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Lions up 21-7 over Seahawks, Titans lead 19-6 over Dolphins
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Lions up 21-7 over Seahawks, Titans lead 19-6 over Dolphins

Dolphins punt after another three-and-out

The Dolphins lost seven yards on their most recent drive and punted.

A 15-yard penalty on Miami on the punt already has the Titans in Dolphins territory.

Titans 16, Dolphins 6

The Titans have scored the first touchdown of the game!

Tyjae Spears scored on a direct snap on 1st-and-goal. Tennessee was setup inside the 10 after a 41-yard run by Tony Pollard.

Detroit in control at halftime

The Lions lead 21-7 at halftime against Seattle. The Seahawks had a slim chance to cut into the lead after getting the ball back with 14 seconds left in the first half. After moving into deep field-goal range. Kicker Jason Myers tried a 62-yard kick, but it was short. It would have been a franchise-record field goal.

The biggest difference thus far is how Seattle has been unable to support QB Geno Smith on the ground, with only 18 rushing yards, and Smith accounting for 12 of them. Smith has completed 17 of his 24 passes, while Lions quarterback Jared Goff is 12-for-12.

Titans 9, Dolphins 6

A Jason Sanders 56-yard field goal has made it a one-field goal game.

The Dolphins went only 10 yards in five plays after starting their drive in Titans territory. It was one yard shy of Sanders’ career long.

Mason Rudolph remained at quarterback for the Titans

In case you missed it — Mason Rudolph was back in at QB for Tennessee on its first drive of the second half.

Head coach Brian Callahan left the door open for Will Levis going into halftime, but I’d be surprised if we see him again.

Titans punt, Dolphins get much-needed return

A Braxton Berrios 27-yard punt return means the Dolphins will start their next drive in Titans territory.

Can Miami finally score a touchdown?

Tricky play!

Seattle just pulled off a tricky lateral for a 19-yard gain. But that’s not all…

Look familiar? Seattle was apparently taking notes while scouting Detroit’s game last week.

Dolphins go three-and-out to start the second half

Miami picked up one yard on its first possession of the second half. Jaylen Waddle dropped a potential first down on second down.

The Dolphins punted and the Titans will take over.

Lions 21, Seahawks 7

The Lions’ offense rolled to a touchdown on a third consecutive drive, this time a nine-play, 70-yard march that ended with Jahmyr Gibbs’s one-yard dive for the score. Sam LaPorta, the tight end who was questionable this week because of an ankle injury, was key again with catches of 13 and nine yards.

This is already more points than Seattle has allowed in any single game this season. Its defense had allowed an average of 14.3 points.

Titans coach on Will Levis return: ‘We’ll see’

Titans coach Brian Callahan didn’t commit to a starter at quarterback for the second half, as Mason Rudolph came in for Will Levis after the latter sustained a shoulder injury.

Callahan said “we’ll see” when asked who would start the second half. He added it would depend if Levis is physically ready to go.

Halftime: Titans 9, Dolphins 3

The Titans lead 9-3 at halftime.

Tennessee raced to get a field goal right before halftime. Taking over with 16 seconds left, the Titans completed a pass to the middle of the field and spiked the ball with one second left to get a field goal off in time.

The Dolphins, who have only 77 total yards at half, will receive to start the second half.

Mason Rudolph is the game’s leading passer with 79 yards. Tyler Huntley has only 35 for Miami.

Seahawks claw one back

D.K. Metcalf, after being responsible for the turnover that led to Detroit’s second touchdown, returned to set up Seattle’s first points.

Metcalf’s pirouette at the end of a 29-yard catch from Geno Smith gave the Seahawks first-and-goal inside the 1-yard line. A few plays later, Kenneth Walker bounced a run outside for a touchdown.

Titans punt, almost recover the kick

The Titans punted, but after a misplay by the Dolphins on a bouncing ball, Tennessee was initially ruled to have recovered the ball.

Replay showed the Titans just barely touched the ball first, so Miami will take over to try to score before the half.

Detroit up 2 touchdowns

Seattle hasn’t been challenged like this so far this season. Barely 16 minutes into this game, the undefeated Seahawks trail 14-0 after Jahmyr Gibbs runs in from three yards out. Detroit was in this position after forcing D.K. Metcalf’s fumble. 

Through one quarter, the discrepancy in rushing yards is stark. One rush attempt for a loss of one yard for Seattle, versus 11 rushes for 66 yards by the Lions.

D.K. Metcalf loses fumble

Lions linebacker Jack Campbell’s hit on Seahawks receiver D.K. Metcalf, just before Metcalf’s right knee could hit the turf and end a 14-yard gain, caused a fumble that was returned 49 yards down to the Seattle 14.

That’s a 52-yard change in momentum and it’s set the Lions up to potentially go up two scores.

Dolphins punting again

The Dolphins will punt after mustering only six yards on their most recent drive. Miami can’t do anything in the passing game right now.

The Titans will take over on their own 34 with 1:40 left in the half.

