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NFL power rankings week 13 and the Tennessee Titans

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There is a clear bottom tier when it comes to NFL teams. The Tennessee Titans, New York Jets, Las Vegas Raiders, and New Orleans Saints make up that group. Before the last two weeks, it was clear to me that the Titans were pretty easily the worst team in the league. With what Cam Ward has shown over the last couple of weeks, maybe they deserve to move up a couple of spots…maybe.

I always write this lead in before I go look and see where the Titans actually rank. I still expect them to be 32nd in every ranking, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see them move ahead of the Raiders in a spot or two. The problem there, of course, is that those two teams played with the Raiders winning 20-10.

Here is where the Titans rank in the various week 13 NFL power rankings around the internet:

ESPN: 32

PFT: 31

They aren’t giving up.

USA Today: 32

If you thought a four-game homestand was going to help a team that hasn’t won in Nashville for 13 months … welp.

The Athletic: 32

No team would rather fast-forward through these final few weeks more than the Titans, who don’t have much to look forward to until they hire their next head coach. Well, that and following their projected odds of landing the No. 1 pick for a second straight draft. (We have them at 47 percent.)

The Ringer: 30(!)

CBS Sports: 32

Cam Ward played better in the loss to the Seahawks, which is the progress that matters. The first pick looks like it’s going to be theirs.

NFL.com: 31

It was another painful loss for the Titans, who are now 0-6 in Nashville, but Cam Ward keeps providing hope for the future. In fact, this was probably his best performance yet, especially considering it came against Seattle’s stellar defense. The No. 1 overall pick continued to battle, even while trailing by 20 points late in the third quarter, finishing with 256 yards and a touchdown through the air, along with 37 more yards and an additional score on the ground. He did all that without any help from the run game, and with Tennessee’s defense struggling to get stops during the first three quarters. With Ward, fellow rookie Chimere Dike (who might be the league’s best punt returner, no joke) and a few other pieces, there is some real encouragement on offense for the next coach. Defensively, the Titans have plenty of work to do. All in all, though, this situation might not look so bad a year from now, if things go right.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...wer-rankings-week-13-and-the-tennessee-titans
 
Lloyd Cushenberry to miss Titans game vs. Jaguars on Sunday

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Tennessee Titans starting center Lloyd Cushenberry will miss the game against the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday because of a foot injury he suffered against the Seattle Seahawks. Corey Levin will get the start at center. Levin was the center for the majority of training camp, while Cushenberry was working back from the Achilles injury from last season. That should make the transition for Cam Ward pretty easy.

The Titans also ruled out cornerback Jalyn Armour-Davis, safety Kendall Brooks, and defensive tackle Shy Tuttle. They have four players listed as questionable – Elic Ayomanor, Dan Moore, Chig Okonkwo, and Xavier Woods. They really need all four of those guys out there in a game they should have a chance to win. The good news is that all four were limited in practice on Friday.

This is the Titans’ final game of a four-game homestand that spanned the month of November. It sure would be nice to see them get at least one win!

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...erry-to-miss-titans-game-vs-jaguars-on-sunday
 
Titans opening odds: Tennessee opens as 6.5-point underdog to Jaguars

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The Tennessee Titans are finally less than a touchdown underdog! They are a 6.5-point home underdog against the Jacksonville Jaguars this week according to Fanduel. No game feels all that winnable for the Titans, but this is one where they could have a chance if Cam Ward continues to play the way he has over the last couple of weeks.

The Jaguars’ defense isn’t bad, but it is not as good as the defenses the Titans have faced over the last couple of weeks. Jacksonville ranks 17th in yards allowed (352.5 per game), 24th in passing yards allowed (240 per game), and 15th in points allowed (22.7). They are, however, really good against the run, allowing only 83.8 yards per game. That is the best in the NFL. Good thing the Titans can’t run the ball anyway.

Ward has shown some real growth over the last few weeks. Now, he gets a chance to go against a pass defense that isn’t in the top 10 in the league. Will that be enough for the Titans to pull out their second win of the season?

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...nessee-opens-as-6-5-point-underdog-to-jaguars
 
Titans head coaching search profile: Klint Kubiak, OC, Seahawks

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Klint Kubiak is another rising candidate in the 2026 head coaching class in the NFL. This one is a bit more personal to me because this is a guy that I’ve had my eye on since week one. I felt like he was an OC who got a bad shake at things and was very excited when I saw he was getting one more shot from the Seahawks, and my Seahawks friends were also very excited (they also have had very high praise for him as the season has gone on). One of them even keeps begging me to stop bringing up the idea of someone poaching him for a head coaching position. Anyway, the bottom line is, everyone is excited about Kubiak, a new hotshot candidate that can be the next wonder boy of offensive schematics. The truth is, though, like every offensive guru, he still has his negatives. So, let’s get into his background, his positives, and his negatives. With some of the highest highs and lowest lows, here is the head coaching profile of Klint Kubiak.

