plenty of player injuries, and in his first year with the Broncos, the team won the third Super Bowl in the franchises history. Hes a former Broncos player, former long-time Broncos assistant coach and now head coach. Hes everything Pat Bowlen always wanted in his tenure as the teams owner -- a guy invested in the Broncos, a guy who cares about the Broncos, coaching the Broncos. Kubiak still has one of the leagues elite defenses at his disposal and fully expects to be in the playoff conversation again. -- Jeff LegwoldKansas City ChiefsAndy Reid: 1While Reid hasnt been wildly successful with the Chiefs, success is a relative term in Kansas City. The Chiefs won four games or fewer in four of the six seasons before his arrival, so his record of two wild-card playoff appearances and a postseason victory in his three years looks good by comparison. Chairman Clark Hunt appreciates the stability Reid brings to the Chiefs. They had three head coaches in the five seasons before hiring Reid in 2013. -- Adam TeicherMiami DolphinsAdam Gase: 1Gase, who was hired in January, is the Dolphins third head coach in six seasons. But Gase will be given every opportunity to put together a winning program. There are no playoff expectations for Miami this year, so Gase is playing with house money in his first season. The pressure will go up in Gases second and third year. -- James WalkerMinnesota VikingsMike Zimmer: 1Zimmer was signed through 2017, but the Vikings gave him an extension before training camp, reportedly adding two years to his original deal. The organization loves the edge Zimmer has brought to the team, particularly to the Vikings defense, and his no-nonsense style has been a hit with both players and fans. His future is tied to the quarterback situation, which was thrown out of order after Teddy Bridgewaters knee injury, but at the moment, Zimmers stock couldnt be much higher in Minnesota. -- Ben GoesslingNew England PatriotsBill Belichick: 1Belichick, 64, is the second-oldest head coach in the NFL, but he remains one of the leagues most secure in his position as he enters his 17th season. That makes him the longest-tenured head coach in the NFL, and for those who might be wondering why hes so safe, the shine of four Lombardi Trophies serves as the reminder. -- Mike ReissNew York GiantsBen McAdoo: 1McAdoo is entering his first year as head coach and working for one of the most patient ownership groups. Even though the Giants havent reached the playoffs in five years, McAdoo has some time to implement his system and develop a winner, especially with general manager Jerry Reese likely next in line to pay the consequences if theres no improvement. The Giants went 6-10 each of the past two seasons under Tom Coughlin, but they are expecting better from McAdoo in 2016. -- Jordan RaananPittsburgh SteelersMike Tomlin: 1Several coaches face pressure in 2016, but Tomlin is not one of them. The Steelers coach has never had a losing season since taking over the franchise in 2007. His .639 winning percentage is better than Bill Cowher or Chuck Noll. Tomlin is one of the safest coaches in all of football. -- Jeremy FowlerSeattle SeahawksPete Carroll: 1There may not be a colder seat in the NFL than Carrolls. He just signed a three-year extension this summer that will keep him in Seattle through 2019. The Seahawks have made it to at least the divisional round of the playoffs in four straight seasons. Theyve reached the Super Bowl twice during that time and won the title once. With Russell Wilson being only 27 years old and the defense having led the NFL in fewest points allowed for four straight seasons, Carrolls goal is to win at least one more Lombardi Trophy with the core of the roster in place. -- Sheil Kapadia ' ' '