GM's firing underscores Titans' urgency vs. Jaguars

Owning a three-game lead in the AFC South with just five games left, the Tennessee Titans still pulled the trigger on a major move on Tuesday.

Owner Amy Adams Strunk canned general manager Jon Robinson, two days after watching wide receiver A.J. Brown, whom Robinson traded in the offseason to Philadelphia, catch eight passes for 119 yards and two scores in the Eagles' 35-10 rout of Tennessee.

The Titans try to pick up the pieces from that outcome and organizational upheaval Sunday when they host the Jacksonville Jaguars, who are hoping to mount a late challenge to Tennessee in the division.

Fifth-year coach Mike Vrabel, whom Robinson hired in January 2018 after Strunk fired then-coach Mike Mularkey, will team with vice president of player personnel Ryan Cowden to handle player moves for the season's remainder.

"The message is the same as it's always been -- we're charged to win," Vrabel said Wednesday. "We're here to win championships. We all have a job to do and we're held to a high standard and we're evaluated each and every day on that job.

"And it's the same thing I told the football team and the players this morning."

The Titans (7-5) have lost their last two games after going 7-1 in their previous eight games to take command in one of the league's weakest divisions. They are the only team with a winning record in the AFC South.

As things presently stand, they would be the fourth seed in the AFC playoffs and in the first round would face Cincinnati, which knocked them out of the postseason back in January and defeated them in Week 12. With just one winning team left on Tennessee's schedule, there's an opportunity to improve its playoff positioning.

For that to happen, the Titans need to get Derrick Henry going. A two-time league rushing champ, Henry has been held under 100 yards in each of the last four weeks, including just 30 on 11 carries at Philadelphia.

"I pride myself on being a playmaker for this team and I feel like I haven't really done that these last two weeks," he said.

The Titans won't have talented rookie wide receiver Treylon Burks, who has been ruled out for Sunday's game due to a concussion. Burks sustained the injury while catching his first career touchdown pass in the first quarter of last Sunday's loss at Philadelphia.

Meanwhile, Jacksonville (4-8) has one shot to maneuver into some sort of contention. It either wins this week or it will miss the playoffs for the fifth straight year since advancing to the AFC finals in 2017, when it held a fourth-quarter lead before losing in New England.

The Jaguars are coming off one of their worst games of the year, allowing points on Detroit's first eight possessions last week in a 40-14 loss at Ford Field. The Lions carved up Jacksonville for 437 total yards and never punted, going 8 for 12 on third down.

"It was an ugly day for us, for sure," said Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence, who went 17-for-31 for 179 yards and a touchdown in defeat.

And Lawrence didn't go unscathed, leaving the game after his left leg was twisted during a sack. He was limited in practice on Friday and was listed as questionable before being declared active on Sunday morning.

"He's been in these situations before in his career so it's not unfamiliar territory to him," said Jacksonville coach Doug Pederson of Beathard.

--Field Level Media

Final1st2nd3rd4thScore
Tennessee TitansTitans1400822
Jacksonville JaguarsJaguars71313336
Tennessee
Passing:Ryan Tannehill 25/38 (254 YDS)
Rushing:Derrick Henry 17 CAR (121 YDS)
Receiving:Austin Hooper 5 REC (68 YDS)
Jacksonville
Passing:Trevor Lawrence 30/42 (368 YDS)
Rushing:Travis Etienne Jr. 17 CAR (32 YDS)
Receiving:Evan Engram 11 REC (162 YDS)
Season Series
TennesseeStatsJacksonville
4-0Vs0-4
121Points59
15Touchdowns8
6/7Field Goals2/4
71/101 (781 yd.)Passing108/172 (1018 yd.)
144 CAR (658 yd.)Rushing81 CAR (462 yd.)