Titans game — plays, tweets, analysis, highlights

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Rams Huddle Titans game — plays, tweets, analysis, highlights

Viewing 25 posts - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #157969
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157970
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157972
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157974
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157975
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157976
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157978
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Rams average 7.4 yards per play, rack up 439 total. Get touchdowns from Puka, Allen, Adams, and Corum.

    LA defense only allows 80 yards in the 2H.
    5 sacks & a takeaway on the day.

    33-19 FINAL. Rams 2-0.

    Jim Youngblood 53@53_jim70721
    Rams left points on board … defense did well … Not going to complain too much on a 33-19 win … could have been more.

    Los Angeles Rams PR@TheLARamsPR
    WR Davante Adams ties Antonio Brown, Calvin Johnson, Brandon Marshall and Jimmy Smith (46) for the 11th-most 100+ receiving yard games in NFL history.

    Rams Bros.@RamsBrothers
    Matthew Stafford has been outrageously good today. My lord. He makes all of the most difficult throws look completely effortless

    Los Angeles Rams PR@TheLARamsPR
    In the third quarter against the Titans, WR Puka Nacua has surpassed 200 receptions for his career. It ties Odell Beckham Jr. for the fewest games to reach 200 career receptions in NFL history.

    Eric Lambkins II@elambsquared
    #Rams WR Davantae Adams is unguardable. No, literally. He’s ALWAYS open.

    Los Angeles Rams PR@TheLARamsPR
    OLB Byron Young now has a team-leading 3.0 sacks on the season with sacks in back-to-back games. Young has 18.5 sacks for his career and also 4.5 sacks in his last four regular season games, dating back to last season.

    #157980
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157981
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Game Recap: Rams use big second half to surge past Titans 33-19

    Stu Jackson

    https://www.therams.com/news/game-recap-rams-use-big-second-half-to-surge-past-titans-33-19-week-2-2025

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. – After a mistake-filled close to the first half, the Rams (2-0) turned things around in the second half to knock off the Titans 33-19 on Sunday at Nissan Stadium.

    Trailing 13-10 at halftime, Los Angeles outscored Tennessee (0-2) 23-6 in the second half, led by explosive completions from quarterback Matthew Stafford.

    Wide receiver Davante Adams surpassed 12,000 career receiving yards with his performance of six catches for 106 yards and one touchdown. Wide receiver Puka Nacua logged 136 total yards (45-yard rushing touchdown, 91 receiving yards) in the win as well.

    Defensively, outside linebacker Byron Young registered a sack for the second straight week, finishing with two total (one causing a fumble) plus five total tackles (two for loss) in the win.

    Cornerback Ahkello Witherspoon was ruled out in the second quarter after sustaining a shoulder injury.

    Here is the complete game recap:

    The Rams jumped out to an early 7-0 lead with a 45-yard touchdown run by wide receiver Puka Nacua on 4th and 1 from the Titans’ 45 on their first offensive drive. That followed a series from the defense which included outside linebacker Byron Young sacking Tennessee quarterback Cam Ward for an 8-yard loss, amid a series of penalties already driving back the Titans offense on their opening drive.

    Kicker Joey Slye’s 55-yard field goal early in the second quarter gave the Titans their first points, cutting the Rams’ lead to 7-3 with 11:21 left in the first half.

    A trio of explosive completions by Stafford – two to Adams and one to Higbee – set the Rams up inside the Titans’ 10. However, a botched snap and a pair of incompletions forced Los Angeles to settle for a 21-yard field goal by Karty to bring its lead back to seven with 7:25 left in the first half.

    Tennessee eventually answered with a 9-yard touchdown pass from Ward to wide receiver Elic Ayomanor with 38 seconds left in the first half, with Ward making the play by throwing across his body as Rams defensive end Tyler Davis was bearing down on him toward the Titans sideline.

    On the first play of the ensuing Rams offensive series, Stafford’s pass intended for wide receiver Tutu Atwell was intercepted by Titans linebacker Cody Barton, giving Tennessee the ball back with 27 seconds left in the first half. The Titans then drew a defensive pass interference penalty against cornerback Cobie Durant, which moved the Titans from the Rams 46 to the Rams 32.

