The last two Sundays have been tough for a lot of NFL franchises, with some having already let their head coaches take a stroll, others having little-to-nothing left to play for, and even more seeing their playoff hopes evaporate as the clock wound down on the regular season.
But no two franchises had a reversal of fortune quite like Oakland and Tennessee.
For the Titans, entering Week 16 they were in a tie atop the AFC South with the Houston Texans, who had just changed quarterbacks and were surrounded by all kinds of questions. Tennessee had won three in a row, one of those wins coming on the road against the defending champion Denver Broncos, another coming on the road against the AFC's No. 2 seed heading to the postseason, the Kansas City Chiefs. The Titans controlled their own destiny, had all the momentum in the world on their side, and were going to Jacksonville to face the Jaguars for their second-to-last regular season matchup of the year, a team that has more support in London than it does from its hometown fans.
What could go wrong?
On our country's other coast, there was similar momentum. A seemingly unstoppable cast of characters had been assembled in Oakland over the last five or so years and their fans were finally seeing it all come together. The Raiders (save a loss to the aforementioned Chiefs in Week 14) had won their last eight times out, putting up 30-plus points in six of those wins. All Oakland needed to do was win their final two to clinch a first-round bye in the playoffs, and with the struggling Colts coming to town and then a matchup with a deflated Denver team on the road to close out the regular season, WHAT COULD GO WRONG?!?!
In what must be considered one of the most ironic and painful coincidences in recent sports memory, as it turned out, there was only ONE thing could go awry, and that exact thing did for both teams.
At the heart and soul of these two franchises rise to re-relevance were their quarterbacks, Marcus Mariota in Tennessee, and Derek Carr in Oakland. Both highly acclaimed and highly productive out of college, both on the verge of ending long playoff draughts for their franchises (Oakland since 2002, Tennessee since 2008), but both about to meet the same fate.
In the third quarter of Tennessee's Week 16 game against Jacksonville, Mariota was sacked from behind by defensive lineman Sheldon Day on what appeared to be a standard takedown. Uncomfortable replays showed Mariota's right leg contorted and flailing in every direction, leaving no doubt something serious had just transpired. The following minutes of Mariota being loaded onto a cart and taken from the field confirmed those fears.
Just four hours later, with Oakland wrapping up a win over the Colts at The Coliseum, onlookers would see a similar scene. Carr, dropping back to put up another ball in the Raiders' pass-happy offense, was wrapped up by edge-rusher Trent Cole and spun down by his legs. Instantly, Carr knew what had happened, and as he writhed in pain on the ground, groans could be heard around the stadium from Oakland fans being forced to think about losing one of the league's best young quarterbacks at the worst possible time. In appreciation of their second-round pick in 2014, those groans turned to salutes, as Carr left the field for the final time in 2016 to the tune of MVP chants.
Considering their trajectory and success early in their careers, perhaps its fitting their prognosis matched as well: broken fibula, out for the season.
Tennessee would go on to lose to Jacksonville, the Jags pulling away late as veteran backup Matt Cassel was unable to get much going offensively. With the game, so went the season, the Titans eliminated from playoff contention via Houston's tight win over Cincinnati.
Oakland didn't meet as instant of a fate, as they were able to hang on to beat a hard charging Colts team 33-25, but perhaps the slow knife is the one that hurts the most, as they would see their first-round bye status snatched away by Kansas City earlier today via their win over San Diego and Oakland's lopsided loss to Denver.
In a span of hours it was over for Tennessee, in a span of a week Oakland, while still making the playoffs, suddenly look like a probable first-round exit, having to travel to Houston for round one, rather than earning the bye they appeared to deserve much of the year. Harsh happenings for these two franchises and their fan bases, devastating realities that this sport has become synonymous with.
But while it appears to be just another sad NFL injury story, this one has another side to it. After all, there can be no true hero without adversity, and with this cruel coincidence, the NFL, in search of heroes to replace the mainstays that are aging or retired, may have found the two that will carry this league into the next generation.
