San Francisco Chronicle

Brady bruised, battered in loss

- By Teresa M. Walker Teresa M. Walker is an Associated Press writer.

NASHVILLE — Tom Brady added another big chunk of NFL history to his resume.

Tennessee made sure the Patriots’ quarterbac­k didn’t finish his 300th game by hitting him over and over again.

The Titans sacked Brady three times and hit him six more times as they beat New England 34-10 on Sunday, snapping a seven-game skid against the Patriots in Mike Vrabel’s first game as head coach against the team he helped win three Super Bowls.

It was the most sacks allowed in a game this season by the Patriots (7-3), and head coach Bill Belichick pulled Brady for Brian Hoyer midway through the fourth quarter.

“You’ve got to make Tom blink, and if you make him blink and (he has) to go to a second read, you’ve got a chance,” Vrabel said of his former teammate. “But if you let him rip it to the first guy he looks at, it’s going to be a long day.”

Asked if he thought Brady was effective, Belichick said to ask Brady.

“It was just a bad day for all of us,” Brady said.

Only Brett Favre (326) has played in more games, both regular season and postseason, as a quarterbac­k than Brady. The three-time NFL MVP also needed only three touchdown passes to tie Peyton Manning (579) for the NFL record for most TD passes all time for both the regular season and postseason.

Brady left having thrown for 254 yards and no TD passes. The Titans outgained the Patriots 385-284, holding New England to 40 yards rushing. Linebacker Wesley Woodyard, who had 1½ sacks, said that allowed them to get after Brady.

“Coach Vrabel said make them pay for everything,” Woodyard said. “Tackle him, hit him and make him feel it.”

Marcus Mariota capped each of the first two drives with TD passes, and Derrick Henry ran for two TDs. Ryan Succop also added two field goals as the Titans (5-4) scored a season high in points after jumping to a 17-3 lead in the first quarter. They have beaten both of last season’s Super Bowl teams in Nashville.

The loss snaps a six-game winning streak going into New England’s bye. The Patriots, who routed the Titans 35-14 in January, also lost to Tennessee for the first time since Dec. 16, 2002.

Darius Jennings opened the game with a 58-yard kickoff return, and Mariota capped the drive with a 4-yard TD pass to Jonnu Smith. The Titans did not trail.

The Titans came into Sunday with the NFL’s stingiest scoring defense and also leading the league in fewest touchdowns allowed in the red zone. They held the Patriots to two 52-yard field-goal attempts by Stephen Gostkowski, who missed his second wide left. James Develin scored on a 1-yard TD run early in the second, which cut New England’s deficit to 17-10.

Tennessee led 27-10 early in the fourth quarter. Brady caught a 6-yard pass from Julian Edelman and Brady was tackled at the Titans’ 37, a yard shy of a first down. A false start followed, then Logan Ryan, a former New England cornerback, broke up a Brady pass to Edelman, and the Titans took possession.

On the very next play, Vrabel called his own trick play with Jennings throwing to a wide-open Mariota for a 21yard gain.

Hoyer replaced Brady on the next possession.

 ?? Austin Anthony / Associated Press ?? New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady (right) is sacked by Tennessee defensive end Jurrell Casey (99) and linebacker Harold Landry, one of three sacks Brady absorbed.
Austin Anthony / Associated Press New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady (right) is sacked by Tennessee defensive end Jurrell Casey (99) and linebacker Harold Landry, one of three sacks Brady absorbed.

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