Tag Archive | "time"

Titans ready to install new defense

NASHVILLE — Jerry Gray finally is about to install his own defensive schemes with the Tennessee Titans.

Thanks to the NFL lockout last year, Gray had no offseason as the new defensive coordinator to make changes. So Gray said Thursday he just trimmed the fat out of what the Titans had used the year before and managed to squeeze out a unit that ranked eighth in the league in fewest points allowed.

Now he’s making sure to tailor his scheme to new players like end Kamerion Wimbley and returning players like linebacker Akeem Ayers. He also has plenty of competition to replace Cortland Finnegan at cornerback.

What exactly does he have in store? Gray’s not saying, though getting to the quarterback is a priority after a measly 28 sacks in 2011.

“We know we got things to work on,” Ayers said. “We know we didn’t do our best job at getting to the quarterback and everybody knows that. The guy, the d-linemen, linebackers who rush the quarterback we know that we’ve got to do better at that. So that’s just motivation to work harder this offseason.”

Gray and a few Titans spoke Thursday after their latest session in the offseason program. Nobody has seen just what Gray has in store for them yet because they are all working on their individual technique and conditioning still. The team’s first organized team session is the last week of May.

“Last year throughout the season certain things he would say that we couldn’t run just yet,” cornerback Jason McCourty said. “We had to get an offseason to really teach it so we can master it before we go out on Sundays and get a chance to run it. So I’m excited about that, just to see the different nuances he’s going to add to the defense and let guys use their athletic ability and make plays.”

Gray plans to add a lot, using some schemes he used in Buffalo and in Washington.

“So we’re kind of tailoring this defense to the players we have, not to what we had, which was under the gun, last year,” Gray said.

The Titans’ biggest offseason addition came with the signing of Wimbley. The 6-foot-4 Wimbley will play end for the Titans, and he has 42.5 career sacks. Gray compares Wimbley to Chris Clemons, who came to Seattle a couple years ago and had 12.5 sacks in helping the Seahawks just miss the NFC championship game.

They also expect Wimbley to help end Derrick Morgan, the 16th pick overall in 2010 who was busy recovering from a torn ACL this time last year.

“And Wimbley, your job is to get Morgan to get that double-team off for you, to get that chip off for you because if you don’t, they’ll chip him the whole year,” Gray said. “That’s what you do with a good football team. You can’t just think, ‘I’m going to be the best player and not help someone else get better.’”

Coach Mike Munchak also hired Keith Millard, the 1989 Defensive Player of the Year, as a pass rush specialist this offseason, and he’s been busy working with Ayers. The linebacker had plenty of big plays in college at UCLA, but he had only two sacks and seven quarterback pressures despite starting all 16 games as a rookie.

Ayers said Millard has been working on technique with him while studying the likes of Mario Williams and Dwight Freeney for tips on how to adjust his angle of attack, rush off the snap and using his hands better.

“I was doing a lot of things completely wrong,” Ayers said.

The Titans used five of their seven draft picks on defense, and Ayers said he likes the speed of fellow linebacker Zach Brown, the second-round pick out of North Carolina. The Titans also added tackle Mike Martin of Michigan and end Scott Solomon of Rice.

McCourty now finds himself as the veteran in the cornerback group with Finnegan now playing in St. Louis. Alterraun Verner, who has started 15 games in his first two seasons, leads the group vying to fill that open job. That pack includes Tommie Campbell, a seventh-round pick out of Division II California (Pa.), Ryan Mouton coming off a torn Achilles tendon, Chris Hawkins and fourth-round pick Coty Sensabaugh.

Gray called the 6-3 Campbell their second-best technique cornerback as of now who is busy working hard daily to improve. McCourty said the sky is the limit for Campbell.

“Tommie has attributes you just can’t teach,” McCourty said. “A guy like him at corner being able to press with his arm length and as far as he is, it’s going to be a sight to see when he gets out there.”

That’s just part of what Gray is waiting to see.

Thanks for reading! .

Posted in titans-newsComments (0)

Tennessee Titans' Jake Locker knows deeds…

Titans QB Jake Locker with Titans Caravan/ The Tennessean

Draft needs: Tennessee Titans

The Tennessee Titans courted Peyton Manning, craved Peyton Manning, and didn’t get him.

So now they move forward, but what does that mean? Do they turn to second-year player Jake Locker at quarterback or is it another year with Matt Hasselbeck?

The Titans have stockpiled some good, young talent, so if they can figure out the quarterback position they could push the Houston Texans in the division.

Now we know why they pursued Manning.

QB: The Titans have a big decision now that Manning went elsewhere. For the long-term success of the franchise, they might want to move on to Locker. He showed well in the time he played last season. Hasselbeck is still a decent starter, but is he the long-term solution? He was top 10 last season in only one passing category (completion percentage). The Titans have an interesting decision to make. Rusty Smith is the third quarterback.

RB: After a holdout, Chris Johnson wasn’t the same back last season. It took him a while to get into a groove, although the poor line play early on contributed. Johnson rushed for 1,047 yards, but his per-carry average was 4 yards, the lowest of his career. It’s why the Titans were 31st in rushing yards per game. He needs to be more explosive again. Javon Ringer and Jamie Harper are solid backups. Harper is a bigger back who flashed as a rookie. The fullback will be Quinn Johnson.

WR: The Titans need a healthy Kenny Britt. He went down with a knee injury in the third game and finished with 17 catches and three touchdowns. Britt has to be healthy for the Titans to have a real No. 1 threat down the field. Nate Washington was the leading receiver last season with 74 catches and seven touchdowns. Lavelle Hawkins and Damian Williams each had over 40 catches and Williams had five touchdown catches. Marc Mariani is another reserve who excels on special teams. The key to this unit is Britt’s health. They could take a receiver at some point in the draft.