Consider first, the reactions to their injuries. Even in a time of great physical and emotional tumult, both men were calm. Mariota, after remaining on the turf face down for a few moments, turned over, sat up, and did not show an ounce of fragility. Despite obvious disappointment he had to have been feeling inside, he maintained his strong demeanor outside like the leader that had his team on the brink of making the postseason.
Carr, while showing much more emotion and physical pain, immediately began coming to terms with the injury. In NFL Films video that is, admittedly, tough to watch, he immediately identified the injury, calling to the sidelines that "it broke". But rather than wallow in the reality that was setting in, he got up, encouraged backup Matt Mcgloin to finish the game out and get the win on his way off the field, gave up a thumbs up to his home crowd as he was carted to the locker room, and then sent this text to Peter King of Monday Morning Quarterback:
"Although this situation is the toughest thing I've ever faced in my football career, it will not stop me from coming back stronger than ever. I left everything I had out there on that field for my God, family, brothers on that team, and Raider nation. I felt so much love in that stadium as I was hopping off the field, and that same love is what my team will feel from me going forward. We still have work to do as a team, and goals to obtain. Although I may not be throwing the ball right now, I will do whatever I have to do to help US win.
Merry Christmas.
Derek"
Even though he was the only thing on the Raiders' minds, he was the last thing on his own, turning his support to those that could still help his team on the field.
These two cases of selflessness and strength show what makes these two great leaders and why they are so respected by their teammates and peers. It also shows, in a league full of questionable behavior and characters, that these two can be role models for much of the youth football is currently losing. Furthermore, their reactions will win them plenty of fans that will be anxiously awaiting their respective returns from the adversity that's keeping them sidelined. Why? On top of everything else, it's because people love a comeback story, especially one by a humble kid on the rise, and both fit that category.
The reaction piece is big, but It doesn't stop there, because if these two were merely the single young standouts on veteran teams or were pulling off flash-in-the-pan miracles on terrible squads before getting hurt, they could fade to obscurity. But with their situations, it just isn't the case, and you can look at both and see long, successful NFL careers full of winning in front of these two because of those around them. Oakland boasts Amari Cooper, Michael Crabtree, and Seth Roberts on the outside, a tremendous trio of receivers that is headlined by the 22-year-old Cooper, but whose oldest member is Crabtree at just 29 years of age. Couple that with the three-headed running attack that is Latavius Murray, Jalen Richard, and DeAndre Washington, and you have a stable of weapons on the offensive side for Carr. Oh by the way, they also have a defense that brings one of the best young linebackers in the league to the field every week in superstar Khalil Mack.
For Tennessee, they have less in the passing game to lean on, but a ton of road graters up front to play behind. Tennessee's offensive line gave up the fifth-fewest sacks in all of football this year while clearing the way for Demarco Murray and the up-and-coming Derrick Henry to the tune of the third-most rush yards in the NFL in 2016. Consider the emergence of Rishard Matthews as the team's No. 1 receiver in his very first season in Tennessee, and the always reliable Delanie Walker catching balls at the tight end position, and you have a group around Mariota that, even if some of the veterans like Murray and Walker should move on, is deep enough to cause problems for defenses for many years to come.
Those groups being back together with their starting quarterbacks playing in games that matter is still nine months away and yes, it will be a long offseason for Mariota, Carr, and their teams wondering what could've been. But their returns will be well worth the wait not only for their fan bases and teammates, but for a wider audience as well, because with the Manning's, Brees' and Brady's gone or soon-to-be, the Luck's and Griffin's not measuring up, and the Newton's and Big Ben's lacking the character to be true league-representing faces, the NFL needs a new rivalry, new icons, new greatness.
Who better to carry the brightly burning torch of a billion-dollar business than two men that are seeing the dark depths of it now?
What doesn't kill them will make them stronger, an encouraging thought for Raiders and Titans fans, a scary proposition for the 30 other teams in the league, and a coup for those in the league office.