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Emotional Brian Callahan on Titans' win: 'Needed it bad'

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Drake Maye's heroics fall short with game-ending INT in OT (0:25)

Drake Maye goes deep, but he is intercepted by Amani Hooker, giving the Titans a 20-17 win over the Patriots in overtime. (0:25)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Tennessee Titans coach Brian Callahan did everything he could to hold back the emotions after his team's 20-17 overtime win over the New England Patriots on Sunday.

Callahan got choked up as he described the second win of his career. It was a different feeling from when he got his first win five weeks ago against the Miami Dolphins.

"I mean, look at me. I needed it bad, man," Callahan said after the game. "It was, yeah, we needed it."

The win wasn't an easy one. The Titans (2-6) allowed a Rhamondre Stevenson 5-yard touchdown catch from Patriots rookie quarterback Drake Maye as time expired in regulation, tying the game at 17. But they bounced back and drove down the field in overtime to set up a 25-yard field goal by Nick Folk. On the Patriots' ensuing possession, the Titans' defense redeemed itself with an Amani Hooker interception to close the game out.

"He puts his heart and soul into this," Titans quarterback Mason Rudolph said. "Everything is just the first time for him. He needs to have a cold one tonight to enjoy himself and take the edge off, because it's a lot."

Callahan praised his team's resiliency, having fought through injuries to veteran starters such as Quandre Diggs and Lloyd Cushenberry III. Team captain Jeffery Simmons said the way the players helped pick each other up when times got hard showed they're a connected team that has each other's back.

Tennessee held a 7-3 lead at halftime but fell behind 10-7 after the Patriots opened the second half with a 12-play drive that covered 70 yards over seven minutes and 21 seconds. The Titans answered with their own seven-minute drive, resulting in a 21-yard field goal to tie the game.

The adversity started during the week leading up to Sunday's game. The Titans had 10 players that missed time or were limited in practice. Running back Tony Pollard was one of the seven players who still played against New England. He finished with 128 rushing yards, the first 100-yard performance of the season for the Titans.

Callahan had to once again fight the tears as he described Pollard's contribution.

"Tony Pollard, just to point out, I mean 154 total yards, in practice once this week," Callahan said. "He's everything that our locker room is about."