NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Steve Slaton, consider yourself warned. The Tennessee Titans do not like allowing 100-yard rushers – ever. After watching Slaton do it against them twice in 2008, the Houston running back has a very big target on his back now.
It’s a matter of pride.
“That wasn’t good, especially as good as our defense was last year … stopping the run,” Titans defensive end Kyle Vanden Bosch said Wednesday. “We know what type of challenge we have. It is a pride thing, and I don’t know how many times a guy’s gone for 100 yards three times in a row. We really don’t want that to happen.”
Stopping the run is the cornerstone of coach Jeff Fisher’s defense and the Titans rank fourth in the NFL in that category since 1995, allowing an average of 99.2 yards per game. Only Pittsburgh, Baltimore and San Diego have been stingier on the ground.
Giving up 100 yards to one runner is rare – it’s happened to the Titans only 39 times since the start of the 1995 season. Tennessee is 9-30 in those games.
reach 100 yards at LP Field since the stadium opened in 1999.
Fisher said Slaton’s the only back he can remember putting up back-to-back 100-yard games against his defense in the same year.
“Two of the runs were Fred Taylor-like where you had him bottled up behind the line of scrimmage, and we had people stop him and he bounced out and ran for 40 yards each time. But still, five or six yards a crack is what he does best. He’s a very talented runner,” Fisher said.
The Titans ranked sixth in the NFL last season against the run, allowing only 93.9 yards per game. They did a strong job stopping Slaton behind or near the line on most of his carries. But he slipped away for a 50-yarder Sept. 21 and finished with 116 yards on 18 carries as Tennessee won 31-12.
In Houston on Dec. 14, the Titans had bottled up Slaton very well. Then just after the 2-minute mark, Slaton broke away for a 34-yard run on first-and-10 – his biggest run of the day – and finished with 100 yards on 24 carries.
“In each of those games he broke a big run that allowed him to get over that 100-yard mark,” Titans linebacker Keith Bulluck said. “We’re a team that takes pride in our defense, especially our rushing defense. For him to be able to eclipse 100 yards both times last year, we definitely have to shape up.”
purpose yards last season. But he struggled in the Texans’ 24-7 opening loss to the New York Jets, getting just 17 yards on nine carries.
“Steve played good football for us last year,” Texans coach Gary Kubiak said in conference call with Tennessee reporters. “We’ve struggled as a team throughout the preseason and week one running the football. It’s been an issue for us so we’ve got to get a lot better, and there’s no tougher place to do it than coming there to play (there).”
The Titans started off this season in strong fashion, limiting Pittsburgh to 36 yards rushing.
They understand the Texans use their zone-blocking schemes to slide big offensive linemen sideways, allowing the 5-foot-9, 215-pound Slaton to hide behind them until he sees a hole to dart through. They also know two defenders putting their hands on Slaton doesn’t mean the play is over either.
“We had a couple guys had him wrapped up, and he just kept going,” Vanden Bosch said. “The deceptive thing is he looks like a smaller type back. He’s hard to bring down. He keeps his legs moving, and he’s powerful.”
Add A Comment