TE: Jared Cook emerged as a big-time threat in his second season in 2011. Cook caught 49 passes, but averaged 15.5 per catch. The Titans have to get that number up to 70 catches this season. The backups are Craig Stevens and Daniel Graham, but they’re both more blockers than receivers.

OL: Tennessee’s tackles form one of the best tandems in the league, with Michael Roos on the left side and David Stewart the right. Both are good in the run game, which is key for the Titans, but they are also solid in pass protection. The inside play wasn’t very good last season. That’s why the Titans signed veteran Steve Hutchinson. He is getting up there in years, but he will help the inside run game. Center Eugene Amano and right guard Leroy Harris have to be better. Duke Robinson, Fernando Velasco and Kevin Matthews provide backup inside.

DL: The Titans had a lot of injuries on the line last season that slowed their progress and limited the team to 28 sacks. Derrick Morgan, who was counted on to be a breakout star, was limited to 10 starts. The Titans signed Kamerion Wimbley as a free agent from Oakland. He will start at one end. Jason Jones left to sign with Seattle. The leading returning sacker from the end spot is Dave Ball with four, but he is a free agent who hasn’t signed yet. The inside play was the surprise for the team in 2011. Jurrell Casey and Karl Klug both had good rookie seasons. Klug had seven sacks from his tackle spot. Sen’Derrick Marks and Shaun Smith offer good depth inside.

LB: The Titans signed Barrett Ruud to a one-year deal as a free agent, and he opened as the starter. But when he got hurt, rookie Colin McCarthy stepped in and played well. He will be the starter this season and should be for a long time. He’s a heck of a find. Akeem Ayers had a good rookie season on the outside, giving the Titans a nice young 1-2 punch. Veteran Will Witherspoon is the other starter. He was solid in 2011. The top backups are raw, with the exception of Gerald McGrath. They could use an early pick on a linebacker.

DB: The departure of Cortland Finnegan to the Rams in free agency leaves a void on the corner. Alterraun Verner will get the first shot, but don’t be shocked to see the Titans use an early pick on a corner. Jason McCourty was good on the other side as he emerged as their best cover player last season. Ryan Mouton is the top reserve and he could push for the starting job. Tommie Campbell and Terrence Wheatley are also in the mix. The Titans put the franchise tag on free safety Michael Griffin, even though he didn’t have a great season. That speaks to the weakness of the safety spot in the league. Jordan Babineaux was a pleasant surprise last season with 14 starts and was given a new contract extension.

There is the quick update of the day.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

Manning to meet with Titans

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A person familiar with the situation says the Tennessee Titans will be visiting with four-time NFL MVP Peyton Manning in his search for a new team.

ESPN.com first reported Titans coach Mike Munchak will meet with Manning after a session with Miami coach Joe Philbin.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on Monday about Manning’s meeting with the Titans on the condition of anonymity because the location and time of that meeting remains confidential.

Titans owner Bud Adams made it known Sunday he will do whatever it takes to sign Manning to get back to the playoffs and win his team’s first Super Bowl. Adams told The Tennessean he had talked to Manning’s agent, Tom Condon, asking for a visit with the quarterback.

Manning has plenty of connections to Tennessee.

He starred at the University of Tennessee, leading to his first name becoming a popular choice for newborns in this state. His wife is from Memphis, and Manning already knows the Titans’ facility a bit, having practiced against Tennessee a few years ago when the Colts came to town for some joint practices.

Munchak also was a teammate of Archie Manning in 1982 and briefly in 1983 with the then-Houston Oilers. Munchak just hired Dennis Polian — son of former Colts General Manager Bill Polian — as his assistant.

But the biggest key is Adams, the 89-year-old billionaire who wants back in the playoffs. His Titans have been only twice since 2004 with both trips in 2007 and 2008 lasting only one game each. A meeting with Manning could come in Houston where Adams still lives after relocating his Oilers to Tennessee in 1997.

“I want Manning,” Adams told The Tennessean. “I’d love to see him in Titan blue after watching him so many years with the Colts. … I want him. I am ready to do what it takes to get him aboard, and I think he’d be the guy to get us into the playoffs.”

The Titans already have veteran Matt Hasselbeck, signed to a three-year contract last July, and Jake Locker, picked with the No. 8 overall selection in the 2011 draft. But Hasselbeck is due $5.5 million in salary this year after getting a chunk of his deal last season.

So far, Manning has met only with the Denver Broncos and Arizona Cardinals.

He was expected to be heading back to Florida, but did not show at the Dolphins’ headquarters Monday despite reports he would meet with the team.

Dolphins owner Stephen Ross arrived at the team complex at midmorning, and several players — including quarterback Chad Henne — showed up around the same time to work out. Henne is a free agent and not expected back this season.

A media stakeout at the complex began when a local TV station camera crew arrived at 4 a.m. Half a dozen TV cameras and a handful of reporters eventually gathered across the street. They weren’t allowed on the team’s property, but a Dolphins official brought out water, pizza and napkins.

Curious motorists occasionally pulled up to ask for an update.

Manning spent nearly 6 1/2 hours at the Arizona Cardinals’ headquarters and training facility on Sunday in meetings designed to lure the superstar to the desert.

The session followed a meeting of nearly six hours Manning had at the Broncos’ facility in Denver on Friday night. The two sessions showed that, for the time being at least, Arizona and Denver seem to be the top two contenders.

There is the quick update of the day.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

AP Source: Peyton Manning to meet with Tennessee

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A person familiar with the situation says the Tennessee Titans will be visiting with four-time NFL MVP Peyton Manning in his search for a new team.

ESPN.com first reported Titans coach Mike Munchak will meet with Manning after a session with Miami coach Joe Philbin.

