The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Titans, Derrick Henry agree to contract before NFL deadline

De Boer notes key areas team needs to improve to remain in contention.

- By Doug Roberson doug.roberson@ajc.com

The Tennessee Titans agreed to a new contract with Derrick Henry, keeping the NFL rushing leader around and not playing under the franchise tag before the league deadline for an extension.

The team said only that the deal was a “multiyear extension.” Henry received a fouryear contract for $50 million with $25.5 million guaranteed, according to ESPN.com.

The Titans faced a deadline of 4 p.m. Wednesday to sign Henry to an extension or let him play this season for the $10.2 million due under the franchise tag he signed April 2. They could have tagged him again for 2021 for 120% of his pay this season.

Atlanta United manager Frank de Boer fell back on some familiar themes. On Tuesday, he addressed areas his team must fix to improve its chances of defeating Cincinnati today and keeping alive its hope of advancing to the knockout rounds in the MLS tournament in Orlando.

The first was “lock on.” It’s how de Boer and his staff describe what their players must do when they turn over the ball. It’s a phrase they used often last year, particular­ly early in the season when the team struggled. They must lock on to the opponent and press with urgency in an attempt to either stop them from moving up the field or to win the ball back.

The team failed to do so on the New York Red Bulls’ only goal in last week’s 1-0 loss in the opening game. New York needed only four passes to flip the field to produce the deciding shot. “It’s our DNA,” de Boer said. There are a few reasons why

the players didn’t “lock on” as well as they should.

First, de Boer said an inability to scrimmage other opponents and work on what to do after turnovers was a factor. MLS rules for competing in the tournament forbade playing other teams because the league was trying to limit potential exposure to COVID-19 during the suspension of the season.

“If we do that, we aren’t having those types of problems,” he said. “Maybe not as many as we had against Red Bulls.”

Midfielder Emerson Hyndman and defender Franco Escobar said there were times that the brain recognized the situation, but the body didn’t react as quickly as it should.

They said that’s a result of not playing a game the past four months, which affects instincts and execution.

Lastly were the muggy conditions, which can sap energy.

“Sometimes, the first game back is hard to get that awareness,” Hyndman said. “It’s part of how we pay normally. We all agreed we can do that much better. Hopefully we can provide that next game.”

On offense, de Boer said the team must get its playmakers move involved.

While Pity Martinez played well, creating a team-high four chances, de Boer said they need to get Matheus Rossetto on the ball in more dangerous spots. He finished with two chances created in 72 minutes.

“How we can liberate our best players with movement,” de Boer said. “That was also a point that we can do better. Sometimes you have to learn the hard way.”

Lastly, he said the team needs to execute its crosses better. The team pumped in 15 from open play. Only one resulted in a shot on goal, and it came in the final seconds.

“All those things we want to see different on Thursday morning,” de Boer said.

If they don’t, the team’s hope of winning its third major trophy could be over with a game in the group stage remaining. It’s not what the team envisioned when it entered the MLS bubble on the Fourth of July.

The Red Bulls and Columbus lead the group with three points each. They will play each other tonight. The top two teams from each of the six groups advance. The four remaining teams with the most points will also advance. The Five Stripes should advance as one of the top teams if it can secure at least four points from its next two games. But beating Cincinnati seems a much easier task than Columbus, which hammered its rival 4-0 in their first match.

“We know we have to get a good result (today), or we could be out of the tournament,” Escobar said.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Midfielder Emerson Hyndman says the team was a bit sluggish in its return after not playing the past four months.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Midfielder Emerson Hyndman says the team was a bit sluggish in its return after not playing the past four months.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Atlanta United will try to get Matheus Rossetto (battling FC Cincinnati in March) more opportunit­ies to attack in today’s game. He had two chances created in 72 minutes against the Red Bulls.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Atlanta United will try to get Matheus Rossetto (battling FC Cincinnati in March) more opportunit­ies to attack in today’s game. He had two chances created in 72 minutes against the Red Bulls.

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