Klint Kubiak’s start​


To start, Klint Kubiak had much less humble beginnings than Chris Shula did. While Shula started as an assistant linebackers coach at Ball State, Klint immediately got his start at Texas A&M as an offensive quality control coach. He spent two years with that title and then became a grad assistant in his third year at A&M. Then he got called up to the big leagues. He was asked to be an offensive quality control coach with the Minnesota Vikings and spent two years in that position, and then went back to college to be a wide receivers coach at Kansas, where he spent one year. After that, he went to the Denver Broncos as an offensive assistant, where he was able to coach with his dad for the first year and then remained there for an extra two years in the same title. After that, Mike Zimmer called him up to be Kirk Cousins’ QB coach in 2019, where Klint (alongside Kevin Stefanski) helped Kirk have a nice bounce-back year. Then, he stayed around in 2020 with his dad as the offensive coordinator. After 2020, though, he got the big job, offensive coordinator for the Vikings, where his offense ranked 12th in total yards, not bad, but with a head coach out the door, and an offensive mind on the way in, he was never going to stay. So, Klint met up with the son of one of his dad’s closest friends, Kyle Shanahan, in San Francisco, where he served as the passing game coordinator as a reset. He got his second shot with the New Orleans Saints, where after the unit looked unstoppable for three weeks, then reality hit. The offense ranked 21st with a head coach on the way out again. Most people knew he wasn’t the problem, though, and teams gave him interviews where he got his most likely last chance as an OC with the Seahawks, and, well, judging by the fact that you’re reading this article, it can be assumed that he has been pretty great.

Positives of Klint Kubiak​


So, the positives of Klint Kubiak are some of the biggest positives of this entire head coaching cycle. The first, and my personal favorite part of a Klint Kubiak-coached team is easily his offense. Obviously, his offense has been good, but that’s not what makes it stand out. No, what makes his offensive system stand out is that it is one of the most timeless offensive schemes in the NFL, with the Gary Kubiak West Coast offense. Whenever this offense is given to the right person or leader, it produces some of the top numbers in the NFL, and top teams at that. He is one of the people who has used it so well, especially with the pieces he has been given (that’s not a shot at Darnold, more at the weapons outside of JSN). Speaking of JSN, another big positive of Klint is that he uses his best skill players as much as possible, which makes him the anti-Arthur Smith in some ways. He did this with Justin Jefferson and Alvin Kamara, and he continues to do this with JSN. This is a very good thing because it makes teams so focused on that player; it gives a lot more opportunities to other players who probably wouldn’t get as open without that. Actually, Mike MacDonald spoke on this when the announcement of Kubiak’s hiring was made; he said,

“He is able to kind of accentuate and highlight some of the players at any given position,” Macdonald said. “You look at where Alvin Kamara started out his season last year, Derek Carr was playing at a really high level at quarterback. Kirk Cousins, back in Minnesota, was playing really probably the best ball of his career when Klint was coaching him. Justin Jefferson was a first-year player and had a ton of catches his rookie year, had big-time games. Those are the things I respect about Klint and how he builds it and understanding how to take care of guys’ strengths and mitigate weaknesses.”

It sounds bad at first because it sounds like the offense is predictable, but it actually makes it even better. The last thing I’ll mention is his coolness. This is something that has been mentioned to me more than I have noticed it. Specifically looking at his press conferences, he doesn’t come off as some crazy, fiery personality; he just comes off as just a cool, collected guy, but he’s still confident in his decisions (unlike some “calm” coaches). Now, even though I said Kubiak has some of the biggest positives, he also has some of the biggest negatives.