The person spoke to The Associated Press Monday about Manning’s meeting with the Titans on the condition of anonymity because the location and time of that meeting remains confidential.

Titans owner Bud Adams made it known Sunday he will do whatever it takes to sign Manning to get back to the playoffs and win his team’s first Super Bowl. Adams told The Tennessean he had talked to Manning’s agent, Tom Condon, asking for a visit with the quarterback.

Manning has plenty of connections to Tennessee.

He starred at the University of Tennessee, leading to his first name becoming a popular choice for newborns in this state. His wife is from Memphis, and Manning already knows the Titans’ facility a bit, having practiced against Tennessee a few years ago when the Colts came to town for some joint practices.

Munchak also was a teammate of Archie Manning in 1982 and briefly in 1983 with the then-Houston Oilers. Munchak just hired Dennis Polian — son of former Colts general manager Bill Polian — as his assistant.

But the biggest key is Adams, the 89-year-old billionaire who wants back in the playoffs. His Titans have been only twice since 2004 with both trips in 2007 and 2008 lasting only one game each. A meeting with Manning could come in Houston where Adams still lives after relocating his Oilers to Tennessee in 1997.

“I want Manning,” Adams told The Tennessean. “I’d love to see him in Titan blue after watching him so many years with the Colts. … I want him. I am ready to do what it takes to get him aboard, and I think he’d be the guy to get us into the playoffs.”

The Titans already have veteran Matt Hasselbeck, signed to a three-year contract last July, and Jake Locker picked with the No. 8 overall selection in the 2011 draft. But Hasselbeck is due $5.5 million in salary this year after getting a chunk of his deal last season.

So far, Manning has met only with the Denver Broncos and Arizona Cardinals.

He was expected to be heading back to Florida, but did not show at the Dolphins’ headquarters Monday despite reports he would meet with the team.

Dolphins owner Stephen Ross arrived at the team complex at midmorning, and several players — including quarterback Chad Henne — showed up around the same time to work out. Henne is a free agent and not expected back this season.

A media stakeout at the complex began when a local TV station camera crew arrived at 4 a.m. Half a dozen TV cameras and a handful of reporters eventually gathered across the street. They weren’t allowed on the team’s property, but a Dolphins official brought out water, pizza and napkins.

Curious motorists occasionally pulled up to ask for an update.

Manning spent nearly 6½ hours at the Arizona Cardinals’ headquarters and training facility on Sunday in meetings designed to lure the superstar to the desert.

The session followed a meeting of nearly six hours Manning had at the Broncos’ facility in Denver on Friday night. The two sessions were evidence that, for the time being at least, Arizona and Denver appear to be the top two contenders.

___

AP Sports Writers Steve Wine in Miami and Bob Baum in Tempe, Ariz., contributed to this report.

Leave any suggestions in the comment box.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

Tennessee Titans taking time with franchise tag…

Tennessee Titans part ways with 2 asst. coaches

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -

The Tennessee Titans parted ways with two coaches on Wednesday. 

Secondary coach Marcus Robertson and assistant secondary coach Curtis Fuller were informed they will not be retained for the 2012-2013 season.

“I want to thank Marcus and Curtis for their time here. After meeting with the coordinators over the last couple of days, we decided to make this move today,” headcoach Mike Munchak said in a release.

Robertson had been with the Titans organization for 19 years and served as a coach for five years.

“Letting Marcus go was not an easy thing. He spent so many great years with this organization as a player, front office employee and a coach. I respect both men, but I wanted to move in a different direction for both of these spots. The interview process might take some time, but we will find the right fits for the secondary room moving forward,” Munchak said.

No additional information was immediately released.

For more information on the Titans, visit their Web site.

Running low on time today, i’ll be back tomorrow hopefully with some more news.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

Tennessee Titans see ‘something great’ under Mike…

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Titans will spend the offseason thinking of the three games that cost them a playoff berth and looking ahead to a promising second season with Mike Munchak as head coach.

Just how many players are back for 2012 remains to be seen with contracts of more than 20 expiring. With Munchak taking over a team that went 6-10 and didn’t have an offseason because of the lockout, the Titans have high expectations for what’s next.

“Who would have thought we’d be 9-7?” fullback Ahmard Hall said Monday after the Titans cleaned out lockers. “Who would give us a chance to be 9-7? Munch is building something great here, and everybody wants to be a part of that.”

Hall is among those whose contracts are up, meaning the Titans have plenty of personnel work ahead.

For a franchise that got rid of a quarterback and head coach a year ago, handling a secondary with four pending free agents should be much easier. Defensive captain and cornerback Cortland Finnegan and safeties Chris Hope, Michael Griffin and Jordan Babineaux all are up with no contract talks since Finnegan bolted training camp in August.

Finnegan doesn’t sound as if he expects to be back, though he hopes to return after six seasons in Tennessee.

“Coach Munchak is building something really special around here,” Finnegan said. “He plans to talk to everyone. We’ll see what the future holds.”

Munchak said the salary cap will decide how many players the Titans keep. He hopes they keep as many as possible in free agency along with another crop of rookies to go with a 2011 draft class that had three starters on defense.

A fourth rookie, Karl Klug, led the Titans with seven sacks, and the Titans ranked eighth in the NFL in points allowed per game.

“You’ve got a nice little core here, so I think it’s something we can build on,” Munchak said. “I think that’s part of the excitement of selling to the guys that are in this room is that yeah, 9-7 was OK. It wasn’t quite good enough this year, but a lot of good things happened at 9-7 that we’re excited about as an organization, as a team and that we can build on.”

The Titans finished the season beating the Houston Texans 23-22, missing out on their first playoff berth since 2008 when the Jets lost to Miami and Denver lost to Kansas City. That left Tennessee tied with Cincinnati but losing the head-to-head tiebreaker due to a Nov. 6 loss to the Bengals when the Titans blew a 10-point lead and lost 24-17.

