5 Titans players who could cause problems for the Jaguars in Week 11

Which Titans player should worry the Jaguars most?

The Jacksonville Jaguars need a win this week to forget about their rough Week 10. Last Sunday, the Jaguars lost to the San Francisco 49ers, 34-3.

Now, Jacksonville will face the Tennessee Titans at home. The Titans are never an easy matchup, but they’re currently last in the AFC South with a 3-6 record.

Tennessee has lost four of its last five games and benched former starting quarterback Ryan Tannehill in favor of rookie quarterback Will Levis. If the Jaguars want to get back on track, a win against the Titans would do wonders.

Here are five Titans player who could give the Jaguars trouble in Week 11:

Josh Allen on Titans: ‘We don’t like these guys and they don’t like us’

Josh Allen knows a game against the Titans isn’t just another game.

There aren’t many players who have been on the Jacksonville Jaguars’ roster longer than outside linebacker Josh Allen. But it didn’t take years in Duval for Allen to understand the stakes in the biannual matchup against the Tennessee Titans.

“This is the first game I was told about that, ‘We don’t like these guys and they don’t like us,'” Allen said. “The energy — no matter the record, no matter the situation; we could be undefeated, they could not win one game — the intensity of the game is gonna be high. We gotta be prepared for that.

“There’s just something about these games that just brings out a little bit out of each person. So we gotta be ready to play, first and foremost. We gotta stick to our keys, we gotta dominate out matchups, and we gotta fly around and have fun offensively, defensively, and special teams.”

Last season, the Jaguars beat the Titans, 36-22, in Nashville and then got a 20-16 victory in a winner-take-all regular season finale at EverBank Stadium. It was just the third time ever that Jacksonville got the season sweep over the division rival.

After the first of the two wins, then-Jaguars pass rusher Arden Key (who now plays for Tennessee) told reporters that Doug Pederson showed his team a reel of trash talk from previous Titans teams.

“I saw a video yesterday that Doug showed and it informed me on the Jaguars playing against the Titans and stuff like that,” Key told Action Sports Jax. “It honestly pissed me off, just to see how Tennessee don’t respect us in the division and we changed that tonight.”

This season, the situation in the AFC South is much different. The first place Jaguars are looking to avoid allowing their 34-3 loss in Week 10 to snowball into a losing streak. The last place Titans are trying to get their offense back on track with rookie quarterback in Will Levis after back-to-back losses.

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Is Trevor Lawrence’s knee injury still affecting the Jaguars’ offense?

Trevor Lawrence hasn’t been on the injury report after the bye, but the Jaguars still aren’t comfortable moving him outside the pocket.

There hasn’t been much talk of Trevor Lawrence’s knee in recent weeks. After a few days of hand-wringing prior to a Thursday night game against the New Orleans Saints, the Jacksonville Jaguars’ third-year quarterback played through the injury and that was that.

Even with a knee brace he called “not comfortable, in general” prior to the game, Lawrence ran for a career-high 59 rushing yards in the win against the Saints and added 204 passing yards and a touchdown.

After the team’s Week 9 bye, Lawrence has stopped appearing on the Jaguars’ injury reports. Yet, the brace is still on his knee.

“You’ll see it again this week,” Lawrence said Wednesday. “It’s kind of week-to-week with that, just being cautious there.”

While it sounds like nothing to worry about, it may be holding the Jaguars offense back.

“It affects mobility,” Jaguars coach Doug Pederson said. “Straight line, linear speed, all that is fine, but the stopping and starting and all of that kind of affects it. As we continue to go, he gets healthier and feels better. That’s his strength of his, is being able to throw on the run. The more he feels comfortable and strong, I think the more we can implement those in our game plans.”

In the meantime, plays that roll Lawrence out of the pocket are temporarily missing from the Jaguars offense.

That missing element hasn’t just removed part of what makes the Jaguars offense dangerous, it has also made Lawrence a sitting duck, more or less, behind a struggling offensive line.

