Dolphins' streak-ending loss seriously dents playoff hopes
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - The Miami Dolphins had been winning so much the playoffs seemed an inevitability in coach Brian Flores' third season.
With one game remaining, the Dolphins now find themselves on the outside looking in and needing lots of help to revive their postseason chances.
Tua Tagovailoa turned the ball over twice, once with the ball slipping out of his hands on a cold, rainy day, and the Miami Dolphins found themselves routed 34-3 by the Tennessee Titans to snap their seven-game winning streak Sunday.
The loss pushed the Dolphins (8-8) from seventh in the AFC as the last team in the playoffs to the outside, trailing at least the Los Angeles Chargers with the Las Vegas Raiders and Indianapolis Colts holding the final two wild-card spots available. The Dolphins knew they likely needed two more victories to clinch a berth.
'œObviously, if you're a competitor you're disappointed,'ť Dolphins tight end Mike Gesicki said. "That's the situation we're in.'ť
The Dolphins proved their resiliency by becoming the first team in NFL history to win seven straight after losing seven consecutive games. That run pulled them out of a 1-7 start to 8-7 before they ran into a team with the best record the Dolphins had faced down the stretch with the Titans now holding the AFC's No. 1 seed.
The Titans sacked Tagovailoa four times and harassed him much of the game. His l ongest throw of 45 yards to rookie Jaylen Waddle came too late, and Miami couldn't finish off that drive anyway before turning the ball over on downs early in the fourth quarter trailing 17-3.
Tagovailoa said one person not doing what's needed can mess up the play. He finished 18 of 38 for 205 yards.
"Whether it's me making a throw, the running backs running and finding the right lane, or the line blocking a certain way, the receivers' routes, everything matters. Little things matter. It was just poor execution on our part.'ť
The Titans scored 24 unanswered points, 17 in the fourth quarter, to seriously damage the Dolphins' playoff chances.
Miami defensive tackle Christian Wilkins said the Dolphins will do what they've done all season and stick together.
'œIt's definitely unfortunate, though, because we've been experiencing a lot of winning lately, and we've been doing a pretty good job, but the recipe and the formula is still the same, 24-hour rule,'ť Wilkins said. "Flush this one and get back to work (Monday). It's the best seven days of the season yet.'ť
The challenge for the Dolphins is they host the New England Patriots (10-6) who currently sit fifth in the AFC, with a chance still to win the AFC East if Buffalo loses to the visiting Jets.
Miami safety Brandon Jones, activated after being cleared off the reserve/COVID-19 list, was unhappy at how the Dolphins' defense played.
A unit that had been No. 1 in so many categories during the seven-game winning streak gave up 308 yards. The NFL's top unit with 45 sacks coming in took down Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill only once, and the Titans had a 2-0 edge in turnovers.
Miami also came in seventh against the run, giving up only 103.7 yards per game yet gave up 198 yards rushing as the Titans averaged 5 yards per carry with two touchdown runs.
'œJust knowing how good we can be when we're all playing on the same accord from offense, defense, (and) special teams, it's always frustrating when things don't go your way,'ť Jones said.
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