Baltimore Ravens (3-0): The Ravens rolled against Cleveland, not even a hitch in the giddyup. The Ravens offense also continued to impress – scoring 30 points in three consecutive games is not easy, even if two opponents were a bit weak. More importantly for the Ravens, their defense seemed to find some renewed confidence and swagger. It may have only been the Browns, but the team’s four interceptions are nothing to laugh about. Heading to New England this week, however, you can’t exactly expect the same kind of mistakes from Tom Brady as from Brady Quinn and Derek Anderson. Put enough pressure on him, however, and you can never be sure. Next Game: @ New England (2-1)

Cincinnati Bengals (2-1): The Bengals pulled the upset at home as predicted here (and many other places). It wasn’t pretty. It wasn’t even cute. For three quarters the Bengals were pretty well handled by the Steelers, and then the Bengals offense showed up and made some plays. But a win is a win, and the Bengals are second in the division. It’s hard to tell what to believe about the Bengals this season. Their defense was still stout against the Steelers, but the Steelers offense has struggled mightily this season. And the Bengals offense only came together at the end. What we do know is that with a re-energized Carson Palmer, they can be trouble. Next Game: @ Cleveland (0-3).

Pittsburgh Steelers (1-2): The Steelers lost back-to-back games for the first time since 2007 with their loss to Cincinnati on Sunday and are now two games in the hole to the Ravens for the division lead. It’s not entirely clear if this team is just struggling or if there’s something seriously wrong. The Steelers have been largely unsuccessful running the ball (Willie Parker’s 95 yards against the Bengals were mostly first half), Roethlisberger has been getting hit frequently and making mistakes, and the defense has shown weakness without Troy Polamalu. Jeff Reed missed yet another field goal. Things simply aren’t clicking in Pittsburgh. Things won’t get easier with San Diego coming to town, and still not Polamalu in the secondary. Next Game: vs. San Diego (2-1).

Cleveland Browns (0-3): The Browns look like the Browns… again. I’m not sure what the media is talking about when they say that Eric Mangini is “changing the personality” of the team, but I’m not seeing it. Mangini looks to have things just as sloppy as ever. His decision to pull Brady Quinn was just silly. The Browns defense was absolutely toothless against the Ravens. Things don’t get much easier for the Browns, they play the Bengals, Steelers, Packers and Bears before the bye. Their only chance at a win before that bye is in Buffalo, but even that is doubtful. Next Game: vs. Cincinnati (2-1).

Thumbs Up

Joe Flacco, Ravens. 347 yards, a touchdown, 71% completions. Flacco looked poised and unfazed by anything the Browns defense threw his way.

Kelley Washington, Ravens. Washington is tied for the team lead with 12 receptions, despite being the team’s third receiver.

Carson Palmer, Bengals. Palmer wasn’t spectacular against Pittsburgh, but he was effective when it mattered most.

Willie Parker, Steelers. Parker ran for almost 100 yards and caught two passes for 36 yards. He finally showed flashes of the “Fast”Willie Parker he used to be.

Thumbs Down

Steelers Defense and Ben Roethlisberger: Despite how nice the numbers might look, the Steelers signature has been playing close games and playing them perfectly. In Sunday’s game, neither of these units was anywhere close to perfect.

Derek Anderson, Browns. The one-time Pro Bowler may have been confused from his days with the Ravens.

Bengals Defense. The Bengals D was all the rave in recent weeks. And yet, that same defense let the Steelers walk all over them for nearly 400 yards and barely put a scratch on Roethlisberger.

Eric Mangini, Browns Coach. Has he put on weight?

Three Issues Upcoming…

How will Pittsburgh respond? Mike Tomlin hasn’t been in this position before. Most of the current Steelers roster probably isn’t used to this either. A losing record so early? Losing to the Bengals? It gets no easier with the Chargers coming to town. Philip Rivers decimated the Ravens, and the Steelers defense may not fair better without Polamalu. And the Steelers offense certainly has shown the ability to win a shoot out.

What will the Browns do at quarterback? Brady Quinn didn’t have much success in his first two games, but he hardly got a shot against the Ravens. Meanwhile, Derek Anderson seemed to give a spark to some of his offense, before turning the ball over three times. Both quarterbacks have to be suffering from shattered self-confidence, and based on his reputation, Eric Mangini isn’t the kind of coach that specializes in team unity or building players up.

Are the Bengals the Ravens biggest competition? The Bengals are likely to win this week against the Cleveland (we’d assume), but the Ravens have a rough game in New England. And then in Week 5 the division rivals meet. The Ravens certainly hope to still hold their one-game lead over the Bengals entering the head-to-head match-up, but seeing a pair of teams at 3-1 is not out of the question.