“Hopefully the lesson we learned is you can’t hope that someone else can do your job for you,” Munchak said. “We had to earn our way in, and we didn’t.”

Tennessee also lost its opener 16-14 in Jacksonville and became the first team to lose to the previously winless Colts 27-13 on Dec. 18 when a win would have put the Titans into the AFC’s sixth and final playoff spot.

At least Munchak has his quarterbacks in veteran Matt Hasselbeck and Jake Locker going into a full offseason to push for the starting job. Hasselbeck started all 16 games and became the first quarterback for this franchise not named Warren Moon to throw for at least 3,500 yards. He finished with 3,571 yards passing with 18 touchdown passes and 14 interceptions. Locker threw for four TDs with a 99.4 passer rating coming off the bench in five games.

Munchak said the quarterbacks will compete again with the player who should start being an obvious decision when the time comes.

He plans on keeping his coordinators, giving Chris Palmer time to work on an offense that ranked 17th in the NFL in passing even though top receiver Kenny Britt tore his right ACL in September.

The biggest focus will be on a run game that ranked 31st in the league averaging a measly 89.9 yards. Chris Johnson ran for a career-low 1,047 yards after missing the preseason before getting his new contract extension.

Feel free to leave your comments below.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

Titans miss playoff bid, optimistic after 9-7…

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The Tennessee Titans will spend the off-season thinking of the three games that cost them a playoff berth and looking ahead to a promising second season under coach Mike Munchak.

Just how many are back for 2012 remains to be seen with contracts of more than 20 Titans expiring. With Munchak taking over a team that went 6-10 and didn’t have an off-season due to the lockout, the Titans have high expectations for what’s next.

“Who would have thought we’d be 9-7?” fullback Ahmard Hall said Monday after the Titans cleaned out lockers. “Who would give us a chance to be 9-7? Munch is building something great here, and everybody wants to be a part of that.”

Hall is among those whose contracts are up, meaning the Titans have plenty of personnel work ahead.

For a franchise that got rid of a quarterback and head coach a year ago, handling a secondary where four defensive backs are pending free agents should be much easier. Defensive captain and cornerback Cortland Finnegan and safeties Chris Hope, Michael Griffin and Jordan Babineaux all are up with no contract talks since Finnegan bolted training camp in August.

Finnegan doesn’t sound as if he expects to be back, though he hopes to return after six seasons in Tennessee.

“Coach Munchak is building something really special around here,” Finnegan said. “He plans to talk to everyone. We’ll see what the future holds.”

Munchak said the salary cap will decide how many players they keep. He hopes they keep as many as possible in free agency along with another crop of rookies to go with a promising draft class where three started on defence.

“You got a nice little core here, so I think it’s something we can build on,” Munchak said. “I think that’s part of the excitement of selling to the guys that are in this room is that yeah, 9-7 was OK. It wasn’t quite good enough this year, but a lot of good things happened at 9-7 that we’re excited about as an organization, as a team and that we can build on.”

The Titans finished the season beating the Houston Texans 23-22, missing out on their first playoff berth since 2008 when the Jets lost to Miami and Denver lost to Kansas City. That left Tennessee tied with Cincinnati but losing the head-to-head tiebreaker due to a Nov. 6 loss to the Bengals where the Titans blew a 10-point lead in losing 24-17.

“Hopefully the lesson we learned is you can’t hope that someone else can do your job for you,” Munchak said. “We had to earn our way in, and we didn’t.”

Tennessee also lost its opener 16-14 in Jacksonville and became the first team to lose to the previously winless Colts 27-13 on Dec. 18 when a win would have put the Titans into the AFC’s sixth and final playoff spot.

At least Munchak has his quarterbacks in veteran Matt Hasselbeck and Jake Locker going into a full off-season to push for the starting job. Hasselbeck started all 16 games and became the first quarterback for this franchise not named Warren Moon to throw for at least 3,500 yards. He finished with 3,571 yards passing with 18 touchdown passes and 14 interceptions. Locker threw for four TDs with a 99.4 passer rating coming off the bench in five games.

Munchak said the quarterbacks will compete again with the player who should start being an obvious decision when the time comes.

He plans on keeping his co-ordinators, giving Chris Palmer to work on an offence that ranked 17th in the NFL in passing even though top receiver Kenny Britt tore his right ACL in September.

The biggest focus will be on a run game that ranked 31st in the league averaging a measly 89.9 yards.

Chris Johnson ran for a career-low 1,047 yards after missing the pre-season before getting his new contract extension. He has plenty of incentives in that deal to spend plenty of time working in the Titans’ off-season program, and he said the Titans simply need to improve their execution.

A full off-season will help Jerry Gray’s defence too.

“We were limited in what we could do because guys were learning it on the run,” Finnegan said. “That’d be huge for this defence.”

A fourth rookie, Karl Klug, led Tennessee with seven sacks, and the Titans ranked eighth in the NFL in points allowed per game. But Tennessee still must find a way to tighten up a run defence gashed for big runs far too often, leading to a No. 24 ranking giving up 128.3 yards per game.

Notes: The Titans will pick 20th in April’s draft. … The Titans’ 2012 home schedule features visits from Houston, the Colts and Jaguars in the AFC South along with the Patriots, the Jets, the Steelers, Chicago and Detroit. Tennessee will visit its AFC South divisional rivals along with trips to Minnesota, Green Bay, Miami, San Diego and Buffalo after finishing second in the division.

Gotta run!.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

CJ has Titans run game rolling in beating Bills

Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck did his part in getting the
Tennessee Titans this far into the playoff hunt. Chris Johnson’s
happy to take over from here.

