Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tannehill has winning touch for Miami

- By Gilbert Manzano Las Vegas Review-journal

The Raiders have dug themselves an 0-2 start after giving up another second-half lead last week against the Broncos.

On Sunday they are in Miami to meet the unbeaten Dolphins, who have victories over the Tennessee Titans and New York Jets to open the season. Here are five things you need to know about the Raiders’ Week 3 opponent :

Tannehill back to form

To many, it’s hard to understand why the Dolphins continue to show faith in quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill, who has produced pedestrian numbers and missed numerous games because of injuries since being drafted in the first round in 2012. The simple reason: Tannehill wins when he has Dolphins coach Adam Gase calling the plays. Tannehill is 9-1 in his last 10 starts. Again, the numbers don’t pop out to start the season, but he’s completed 72 percent and is gaining yards on the ground. Tannehill doesn’t seem to be bothered by the surgically repaired left knee that forced him to miss the entire 2017 season. The Raiders’ lackluster pass rush might have trouble getting to a mobile Tannehill.

Banged up O-line

Not everything is going right for the Dolphins. They lost their prized free-agent acquisitio­n, Josh Sitton, for the season after the left guard sustained a torn rotator cuff in the opening week. The offensive line gave up four sacks last week. That could bode well for the Raiders’ defensive line that only has two sacks. But expect Tannehill to release the ball quicker to possession receivers Kenny Stills and Danny Amendola.

Tandem backfield

Old-reliable Frank Gore and up-andcomer Kenyan Drake have given Miami one of the top rushing teams in the league. The Dolphins are sixth in rushing yards per game with 127.5 yards. Drake has received the bulk of the carries and could see an increase in work this week against a Raiders defense that ran out of gas in Denver.

Rising secondary

Xavien Howard is emerging as a shutdown cornerback. In the first two games, opposing quarterbac­ks rarely threw to Howard’s side. When Jets quarterbac­k Sam Darnold tested him in the end zone last week, Howard won the battle with an intercepti­on. Minkah Fitzpatric­k, the Dolphins’ 2018 first-round pick, has stepped up as a nickel cornerback. Former UNLV standout Torry Mctyer is a backup cornerback for Miami.

No Suh, no problem

The Dolphins’ rushing defense has done just fine without defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, who was released by Miami in the offseason and now plays for the Los Angeles Rams.

The Dolphins have gotten production from a four-man rotation at defensive tackle. Miami allows 79 rushing yards per game, good enough for eighth best in the league. Defensive ends Robert Quinn and Cameron Wake anchor the pass rush.

Contact Gilbert Manzano at gmanzano@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @Gmanzano24 on Twitter.

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