1) John Harbaugh must've been left with no choice. The Baltimore Ravens coach referenced one of his well-worn sayings -- "WIN: What's important now," -- in discussing former offensive coordinator Cam Cameron's dismissal on Monday. Know this: The decision had to be a tough one for Harbaugh personally. Cameron was a position coach for Harbaugh's brother, Jim (you might know of him) at Michigan, and worked with his dad in Ann Arbor. John and Cameron were also staff-mates at Indiana. So how did this situation reach the point of no return? My sense is that Cameron lost the players, which is generally the one thing that precipitates a move like this. Last week, Ravens running back Ray Rice told me he didn't think he got enough touches (13) against the Pittsburgh Steelers, saying that his "magic number" was 20-25. Two days later, at the end of regulation against the Redskins, Rice was visibly despondent when Baltimore chose to kneel rather than get aggressive. And quarterback Joe Flacco was sold on the idea that the Ravens would have more of an up-tempo, no-huddle look this year, to help get him and the offense in better rhythm, but that never really got off the ground, even with Jim Caldwell imported to push the concept along. Those are just a couple of examples; it seems lots of guys had gripes. This will give them one less place to point a finger and, the hope has to be, re-energize the group.