Dolphins with chance to tie or take the lead

The Titans opted to punt on 4th-and-2, and now the Dolphins have a chance to drive for a tie or take the lead with a little over two minutes left in the half.

On first down, Tyler Huntley missed Tyreek Hill on a go route.

Lions helped by LaPorta’s presence

Sam LaPorta, Detroit’s tight end, is playing tonight after injuring an ankle last week in Arizona. He has already caught one pass, and his blocking helped the Lions rush for 59 yards on their second drive alone en route to a touchdown.

Lions 7, Seahawks 0

David Montgomery ends a 93-yard drive with a one-yard touchdown run.

Detroit’s second drive of the night was a case in point as to why its offensive coordinator, Ben Johnson, was interviewing for head-coaching jobs last season.

The Lions made adjustments between drives to go from looking fooled early by Seattle to moving steadily down the field by mixing in passes with runs. Detroit didn’t face a third down until the drive’s 12th play. 

Titans 6, Dolphins 3

Thanks in part to a taunting penalty and a Tyler Huntley third-down scamper, the Dolphins are finally on the board!

Miami ends a 10-play, 44-yard drive with a 44-yard field goal by Jason Sanders.

Titans 6, Dolphins 0

The Titans are up 6-0 thanks to another Nick Folk field goal. The kick capped off an eight-play, 19-yard drive that stalled because of a holding penalty.

Six points may be enough tonight. Let’s see what the Dolphins have on their next drive.

Lions’ opening drive goes nowhere

Seattle coach Mike Macdonald took over with high expectations this offseason after the success of his defense in Baltimore. So far, the Seahawks have looked as stingy as his old squad.

Entering tonight through a 3-0 start, Seattle’s defense had allowed the lowest passer rating in the NFL. And on Detroit’s opening drive, Jared Goff couldn’t find any open room to operate and was sacked on third down.

Dolphins stopped on fourth down!

The Dolphins can’t pick up a 4th-and-1, as Tyreek Hill was stopped short on an end around.

The Titans will take over on their own 47.

Seattle Seahawks hope to keep on soaring

The Seattle Seahawks were expected to be a middle-of-the-pack squad this season with outside playoff hopes.

But featuring a defense that’s yielded only 14.3 points and 248.7 yards per game so far this young season, Seattle has become one of the NFC’s surprise teams. The Seahawks could be two games ahead of the powerful San Francisco 49ers in the NFC West by the end of Monday night.

The Seahawks have been particularly tough against the pass, limiting opponents to an NFL-best 4.7 yards per throw. But those small numbers were built on games against the Broncos, Patriots and Tua-less Dolphins, so tonight’s game against Jared Goff’s Detroit Lions will easily be Seattle’s toughest test yet.

Titans 3, Dolphins 0

Mason Rudolph has led the Titans to the first points of the game. A relatively short field ultimately led to a Nick Folk 53-yard field goal.

The Dolphins — who’ve gone 22 straight possessions without a touchdown — will now look to answer.

End of first: Titans 0, Dolphins 0

We’re scoreless after one quarter, and this game has turned into a battle of backup quarterbacks.

The Titans are in Dolphins territory, though, with a chance to break that tie as the second quarter begins.

Will Levis questionable to return

Titans quarterback Will Levis is questionable to return, per the ESPN broadcast.

Mason Rudolph takes over after Dolphins punt

Miami goes three-and-out, and the Titans take over with Mason Rudolph at quarterback.

Will Levis appeared to hurt himself after taking a hard fall on his right shoulder while trying to run for a first down.

No harm done for the Dolphins

Miami’s fumble didn’t hurt them, after all.

With Will Levis still unable to generate any easy yardage for Tennessee, the Titans went three-and-out before a punt. Levis has completed three of his first four passes but for little impact.

Turnover, Dolphins

Miami quarterback Tyler Huntley threw a backward pass that Tyreek Hill dropped. Tennessee’s Arden Key was the only player on the field who had the awareness that the pass could be a live ball as he recovered it. It took a referee review to confirm the turnover. Each team has had one head-scratching turnover so far.

Will Levis is picked off!

The Titans were having success on their first drive, but Will Levis was picked off by Emmanuel Ogbah. Levis has had a penchant for turnovers so far this season, and he coughs the ball up on Tennessee’s opening drive.

It’s Tyler Huntley time for the Dolphins.

Miami Dolphins a totally different team without Tua Tagovailoa

With Tua Tagovailoa under center, the Miami Dolphins were a playoff team and possible Super Bowl contender.

Without him, the Dolphins haven’t scored a touchdown in almost 80 miles of play.

Tagovailoa suffered a head injury in Miami’s Week 2 loss the Buffalo Bills, and his replacements Skylar Thompson and Tim Boyle couldn’t guide the Dolphins to the end zone in a Week 3 loss to Seattle.

Tyler Huntley, who was signed away from the Baltimore Ravens practice squad, gets his chance to lead Miami tonight.

Tyler Huntley gets the start for his hometown team

Tyler Huntley will start at quarterback for the Miami Dolphins tonight.

