Titans face surging Dolphins in bid for AFC South crown

Updated Dec. 30, 2021 6:12 p.m. ET
Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Tennessee Titans know exactly what's on the line Sunday. Stop the Miami Dolphins' historic ride and clinch their

This franchise hasn't strung together division titles since the dawn of the AFL in 1960 when the then-Houston Oilers won the Eastern Division for the first three seasons.

The Titans also would clinch a third straight playoff berth, something this team has done only once before during the Oilers' “Run & Shoot” days.

The Titans (10-5) are so close they can taste it with a road game in Houston remaining.

ADVERTISEMENT

“You know we’re starving,” Titans defensive lineman Teair Tart said. “We’re trying to just claw at it any way we can. ... Everybody is hungry as possible to lock the division up.”

The Dolphins (8-7) are the NFL's first team ever to lose seven consecutive games, then reel off seven straight victories to revive their playoff hopes. Their latest came

“It’s not just the younger guys, it’s the veterans like myself too,” Roberts said. "Hone in what we have in front of us, and what we have in front of us is the Tennessee Titans. We’re just all zoned in on that.”

This could be a playoff preview with the Titans currently holding the AFC's No. 2 seed and Miami in the third and final wild-card spot with a trio of teams at 8-7 ready to pounce. Tennessee still has a chance at the No. 1 seed and the first-round bye if Kansas City (10-5) slips.

The Titans are healing up after not having the left half of their offensive line in

“It’s in our hands, and we can control it,” left guard Rodger Saffold said.

RYAN'S EXPRESS

If Titans quarterback

Tannehill, who was traded by Miami to Tennessee in March 2019, has started every game since Week 7 of 2019. He's a big reason why the Titans are 28-13 (68.3%) in those games. Only Kansas City and Green Bay, both 33-8 (80.5%) and Baltimore (29-12, 70.7%) have been better in that span.

STEPPING UP

This will be only the third game since October with the Dolphins facing a team that will enter the matchup with a better record than Miami. Baltimore was 6-2 when it faced 2-7 Miami on Nov. 11, and Carolina was 5-6 when it met the 4-7 Dolphins on Nov. 28.

NO COMPARISON

Much has been made of how Miami’s offensive line hasn’t always been particularly great at protecting quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who has been sacked 35 times in his first 21 games with the Dolphins. By comparison, that has been elite protection to what Tannehill got in his Miami days. He was sacked a whopping 59 times in his first 21 appearances with the Dolphins.

The Titans rank 10th with 37 sacks and are one of only two NFL teams with three players having at least 7 1/2 sacks each.

PROTECT TANNEHILL

Miami leads the NFL with 45 sacks, and 33 of those have come in this winning streak. That's four off the team record of 49 last tied in 2005. Keeping Tannehill upright has been a problem for Tennessee with a revolving door of injuries on its offensive line. Only Cincinnati's Joe Burrow (47) has been sacked more than Tannehill (45) this season.

But Saffold should be back after missing the past two games, one with an injured shoulder and the last on the reserve/COVID-19 list. Left tackle Taylor Lewan also should be back after missing the 49ers' win with a back issue and his own stint on the COVID-19 list, and starting right guard Nate Davis was removed Thursday from the COVID-19 list.

WHITHER THE WEATHER

The previous time these teams met was Titans coach Mike Vrabel's debut, and it wound up the longest game in NFL history at 7 hours, 8 minutes because of two weather delays on a steamy day Sept. 9, 2018, in Miami Gardens. A cold front will be dropping the temps from the 70s on Saturday to freezing by kickoff Sunday.

“Put some thermals on, put a hoodie on and get out there," Miami coach Brian Flores said.

___

AP Sports Writer Tim Reynolds contributed to this report.

___

More AP NFL coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

share