The Commercial Appeal

Titans walloped by Cardinals in opener

- Ben Arthur

The Tennessee Titans were walloped in their season opener, falling 38-13 to the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday at Nissan Stadium.

Here are five things we learned from the Titans' loss:

Practice matters

The Titans' offense found some life midway through the second quarter and to start the third period, scoring two touchdowns in three drives. But the overall production was bad, with the Titans' high-powered offense showing rust and looking out of sync.

Entering Sunday, much was made about the lack of practice time for the Titans' starting offense over the summer. Julio Jones, who signed with the franchise in the offseason, missed three straight weeks. Quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill had a nine-day stint on the Reserve/covid-19 list. The starting offensive line had just a few practices together. Star receiver A.J. Brown was often in and out of practices. Turns out, that lack of time together was a big deal.

Tannehill had three turnovers — an intercepti­on and two fumbles — including two on back-to-back drives in the third quarter when the offense needed to be perfect to stage a comeback. The offensive line could not block Cardinals outside linebacker Chandler Jones, who had two forced fumbles and five sacks, including three in the first quarter. Tannehill was sacked six times.

The Titans, who were No. 4 in the NFL last season in scoring, produced just two touchdowns.

New-look defense has work to do

The Titans' defense showed positive strides in the preseason, ranking No. 1 in yards allowed and holding opponents under 20% on third down. Titans coaches and defenders spoke all summer of the confidence and swagger the newlook defense had.

None of that mattered against the Cardinals.

The 38 points the Titans gave up tied for the second most at home in the Mike Vrabel era, which began in 2018. And the Cardinals converted on key third downs, the Titans' Achilles heel last season. Arizona quarterbac­k Kyler Murray connected with receiver Christian Kirk for two touchdowns on third down in what was a back-breaking third quarter for the Titans.

The Titans still have kicking issues

Kicker Michael Badgley, who was signed to the active roster after Sam Ficken was placed on Injured Reserve, struggled in his debut. He missed a field goal and an extra point in the first half. The Titans appeared to have their kicking woes of the last two seasons figured out with the way Ficken performed in the summer, but Ficken is now out at least three weeks on IR with a groin injury.

Run game was flat

Titans star running back Derrick Henry

had a few big runs late in the second half, but the game was long over by that point. Henry, after rushing for 2,000 yards last season, was held to 58 yards on 17 carries.

The Titans' run game, the strength of the offense, was rendered ineffective like the rest of the unit.

Questionab­le coaching decision

Facing a fourth-and-1 at the 28-yard line in the closing seconds of the first half, the Titans elected for a field goal, which was missed by Badgley. The Titans would've benefited from an aggressive decision to go for it. They were trailing 24-6 and needed momentum entering the second half.

After the missed kick, the boos rained down from the Nissan Stadium crowd.

Up next

The Titans travel to Seattle next week to face the Seahawks. Kickoff is scheduled for 3:25 p.m. CT next Sunday at Lumen Field.

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