John Harbaugh defends decision to challenge Bengals' short completion in first quarter

The Bengals were inside the 5-yard line on the first possession of Thursday night's game when Joe Burrow completed a short pass to Mike Gesicki, and Ravens coach John Harbaugh threw his challenge flag.

John Harbaugh defends decision to challenge Bengals' short completion in first quarter

The Bengals were inside the 5-yard line on the first possession of Thursday night's game when Joe Burrow completed a short pass to Mike Gesicki, and Ravens coach John Harbaugh threw his challenge flag.

To most people watching the game, the question was obvious: Why did Harbaugh think he was going to win a challenge of a pass that looked complete, and why would he even bother to challenge a gain of only a couple yards?

Harbaugh lost the challenge and cost his team a timeout, but after the game he defended his decision, saying every yard matters when the offense is that close to the goal line, and that moving the Bengals back a couple yards would have forced them to pass, not run, on the next play.

"In the low red zone, the difference between defending the 2-yard line and the 4-yard line is massive," Harbaugh said. "There's a big difference between the 2 and the 4, and we're trying to force a field goal there, so it felt like it was worth the cost if you win it. If you don't win it, it becomes a loss. So I'm disappointed we didn't win it, but I think the cost-benefit in that situation, defending the 4 is different because they're not going to run it in there. They've got a run-pass option, you've got to play man, you've got to pack the box at the 2-yard line, you get picked and all those things, it's a little bit tougher down there."

It was a decision most viewers disagreed with, but Harbaugh clearly had a thought process behind it. The Bengals ultimately scored on the possession after a Ravens defensive penalty handed them an automatic first down, but Harbaugh isn't second-guessing himself on that challenge.