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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Tennessee Titans just put together their most gratifying victory of coach Mike Vrabel’s short tenure.
They spent the past two weeks dealing with the NFL’s first COVID-19 outbreak with each morning bringing news of yet another positive test. A game postponed and rescheduled with a second pushed back. Only one practice with two walk-throughs and unrelenting criticism.
The Titans remain depleted. They’re also still undefeated.
Ryan Tannehill threw for three touchdowns and ran for another as the Titans routed the Buffalo Bills 42-16 on a rare Tuesday night in a showdown between two of the NFL’s five remaining undefeated teams pushed back two days after a couple more positive tests for Tennessee last week.
“What this organization has been through over the past couple weeks to really fight through all of that, shake it all off, really limited practice, limited reps and go out and put this kind of win together, I think makes a statement and I’m happy we were able to do that today,” Tannehill said.
The Titans (4-0) continued their best start since winning their first 10 games in 2008 despite not playing playing their last game Sept. 27 in Minnesota. Coach Mike Vrabel said everyone in the organization would get a game ball after this performance.
“I learned a long time ago is the definition of a pro is they make the hard look easy, so whatever situation we’re presented with we got to all come together and make the best decisions for the team each and every time,” Vrabel said.
Malcolm Butler intercepted two passes, the second he returned 68 yards, and both set up short touchdowns for Tennessee. Kareem Orr’s recovery of a fumbled kickoff set up Tannehill’s fourth TD for 21 points off Buffalo’s three turnovers. Kalif Raymond’s 40-yard punt return also set up a 1-yard TD run by Derrick Henry.
“We expected to win,” Butler said.
The Bills (4-1) had not won five straight games since 2004, and they came in looking for the franchise’s best start since 1991 when Buffalo reached the Super Bowl. They also played without starting cornerbacks with Tre’Davious White inactive because of a back injury and Levi Wallace on injured reserve.
Starting wide receiver John Brown also was out for Buffalo, which had scored at least 30 points in the past three games.
“They were ready to go and at the same time we beat ourselves,” Bills coach Sean McDermott said.
Buffalo center Mitch Morse called this a gut-punch.
“It’s tough, they came out and beat us like a drum,” Morse said.
Josh Allen came in second in the NFL in yards passing. He threw for 263 yards and two TDs. Stephon Diggs had 10 catches for 106 yards.
The Titans needed the turnovers with seven key players on the reserve/COVID-19 list led by wide receivers Corey Davis and Adam Humphries and defensive lineman Jeffery Simmons. They also were missing a couple assistant coaches and two players activated off that reserve list earlier Tuesday were scratched.
The Titans got a big boost on the Bills’ opening drive.
Allen’s pass went off Andre Roberts’ hands right to Butler, and he returned the interception 29 yards to the Bills 16. Two plays later, Tannehill hit A.J. Brown, who missed the last two games with an injured knee, for a 16-yard TD for the quick lead.
The Bills tied it up with a methodical 15-play drive converting four third downs, taking advantage of a Titans’ defense playing a pair of rookies in end Larrell Murchison and cornerback Chris Jackson. Allen tossed the ball to Isaiah McKenzie for a 3-yard TD tying it up, the ninth different Bill to catch a TD pass from Allen.
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The Titans scored 21 of the next 24 points.
Tennessee led 21-10 at halftime after Tannehill ran in from 10 yards seconds before the half. Butler refused to go down after picking off an Allen throw to Gabriel Davis late in the third, and Tannehill found Jonnu Smith for a 4-yard TD and a 28-10 lead three plays later.
RARE TUESDAY NIGHT
This was the 21st time the NFL has played on a Tuesday and the league’s first on a Tuesday night since Dec. 28, 2010, when the Eagles hosted Minnesota on a Tuesday because of a snowstorm. That game was the first since the Boston Yanks played at the New York Giants on Oct. 1, 1946.
HEY YOU
The Titans had roughly 8,600 fans on hand for this game. Tennessee originally was going to have fans Oct. 4 for the first time this season, but the outbreak pushed that game with Pittsburgh to Oct. 25. Zip ties were used to keep fans from switching seats, and neck gaiters were given out.
INJURIES
Titans left tackle Taylor Lewan had been questionable with a shoulder injury, and he went to the sideline late in the second quarter after Bills tackle Harrison Phillips landed on him. Lewan went immediately to the sideline and was replaced by Ty Sambrailo, but he returned in the third. ... Rookie RB Darrynton Evans aggravated a hamstring in the second quarter. He did not return.
Bills tight end Dawson Knox hurt a calf.
UP NEXT
Bills will host Kansas City on Monday night. Safety Micah Hyde denied the Bills got caught looking ahead to the defending Super Bowl champs.
“No, no, no, no. We were 100% focused on the Titans,” Hyde said. We knew this game was going to be played one way or another. It was not looking forward to the Chiefs or anything.”
