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Beat down: Interceptions hurt Texans in loss

HOUSTON - Sage Rosenfels didn’t blow a lead on Sunday. He made so many mistakes this time the Texans were never ahead.

Rosenfels, who squandered a 17-point, fourth-quarter lead in his last start, threw four interceptions and the Baltimore Ravens got a 41-13 win over the Houston Texans.

Filling in for the injured Matt Schaub, Rosenfels’ first interception came in the end zone in the first quarter.

Baltimore got a safety because of rookie Duane Brown’s end zone holding penalty that came while trying to keep Rosenfels from being sacked when he held the ball too long. The same fans that chanted his name when Schaub would struggle, booed him most of the day Sunday.

“I did the best I could (but) I made too many mistakes,” Rosenfels said. “I blame myself for the mistakes I made, but I can’t do it all. I’m probably trying to be too aggressive and trying to make too many things happen.”

Ravens rookie Joe Flacco was 15-of-23 for 185 yards and threw touchdowns to Yamon Figurs and Todd Heap, keeping his composure despite being under heavy pressure most of the day.

“He doesn’t get flustered,” said Ravens coach John Harbaugh. “Momentum swings don’t affect him too much. He comes out and plays the next series and takes care of business. That’s the kind of person he is. He played well when he had to.”

Willis McGahee returned after missing last week with an ankle injury to run for 112 yards and two touchdowns. His second score came on a 4-yard run in the fourth quarter set up by an interception by Samari Rolle.

This game was supposed to be played Sept. 14, but was postponed because of Hurricane Ike and both teams had their byes that weekend instead.

“They took our bye week, so we had to come out there and show ‘em that they can throw obstacles at us and we’ll just try to overcome them,” McGahee said. “We’re trying to be in the playoffs this year.”

With their sixth victory, the Ravens (6-3) have eclipsed last season’s win total.

The Ravens have scored at least 27 points in a team-record four consecutive games. Sunday was the first time they’ve scored more than 40 points on the road since 1999.

“I never would have thought they would put 40 points on us,” Texans linebacker DeMeco Ryans said. “It’s not good for our defense at all. It’s not at all how we expect to play. We feel like we’re a lot better defense than we showed today.”

Ray Lewis had two interceptions, one in the third quarter and the second leading to Heap’s second touchdown. Troy Smith threw that 14-yard pass to make it 34-13 with about seven minutes left.

The Texans also struggled to overcome their penalties and finished with 10 for 76 yards.

“They got a lot of yardage and the penalties helped them out big-time and it hurt us,” linebacker Ryans said.”

Lewis intercepted Rosenfels with about six minutes left in the third quarter and returned it 29 yards. The Ravens couldn’t convert and Houston got the ball back after Matt Stover missed a 50-yard field goal attempt.

The Texans didn’t waste any time with Rosenfels finding Kevin Walter on a 60-yard touchdown pass on the next play to make it 19-13 late in the third.

But the Texans couldn’t do anything right after that, allowing Baltimore to capitalize on Rosenfels’ errors and score 22 unanswered points.

“We just fell apart at a certain point in the football game,” Texans coach Gary Kubiak said. “We played a tough football game against a good team until late in the third quarter and then we just self-destructed.”

McGahee stretched Baltimore’s lead to 19-6 early in the third quarter with a 1-yard touchdown run. That score was set up when Houston’s Morlon Greenwood was flagged for pass interference in the end zone.

“They were just trying not to give us big plays and making us work for our stuff and hoping we make a mistake and unfortunately we do,” Kubiak said.

Figurs gave Baltimore an early lead on a 43-yard touchdown catch in the first quarter. The Ravens were facing third-and-13 when Flacco found a wide open Figurs for his first career touchdown.

Rookie Steven Hauschka’s 54-yard field goal put Baltimore ahead 12-6 at halftime. It was the first field goal attempt of his NFL career and the second longest in Ravens history and at Reliant Stadium.

What looked like a touchdown on a 58-yard catch and run by Steve Slaton was brought back because of a holding penalty on tight end Owen Daniels in the second quarter. Jacoby Jones caught a career-high 45-yard pass on the next play to get Houston to the 5.

The Texans failed to move the ball after that and settled for a 23-yard field goal by Kris Brown to make it 7-3 midway through the second quarter. Brown also had a 48-yard field goal just before halftime.

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