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Rams’ Quinn ‘felt great’ in return to lineup

The Rams' Robert Quinn gets a sack at the expense of Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill during Sunday's game.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)
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Rams defensive end Robert Quinn, who was hospitalized this week, started Sunday and recorded a sack in a 14-10 loss to the Miami Dolphins at the Coliseum.

Quinn was released from the hospital Tuesday after he was treated for what he described as a dehydration issue.

The sixth-year pro sacked Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill for a 10-yard loss in the second quarter. It was one of four sacks by the Rams.

“I felt great out there,” said Quinn, who has 53 career sacks. “I wish I could have done a little bit more.”

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The Dolphins were down to their third left tackle by the end of the game. Starter Branden Albert was declared out this week because of wrist injury. His replacement, Laremy Tunsil, suffered a shoulder injury.

Quinn was in the Dolphins’ backfield repeatedly before his sack.

“Rob had a rough week but he came on strong,” Rams Coach Jeff Fisher said. “We felt like he was going to be fine.”

Defensive tackle Dominique Easley had two sacks and cornerback Lamarcus Joyner one for a defense that allowed the Dolphins to convert only one of 11 third downs.

End Eugene Sims, who had been in concussion protocol during the week, played Sunday but did not record a tackle.

Penalty issue

Penalties were a problem again for the Rams, who were flagged eight times for 70 yards, including linebacker Alec Ogletree’s 15-yard unnecessary-roughness infraction and defensive tackle Aaron Donald’s 15-yard roughing-the-passer penalty in the fourth quarter.

Ogeltree’s penalty came after Tannehill connected with receiver Jarvis Landry on a 12-yard pass. The penalty moved the Dolphins from their 47-yard line to the Rams’ 38. Miami scored four plays later to cut the Rams’ lead to 10-7.

“I was not trying to hit him,” Ogletree said of his contact with Landry. “I was trying to turn away and ran into his back. I have to be smarter and not touch him at all.”

Donald’s penalty came after Tannehill completed a 15-yard pass to Kenny Stills on the first play of Miami’s game-winning drive. That pushed the Dolphins from their 40 to the Rams’ 45.

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“The penalties really changed field position and gave them shots, and they got down,” Fisher said. “Threes are OK. Touchdowns are not. The defense is going to be disappointed. You don’t want to play us next week because the defense is going to be upset.”

Milestone game

Rams receiver Kenny Britt caught a team-best five passes for 43 yards.

Britt, an eighth-year pro who played five seasons with the Tennessee Titans, has 49 catches, eclipsing his previous career best of 48 set in 2014 during his first season with the Rams.

Britt has 736 yards receiving, 39 yards short of his career best also set in 2014.

Rally time

Tannehill had a good feeling about the Dolphins, even though he had passed for only 57 yards and Miami was being shut out late in the fourth quarter.

He completed 12 of 13 passes for 115 yards and two touchdowns on his final two drives.

“I told the guys right before that first touchdown drive, ‘Hey, everyone take a deep breath, we’re going to win this game,’ and that’s what we did.”

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Dolphins receiver Landry got an assist from his linemen, who pushed him for the final four yards of his 10-yard touchdown reception in the fourth quarter.

“I couldn’t get in there alone,” he said of Miami’s first score. “[Tackle Ja’Wuan] James was the one person I saw before I closed my eyes and went for the ride.”

Quick hits

Rookie linebacker Josh Forrest left the game and did not return because of a knee injury. ... Ogletree and Mark Barron each had a game-high 11 tackles. Ogletree had two for losses.

mike.digiovanna@latimes.com

gary.klein@latimes.com

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