Titans host Texans on Sunday.
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Follow Teresa M. Walker at https://twitter.com/TeresaMWalker
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The 2020 NBA playoffs have been a showcase of shocking comebacks, ungodly individual exploits, buzzer-beaters and beautiful team performances. But not every postseason game can be a work of art. Those instant classics linger in our memories, but every team that advances to the NBA Finals trudges its way through a bog or two.
For the Miami Heat, their 112-109 Game 4 victory over the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference finals was anything but elegant. There were glimpses of the two-man dance of Goran Dragic and Bam Adebayo, and Jimmy Butler found 24 points in places he usually does. But very little on Wednesday came easily until the closing possessions.
There was one exception: Tyler Herro.
In a choppy affair with many ugly possessions, Herro was playing in a different game. The rookie guard sizzled from beyond the arc, showed off his ball skills off the dribble and crashed the glass. His 37-point output not only paced the Heat but also saved them.
After outplaying Miami minute-for-minute most of the series, Boston is in a precarious spot: down 3-1. The first two-and-a-half quarters Wednesday were a quagmire. After attacking from the outset in Game 3 to great effect, the Celtics were tentative again in the first half of Game 4.
Forward Jayson Tatum endured a hellacious, scoreless first half, then came out of the locker room with a vengeance after intermission. It was one of the more bizarre, bifurcated individual efforts of the postseason, but Tatum's second-half outburst kept the Celtics afloat.
Butler 4 3 24 Tractor Tire
There were glimpses of vintage Heat when it counted most, including a crucial 3-point bucket from Dragic that captured the collective basketball IQ that has propelled this No. 5 seed to the doorstep of the Finals. In just four seconds, the ball traversed four zones of the court, from Butler to Adebayo to Andre Iguodala and finally to Dragic, to put the Heat up three possessions with 1 minute, 36 seconds remaining.
With the huge hockey assist, Adebayo was the fulcrum of that possession, just as he has been at so many big moments in this Miami bubble run. Late in the fourth quarter, he appeared to have difficulty moving his left arm. He finished the final frenzied minutes of the game -- with the left arm dangling without much vigor. Adebayo's health is crucial to the Heat's success on both sides of the ball, and the next two days could be long ones as the Heat and their big man await a prognosis.
The Heat are just one game away from the NBA Finals and would be just the third team seeded fifth or lower to reach that stage. Although it would have seemed improbable just a short time ago, they have the composition of a team entirely up to the task: a gritty closer, a multipurpose big man, shooters all over the floor, veteran savvy and, after Game 4, a young playmaker with championship-level confidence. -- Kevin Arnovitz
Herro flashes All-Star potential
Tyler Herro continued his scorching postseason run with 37 points in 36 minutes, setting the NBA record previously held by Andrew Toney for points off the bench by a rookie and becoming the fourth player in NBA history to score 30 or more points in a playoff game before the age of 21.
For the second consecutive game, Herro was the best player on the floor. He scored 59 points in his past 72 minutes on 22-of-39 shooting. Throughout the series, the 20-year-old has shown the confidence of a veteran All-Star, constantly in attack mode, staring down the Celtics' bench after makes and giving Miami a much-needed spark with his energy and bucket-getting mentality.
Herro's never-ending self-belief comes as little surprise, as he has long been praised for his swagger and edge, even predating his 'I'm a bucket' moment at Kentucky.
But Herro's evolution from off-ball, quick-action scorer in college to more of an on-ball, pick-and-roll threat has been a key development in Miami's postseason brilliance.
A lot of Herro's damage is done by way of spot-ups, handoffs and cuts, like we have seen from Devin Booker before him. Herro used only 25 pick-and-roll possessions in 37 games during his freshman season at Kentucky, but he has looked far more comfortable creating for himself and his teammates in the NBA. Veteran teammates deferred to him down the stretch Wednesday, and he looked calm and collected in bringing the ball up the floor, getting Miami into its offense and making timely reads.
Herro dribbled into several midrange pull-ups, splashed a deep rise-and-fire triple against a drop coverage, sprinted into catch-and-shoot 3s, converted a one-legged runner and made a handful of heady drop-offs and kick-outs to open teammates with either hand.
Beyond this series, Herro's evolution as a true ball-screen scorer and poised playmaker, in addition to his nonstop off-ball movement, gives him considerable long-term upside that few scouts saw when he was drafted 13th overall. In the interim, it isn't just Herro's scoring that lifted Miami to a pivotal Game 4 victory.
Herro has turned himself into an elite positional rebounder, averaging 7.5 boards this series at 6-foot-6 with a lean frame and negative wingspan. He's willing to crack down from the weak side or stick his nose in traffic to corral loose balls. The rookie is also active in Miami's zone, stunting at shooters to make them second-guess letting it fly. Even if he's overmatched physically at times, he's willing to put his body on the line to contain penetration.