    Tennessee eventually turned that takeaway into a 37-yard field goal by Slye to take a 13-10 lead into halftime.

    The Rams moved the ball well on the opening series of the second half, but that drive stalled at the Titans 3 and they were forced to settle for another 21-yard field goal by Karty to tie the game 13-13 with 9:29 left in third quarter.

    Slye drilled his third field goal of the day, this time from 57 yards, to regain the lead for the Titans 16-13 with 3:32 left in the third quarter. However, the Rams answered with an 8-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Allen to regain the lead 20-16 on the ensuing possession, doing so after successfully challenging the original ruling that Allen was down by contact at the 1-yard line.

    A 16-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Adams extended the Rams’ lead to 27-16 midway through the fourth quarter after a timely sack-fumble caused by Young and recovered by inside linebacker Nate Landman. Corum’s 1-yard touchdown run a little over three minutes later made it a 33-16 Rams lead, effectively sealing the game.

    #157982
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from https://theramswire.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/rams/2025/09/14/rams-studs-and-duds-titans-week-2-2025/86151430007/?taid=68c726fc07e28c0001e5dae2&utm_campaign=trueanthem&utm_medium=trueanthem&utm_source=twitter

    The Rams needed a strong pass rush against Cam Ward on Sunday, and Young was one of the options to bring it. He finished the day with five tackles, two sacks and a forced fumble that set up Los Angeles on a short field and allowed them to take a two-score lead.

    Stafford followed up a solid first game with an even better Week 2, completing 69.7% of his passes for 298 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. That lone interception was a horrendous decision late in the first half that allowed Tennessee to take the lead into halftime. However, moving up into seventh on the Rams’ all-time passing touchdown list and ninth on the NFL’s all-time passing touchdown list are reasons to celebrate.

    Adams caught four passes for 51 yards in his Rams’ debut against the Seahawks, but against the Titans, he made a much bigger impact. The 32-year-old finished with six receptions for 106 yards and a touchdown. However, Stafford and Adams couldn’t connect on seven targets, so there’s a little work to be done going forward.

    #157990
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Sarah Barshop@sarahbarshop
    Rams CB Ahkello Witherspoon broke his clavicle, Sean McVay said.

    Adam Grosbard@AdamGrosbard
    Darious Williams comes in cold and bats away a third-down pass

    #157991
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams Top Plays vs. Titans: Davante Adams’ First Rams TD, Byron Young’s Forced Fumble & More

    #157992
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157996
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    Byron Young had 5 total tackles (2 for loss), 2 sacks (one resulted in forced fumble) and 2 QB hits today.

    “I thought he took his game to the next level,” McVay said. “His pursuit, you see when (Cam) Ward’s able to extend plays, he’s got the speed to be able to track him down. I think he made the game-changing play where he forces the sack fumble.”

    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    Sean McVay raved about Blake Corum after today’s game, saying he was “really impressed” by the “explosive” running back

    #157998
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Byron Young had 5 total tackles (2 for loss), 2 sacks (one resulted in forced fumble) and 2 QB hits today.

    For the season, 3 sacks, 4 qb hits, 14 tackles (9 solo), 3 TFLs, and 1 FF (that was recovered, leading to a score).

    To invent a completely new phrase–Young is really taking off.

    #158002
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #158006
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from https://www.si.com/nfl/rams/los-angeles-blake-corum-kyren-williams-chris-shula-tennessee-titans-sean-mcvay

    Chris Shula has yet to figure out how to contain mobile quarterbacks

    Cam Ward just told the entire NFL that he was about it and that he’s the new boss of Tennessee. Ward lead the Titans to 19 points on Sunday which marks the first time in the regular season since December eighth, a Rams’ defense at full strength surrendered more than ten points.

    Ward’s mobility was a problem and while the Rams corralled him in the end, since he’s more of a runner to extend plays instead of a runner to gain yardage, when they take on Jalen Hurts next week, if Shula doesn’t get things in order, there’s going to be a problem.

    #158008
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #158009
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #158011
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    HIGHLIGHTS: Matthew Stafford’s Best Throws From 298-Yard Game vs. Titans In Week 2

    #158012
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    They do the Rams at about 58:55.

