NFL

Jets not looking past lowly Titans, trying to keep playoff hopes alive

NASHVILLE — The Jets face a losing team for the third straight week, hoping for their third straight win.

Gang Green has kept its slim playoff hopes alive by beating the Cardinals and Jaguars the last two weeks. Tonight, they face the Titans in what amounts to an elimination game for the Jets (6-7). If they lose, they are out of the playoffs.

The Titans (4-9) have lost three straight games and are in a tailspin. The Jets, though, are not looking at their record.

“I don’t think at this point we can overlook anybody, regardless of their record,” safety Yeremiah Bell said.

No they can not. The Jets have taken care of business the last two weeks against some dismal offenses. They held the Cardinals and Jaguars to a combined 2-for-31 on third downs.

Tennessee enters the game with the 23rd ranked offense in the NFL. The Titans have only one starter on the offensive line who began the season as a starter, as injuries have hit that group hard.

The Jets won’t feel any pity. They know that to make the playoffs they have to keep winning. The Bengals’ victory Thursday gave the Jets no wiggle room. They need a win or they are mathematically eliminated from the postseason.

The Jets have been playing with that mentality anyway since their loss to the Patriots on Thanksgiving night.

“I don’t think we’d call it playoff mode,” Bell said. “I think we’d say it’s more like our backs are up against the wall. We know that we need to win every game. At the same time, we’re not looking ahead and trying to see what’s going on, just trying to focus on one game at a time and take it from there.”

The Jets were ultra-conservative on offense last week as they tried to keep quarterback Mark Sanchez from turning the ball over. Expect more of the same tonight against a Titans defense that was ranked 27th in the league before yesterday.

“It really doesn’t matter to me as long as we’re winning games,” Sanchez said. “If we have to run it 50 times, fine, we’ll run it 50 times, if we have to throw it at some point, we have to and we’ll make it work.”

Here is how The Post sees today’s game breaking down:

MARQUEE MATCHUP

Jets front seven vs. Titans RB Chris Johnson. The Jets have struggled against the run this season, giving up 136.5 yards per game on the ground, 29th in the NFL. Now, here comes Johnson, who is capable of scoring from anywhere. He has 1,037 yards this year despite a slow start.

The problem for Johnson, who hasn’t topped 100 yards in a game the last three weeks, is he is playing with a depleted offensive line.

“He’s the kind of guy who can turn a run that’s nothing into an 80-yard [run],” Jets defensive coordinator Mike Pettine said. “It’s scary how well he can [see things] … the vision that he has and the ability to make people miss. When he does see a crease, I think he has probably the best ability in the league to plant his foot and head downhill.”

BRAYLON’S RETURN

He’s baaaack. All indications are wide receiver Braylon Edwards will play tonight despite his injured hamstring. How much and how well seem to be the bigger questions.

Edwards has done very little in practice this week, so it’s hard to imagine him having a big role. Then again, with the Jets, you never know.

“It really is a brand new system for Braylon,” Jets coach Rex Ryan said. “He is familiar with Mark. There is no question about it. He definitely brings back that mentality as a blocker and everything else that we certainly appreciate.”

LOCKER HURTS

The Jets have feasted on several young quarterbacks this year. Now, they get Jake Locker, the second-year quarterback from Washington.

Locker has had seven interceptions and three touchdowns during Tennessee’s three-game losing streak. But Locker is capable of running (9.9 yards per scramble) and he throws a nice deep ball. The Jets have to be careful not to be overly aggressive against him.

TINY TIM

The latest chapter of the Tim Tebow saga has involved Ryan’s back-and-forth act on whether Tebow can go back to his old role of running some Wildcat and zone-read option plays. First, Ryan said he couldn’t. Then, he said he could.

Tebow’s ribs seem healed. He is practicing fully. It may just be a question of whether the Jets coaches want to use Tebow in that role anymore and they just don’t want to admit that publicly.

Tonight will be telling. If Tebow watches the entire game from the sideline again, it will appear Tebow’s time with the Jets is over before it ever really began.

THE WRIGHT ROOKIE

Rookie wide receiver Kendall Wright is having a good year for the Titans. His 59 receptions are tops in the NFL among rookie receivers. The 20th overall pick in the draft out of Baylor, Wright is someone the Jets know they have to be aware of.

“Kendall Wright, we think that he’s probably their best receiver as a whole,” Bell said. “We know [Kenny] Britt’s the down-the-field guy, but when you kind of break them down and watch them, he seems like the guy who is getting it done.”

brian.costello@nypost.com