As he showed yet again in Game 4, Herro has the killer mentality that personifies this Miami group and has it one win away from an NBA Finals berth. -- Mike Schmitz
Boston finds itself in a familiar situation
Teams tend to regret missed opportunities in a best-of-seven playoff series. The Celtics must be kicking themselves for the situation they're in.
It would be one thing to be trailing the Miami Heat 3-1 in the Eastern Conference finals if the Celtics had been thoroughly outplayed. But entering Game 4, Boston had led for 74.7% of the minutes in the first three games.
The Celtics had a disastrous fourth quarter in Game 1 and an awful stretch in the third quarter of Game 2 -- and lost both games. The introduction of Gordon Hayward to the series swung things in Boston's direction in Game 3. But trailing 2-1, the Celtics were in a position where -- if something weird happened in Game 4 on Wednesday -- they could be on the verge of leaving the NBA's bubble.
Well, Tyler Herro and his 37 points were that weird thing. The Celtics now find themselves in a massive hole.
The Celtics needed seven games to get past the Toronto Raptors in the Eastern Conference semifinals. Boston lost two close games in that series and only just managed to win Game 7 to advance past the defending champions.
Boston is in the same situation against another battle-tested team in Miami and might not escape this time around.
There will be plenty for the Celtics to look back on with regret from this game. Kemba Walker was left on Herro for too long as Herro was torching Boston in the second half. Jayson Tatum was invisible for the first 32 minutes before he finally got going. Boston got lots of open looks against Miami's zone defense but missed most of them in the first half, then didn't make enough of them down the stretch.
It's the kind of thing that can happen in a playoff series. It's also the kind of thing that a team can't afford to let happen if it has already blown a couple of games it should have won. -- Tim Bontemps
Bam finds ways to contribute on both ends
Bam Adebayo and Jimmy Butler have spent the bubble bouncing praise off each other. Butler has repeatedly said that Adebayo is the 'heart and soul' of the Heat. Adebayo usually has smiled and relayed the same message: It's the other way around. Adebayo's Game 4 performance, though, offered more credence to Butler's statements.
As Tyler Herro hit shots from all over the floor and delivered a career-high 37 points and Butler continued to make plays late in the fourth quarter that carried the Heat across the finish line, there was Adebayo delivering one more time on a variety of levels. It wasn't just the 20 points, 12 rebounds, 4 assists and 2 steals -- all of which the Heat needed; it was also that Adebayo continued to make plays when the Heat needed them.
In Game 1, it was the block at the rim on Jayson Tatum that caught the basketball world's attention. In Game 4, it was play after play over the course of a hard-nosed contest that pushed the Heat to just one win from a Finals appearance. Adebayo doesn't have the type of flashy offensive game that will catch attention most nights, but he continues to play with the steady consistency that any championship contender needs.
In what has become a common theme throughout this postseason, it looks like Butler was right all along.
Dragic's season of the ultimate teammate
How many players who started 242 games the previous four seasons would have accepted the role of sixth man heading into a contract year?
That is what happened when 34-year-old Goran Dragic made the ultimate team sacrifice before the season, relinquishing his starter duties to rookie Kendrick Nunn, who went on to earn All-NBA rookie honors. Dragic thrived coming off the bench, averaging 16 points in 28 minutes.
When Nunn was sidelined during the NBA restart after testing positive for the coronavirus, the door opened for Dragic to regain his starting position.
What has transpired since then has set the stage for Dragic to be one of the most sought-after free agents in the offseason.
In the Heat's Game 4 win, Dragic affected the game offensively in multiple ways:
He finished with 22 points, 5 rebounds and 3 assists. In the playoffs, he is averaging 21 points on 38% from 3.
How does this set up for free agency?
Butler 4 3 24 Inch
Dragic ranks second on the free-agent point guard board behind Fred VanVleet.
Butler 4 3 24 Commentary
The Heat have made a concerted effort to prioritize cap flexibility (they could have a max slot available) for the summer of 2021.
Miami can offer Dragic a one-year, $20 million contract and still have the flexibility to use its $9.3 million midlevel exception, remain below the tax line in 2020-21 and have cap space in 2021-22.
Teams such as the Dallas Mavericks and Los Angeles Lakers have the $9.3 million midlevel exception to offer, but Dragic could double that amount by going the one-year route with the Heat.
The Heat front office will need to thoroughly analyze and put together a plan if Dragic receives an offer of more than one year. Will the Heat spend even if it means compromising cap flexibility? As Brian Windhorst wrote, the Heat do not believe in three-year plans.
'You know me: I'm all about now,' Heat president Pat Riley said earlier this season. 'We're going to press on, and we're not going to stop.' -- Bobby Marks
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