Huntley was born in Dania Beach, about 15 miles from the Dolphins’ home stadium. He attended high school at Hallandale High School, which is even closer to Miami’s home field.

The Dolphins signed Huntley to their practice squad after Tua Tagovailoa suffered a concussion in Week 2. He was named the starter after backup Skylar Thompson suffered a rib injury against the Seahawks in Week 3.

Huntley has a 3-6 career record.

Why television executives are freaking out over 2029

At $111 billion over 11 years, the NFL’s media rights deal is the biggest in the U.S. That deal has an out clause after the 2029 season with all of its media partners except Disney (which can opt out one year later). 

Sources tell me the opt-out also affects “Sunday Ticket,” the league’s out-of-market package for which Alphabet’s YouTube paid about $2 billion. That means that after the 2029-30 Super Bowl, the NFL has the right to completely rejigger the media landscape, if it so chooses. 

Five years is a lifetime in the media industry given the rapid pace of change. To put that timeframe in perspective, if you rewind five years from today, Disney+, NBCUniversal’s Peacock, Paramount+ and Max (formerly known as HBO Max) all hadn’t launched. Now they have more than 300 million subscribers combined.

But it’s not too early to start thinking about what 2029 symbolizes. I don’t think it’s hyperbole to say 2029 could be the end of the modern media era. It’s at least plausible that by that time, streaming has become so dominant that the NFL feels comfortable moving some Sunday afternoon packages away from broadcast TV, especially given the superior balance sheets and potential global reach of companies such as Netflix, Google, Apple and Amazon.

Read the full story here

‘Monday Night Football’ injury report

Why Titans head coach Brian Callahan hired his father

Jesse Kirsch and Will Ujek

Brian Callahan, the first-year head coach of the Tennessee Titans, is overseeing aspects he didn’t have to think about before as an assistant. He’s managing practice schedules, strength training and his staff — which happens to include his father, Bill Callahan, as offensive line coach. 

“It’s a dream come true,” Bill said. “We’re proud of Brian, as we are of all of our children, but this is really a unique and a rare situation that we’re in right now.”

Now a father and son from the same family tree — but slightly different coaching trees — are trying to get the Titans on track for success.

Their similarities and unique dynamic have led to a few misunderstandings and jokes along the way.

Read the full story here

Lions’ all-time great to be honored

Calvin Johnson, who holds just about every receiving record for the Detroit Lions, will be honored at tonight’s game by being inducted into the Pride of the Lions.

Johnson, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2021, played in Detroit from 2007 till his retirement after the 2015 season.

Chiefs remain undefeated on the season

Kansas City won its 11th consecutive road game over the Chargers yesterday, 17-10.

Rallying back from an early 10-point deficit, both teams were tied late in the fourth quarter. Chiefs running back Samaje Perine scored a 2-yard touchdown that gave Kansas City its first lead of the game, and when wide receiver Xavier Worthy later hauled in quarterback Patrick Mahomes’ third-down pass, the Chiefs earned their fourth straight victory of the year.

But it wasn’t all reason to celebrate for the Chiefs. Wide receiver Rashee Rice exited the game early in the first quarter with a knee injury that may be serious.

Pittsburgh Steelers gave up the most points they have all season

Previously unbeaten, the Steelers fell to the Indianapolis Colts 24-27 last night after a rocky defensive performance.

Even with Colts’ quarterback Anthony Richardson’s injury in the first half, the team was able to dominate thanks to 39-year-old Joe Flacco subbing in to relive Richardson – and throwing two touchdown passes of his own.


Seahawks HC Mike Macdonald has a resume like few others

It might be a jarring sight for many casual football fans to see Mike Macdonald prowling the Seattle Seahawks sideline and not gum-chewing, cocksure Pete Carroll.

Macdonald, at 37, is the NFL’s youngest head coach and one of the few to have a head coaching job with no significant playing experience beyond high school.

And while he’s been a coordinator and assistant coach in the NFL and at colleges for several years, he’s never been the man in charge. Seattle earlier this year hired him away from the Baltimore Ravens, where he was the defensive coordinator.

Beleaguered QB Will Levis and his 0-3 Titans limp into MNF

No one is feeling more heat in Nashville than mistake-prone Titans quarterback Will Levis.

He’s thrown five interceptions in just 94 passes for a 5.3% pick rate, third highest in the NFL and Tennessee’s team offense of 260.3 yards per game is ranked No. 29.

But as shaky at those numbers have been, the 25-year-old QB, who graduated in the same high school class as Brock Purdy and Trevor Lawrence, has arguably fared worse in the eye test.

In a 24-17 loss to the New York Jets on Sept. 15, Levis made the blooper reel with a ridiculous, improvised lateral deep in New York territory that resulted in a turnover.

Derrick Henry makes longest run in Ravens’ history

The Baltimore Ravens dominated the Buffalo Bills at home last night with a 35-10 victory.

The most notable moment of the game was Henry’s 87-yard run on Baltimore’s first offensive play, breaking the previous 82-yard record that was shared by Jamal Lewis and Le’Ron McClain.