    #158013
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Matthew Stafford, the Rams’ commander in chief, was as cool as can be vs. Titans

    Nate Atkins

    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6629293/2025/09/14/matthew-stafford-rams-titans-week-2/

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Matthew Stafford slammed his helmet in anger.

    The Los Angeles Rams quarterback knew he couldn’t make this mistake, not right now. With his team tied against the Tennessee Titans and less than a minute until halftime, the 17th-year veteran floated a pass up the left sideline and into the arms of Titans linebacker Cody Barton as he dropped back into zone coverage.

    With one toss, he handed the momentum over to the No. 1 pick playing quarterback on the opposite team. As a lead disappeared, a normally calm and collected Stafford gripped his blue and gold helmet and spiked it into the turf at Nissan Stadium.

    By the time Davante Adams got over to him to talk it through, a metamorphosis had begun.

    “I told him during the game: ‘Bro, you are the coolest dude I’ve been around,’” Adams said. “He’s not cussing. He’s not blaming anybody. It was like it happened in practice.”

    For the rest of the game, Stafford stopped forcing the ball into tight windows. He peppered Adams and Puka Nacua for 22 targets, rotating based on the coverages each drew. When both were covered, he found tight end Tyler Higbee for first downs, Davis Allen for a touchdown and Jordan Whittington for a 40-yard gain up the right sideline.

    Stafford finished 23-of-33 for 298 yards, two touchdowns and an interception.

    More importantly, he turned a three-point halftime deficit into an easy 33-19 victory to propel the Rams to 2-0. Now, they stare down a battle with the Eagles in Philadelphia next week, the site where his 16th season ended in the NFC divisional round.

    On Sunday, his team played the second half with the demeanor he displayed in that first conversation after the pick and the helmet slam — as cool as an early fall breeze in Los Angeles.

    This is the Rams’ commander in chief, playing out the string the only way he knows how. But could this be the best version of him, too?

    The unwavering nature of Stafford

    A narrative once formed about Stafford nationally, back when he was in Cam Ward’s shoes as the quarterback drafted No. 1 overall to rebuild the worst team in football. People called him Stat Padder for the way he racked up 4,000-yard passing seasons but saw just three playoff games and zero postseason wins in 12 years in Detroit before the trade that sent him to Los Angeles for Jared Goff.

    But the reality of mid-career Stafford was that, for as much of a care-free gunslinger as he can be on plays that lead to interceptions like the one to Barton on Sunday, those moments almost always come in the heart of games rather than in the clutch. He’s sometimes the man who leads his team back from his own pick six. By the time Sunday arrived, he was the owner of 38 career fourth-quarter comebacks and 49 career game-winning drives.

    There’s something about this quarterback that lets him go from carelessly tossing an interception to furiously spiking his helmet to diagnosing the path forward with the tone of a man ordering a pizza delivery on a Sunday afternoon.

    “Mental toughness, resilience, experience — all the things that lead to great players being great,” Rams coach Sean McVay said.

    If being drafted No. 1 and serving as the face of a franchise and being traded for a bounty of draft picks to engineer an all-in run to a championship created a weight, it’s been hard to tell when hoisted on the back of this 6-foot-3, 214-pound passer.

    That’s still true now, even as that back has a degenerative disorder that led to weeks missed in training camp and has this 37-year-old dirting the ball in the face of rushers and passing up lanes to rush for touchdowns. One week after he became the 10th quarterback in history to pass for 60,000 career yards, he is living to see another down.

    Nobody knows this truth better than the coach who led his position meetings every day back in 2016 and 2017 in Detroit and was now tasked with finding a way to make Sunday’s second-quarter interception snowball.

    “Today, Matthew Stafford, Hall of Fame-caliber quarterback,” Titans coach Brian Callahan said after the game. “We didn’t do enough to disrupt him.”

    That’s because the Stafford that exists now is in a different place. For one, he’s never had a duo of outside receivers like this.

    In Nacua, he has a third-year budding superstar who averages 90 receiving yards a game for his career and catches everything in sight. Through two games this season — including Sunday’s eight-catch, 91-yard performance — Nacua has a 90 percent catch rate on 20 targets. That figure would be extreme for a running back catching checkdowns against Cover 2, let alone a wide receiver zipping across the middle and into traffic so much that he needed stitches in his eye last week to check back into the game.