The Titans ground game is sprouting legs now that Johnson has
shown more signs that he’s re-emerged from what had been a
two-month slumber.

CJ rushed for 153 yards and scored twice in securing a 23-17 win
over the slumping Buffalo Bills on Sunday. It’s the third time in
four games Johnson’s had at least 100 yards, and it’s no
coincidence that the Titans have won all three times to climb into
a logjam of five teams with 7-5 records.

“At the beginning of the season, the passing game carried us,
and now it’s time for the running game to step it up,” said
Johnson, who has 486 of his 852 yards rushing in his past four
games. “The offensive line and everything is hitting on all
cylinders right now, and hopefully we can continue to keep this
momentum going.”

Johnson doubled his season touchdown total by scoring from 48
and 4 yards on consecutive possessions in getting the Titans out to
a 17-7 lead.

Rob Bironas hit three field goals, including a 44-yarder to make
it 23-10 with nine minutes left. Hasselbeck was efficient, going 16
of 25 for 140 yards passing. And the Titans defense generated two
turnovers, and forced Ryan Fitzpatrick to throw three straight
incompletions to end the Bills last drive in the final minute.

The praise was left to Johnson, who’s electric running style is
sparking the Titans’ confidence.

“That’s the CJ that I know,” cornerback Alterraun Verner said.
“If there is a time you want someone to peak, it’s now. … It’s
going to be scary when he starts having some 250-yard games. I
can’t wait for that.”

The Bills (5-7) have very little left to look forward to but
playing games for pride, in the midst of a five-game skid that has
all but mathematically knocked them out of the hunt. A month after
Buffalo was battling New England and the Jets for top spot in the
AFC East, the team’s now in attempting to hold off Miami (4-8) for
last place in the division.

“It’s disappointing. I’ve never lost five in a row,” linebacker
Nick Barnett said. “This is new territory for me and I’m sure for a
lot of guys. It doesn’t feel good. They don’t like it and I don’t
like it.”

C.J. Spiller rushed for a career-best 83 yards and scored on a
35-yard scamper in which he recovered his own fumble just before
sliding out of the end zone. Stevie Johnson made the game close,
scoring on a 2-yard touchdown catch with 2:58 remaining.

At least Johnson, this time, kept his TD celebration in check, a
week after being criticized, flagged 15 yards and fined by the NFL
$10,000 for a questionable display in a 28-24 loss to the New York
Jets.

“Last week was last week,” said Johnson, who had five catches
for 52 yards. “We moved on to the Titans and we tried to get this W
and we came up short.”

Two turnovers _ fumbles by Fitzpatrick and tight end Scott
Chandlers _ led directly to the Titans scoring 10 points.

Though the Bills’ defense limited Tennessee to converting two of
11 third-down chances, Buffalo couldn’t contain the Titans’ running
attack in allowing a season-worst 187 yards.

The Titans prepare for their next big test in hosting Drew Brees
and the NFC South-leading New Orleans Saints next week.

“We’ve got some extra studying to do,” cornerback Cortland
Finnegan said. “I might not do another interview this week, because
I’ll be watching film.”

They’ll at least have some confidence and momentum going into
that game in having strung together two straight wins for the first
time since a 3-1 start.

“A lot of these guys are growing confidence that wasn’t there
from the beginning,” receiver Nate Washington said. “We are
starting to realize we have a good chance at being a great football
team here _ not just good, but great.”

Notes: Johnson’s 48-yard TD run was his longest since scoring a
76-yard touchdown in the 2010 season opener. … Fitzpatrick’s TD
pass gave him 20 this season, becoming the first Bills player to
throw that many in consecutive years since Jim Kelly did it in
1994-95. … Washington did not finish the game to rest a sore left
ankle. Starting CB Jason McCourty’s status is uncertain after he
sustained a concussion in the first quarter. … The Bills honored
Allen Wilson, longtime beat writer for The Buffalo News, who died
Saturday of leukemia. Flowers and a framed picture of “Big Al” were
placed at his seat in the press box. Bills safety and captain
George Wilson spoke for the players in issuing his condolences,
calling the writer a “good man” and “genuine guy.”

Not much else going on in the NFL world today.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

Bills drop 5th straight with 23-17 loss to Titans

The playoffs have just about slipped away for the Buffalo Bills after a fifth straight loss.

Chris Johnson rushed for 153 yards and two touchdowns and the Tennessee Titans beat the Bills 17-10 on Sunday.

A month ago, the Bills were playoff contenders. Now they are closer to last place than second place in the AFC East.

“I’ve never lost five in a row, ever,” Buffalo linebacker Nick Barnett said. “Pop Warner, baseball, all that stuff, so this is new territory for me and I’m sure for a lot of guys. It doesn’t feel good, and I’m sure they don’t like it and I don’t like it.”

From 5-2 to 5-7 — with the possibility of going from first to last in the division — the Bills fall has been fast and furious. A fizzling offense coupled with a defense that has plenty of holes has left the Bills staring at their 12th straight non-playoff season.

“Extremely shocked and disappointed, all those words,” said quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick, who finished 29 of 46 for 288 yards. “It’s been really disappointing these last five weeks. It just seemed like when a play needed to be made we didn’t make it, and they did. That was the difference.”

A rejuvenated Johnson didn’t help matters. Held under 100 yards seven times in his first eight games, Johnson now has topped the century mark three times in his last four outings.

He scored on runs of 48 and 4 yards to match his season touchdown total. Kicker Rob Bironas did the rest, hitting three field goals, including a 44-yarder midway through the fourth quarter to put the Titans ahead 23-10.

Johnson had 106 yards in the first half.

“We were two different defenses,” Barnett said. “The first half we let (Johnson) make some big plays, and he made them.”