The Jaguars allowed five sacks in a Week 10 blowout loss to the San Francisco 49ers, tied for the most in Lawrence’s career. And both 49ers pass rusher Nick Bosa and the Tennessee Titans’ Arden Key highlighted exactly what they needed to do to get home against a Jacksonville offense without much protection or the option of moving Lawrence around.

“If we can take away his first read, the rush will be allowed to get there,” Key said in the Titans locker room Wednesday, via Kayla Anderson of 104-5 The Zone. “If the first read’s there, he’s throwing it right there, right now. If it’s not, you see the kind of hesitation, things of that sort so we know and realize that we’ve got to take away the first read so we get to him.”

Jacksonville will hope to prove that wrong and find success anyway against the Titans, who are 3-6 after back-to-back losses. But until Lawrence’s knee is healthy enough that Jaguars coaches are comfortable moving him around, the offense won’t quite be firing on all cylinders.

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Titans have 3 players with top 20 win rates

Three Titans currently rank inside the top 20 in win rates going into Week 10.

We already covered the Tennessee Titans’ win rates as a team going into Week 10 in a previous article, so now it’s time to look at which players are individually getting the job done.

According to ESPN Analytics, only three Titans players rank inside the top 20 at their respective positions in at least one of the four major categories listed below.

  • Pass-rush win rate (PRWR)
  • Run-stop win rate (RSWR)
  • Pass-block win rate (PBWR)
  • Run-block win rate (RBWR)

The Titans have one edge rusher who ranks inside the top eight in pass-rush win rate amd one defensive tackle who ranks inside the top 15. In addition, they have one offensive tackle who ranks inside the top 20 in pass-block win rate.

Tennessee failed to have a single interior offensive lineman listed in either blocking category, along with no defender who ranks amongst the best run-stoppers in the league.

Now, let’s go ahead and find out which three players made the cut.

Jaguars’ projected 2024 NFL draft picks after trade deadline

The Jaguars still have plenty of draft capital to spare after sending a sixth-round pick to the Vikings for Ezra Cleveland.

The Jacksonville Jaguars gave up a sixth-round draft pick Tuesday to acquire offensive lineman Ezra Cleveland from the Minnesota Vikings. But even after losing the late-round pick, the Jaguars have plenty of 2024 NFL draft capital to spare.

With the draft just under six months away, here are the picks currently owned by the Jaguars:

There won’t be any more trades until the NFL’s 2024 league year begins on March 14, so the picks are mostly set for the time being. There are still the parameters of the Ridley trade that need to be finalized with the Jaguars’ fourth-round selection appearing unlikely to be the pick that gets sent to Atlanta.

Compensatory selections will be officially announced at some point during the NFL’s annual league meeting scheduled for March 24-27, 2024. While there’s no doubt that the loss of Taylor will net Jacksonville a third-round pick, there’s a chance that the loss of Key could land the Jaguars a fifth-rounder instead of a sixth-rounder.

The losses of tight end Chris Manhertz and wide receiver Marvin Jones Jr. are also eligible to count in the compensatory formula, but are unlikely to reach the threshold for a seventh-round selection.

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Titans’ 2023 pass-rush stats after six games

A look at the Titans’ pass-rush stats after six games of the 2023 campaign.

Ahead of the start of the 2023 season, the Tennessee Titans’ defensive front was arguably the most hyped-up part of the team, and for good reason.

Tennessee was coming off its second straight elite campaign against the run and an already solid pass-rush had Harold Landry returning and also added Arden Key in free agency.

After a very promising start to the season versus the New Orleans Saints, things have cooled off significantly for both areas of Tennessee’s defense.

The unit ranks 14th against the run and the Titans have garnered an underwhelming 15 sacks in six games, tied for 18th in the NFL.

Making that lack of sack production worse is the fact that the secondary has been fully exposed whenever Tennessee can’t get home on opposing quarterbacks, which has happened far too often of late.

Hopefully Tennessee’s defense as a whole can get back on track coming out of the bye. For now, here’s a look at the Titans’ pass-rush stats through six games.

5 Titans players among leaders in win rates

Five Titans players are among the top 20 in win rates, according to ESPN analytics.