Klint Kubiak Negatives​


Like I said at the end of the last paragraph, while Kubiak has a very high ceiling as a head coach, he also has a very low floor for these reasons. First off, even though he’s calm and collected, that is also a negative of him to me. Only because I have no idea what he would be like as a leader for this team. His calm presence could make him very easily a great leader, but, at the same time, it could also make him very hard to get behind and compete for. I’m not saying his whole identity has to be that he’s a leader. I’m just saying I haven’t seen anything that screams leader. I’ll also say, I’m a little worried about his experience a lot more than I am with Shula’s. That’s because, as much as Seahawks fans love Kubiak, they will also be the first ones to tell you that he also has one terrible play call per game that makes you really confused about why he’s so loved. I think part of that is also that he’s finally branching out into adding his own stuff into his schemes instead of just riding off of his dad’s schemes, which is probably for the better. Still, though, it makes me think he’d be a phenomenal 2026 candidate, instead of a great 2025 candidate. The biggest thing I worry about, though, is how similar he is to Brian Callahan. I remember someone commenting on my last post saying they were out on Shula because he was too similar to Callahan, but I feel like Klint is more similar. Now, obviously, Klint is also a lot like Kyle Shanahan, too. If you want to see those similarities, you can look at the many posts from content creators saying those, but he’s a young offensive mind with a big last name who has used his connections to get to as many places as he’s been. That worries me, again, he has playcalling experience and has also run his side of the ball, but it would be very unwise to look at the concerns there are, especially after coming off a nepo baby disaster. Still, though, even with the negatives that come with Kubiak, he is obviously a very strong candidate who has a sky-high ceiling.

What are the Chances For Kubiak?​


Honestly, even though I actually think Kubiak is more likely for the Titans to hire than Shula, solely because he’s an offensive mind, it is still not likely that Klint Kubiak lands the job. This has to do with the fact that Kubiak isn’t as experienced as the Titans want him to be, but there is something bigger than experience, and that’s other teams. There are going to be other teams wanting a new head coach this offseason, and even though I think our job is very appealing, there is one that I think might end up being a better fit for Kubiak. I think the Giants end up landing Klint Kubiak, and he ends up being the replacement for Brian Daboll. Think about it, a defense with some very good pieces with a young, promising QB with a solid O-line, two quality young running backs, alongside a great receiver that he can spam all season long. It just makes too much sense for someone as smart as him. It’s like he would just end up going from one offense with a QB who could be good in the right system with two good running backs, an O-line, and a great receiver, to another. That’s one good coordinator hire away from being a competitive team. Now, I personally think he’d be better off drafting a receiver of his own that he can develop, but I would 100% understand if he ended up with NY. Even though I don’t think it’s likely for the Titans to hire him, it would 100% be a solid hire in my eyes.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...ching-search-profile-klint-kubiak-oc-seahawks
 
Titans vs. Jaguars discussion: React to today’s game

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The Tennessee Titans wrap up a four-game homestand today that spanned the month of November. They are 0-3 in those games so far, but have played better in the last couple of weeks. Can they put it together today and get a win against the 7-4 Jacksonville Jaguars?

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Cam Ward finally gets to face a defense that isn’t in the top 10 against. That hasn’t happened for him very often this season. He has been good against two really good defenses the last two weeks. Hopefully, today will be the day that he puts up 300+ yards with multiple passing touchdowns for the first time in his career.

The Titans’ defense has also played better than expected the last few weeks. They are missing so many guys they were counting on at the first of the year due to either trades or injuries. Dennard Wilson has really done a great job. He probably won’t be here next year, but he has proven he deserves to be a defensive coordinator in this league.

Use this thread to discuss the game.

GO TITANS!!

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...ns-vs-jaguars-discussion-react-to-todays-game
 
Titans fall to Jaguars 25-3

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Cam Ward and the Tennessee Titans’ offense looked like they were taking some big steps forward over the last two weeks. All of that progress completely disappeared in today’s 25-3 loss at home to the Jacksonville Jaguars. After coming out on their first possession and moving the ball, they were unable to get anything going for the rest of the game. I was at the game, and it was one of the most boring games I’ve ever been to.

Cam Ward had a rough day. He finished 24 of 38 for 141 yards. He added one carry for seven yards. There were some throws he missed, but there honestly wasn’t much there for him to take advantage of. The offense as a whole is just terrible.

Tony Pollard got off to a fast start with carries of 15, 11, and 10 yards on his first three carries. After the 10-yard run, they tried an end-around to Chimere Dike that went for one yard. Why get cute when just handing the ball to Pollard is working so well? The only answer is that Bo Hardegree is just not a good playcaller.

The defense actually played pretty well. They were on the field for the entire day because six of the Titans’ 10 offensive drives went for five plays or less. There was also a Chimere Dike fumble on a punt return. To only give up 25 points when faced with that isn’t half bad.

That’s really all there is to say about this one. The Titans are still a bad football team that currently holds the top overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/tennessee-titans-news/62879/titans-fall-to-jaguars-25-3
 
Titans opening odds: Tennessee opens as underdog at Cleveland Browns

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Will the Tennessee Titans ever open as a favorite in a game again? The answer to that is *probably* yes, but it isn’t going to be anytime soon. There is a slight chance they will be a favorite when the New Orleans Saints come to town on December 28th, but if the Titans continue to play like they did yesterday over the next month, they will be an underdog in that game as well.