C.J. Spiller had a career-best 83 yards rushing and scored on a 35-yard touchdown run in his second start since Fred Jackson broke a bone in his leg. Receiver Stevie Johnson toned down his touchdown celebration after scoring on a 2-yard catch with 2:58 left to make the game close.

Johnson had been criticized for much of the past week over his celebration in a 28-24 loss to the New York Jets. Johnson was fined $10,000 by the NFL for mocking Jets receiver Plaxico Burress, pretending to shoot himself in the thigh. He was also flagged 15 yards for going to the ground in pretending to be a crashing plane.

This time, Johnson kept his arms to himself and politely handed the ball to the nearest official.

The Titans (7-5) converted two Bills turnovers into 10 points.

Rookie linebacker Colin McCarthy stripped Fitzpatrick on a fourth-and-3 scramble and recovered it at the Titans 43-yard line. Six plays later, Johnson scored on a 4-yard scamper up the middle to put Tennessee up 17-7.

McCarthy also recovered tight end Scott Chandler’s fumble at the Titans 37 to end the Bills’ first possession of the second half. That set up a time-consuming 11-play, 54-yard drive capped by Bironas hitting a 27-yard field goal to give Tennessee a 20-10 lead.

Spiller gave the Bills a 7-3 lead midway through the fourth quarter when he beat the Titans to the left corner and cut it up the sideline. He was chased down from behind by Michael Griffin, who punched the ball loose inside the 10. The ball ricocheted off Spiller’s left knee and was bouncing out of the end zone when the running back made a diving attempt to secure it before sliding out.

Officials initially ruled it a touchback, before reversing the call to a touchdown after replays showed Spiller had control of the ball while inbounds.

The Bills never regained the lead after that.

“It’s a drastic difference from where we were to where we are now,” Bills receiver Brad Smith said. “We look at ourselves in the mirror, and know it’s on us.”

Notes: Johnson’s 48-yard TD run was his longest since scoring a 76-yard touchdown in the 2010 season opener. … Fitzpatrick’s TD pass gave him 20 this season, becoming the first Bills player to throw that many in consecutive years since Jim Kelly did it in 1994-95. … The Bills honored Allen Wilson, longtime beat writer for The Buffalo News, who died Saturday of leukemia. Flowers and a framed picture of “Big Al” were placed at his seat in the press box. Bills safety and captain George Wilson spoke for the players in issuing his condolences, calling the writer a “good man” and “genuine guy.”

Feel free to leave your comments below.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

Buffalo Bills drop 5th straight in 23-17 loss to…

A month ago, the Bills were playoff contenders. Now they are closer to last place than second place in the AFC East.

“I’ve never lost five in a row, ever,” Buffalo linebacker Nick Barnett said. “Pop Warner, baseball, all that stuff, so this is new territory for me and I’m sure for a lot of guys. It doesn’t feel good, and I’m sure they don’t like it and I don’t like it.”

From 5-2 to 5-7 — with the possibility of going from first to last in the division — the Bills fall has been fast and furious. A fizzling offense coupled with a defense that has plenty of holes has left the Bills staring at their 12th straight non-playoff season.

“Extremely shocked and disappointed, all those words,” said quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick, who finished 29 of 46 for 288 yards. “It’s been really disappointing these last five weeks. It just seemed like when a play needed to be made we didn’t make it, and they did. That was the difference.”

A rejuvenated Johnson didn’t help matters. Held under 100 yards seven times in his first eight games, Johnson now has topped the century mark three times in his last four outings.

He scored on runs of 48 and 4 yards to match his season touchdown total. Kicker Rob Bironas did the rest, hitting three field goals, including a 44-yarder midway through the fourth quarter to put the Titans ahead 23-10.

Johnson had 106 yards in the first half.

“We were two different defenses,” Barnett said. “The first half we let (Johnson) make some big plays, and he made them.”

C.J. Spiller had a career-best 83 yards rushing and scored on a 35-yard touchdown run in his second start since Fred Jackson broke a bone in his leg. Receiver Stevie Johnson toned down his touchdown celebration after scoring on a 2-yard catch with 2:58 left to make the game close.

Johnson had been criticized for much of the past week over his celebration in a 28-24 loss to the New York Jets. Johnson was fined $10,000 by the NFL for mocking Jets receiver Plaxico Burress, pretending to shoot himself in the thigh. He was also flagged 15 yards for going to the ground in pretending to be a crashing plane.

This time, Johnson kept his arms to himself and politely handed the ball to the nearest official.

The Titans (7-5) converted two Bills turnovers into 10 points.

Rookie linebacker Colin McCarthy stripped Fitzpatrick on a fourth-and-3 scramble and recovered it at the Titans 43-yard line. Six plays later, Johnson scored on a 4-yard scamper up the middle to put Tennessee up 17-7.

McCarthy also recovered tight end Scott Chandler’s fumble at the Titans 37 to end the Bills’ first possession of the second half. That set up a time-consuming 11-play, 54-yard drive capped by Bironas hitting a 27-yard field goal to give Tennessee a 20-10 lead.

Spiller gave the Bills a 7-3 lead midway through the fourth quarter when he beat the Titans to the left corner and cut it up the sideline. He was chased down from behind by Michael Griffin, who punched the ball loose inside the 10. The ball ricocheted off Spiller’s left knee and was bouncing out of the end zone when the running back made a diving attempt to secure it before sliding out.

Officials initially ruled it a touchback, before reversing the call to a touchdown after replays showed Spiller had control of the ball while inbounds.

The Bills never regained the lead after that.

“It’s a drastic difference from where we were to where we are now,” Bills receiver Brad Smith said. “We look at ourselves in the mirror, and know it’s on us.”

Notes: Johnson’s 48-yard TD run was his longest since scoring a 76-yard touchdown in the 2010 season opener. … Fitzpatrick’s TD pass gave him 20 this season, becoming the first Bills player to throw that many in consecutive years since Jim Kelly did it in 1994-95. … The Bills honored Allen Wilson, longtime beat writer for The Buffalo News, who died Saturday of leukemia. Flowers and a framed picture of “Big Al” were placed at his seat in the press box. Bills safety and captain George Wilson spoke for the players in issuing his condolences, calling the writer a “good man” and “genuine guy.”

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Feel free to leave your comments below.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

Bills series has its ups, downs for Titans

Two things come to mind whenever the Titans face the Bills — aside from Titans owner Bud Adams flipping a pair of birds toward the Buffalo sideline in 2009.

One brings back good memories for the Titans and their fans: the “Music City Miracle” sparked a Super Bowl run to conclude the 1999 season.

The other remains a nightmare for many, including Titans Coach Mike Munchak.

He was playing for the Oilers on Jan. 3, 1993, when they lost “The Comeback” to the Bills, who rallied from a 32-point deficit to win in overtime at Ralph Wilson Stadium.

“I try to forget,” said Munchak, who leads the Titans (6-5) to Buffalo (5-6) on Sunday. “But unfortunately they play the tape every year when the playoffs start. … That will never go away I guess.”

Three members of Munchak’s staff played in the game for the Oilers — Bruce Matthews, Jerry Gray and Marcus Robertson.

“A lot of good coaches got fired from here,” said Gray, who played cornerback and is now defensive coordinator. “Nothing against (the Bills), but we had a lot of good football players. We should have won that game and we knew it. I think at that time we were probably the best team in the NFL with the talent we had, but the best team doesn’t always win.”

Injuries: Tackle David Stewart (calf) was limited on Thursday after sitting out Wednesday’s practice. He’s on track to play Sunday, Munchak indicated.

Center Eugene Amano (hip), tight end Jared Cook (concussion), defensive end Jason Jones (knee), linebacker Colin McCarthy (knee) and defensive end Derrick Morgan (ankle) returned to practice.

Cornerback Tommie Campbell (shoulder) and linebacker Barrett Ruud (groin) did not practice. Campbell said he expects to practice today and play Sunday.

Wide receiver Donnie Avery was limited after tweaking his hamstring.

Turning heads: Gray is impressed with McCarthy and fellow rookie linebacker Akeem Ayers.

“A lot of guys don’t know that they come in at 5:30 in the morning. I know Colin does. I know Ayers comes in about 6 or 6:30,” Gray said.

“So those guys are getting a lot of tutor work because they want to be good. You have to give up your time if you want to be a good football player in this league, especially if you’re a rookie.”

If you like reading our blog, remember to bookmark it.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off

&w=100&h=100&zc=1&q=90" alt="Buc Shots: Scenes from the Tampa Bay…" class="woo-image th" width="100" height="100" />

Buc Shots: Scenes from the Tampa Bay…

By Rick Stroud and Stephen F. Holder, Times Staff Writers

In Print: Monday, November 28, 2011


Bucs DT Albert Haynesworth had been looking forward to his return to Nashville, where he spent the first seven seasons of his NFL career. In fact, he still has pretty important ties to the area. • “(Saturday) I got to see my kids, and they’re getting huge,” he said. “I really miss them.” • But Haynesworth made it clear he was in town on business. • “Coming here to play in front of the Titans fans was great, but it would have been even better for me if we would have gotten a win here,” he said. • Haynesworth finished with four tackles, including two for losses. He consistently helped collapse the pocket around QB Matt Hasselbeck and made penetration into the backfield on running plays. On one, when he decked RB Javon Ringer for a loss, Haynesworth got up from the pile and pumped his fists. That drew some mild boos from the Titans fans, who surely recall his decision to leave the team as a free agent in 2009. • Still, Haynesworth’s recollections remain fond. • “I appreciate the memories,” he said.

Clearwater Central Catholic grad and Titans rookie Colin McCarthy faced the team he grew up watching in the bay area. • And in this interesting situation, McCarthy made it known he is the Titans’ middle linebacker of the future. Having started in place of injured former Bucs MLB Barrett Ruud (groin), McCarthy led the Titans with 10 tackles (seven solo), a pass defensed and an interception of Bucs QB Josh Freeman. • Dropping into coverage in his Cover 2 zone — the deep middle of the field — McCarthy read Freeman’s eyes and jumped in front of a pass intended for TE Kellen Winslow, robbing the Bucs of a key fourth-quarter possession. • “What went through my mind was, ‘Just catch it! Just catch it!’ ” McCarthy said afterward. • McCarthy said Tennessee defensive coordinator Jerry Gray had been prepping him all last week to cover throws to Winslow down the middle. • “We’d seen it on film,” McCarthy said. “So, the biggest thing is if they throw it to you, don’t drop it.” • Freeman said there was a miscommunication between he and Winslow, though Freeman wasn’t specific. Whether Winslow ran a different route than Freeman expected wasn’t clear, but Freeman’s decision to throw the ball with McCarthy lurking wasn’t smart in either case. • “It’s just something that, at that point in the game, can’t happen,” Freeman said. “Looking back, we had our timeouts, we had plenty of time.”

Old friend outdoes Morris

. When Bucs coach Raheem Morris played at Irvington (N.J.) High School, he played for coach Chet Parlavecchio, left, probably never dreaming that they would one day face each other on opposite sidelines of an NFL field. But it happened, and it was an important subplot Sunday. As it turns out, it was Parlavecchio, a special teams assistant with the Titans, who cooked up a beautifully timed reverse on a first-quarter kickoff return that resulted in a touchdown.

“I got outdone by my high school head coach,” bemoaned Morris afterward. “Unbelievable, isn’t it?”

On the play, Bucs kickoff specialist Mike Koenen and his cover men were attempting a right-side kickoff, putting the ball near the Bucs sideline. That’s where KR Marc Mariani fielded it at the goal line and worked his way up the field. The Bucs had a wave of cover men converging to pin him against the sideline when he did the unexpected. At the Tennessee 16, Mariani stealthily handed the ball to DB Tommie Campbell, who was heading in the opposite direction. By the time the Bucs found the ball, they were in a footrace that they would lose, resulting in an 84-yard touchdown return for Campbell.

“It was a great call because nobody saw it,” Bucs LB Adam Hayward said. “We were all running to where the ball was. We had no idea.” The play was called 37 Special.

“Once I got past the safety, I knew I had it,” Campbell said.

“They’ve done a lot of tricks, but nothing like that,” said Hayward, Tampa Bay’s special teams captain. “We were expecting something else. It was perfect timing. It was a good call because we had people coming across the field (in the opposite direction) and they just walled us off.” And, for that, Morris can thank his old friend, Coach Parlavecchio.

. The Bucs offense seemed to have major issues finding the end zone, so Tampa Bay needed its defense to help show the way.

That’s where CB Aqib Talib came up big, intercepting Tennessee QB Matt Hasselbeck in the third quarter and returning the ball 27 yards for a momentum-shifting touchdown. It was Talib’s second interception of the season, and both times he has returned them for touchdowns.

The play gave the Bucs a 17-10 lead, but it didn’t hold up.

“We got turnovers, but we didn’t get enough to win,” Talib said.

Talib dived underneath intended receiver Nate Washington, then stopped, cut and hightailed it to the end zone.

Talib had another stellar day, adding three tackles, a pass defensed and a forced a fumble by RB Chris Johnson (which SS Sean Jones recovered).

RB LeGarrette Blount had his second consecutive 100-yard rushing performance Sunday, but it wasn’t one that the second-year player is likely to celebrate. • Moments after the game, when coach Raheem Morris was asked about Blount, he succinctly summed up the day of his battering-ram ball carrier, who fumbled twice. • “LeGarrette went out and ran the ball well, but you have to hang on to the football at all costs,” Morris said. “When you’re carrying that football, you’re carrying the whole team on your back.” • Blount rushed for 103 yards on 20 carries, a 5.2-yard average. He also caught three passes for 56 yards, including a short reception in which he rumbled 35 yards. • A subdued Blount, who had his third 100-yard game of the season, had few answers afterward. • “We just didn’t hold on to the ball tight enough,” he said. “We didn’t hold on to the ball the way we were taught.”

Johnson awakens against Bucs D

. Titans RB Chris Johnson had run for 4,598 yards in his three previous seasons. Yet, this season, he had not flirted with the sort of rare numbers he had since 2008 — until Sunday. The Orlando native had the third-best effort of his career, running for 190 yards on 23 carries, dazzling with his precise, quick cutting and rapid acceleration that left the Bucs exasperated.

The Bucs seemed to have Johnson under wraps in the first half, when they gang-tackled him, dropped him for losses and generally limited his effectiveness, holding him to 46 yards at halftime. Then, everything changed.

“The way he is, he can make up for (negative plays),” said Bucs DT Albert Haynesworth, a former teammate of Johnson’s. “He’s Chris Johnson. You don’t really come in and try to stop him. You just want to contain him. That was kind of the plan.”

The Bucs could’ve limited Johnson by limiting his opportunities, but that would have required getting defensive stops and finishing drives on offense. In the late going, they did neither.

“He got too many yards,” coach Raheem Morris said. “He had a couple breakout runs. He’s a great running back. Make no mistake about it. When great running backs get that many carries and that many touches, you get a chance to be explosive and (he’s) going to be. The only way to stop him is to get him off the football field.”

The Bucs entered the game with the NFL’s 31st-ranked defense. They didn’t help their ranking with Sunday’s performance, giving up 352 yards.

Quick hits

. DT Brian Price, who has been hampered by injuries, sprained his ankle in the second quarter and was seen in the locker room on crutches. The severity of the injury is unknown.

. Rookie DE Da’Quan Bowers made his first start, replacing injured Michael Bennett, and had one tackle.

. CB Ronde Barber‘s forced fumble, which led to a Bucs touchdown, was his first of the season and the 14th of his career.

. DE Adrian Clayborn‘s third-quarter sack was his fifth of the season, a team high.

. After recording just one TD reception in the first nine games, WR Mike Williams has now scored in back-to-back weeks and has 14 in his career.

Slipping and sliding

. The Nashville area was bracing for a cold front that was expected to drop more than an inch of rain. Mother Nature did not disappoint. The playing surface at LP Field was covered by a tarp before kickoff. But with rain falling consistently, it didn’t take long for the conditions to affect the game. There were nine combined turnovers, including six lost fumbles (four by the Bucs). At times, ball carriers lost their footing when trying to plant on the wet turf, which had been resodded just last week. “I think there were some good hits where the ball was going to come out,” Titans coach Mike Munchak said. “But I think the weather ends up being the main reason for it. … It adds to it. It was definitely the first time we have played in that weather.” Said Bucs coach Raheem Morris: “Obviously there was a lot of rain. But it’s football. That’s what we play this game for. Nobody wants to play in pretty (weather) all the time. It’s about the elements. That’s why we play, and that’s what we signed up for. I actually enjoyed it. I want to play more games like that.”


[Last modified: Nov 27, 2011 10:32 PM]

[Get Copyright Permissions]
Click here for reuse options!

Copyright 2011 St. Petersburg Times

You must enable javascript to view and add comments.

Not much else going on in the NFL world today.

Posted in titans-newsComments Off