The Tennessee Titans have collectively had a disappointing start to their 2023 season.

The hardest pill to swallow through six weeks is that a lot of the national media and people outside the fanbase were right about the perception they had of this team.

Not many people who pay very close attention to the Titans had them starting the year 2-4, especially following their massive addition of wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins.

However, that’s the reality of where the Titans currently are at heading into their Week 7 bye.

Despite the adversity, the Titans have had a few individual bright spots scattered across the roster. According to ESPN Analytics, the Titans have five players who ranked inside the top 20 at their respective positions in win rates.

In total, Tennessee has three defenders and two o-linemen who cracked the lists after the first six weeks of the season. Let’s find out exactly who they are and where each of them landed.

3 Titans rank inside top 20 in win-rate categories after 5 games

Three Titans players rank inside the top 20 in win-rate categories at their respective positions through five weeks.

The Tennessee Titans haven’t had the start to the 2023 season that many of us envisioned. The unfortunate truth is that Tennessee is currently a talented, yet inconsistent football team that is constantly alternating between strong and underwhelming performances.

Fortunately, they do have a few bright spots in terms of win rate.

According to ESPN analytics, right tackle Chris Hubbard, right guard Daniel Brunskill and outside linebacker Arden Key are all ranking inside the top 20 in a three notable categories.

Brunskill has the sixth-highest run-block win rate among all interior linemen through five weeks, winning 78 percent of his run-block attempts (92-of-118) while only receiving help on 51 percent of them.

Key, has the 11th-highest pass-rush win rate at his position, winning 24 percent of his pass-rushes (16-of-66) while also being one of nine edge rushers who are double-teamed at least 20 percent of the time (22 percent).

Lastly, Hubbard is entering Week 6 with the 17th-highest pass-block win rate at the offensive tackle position. The UAB product has won approximately 91 percent of his reps in pass-pro (82-of-90). However, it should be noted that he is receiving double-team help at the second-highest rate (47 percent) among those offensive tackles that ranked inside the top 20.

These three have routinely ranked inside the top 20 at their respective positions. Let’s hope this trend continues and Tennessee can add more players to the lists as the season progresses.

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Titans’ offensive and defensive win-rate rankings after five weeks

Where the Titans rank in run-block, pass-block, pass-rush and run-stop win rates after five games.

It’s no secret that the Tennessee Titans have struggled with their consistency over the first five weeks. One week they look like a budding contender, and the next they look like a team destined to pick inside the top 10 of the 2024 NFL draft.

That type of trajectory is likely going to leave them destined for mediocrity unless something changes and the Titans start to stack strong or weak performances together for multiple weeks on end.

The Titans’ win rates, according to ESPN analytics, certainly reflect that, as Tennessee ranks right around the middle of the pack in three out of the four categories. Tennessee’s most promising ranking comes in its pass-rush win rate.

The Titans are seventh in the NFL in this area, winning approximately 52 percent of their pass-rush attempts. The Titans come in at No. 18 overall in both run-stop win rate (32 percent) and run-block win rate (71 percent).

The Titans’ run-stop win rate undoubtedly took a hit after they allowed nearly as many rushing yards last week alone (193) as they did over the three weeks prior (212).

Meanwhile, Tennessee’s pass-blocking is right around the league average, coming in at No. 14 at a respectable 58 percent.

This week, the Titans are set to take on a dynamic Baltimore Ravens team led by quarterback Lamar Jackson and linebacker Roquan Smith.

If Tennessee wants to head into the bye week with a .500 record, the team must find a way to hold its own in each of these categories. Otherwise it could end up being be a brutally long flight home from London.

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Colts vs. Titans: Keys to victory in Week 5

Here’s how the Colts can beat the Titans in Week 5.

The Indianapolis Colts continue their homestand in Week 5 with an AFC South rivalry game against the Tennessee Titans.

The division is currently a very contested race. All four teams hold the same record entering this week and need a win to continue their push for the South’s best. The Colts, in particular, are looking to right the wrongs of several games past and break a five-game losing streak against Tennessee.

Here are the keys to victory for overcoming the prowess of the Titans: