Titans use draft to help overhaul defense

AP photo by Tony Dejak / An image of Virginia Tech cornerback Caleb Farley is displayed as a Tennessee Titans fan cheers on stage after Farley was chosen by the Titans with the 22nd pick in the first round of the NFL draft Thursday night in Cleveland.
AP photo by Tony Dejak / An image of Virginia Tech cornerback Caleb Farley is displayed as a Tennessee Titans fan cheers on stage after Farley was chosen by the Titans with the 22nd pick in the first round of the NFL draft Thursday night in Cleveland.

NASHVILLE - The Tennessee Titans have completed their extreme makeover of one of the NFL's worst defenses.

Gone are seven players who started at least three games last season, including three in the secondary to create salary cap space. In are free-agent signees linebacker Bud Dupree, lineman Denico Autry and cornerback Janoris "Jackrabbit" Jenkins.

The latest changes came in the NFL draft, and when the Titans were done picking Saturday, they had made five of their eight selections during the three-day event on defense, led by first-round pick Caleb Farley, a cornerback from Virginia Tech.

"I feel like we've got a good mix of all of that on the defensive side," general manager Jon Robinson.

The reigning AFC South Division champs had to make changes. All-Pro and offensive player of the year Derrick Henry and quarterback Ryan Tannehill not only led one of the NFL's best offenses, they helped carry the Titans to an 11-5 record and their first home playoff game since 2008.

Tennessee had just 19 sacks last season, though, better than only the Cincinnati Bengals and Jacksonville Jaguars. The Titans allowed opponents to convert 51.8% of third downs - worst in the NFL by far - while ranking 28th in total yards and 29th in passing yards allowed per game.

The other defensive draftees were Georgia linebacker Monty Rice at No. 92 and Washington cornerback Elijah Molden at No. 100 in the third round, Pittsburgh edge rusher Rashad Weaver at No. 135 in the fourth round and Oregon safety Brady Breeze at No. 215 in the sixth.

The defensive unit returns safety Kevin Byard and added veterans Jenkins and Kevin Johnson, but otherwise the group has turned over almost entirely after the release of starting cornerbacks Malcolm Butler and Adoree' Jackson and safety Kenny Vaccaro.

Kristian Fulton was a third-round pick and Chris Jackson a seventh-rounder a year ago, and now the Titans have Farley and Molden. Asked about building cohesion in such a young group, coach Mike Vrabel appeared to reference the "My Man Catches No Balls" motto the secondary had used the past couple seasons.

"You don't play well and don't win games in this league because of T-shirts and slogans," Vrabel said. "You win games in this league by coming together as a team and as a unit and a position group and going out there and pushing each other and trying to work, and every year is new."

Tennessee added pass rushing depth with the No. 135 overall pick and its second in the fourth round with Weaver. The 6-foot-5, 270-pound defensive lineman was an All-American in 2020, when he had 7.5 sacks and 14.5 tackles for loss, and the Titans will be using him at outside linebacker.

Weaver will have a chance at immediate playing time backing up Dupree and Harold Landry III. He said the Titans got the biggest steal in the draft after believing he'd be taken no later than the end of the second night.

"They got a great value pick in me, and I am excited to prove that to them," Weaver said.

Offense wasn't completely overlooked, with the Titans drafting North Dakota State right tackle Dillon Radunz in the second round and addressing their needs at wide receiver.

The Titans lost Corey Davis to the New York Jets and tight end Jonnu Smith to the New England Patriots during free agency and cut Adam Humphries in February.

Josh Reynolds was the big offseason signee, and the Titans swapped their fifth-round pick and seventh-rounder to move up 15 spots for Louisville's Dez Fitzpatrick at No. 109. The fourth-round pick led Louisville last season with 833 receiving yards and averaged 19.3 yards a catch.

Tennessee also took Racey McMath of LSU at No. 205 in the sixth rounds, and he should help immediately on special teams thanks to his speed. He was timed at 4.34 seconds in the 40-yard dash at his pro day.

There is more work to do on the roster, though.

Tucker McCann, who has yet to play in the NFL, is currently Tennessee's only kicker. The Titans have five tight ends and 11 wide receivers. A decision also is due by Monday on whether they pick up the fifth-year option on linebacker Rashaan Evans.

Robinson said the Titans are looking at what contracts they might be able to restructure if more salary cap space is needed.

Said Robinson: "We'll continue to evaluate players that are available players, that are on the street that don't have jobs, or players that do have jobs on other teams that may become available."

Upcoming Events