This week, they open as a 3.5-point underdog at the Cleveland Browns. So much of the narrative around this game is going to be Cam Ward vs. Sheduer Sanders. That’s pretty dumb, but we know how the national media works. It’s going to be a tough game for Ward because Cleveland has a really good defense, headlined by Myles Garrett. He’s going to have a field day lining up against Dan Moore. The Titans should probably just plan on keeping Chig Okonkwo on that side to help, and have the running back slide that direction on every play.

This is probably going to be a 6-3 game that the Browns win, but hey, at least in that scenario the Titans cover, right??

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...nnessee-opens-as-underdog-at-cleveland-browns
 
Titans DT Jeffery Simmons wants the coaching search to focus on culture

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The Tennessee Titans were totally embarrassed on Sunday, losing 25-3 to the Jacksonville Jaguars. Every unit was a mess, from the offense, to the defense, to special teams. The Titans gained fewer than 200 yards and failed to score a touchdown. The Jaguars moved up and down the field with ease. Chimere Dike fumbled a first-quarter kickoff that immediately led to a multi-score deficit.

Superstar defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons spoke with the media after the game. Asked about the team’s upcoming head coaching search, Simmons said the chosen candidate must be capable of changing the team’s culture. He’s right about that.

Jeffery Simmons: We have to have somebody that is going to change the culture around here when they hire the new coach.

— Terry McCormick (@terrymc13) November 30, 2025

The Titans haven’t had a culture or identity since firing Mike Vrabel. Brian Callahan was supposed to be an X’s and O’s coach. Culture and leadership wasn’t Callahan’s strong suit. It’s only gotten worse since Mike McCoy was hired as interim.

The Titans have no offensive identity. They aren’t a pass-first, aggressive team. They can’t establish the run either. The offensive line lacks toughness and meanness. Some questioned the Titans’ motivation heading into Sunday, given the lack of intensity throughout the performance in all phases.

Coach McCoy often punts or settles for field goals despite the Titans literally having nothing to lose at 1-11. The Titans are the only offense in the NFL without an opening possession touchdown this season. Despite that, McCoy settled for a field goal on 4th-and-3 from the Jaguars’ 10-yard line. They continued to punt in several questionable spots.

The Titans need a complete makeover this season. That doesn’t just include the roster, which obviously needs a lot of help around rookie quarterback Cam Ward too. But culture, leadership, identity, motivation, aggression, and toughness need to be factors for Mike Borgonzi and Chad Brinker throughout their upcoming coaching search. Simmons was totally right in his evaluation of the necessary candidates.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...wants-the-coaching-search-to-focus-on-culture
 
NFL power rankings week 14 and the Titans

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Well, last week the Tennessee Titans moved out of the 32nd spot in a couple of the NFL power rankings after pretty solid performances against the Houston Texans and Seattle Seahawks in back-to-back weeks. This week, they should be back at 32nd across the board after laying an egg at home against the Jacksonville Jaguars. I really had high hopes for Cam Ward and the offense facing the Jaguars’ defense. What a letdown!

Let’s take a look at where the Titans rank in the various week 14 NFL power rankings around the internet:

ESPN: 32

Despite missing two games, Simmons’ 6.5 sacks has him on pace for his first double-digit sack season. He leads the Titans with 29 quarterback pressures (second most among DTs in the NFL), 12 of which came against double teams. Simply put, as he goes, the Titans’ defense goes. Simmons’ ability to beat double teams allows other defensive linemen to get one-on-one matchups. And his impact extends beyond the pass rush. He’s consistently making plays behind the line of scrimmage, as shown by his 10 tackles for loss. — Turron Davenport

FOX Sports: 31(!)

A complete dud against the Jaguars and a bad game from QB Cam Ward. Good thing they can get him some help in April, when they almost certainly will have the top pick in the draft. Again.

Yahoo! Sports: 32

Here’s a list of categories in which the Titans rank 32nd in the NFL: wins, point differential, yards gained, points scored, first downs, passing touchdowns, points per drive. They’re also second-to-last in EPA (expected points added) per play and success rate on offense. The Titans’ defense is a little better but still has given up the fourth-most points and is fifth-worst in EPA per play allowed. It’s hard to keep the Raiders out of the bottom spot, but the Titans have done it. It’s a historically bad team.

PFT: 31

At least they’re getting a new stadium.

CBS Sports: 32

The No. 1 pick is coming into focus. They are bad. Really bad.

