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NASHVILLE, TENN. -- The Tennessee Titans are a lot like the piece of tape defensive end Jevon Kearse stuck between the numbers on his chest to point out their 9-0 start.
It's not gaudy or glitzy. The NFL's last unbeaten team does whatever it takes to win.
"We're blue collar," tight end Bo Scaife said Monday. "We're going to play you hard. We're going to play you long, and we're heavyweights. That's how our offensive mentality is, especially the offensive line position. They're heavyweights. They're ready for whatever. They really set the tone for us, and it's easy to feed off of them."
Unable to run despite being among the league's best, the Titans turned to veteran Kerry Collins, who was protected well as he picked apart Chicago for 289 yards and two touchdowns in Sunday's 21-14 win. Needing to deal with the ever dangerous Devin Hester, punter Craig Hentrich pinned down the Bears with his foot and the help of the coverage unit. Hester managed 13 yards on two returns.
And a defense missing up to three starters because of injury or illness held the Bears to 243 yards and forced six three-and-outs.
"This is clearly a team effort," coach Jeff Fisher said.
The result is that a franchise that had never started better than 3-0 now has a chance Sunday to be the NFL's first in 2008 to double-digit victories if they can win at Jacksonville (4-5). Of their final seven opponents, only the New York Jets (6-3), Pittsburgh (6-3) and Indianapolis (5-4) have winning records.
Linebacker Keith Bulluck said their undefeated record is giving teams extra motivation to be the first to beat the Titans.
"Little do they know we're not trying to go undefeated. We're trying to win as many games so we get home-field position in the playoffs," he said.
The Titans know they are confounding people with how they're winning. This is a team predicted as recently as August to finish fourth in the AFC South. Instead, they hold a four-game lead that could allow them to clinch their first AFC South title since 2002 before they play the last two of their divisional games in December.
They also have a three-game edge for home-field advantage over Pittsburgh, New England, the Jets and Baltimore Ravens (6-3). This franchise hasn't had home-field advantage since 2000, when the Titans also had the NFL's best record at 13-3.
The Titans watched the Bears stack the line with extra defenders to stop a rushing offense that had been averaging 149.1 yards per game and ran for 20 yards net.
So Collins threw 41 passes with no completion longer than 25 yards, and he was sacked only once. Few fantasy points, just results on a day where they had uncharacteristic mistakes such as fullback Ahmard Hall dropping the ball trying to score from the 1.
Fisher said he isn't worried about his run game. He is pleased with how his Titans finished off a tough game on the road for a franchise-record sixth straight victory away from home.
"It was a good win for us," Fisher said. "We're clearly on our next opponent."
Why mess with what's working?
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