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Titans-Browns takeaways: Cam Ward, Tennessee spoil Shedeur Sanders’ career day for Cleveland

While Shedeur Sanders and Cam Ward trained together in the NFL pre-draft process, it was Ward and the Titans who got the narrow edge over Sanders and the Browns on Sunday, winning 31-29 in the snow in Cleveland.

With the win, Tennessee moves to 2-11 after a season high 31 points, while the Browns drop to 3-10 and are officially eliminated from playoff contention.

Despite the loss, Sanders put together the best game of his young career. He recorded 364 passing yards with four total touchdowns (three passing, one rushing) and one interception, with two 55+ yard passes in the first half. One was a dump off screen to Judkins, but the other was an impressive long throw Sanders ripped over the middle of the field for a 60-yard touchdown to Jerry Jeudy. Sanders became the first rookie quarterback in Browns franchise history with 300-plus passing yards, two-plus touchdown passes and a rushing score. He also recorded Cleveland’s first 300-yard passing game of the season.

Cleveland’s franchise player, Myles Garrett, recorded another sack to bring his season total to 20. He inches closer to the 22.5 NFL single-season sack record held jointly by the Pittsburgh Steelers outside linebacker T.J. Watt and NFL Hall of Fame New York Giants Edge rusher Michael Strahan.

Ward worked through the conditions, throwing for just 117 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. Tennessee running back Tony Pollard broke a career-long 65-yard rushing touchdown late in the first quarter and then had a 32-yard score in the third. He ran through the Browns’ defense for 161 yards and two touchdowns.

Sanders shows up

Sanders was sharp in the first half. And then he led a wild rally in the final six minutes that included a beautiful touchdown pass with 1:03 left. But the Browns went for two twice; Sanders fumbled the exchange on the first miss, and on the second, the Browns took Sanders off the field and ran a wildcat play to Quinshon Judkins that never had a chance.

Overall, the feeling has to be that Sanders has a chance going forward. Clearly, he’s not a finished product — and disaster struck late in the third quarter. Sanders went from having found a rhythm in the first half to struggling to complete anything for a long stretch of the third and fourth quarters. His worst throw hurt the Browns in multiple ways as he lofted a pass into traffic down the middle of the field, and Xavier Woods intercepted the pass and returned it to the Browns’ 38-yard line.

Two plays later, the Titans scored and took the lead for good because the Browns’ offense had no late answer. Sanders was 9-of-14 for 180 yards and two touchdowns in the first half, but the Titans ratcheted up the pressure in the second half, and Sanders never found traction until the Browns were down two scores.

With the Browns down 14 in the last five minutes, Sanders ran for a touchdown to cap a drive that kept the home team’s chances alive. And after Cleveland’s defense gave Sanders a final chance, he capped an 80-yard drive with a high-arching pass to Harold Fannin in the back of the end zone. The awful two-point conversion that followed sunk the Browns, but Sanders finished with 364 yards and three touchdowns, one rushing touchdown and the interception. — Zac Jackson, staff writer, Browns

Browns run defense falters

The Browns got shredded by Tony Pollard and the Tennessee run game. Among the many problems that plagued the Browns at various stages of this game was their inability to slow the run early, allowing the Titans to score first and to play with confidence.

Probably, the Cleveland defense was still the best unit on the field. But Pollard and the Titans showed a belief in their ability to run right at the Browns, and Pollard had a huge day with 164 yards and two touchdowns. — Jackson

Garret’s sack record will have to wait

The Titans weren’t letting Garrett break the sack record today. They’ll never admit that Garrett being 3.5 sacks short of the single-season record played into their thinking, but Garrett is obviously a game-wrecker — and the Titans clearly were looking to get the ball out of Ward’s hand quickly and make the Browns pay for being too aggressive with a set of screens and quick-developing misdirection plays.

Garrett got a sack late in the first half as the Browns seemed to be gaining momentum, but otherwise the Titans mostly succeeded in keeping Ward out of harm’s way — and out of Garrett’s history-making path. Garrett goes to Week 15 with 20 sacks. — Jackson

Costly Cleveland two-point decision

This is the 19th time in the Browns’ post-1999 era that they’ve lost at least 10 games. And though the game seemed over as Tennessee seized control in the early stages of the fourth quarter, Sanders keyed a rally to give the Browns a chance. The mind-numbing decision to take Sanders off the field for the tying two-point conversion will haunt Browns coach Kevin Stefanski — and it should. Sanders had gotten hot. The wildcat trick play with Judkins fooled no one.

The Browns didn’t lose because of one play or one decision, but that’s a huge one that sums up the state of things. Despite getting a punt blocked in the fourth quarter, the Browns rallied behind Sanders and Fannin. And they lost because they tried to get too cute with their final offensive snap. — Jackson

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