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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The Tennessee Titans are off to a running start this preseason. The St. Louis Rams see no reason to take any chances with their rushing offense. Undrafted rookie John Simon scored on a 1-yard run in the fourth quarter as the Titans edged the defending NFC champion Rams 28-26 Saturday night in the preseason opener for both teams. The Titans, who lost the 2000 Super Bowl to St. Louis, have beaten the Rams in six consecutive exhibitions. With 54 seconds left, Tennessee stopped Lamar Gordon from the 1 on a second attempt at a two-point conversion after a penalty. The Rams recovered the onside kick but turned the ball over on downs with 13 seconds remaining. The Titans are trying to rebound from last season's 7-9 record, so coach Jeff Fisher was happy with the result. "It's important to win in the preseason, and we did that," he said. St. Louis played it safe by keeping leading rusher Marshall Faulk off the field. Kurt Warner came in for only one series and tossed just one pass. Still, he left with the Rams leading 10-0 in the first quarter. "It is hard when you know that you are not going to play much," Warner said. "You don't really get into a rhythm, and that part is really tough. But it was great getting back on the field." The Titans knew they wouldn't see much of Warner. "It's kind of what we expected," Titans cornerback Andre Dyson said. "It's the first game, and he's a proven player, so he doesn't have to prove anything now. The only thing that was disappointing was that he threw only one pass." The Titans helped St. Louis to its early lead as Steve McNair fumbled on their first play from scrimmage. Don Davis picked up the loose ball and ran 23 yards for a 7-0 lead. The Titans couldn't have started much worse as they were flagged four times over the first seven plays, including twice on a punt. "I was very anxious, and I wasn't doing what I needed to be doing to make our offense go," McNair said. But Tennessee's Eddie George, coming off his worst season as a pro, looked good. He carried only 11 times in one exhibition in 2001 as he recovered from toe surgery. On Saturday, George carried eight times for 44 yards, with a long of 15 yards, in just over a quarter. "It felt good to get back out there again," he said. "The offense was a little rusty. We didn't start off the way we wanted to obviously. But overall, personally, it felt pretty good out there." Tennessee didn't have a problem running no matter who took the ball. The Titans ran 35 times for 206 yards and three touchdowns. Former Rams back Robert Holcombe had 16 carries for 62 yards, more than he had all last season, and Simon had 78 yards on six rushes. The Rams managed just 70 yards on 23 carries with one touchdown. Jamie Martin was only 11-of-15 for 95 yards with the extra work with Warner sitting. The Titans couldn't pass at all. Fisher kept everyone but George on the field until they finally scored, and that took most of the first half. McNair missed on his first nine passes before finally finding Holcombe on a 2-yarder in the second quarter. McNair completed his next two, including an 11-yarder on fourth-and-1 that set up Holcombe's 1-yard TD plunge that cut it to 10-7 with 4:35 left in the half. That defensive performance made St. Louis coach Mike Martz happy with four of his top seven linemen out most of the first half. "They just did a tremendous job. I was really proud of how they battled and played," he said. Warner was in for six plays. He handed off to Trung Canidate four times and tossed an incomplete pass before Matt Simonton, signed a few days ago to fill in for Jeff Wilkins, kicked a 41-yard field goal. The Rams stayed fairly conservative as they ran on seven of their first 11 plays. Canidate gained 18 yards on 11 carries. Martin managed to set up only a 27-yard field goal by Simonton. He injured his right collarbone when sacked by Titans rookie Carlos Hall late in the third quarter. Marc Bulger, being challenged by Ryan Helming for the No. 3 quarterback spot, was sacked three times. He tossed an 8-yard TD to Gordon to make it 28-26, but the running back, who scored on a 2-yard run in the third, was stopped short on the conversion that would've tied the game. The Associated Press News Service Copyright 2002 The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast or redistributed without prior written authority of The Associated Press. |
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