Titans motivated to do even more this year

AP photo by George Walker IV / Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel, center, fills in at a quarterback spot for a drill during training camp Thursday in Nashville.
AP photo by George Walker IV / Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel, center, fills in at a quarterback spot for a drill during training camp Thursday in Nashville.

NASHVILLE - Tennessee Titans linebacker Rashaan Evans took a few days off after the team's season ended in the AFC championship game this past January.

Then he got back to work - along with many of his fellow Titans.

Coming up one win short of reaching the Super Bowl is a powerful inspiration.

"Having that opportunity to get to that last game, I think it definitely gave me even an bigger motivation because I know how to get there now," Evans said.

The Titans turned around after a 2-4 start with a quarterback switch and then Derrick Henry's historic run through the playoffs in Mike Vrabel's second season as head coach. Tennessee re-signed Ryan Tannehill to a new four-year, $118 million deal and used the franchise tag to keep the NFL's 2019 rushing leader before signing him to a new deal, too.

The franchise that lost 35-24 to Kansas City in the AFC title game - the Chiefs went on to beat the San Francisco 49ers in the Super Bowl - returns 10 of 11 starters on offense but lost defensive coordinator Dean Pees to retirement and traded away five-time Pro Bowl defensive lineman Jurrell Casey in March to the Denver Broncos, the team Tennessee will visit Sept. 14 to open the season.

Now Vrabel and the Titans will try to build on that continuity.

"I'm part of a team that's hungry for the playoffs," left tackle Taylor Lewan said. "It's hungry for getting one game farther than we did last year. It's hungry for making more steps and strides, not just as individuals, but also from a whole team standpoint."

photo AP photo by George Walker IV / Tennessee Titans running back Derrick Henry, who led the NFL in rushing last year, received a new deal in the offseason and is expected to be a big part of the team again in 2020.

The Titans know Tannehill is their starter with his new contract. Now they need his backup, with Logan Woodside the favorite despite his pro experience being all of eight games in the Alliance of American Football in 2019. He spent last season on the Titans' practice squad with an injury, helping offensive coordinator Arthur Smith and charting plays on the sideline during games.

Tennessee cut seventh-round pick Cole McDonald out of Hawaii on Aug. 19 and signed Trevor Siemian with his 25 starts with Denver and the New York Jets for an experienced option.

The Titans picked up the fifth-round option on cornerback Adoree' Jackson but not for wide receiver Corey Davis - the fifth pick overall in 2017. Davis would have cost $15.6 million for 2021 under that option despite ranking second to rookie A.J. Brown with 43 catches for 601 yards last season. Davis has six touchdown catches and 1,867 receiving yards in three seasons.

The new starter on offense is expected to be veteran right tackle Dennis Kelly replacing Jack Conklin, who signed with the Cleveland Browns. The Titans had an open spot on the offensive line last season, too: Nate Davis, the third-round pick out of Charlotte, started 12 games after moving into the starting lineup in October.

The Titans used their first-round draft pick this year on offensive tackle Isaiah Wilson out of Georgia. Kelly replaced Lewan when he was suspended the first four games of last season. The seven-year NFL veteran has started 16 of 58 games with Tennessee, but the 6-foot-6, 350-pound Wilson was the 29th pick overall.

Tennessee's top draft pick started training camp on the reserve/COVID-19 list, and then Wilson got a warning from Tennessee State University police at an off-campus apartment Aug. 15. The police report said Wilson ran to a second-floor balcony and appeared to consider jumping before sitting back down.

"I've talked to him privately and continued to talk to the team and stress the importance of the decisions we make outside the building as it relates to the people we're around because of COVID," Vrabel said.

The pandemic also affected the Titans' hopes of packing Nissan Stadium coming off a deep playoff run. No fans will be at the home opener Sept. 20 against Jacksonville.

"Fans or no fans, you've got to go play, so that's the mindset we have to have," Henry said. "We're trying to go win football games. Like I said, adjust to the circumstances."

The Titans never quite adjusted when it came to field goals last season. They had the NFL's worst unit, making 44.4% of their attempts. Greg Joseph was the fifth and final kicker of 2019, and his lone field-goal attempt came in the AFC title game. He did make all 18 PATs in his five games.

Undrafted free agent Tucker McCann of Missouri was signed to push Joseph, the kind of competition Tennessee didn't have last season.

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