GREEN BAY, Wis. -- The Green Bay Packers (4-4) have lost three of their last four games. The Tennessee Titans (4-5) have lost two of their last three.

Sunday’s game at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Tennessee, could go a long way toward helping one of these two teams turn the season around.

With that in mind, here are some players to watch from ESPN Titans reporter Paul Kuharsky:

Offense

QB Marcus Mariota: The second-year quarterback is on pace for 3,888 passing yards, which would be the most in franchise history outside of Warren Moon’s two peak run-and-shot seasons. He’s also on pace for 30 touchdown passes and 14 picks. Still, it can be hard to see beyond his big mistakes. Five times this season he’s had a pick or fumble returned for a touchdown. The Titans have lost the three games in which he’s made those blunders.

RB DeMarco Murray: He’s the MVP of the team at this point and has done a ton to bring the team the smash mouth mentality it wants. Last week against the Chargers was a tough one, and the Titans know rushing yards will be tough against the Packers' No. 1 rush defense. Look out for him in the passing game, too.

LT Taylor Lewan and RT Jake Conklin: The young bookends have been outstanding, keeping Mariota from hard hits and doing good work to block for Murray. Lewan has settled in after two years of inconsistent play, though he’ll still draw the occasional penalty. Conklin’s been everything the team advertised after trading back up to No. 8 to draft him out of Michigan State.

ESPN Stats & Info

Defense

ROLB Brian Orakpo: He’ll move around but starts out on the right side, where he’ll encounter high-quality left tackle David Bakhtiari. Orakpo leads the Titans' up-and-down pass rush with seven sacks. They only have five sacks in their last three games.

ILBs Avery Williamson and Sean Spence: Pass coverage from inside linebackers has been an issue all season. Good teams have found a way to exploit them in the middle of the field, with Andrew Luck and the Colts really having a field day throwing to Jack Doyle. Williamson is an every-down guy while Spence takes over for Wesley Woodyard in nickel.

FS Kevin Byard: The Titans rotate all four of their top safeties when they are healthy, and starting free safety Rashad Johnson is expected back from a neck injury. Byard, the team’s third-round pick out of Middle Tennessee, is an electric player who’s typically around the ball. Maybe he’s the guy to get the team moving with some takeaways. The Titans only have seven all season, tied for fourth-fewest in the league.