The Boston Globe

Bengals stymie Titans

Three straight for Cincinnati

- By Teresa M. Walker

Bengals 20 Titans 16

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Cincinnati Bengals have a knack for beating the Tennessee Titans at their own game — by playing more physically and forcing the opponent into mistakes at the wrong time.

They did it again Sunday. Joe Burrow threw a 27-yard touchdown pass to Tee Higgins with 13:42 left to put Cincinnati ahead to stay, and the Bengals held off the Titans, 20-16, on Sunday for their third straight victory and fifth in six games.

“This is the kind of game that great teams win,” Burrow said. “It’s not always going to be pretty. This is the NFL. You’re playing really, really good teams on the opposing end. You’ve got to find ways to win, and we’re starting to do that.”

The defending AFC champion Bengals (7-4) won the rematch of their divisional playoff victory despite not having running back Joe Mixon because he hadn’t cleared the concussion protocol. Also, receiver Ja’Marr Chase, the reigning AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year, missed a fourth straight game with a hip injury.

Cincinnati has won three straight over Tennessee and five of six. Burrow, sacked nine times in that divisional loss by the Titans, went down only once. Burrow threw for 270 yards, and Higgins finished with 114 yards on seven catches as the Bengals moved into a first-place tie with Baltimore in the AFC North.

“We wouldn’t trade our quarterbac­k for anybody on the planet and so we’re glad to have him,” Cincinnati coach Zac Taylor said.

Evan McPherson kicked a pair of field goals for the Bengals. He connected on a third with 1:53 left, but Titans lineman Kevin Strong was flagged for unnecessar­y roughness after landing on the long snapper. That allowed the Bengals to instead run out the clock.

Titans two-time All-Pro Kevin Byard said it looked like two teammates hit the snapper. Strong said he was “totally shocked” to learn he was flagged, knowing defenders can’t line up on the snapper or hit him in the head.

“Once he hikes the ball and has his head up, you can come through,” Strong said. “I was just trying to get in the A gap. I wasn’t intentiona­lly trying to hit him in the head. I made a mistake, and I take that one and put it on me. I just have to do better for my team.”

The Titans (7-4) equaled their most points allowed since a Week 2 loss at Buffalo as their two-game winning streak ended. This was just the second time since that loss that Tennessee gave up more than 17, matching the 20 points allowed at Kansas City.

Cincinnati smothered NFL rushing leader Derrick Henry yet again, holding him to 38 yards, his second-lowest total of the season. Tennessee tried to rally by throwing to Henry, and he had a career-best 79 yards receiving.

“We just couldn’t get nothing started in the run game, and I mean they executed,” Henry said. “They played better than we did.”

Taylor credited the Bengals with executing coordinato­r Lou Anarumo’s plan perfectly.

“They put pressure on him the entire game,” Taylor said of Henry. “They hit the quarterbac­k, and they made play after play to win us back the field position there in the second half and allow us to go win it.”

Ryan Tannehill threw for 291 yards, but the Titans couldn’t score a touchdown in three trips to the red zone. They settled for three field goals in four tries by rookie Caleb Shudak.

 ?? SILAS WALKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Trey Hendrickso­n and the Bengals’ defense kept Derrick Henry (22) in check, holding him to 38 rushing yards.
SILAS WALKER/GETTY IMAGES Trey Hendrickso­n and the Bengals’ defense kept Derrick Henry (22) in check, holding him to 38 rushing yards.

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