DETROIT -- The Tennessee Titans wanted to re-establish the run to get back on track after losing for the first time.
The Detroit Lions were very accommodating.
Chris Johnson ran for 125 yards and scored twice in the first quarter and LenDale White had two touchdowns in the second and finished with 106 yards rushing, setting up Tennessee for a 47-10 win over Detroit on Thursday.
"It's nice to be able to do what you set out to do," Titans coach Jeff Fisher said. "Both backs got a lot of yards on their own, but they got a lot of help up front."
Johnson was untouched on a short run to the outside and a long gain up the middle.
The two plays were symbolic of the canyon-like gap between the once-beaten Titans and the winless Lions.
Tennessee (11-1) quickly bounced back from its 21-point loss at home to the New York Jets, surging to a 28-3 lead early in the second quarter.
"We hit the first punch and they fell," White said.
With a 34-point lead midway through the fourth, quarterback Vince Young played for the first time since spraining his left knee in the opener. He skipped a scheduled MRI exam a day later, then prompted a police search when he panicked someone by taking off hours later without his cell phone.
"I'm good," Young said as he walked away from reporters. "I'll talk about it Monday."
The Lions (0-12) moved a step closer to becoming the NFL's first 0-16 team, losing by a franchise-worst 37 points and giving up a franchise-record 47 points in their 69th game on Thanksgiving.
"We only confirmed what everybody was thinking about us as far as outside of Detroit and in Detroit," Lions kicker Jason Hanson said. "I know everybody in here feels embarrassed that we did that on national TV."
Detroit coach Rod Marinelli refused to acknowledge he was embarrassed, insisting the Lions only were beaten.
"We got handled in all areas -- coaches, players, offense, defense, special teams," Marinelli said.
The Lions fell to 10-34 in nearly three seasons under Marinelli and lost for the 19th time in 20 games, leading to more questions about whether he deserves to keep his job.
Six teams have lost at least their first 12 games since Tampa Bay finished 0-14 in 1976, and the Lions have done it twice. They started 0-12 in 2001 before beating the Minnesota Vikings, who play Dec. 7 at Detroit.
Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:
For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.