EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- The Baltimore Ravens starred in this version of "Hard Knocks," punishing the New York Jets with plenty of them.

The Jets intrigued audiences in the preseason with their no-holds-barred, behind-the-scenes TV show, but it was the Ravens who grabbed the spotlight Monday night with a 10-9 victory. They held New York to 176 yards, six first downs, allowed Mark Sanchez just 74 yards passing and kept Rex Ryan's crew out of the end zone.

"Anytime you challenge a warrior, a warrior is always going to respond," Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis said.

For those urging the Jets to put up or shut up, well, it was Baltimore that produced most of the highlights in a sloppy opener of New York's new home. The $1.6 billion New Meadowlands Stadium rocked with J-E-T-S chants, then the Ravens rocked Ryan's defense with enough big plays to silence the crowd of 78,127 -- if not the talkative coach and his players.

"They beat us in every statistical category there is except turnovers," Ryan said.

And not even a 3-1 edge in that department could help the Jets.

"It became personal when the schedule came out," Lewis added. "We knew the tradition and the respect that Rex wanted to bring to the Jets. The bottom line is: Let's just play football. I tip my hat to my team."

Billy Cundiff's 25-yard field goal in the third quarter provided the winning points, with Anquan Boldin, Baltimore's main offseason acquisition, gaining 65 yards on two passes against first-round draft pick Kyle Wilson. Boldin made the kind of impact the Ravens sought with seven receptions overall for 110 yards, at times toying with the Jets' vaunted secondary.

So did tight end Todd Heap, who caught six passes from a cool Joe Flacco for 72 yards.

"I'm excited about our weapons," coach John Harbaugh said. "We have guys all the way across the board that Joe can go to. Joe knows how to find them."

The beginning was fiery, as expected, with Ray Rice and Shaun Ellis woofing at each other before kickoff. But it turned into a slopfest, as many of the openers were this weekend, with the Jets looking particularly undisciplined by drawing 14 penalties for 125 yards. They also were 1 for 11 on third downs.

New York's six first downs tied a franchise-low set in 1976.