The Tennessee Titans weekly press conferences, following what have almost entirely been weekly losses, have taken on a new form in the aftermath of the team firing second-year head coach Brian Callahan.
Now helmed by interim head coach Mike McCoy, the Titans’ former senior offensive assistant, Tennessee fans are working to remain hopeful after the team’s 31-13 home loss to the New England Patriots this past week in his debut at the position.
It didn’t help that the Patriots, now 5-2 and among the hottest teams in the NFL, were led on the opposite sideline by former Titans HC Mike Vrabel. Dramatic irony at its most painful for the Tennessee faithful.
Among much to discuss about the team’s disappointing performance in front of their home crowd, McCoy honed in on rookie quarterback Cam Ward, offering a portion of tough love in reference to the rookie quarterback’s recent struggles to take care of the ball.
Speaking to the media the day after his first loss, McCoy said of Ward's ball security, "it's something you're always going to stress...That's something he has to clean up."
"Because we can't hurt the football team that way."
After starting the season without a turnover and continuing to take care of the ball to a relatively consistent extent through the first month of the season, Ward has gone in the opposite direction in both his scoring and ball security statistics.
According to his passing touchdown/interception ratio alone, the first-year pocket presence has managed just four scores through the air in seven games to a discouraging five interceptions. To boot, Ward has now also lost the ball to a fumble in back-to-back contests.
While it's a blunt way to treat a rookie, Coach McCoy is correct that, if the Titans want to win, their quarterback will have to find better ways to take care of the football.
Then again, while Ward certainly must shoulder the blame for his continued mistakes, his offensive line has done him no favors. In the last two games alone, both losses, the Titans' protective unit has allowed an egregious 11 sacks to opposing defenses. That statistic alone is dire, and it doesn't even represent the pressures, hits and other such similar factors that come with that.
If McCoy and the Titans franchise want Ward to improve, they'll have to do more than ask him to. The team can start with investing in a worthwhile offensive line and, from there, give the rookie time to settle into his uniquely demanding role.
Ward and company will look to turn things around against the scorching hot 6-1 Indianapolis Colts on the road this weekend, a team that already bested Tennessee at home in the early part of this season. At this point, any semblance of improvement from Ward, and really the Titans as a whole, would be taken as its own sort of win.
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