    In Adams, he has a 12th-year player with three first-team All-Pro seasons who is making the same push Stafford is, to reach the Hall of Fame and to win a championship before the sands in the hourglass run out. And that receiver, now 33, is likewise performing as if age is just another number. On Sunday, he saw 13 targets and reeled in six of them for 106 yards and scored his first touchdown as a Ram.

    In Nacua, he has an easy answer to zone coverage in a rugged player who is gaining the experience to settle between defenders and gain yards after the ball arrives, like he did as a runner on a jet sweep that he took 45 yards for the game’s first touchdown on Sunday.

    In Adams, he has a solution to man coverage in one of the best route technicians the sport has seen, as he showed by toasting L’Jarius Sneed with a stutter step on a fade route to reel in a 16-yard touchdown catch. And when that player has the pedigree on the perimeter to force opposing No. 1 cornerbacks to travel to either side with him, as the Titans did with Snead and as the Houston Texans did with All-Pro Derek Stingley last week, it allows McVay to motion Nacua between the outside and the slot to create favorable matchups.

    “It gives a lot of indicators to No. 9, and the more information he has, the better our offense is going to operate,” Nacua said. “There’s an opportunity I get in the mornings to be able to go out there and watch film with him. I know he’s there before I am. The iPad’s open, he’s writing things down and I’m watching the clips for the first time. He’s like, ‘Do you see that up top?’ And I’m like, ‘No, I was watching something else.’”

    How far can a 37-year-old QB take the Rams?
    This is what 17 seasons and 224 games produce in a man whose mind moves at the same velocity as his arm. It’s the way he has to win right now, when his back faces the risk of taking a hit he can’t return from.

    But it’s a model that can work in his conference. After all, just two seasons ago, the NFC Championship Game featured Goff against Brock Purdy. It’s a step below the ceiling in the AFC, where the only quarterbacks to reach the conference title game since the 2020 season are Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow, Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson.

    It’s why the Titans took the swing they did on Ward, who showed a glimmer of that upside when he scrambled for eight seconds to the sideline in the second quarter and launched a pass back across his body for a touchdown.

    Through two games, this is working for the Rams. They made Stafford the third-quickest passer in the league in Week 1, according to TruMedia, where he attempted a league-low three passes that took more than 3 seconds. They are deploying more two-tight end looks to draw run-down personnel and isolate Adams and Nacua.

    Through two weeks, Stafford is completing 71 percent of passes for 8.8 yards per attempt and a quarterback rating of 107.1. It’s a tiny sample, but all three are career bests.

    “I put time and effort into making sure that when we break the huddle, man, everybody is locked and loaded and understanding my plan if we end up changing something,” Stafford said.

    He has never had a duo quite like Adams and Nacua. Cooper Kupp was battling injuries to stay on the field to play with Nacua the past two seasons. Calvin Johnson was doing the same in his final two seasons when Golden Tate arrived in Detroit in 2014.

    Adams and Nacua are the keys to the engine, and the Rams know who they want steering this ride.

    “This is greatness right here,” Whittington said, pointing to the No. 9 Stafford jersey he wore out of the locker room after Sunday’s win. “He’s just in total command. When you’ve got somebody who is so in tune with the process and the game looks so slow to him, it’s really cool to see.”

    #158015
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Never had a duo like Nacua and Adams?

    I dunno. Kupp and OBJ were pretty good. Kupp and Robert Woods were pretty good.

    w
    v

    #158032
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Never had a duo like Nacua and Adams?

    I dunno. Kupp and OBJ were pretty good. Kupp and Robert Woods were pretty good.

    w
    v

    Pretty sure Bruce and Holt surpass them as well.

    #158033
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Never had a duo like Nacua and Adams?

    I dunno. Kupp and OBJ were pretty good. Kupp and Robert Woods were pretty good.

    w
    v

    Pretty sure Bruce and Holt surpass them as well.

    It was receiving duos Stafford has played with.

    You know on this board we frown on incorrect information. And this one is almost as bad as when you denied my assertion that Erik Dikcerson was the best TE the Rams ever had. What other TE ever got 2000 yards?

    Anyway. Atkins doesn’t know about Kupp and OBJ. He’s a newbie.

Viewing 25 posts - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

Comments are closed.