Titans beat Texans 16-10, Houston nabs No. 1 pick

photo Tennessee Titans quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick (4) scrambles away from Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt (99) in their NFL game Sunday, Dec. 29, 2013, in Nashville. At left is Titans tight end Craig Stevens (88).

NASHVILLE - Mike Munchak believes the Tennessee Titans aren't far off from becoming a playoff team, and he'll argue that he should keep coaching them in 2014 in the next few days.

Texans owner Bob McNair could hire a new coach before Houston decides who will be the No. 1 draft selection in May.

Chris Johnson ran for 127 yards and a touchdown in what might be his last game with the Titans, who beat the Houston Texans 16-10 Sunday for a win that might help Munchak's argument to stay on the job.

"I think I have a good feel for what needs to be done," said Munchak, now 22-26 in three seasons. "That's what we'll talk about the next few days, and we'll find out how they want to go forward."

With their 14th straight loss, the Texans (2-14) at least made sure whoever their next coach is will have the top draft pick. Interim coach Wade Phillips declined to answer whether he's interested in staying with the Texans if he's not picked to take over.

"We got in a whirlwind, and it never ended," Phillips said of the skid.

The Titans (7-9) scored 16 straight points in snapping a five-game home skid that was their longest since leaving Houston for Tennessee in 1997. They also won a second straight game for the first time since September, when they started 3-1.

"We always talk about finishing, and we did that," Titans tight end Delanie Walker said.

Rob Bironas kicked three field goals, including a season-best 55-yarder. Linebacker Akeem Ayers intercepted a pass and forced a fumble as the Titans got four turnovers they turned into 10 points.

The Texans had one last chance with the ball and 66 seconds left, but Michael Griffin intercepted an overthrown pass by Matt Schaub. That was the third turnover by the Texans' quarterback.

Johnson became the sixth man in NFL history to run for at least 1,000 yards in each of his first six seasons with a 23-yard run in the second quarter, joining Barry Sanders, Curtis Martin, LaDanian Tomlinson, Eric Dickerson and Corey Dillon. But Johnson, who ran for 2,006 yards in 2009, is due $8 million in 2014, with $29 million left on his contract. That might be too much to pay for someone who posted only his second 100-yard rushing game of the season Sunday.

The running back said he thought about whether this might be his last game in Tennessee when he ran through the tunnel before turning his attention to getting the win.

"Only thing I could control was the game today," Johnson said.

The Texans now can focus on 2014 after a miserable season that saw Jonathan Grimes, signed Dec. 18, become the fifth running back to start this season. Defensive end J.J. Watt called it his most frustrating season personally.

"I'm sure a lot of guys, just like me, are ready to move on and get to work in the offseason and never let this happen again," Watt said.

McNair already has been interviewing possible replacements for Gary Kubiak, fired Dec. 6, with Phillips hoping his performance as defensive coordinator earns him the job.

Tennessee outgained Houston 311-288 in total offense, with 165 coming on the ground thanks to Johnson.

The Texans were up 7-6 at halftime thanks to an opening drive where they looked like the two-time AFC South champs they came into the season as. The banged-up team even got good production from Grimes, who capped the drive with his first NFL TD on a 3-yard carry and ripped through the Titans early.

Houston didn't score again until Randy Bullock kicked a 19-yard field goal with 2:53 left when Phillips decided not to go for a touchdown on fourth-and-goal at the Titans 1.

Tennessee finally got took its first lead late in the third quarter. Ayers intercepted a ball that clanked off the face mask of Titans safety Bernard Pollard on Schaub's pass a little behind Texans tight end Ryan Griffin. Johnson's 11-yard TD put them ahead to stay 13-7.

NOTES: Kendall Wright finished with 94 catches, becoming the first Titans receiver with 90 or more in a season since Derrick Mason had 96 in 2004. Walker finished with a career-high 60 catches, becoming the only tight end other than Frank Wycheck to reach that mark with this franchise. Pro Bowl receiver Andre Johnson finished with six catches for 49 yards for Houston. The Titans snapped a three-game skid to Houston in this series.

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