Baltimore Sun

Mountain to climb

Titans QB Tannehill using playoff loss as fuel for ’22

- By Teresa M. Walker

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — No quarterbac­k has won more games over his first three seasons with the Titans franchise than Ryan Tannehill, who has posted a 30-13 record for the Titans.

The problem? He is 2-3 in the postseason.

Worse is Tannehill and the Titans losing three straight playoff games, with the past two on their home field. The most painful came in January, when the Titans were the AFC’s No. 1 seed and Tannehill was intercepte­d three times — the last with 20 seconds left in a 19-16 loss to the Bengals.

Tannehill goes into his fourth season needing to prove 2021 was simply an off year and that he can win when it matters the most.

“It’s just fuel,” Tannehill said. “You look at things in your past and experience­s that you’ve been through and you can learn from them and you can use them as fuel as you move forward. So that’s the thought here in moving forward is attacking this year, each and every day and try to get the most out of it.”

Tannehill became the first quarterbac­k since Warren Moon between 1987 and 1993 to lead the franchise to three straight playoff berths.

Even as the Titans went 12-5, Tannehill had his worst statistica­l season since replacing Marcus Mariota as the starting quarterbac­k in mid-October 2019.

He threw his fewest touchdowns (21), and his 14 intercepti­ons were one more than he had in his first two seasons in Tennessee combined. It didn’t help that Tannehill was one of only six Titans to start every game in 2021, when the Titans used an NFL-record 91 players — the most for a non-strike season.

Then came the playoff loss. Tannehill talked in May about how much he struggled to deal with that loss, even using therapy to help with the sleepless nights.

General manager Jon Robinson also took that loss tough and said he talked with Tannehill.

For the GM, the key is moving on and not letting one loss fester. Robinson thinks Tannehill has turned the page based on what he’s seen out of the quarterbac­k entering his 11th NFL season.

“Juice. Energy. Leadership. Fired up to be out here,” Robinson said. “Working with the new players that are on the team about, ‘Hey, when you run this route this way, look for the ball, because this is what I’m looking for out of you on this certain route.’ He’s into it. Ready to roll.”

Tannehill said he doesn’t feel as if he’s speaking up more.

“I feel like I just am leading the way, you know, that I believe is effective and the way that works for me,” Tannehill said. “So I’m going to continue doing that, continue pushing the envelope, trying to bring this team, this offense along as fast as we can.”

The Titans tried to give Tannehill more help by acquiring wide receiver Robert Woods from the Rams in March. Tannehill’s favorite receiver the past three seasons is gone, with A.J. Brown playing with the Eagles via a trade, and the quarterbac­k now working with what the Titans hope will be Brown’s replacemen­t in rookie Treylon Burks.

They also signed tight end Austin Hooper and drafted the fastest tight end at the NFL combine, Chig Okonkwo.

And Derrick Henry, the NFL’s rushing leader in 2019 and 2020, is back after missing nine games last season with a broken right foot.

Tannehill is under contract through 2023, but his contract counts $38.6 million against the salary cap this season.

The Titans drafted Malik Willis out of Liberty in the third round, the earliest they’ve selected a quarterbac­k since taking Mariota at No. 2 overall in 2015. Tannehill, who turned 34 on Wednesday, isn’t looking ahead at this point of his career.

“I take it one year at a time,” Tannehill said. “So right now I love the game, I love competing, I love where I’m at physically, you know, I still feel really good.

“So one year at a time and excited for for what’s ahead.”

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/AP ?? Titans QB Ryan Tannehill takes part in drills during training camp at the team’s practice facility on Thursday in Nashville, Tenn. Tannehill goes into his fourth season needing to prove 2021 was simply an off year and that he can win when it matters most.
MARK HUMPHREY/AP Titans QB Ryan Tannehill takes part in drills during training camp at the team’s practice facility on Thursday in Nashville, Tenn. Tannehill goes into his fourth season needing to prove 2021 was simply an off year and that he can win when it matters most.

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