The first seed Baltimore Ravens face the sixth seed Tennessee Titans in the Divisional Round as John Harbaugh's team looks to advance to the AFC Championship for the first time since the 2012-2013 season.

Despite Tennessee's upset win over the New England Patriots in the Wild Card Round, their playoff run will end against Baltimore. The Ravens are too dominant to exit the playoffs this early.

Here are four reasons why.

4. Coaching

Mike Vrabel played in plenty of playoff games during his career as a linebacker. However, there's a significant difference between playing and coaching. There are plenty of great players who failed as coaches and vice versa, and Vrabel lacks playoff experience as a coach.

At 9-7, Vrabel and the Titans narrowly missed the playoffs last season, which was Vrabel's first as a head coach. While he's enjoying the sensation of beating his old coach, Bill Belichick, last week, the Titans are facing yet another fantastic coach in the Divisional Round.

In his 12 seasons with the Ravens, Harbaugh is 10-6 in the playoffs and won Super Bowl XLVII. Harbaugh oversaw just one losing season throughout his head coaching career, and his regular season record is 118-74. Considering all he did for Lamar Jackson this season, Harbaugh should be the coach of the year.

Vrabel could always surprise Harbaugh the way he surprised Belichick, but two wins in a row seem unlikely.

3. Baltimore can control the clock too

Tennessee ran the ball 40 times against the Patriots. It's no surprise their game plan revolves around the league's leading rusher, Derrick Henry. However, the Ravens command an equally impressive ground game.

During the regular season, Baltimore rushed for 206 yards per game. That put the Ravens more than 60 yards ahead of the second-place team, the San Francisco 49ers. Tennessee finished third with 138.9 yards per game.

While Baltimore doesn't sport a single rusher as talented as Henry, the team built its rushing attack around several contributors. Both Jackson and Mark Ingram rushed for 1,000 yards during the regular season. Gus Edwards added 711 yards as the backup running back, and rookie Justice Hill ran for 225 yards.

The Titans possess and strong ground and pound style, but the Ravens are the real kings of the ground game.

2. Defense is the name of the game

No one disputes how powerful Henry is as a runner. Over Tennessee's final six regular season games, he ran for 149 yards per game. Then, he almost single-handily beat the Patriots by rushing for 182 yards during the Wild Card Round.

Baltimore can stop Henry's rampage. Their run defense ranked fifth during the regular season, allowing 93.4 rushing yards per game. Keep in mind, the Ravens faced Buffalo, Houston, San Francisco, and Seattle, all of which boast top-ten rushing offenses. Henry may possess unique talent, but Baltimore is ready to stop the mammoth in his tracks.

The Ravens can handle Ryan Tannehill's passing as well. Tannehill put together an impressive season once he took over for Marcus Mariota, but Baltimore's secondary is stacked.

The Associated Press selected Marlon Humphrey as a First-Team All-Pro this season. On the other side of the field, Marcus Peters made both the first and second All-Pro teams. Earl Thomas didn't make an All-Pro team, but he did earn his seventh Pro Bowl selection.

Even beyond those three premier players, the Ravens can rely on veteran defensive backs. Both Brandon Carr and Jimmy Smith have at least nine years of NFL experience. This is a deep secondary that the Titans are ill-equipped to challenge.

1. Lamar Jackson is unstoppable

The future MVP can hurt opponents in so many ways that it's almost unfair. Watching him run is like watching Chris Paul dribble against a middle school basketball team. Jackson puts defenders on skates to the point where they completely miss him.

People still overlook Jackson's ability as a passer too. During the regular season, he posted a passer rating over 100.0 in nine of his 15 appearances. He also threw five touchdowns in three different games. Even in games where defenses held him below 70 rushing yards, Jackson went 4-2.

Tennessee possesses a bottom ten pass defense and the 12th ranked run defense. Neither aspect of the defense provides the Titans with a reliable counter to Jackson, who led Baltimore's offense to the second-most yards per game (407.6) in 2019.

Fans are stuck on Tennessee's performance and their upset win against the Patriots, but Jackson will shock them back to reality this weekend.