The Athletic: 32

The Titans have been bad enough that they already have a 52 percent chance of earning the No. 1 pick and are basically guaranteed a top-five pick (95 percent). The offseason can’t get here quickly enough.

The Ringer inexplicably has the Titans ranked 30th. They must not have watched this team play all year.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...905/nfl-power-rankings-week-14-and-the-titans
 
Should the Tennessee Titans sign CB Darius Slay?

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If the Tennessee Titans are searching for veteran help at cornerback, an intriguing option just became available. The Pittsburgh Steelers waived veteran cornerback Darius Slay on Tuesday. Slay became expendable in Pittsburgh following the addition of Asante Samuel Jr. from the practice squad to their active 53-man roster.

Steelers waiving CB Darius Slay. (via @TomPelissero) pic.twitter.com/RD5RPE4Q8m

— NFL (@NFL) December 2, 2025

The Titans entered Sunday’s contest versus the Jacksonville Jaguars shorthanded at cornerback. With Jalyn Armour-Davis ruled out due to an Achilles injury, the Titans only had four healthy corners on the 53-man roster, and one of them was Kaiir Elam, who had joined the team just earlier that week. It was a strange week to release cornerback Samuel Womack III, but that’s what Mike Borgonzi did. Dennard Wilson had to get creative at cornerback as a result.

Darrell Baker Jr. and Marcus Harris started outside. That represented a position change for Harris, who had previously been playing the nickel. Replacing him in the slot was safety Kevin Winston Jr. The Titans essentially didn’t trust Elam or fellow recent waiver-wire addition Micah Robinson to play defensive snaps.

The results were poor. Both Harris and Winston appeared miscast in their new roles. Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence encountered little resistance from the Titans’ pass defense, completing 16-of-27 passes for 229 yards, two touchdowns, and zero turnovers in a blowout 25-3 win.

Slay does possess an intriguing connection to the Titans. He played under Coach Wilson for the Philadelphia Eagles for two seasons (2021-22). Wilson served as Slay’s defensive backs coach and passing game coordinator. Turron Davenport shrewdly pointed that out.

I know it's only five games, but Dennard Wilson and Darius Slay were together in Philly……..would imagine Slay could come in and start immediately for the #Titans. https://t.co/PjEZQG2Olk

— TURRON DAVENPORT (@TDavenport_NFL) December 2, 2025

Slay probably possesses interest in joining a postseason contender instead of the 1-11 Titans. It’s worth noting he was a healthy scratch for the Steelers before being released. Slay may not find many suitors via the open market.

The 34-year-old Slay could be a temporary solution for the Titans at cornerback with five games left, but the rebuilding Titans probably have little interest in short-term solutions, rightfully so. Slay is unlikely to be a 2026 solution at 35 years old. That should probably prevent Borgonzi from considering the move despite the connection to Wilson.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...ould-the-tennessee-titans-sign-cb-darius-slay
 
A Tennessee Titans Head Coaching Profile: Robert Saleh

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Robert Saleh is a well-known retread who lost his job in New York after having serious conflict with Aaron Rodgers. He is considered one of the best defensive minds in the NFL, and he has had very solid stints as defensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers. One of the things he is most known for, though, unfortunately, is his time as the head coach of the New York Jets from 2021-2024. This was a tenure of chaos as Aaron Rodgers destroyed any culture that was being built, and Zach Wilson was bringing his own controversy that I won’t mention because I want to keep this article PG. Now, most people don’t put too much blame on Saleh because of Rodgers and the organization he was working with at the time, but then the question comes in about if it really was Rodgers fault, or if Saleh was still to blame. So, to figure out if Saleh is a viable coaching candidate, we need to look into his past and what he brought to New York. So, this is the head coaching profile of former Jets head coach Robert Saleh.

Robert Saleh’s background​


Before getting into his positives and negatives, it is necessary to look at what he did to get to this point. It all started at the college level for Michigan State, where he served as an offensive assistant, which is honestly kind of funny looking back. After a year, the coaching staff realized he was a defensive coach and made him a defensive assistant. After two years at Michigan State, he went to Central Michigan for the same job under Brian Kelly. He was seriously mistreated by Kelly at a party where he and Matt LaFleur had to do dirty work while everybody else was relaxing and warm in the middle of winter. This was so bad that they both promised each other that they’d never treat any of their employees like that when they climb. Anyway, since he couldn’t stand coach Kelly, he left that job for a similar position at Georgia, and soon after, he got called up to the NFL. In 2006, Robert Saleh became a defensive intern at Houston for two years and then got promoted to assistant linebackers coach in 2009. After two years there, he became the defensive quality control coach for the Seahawks. The Jaguars coaching staff was impressed with Saleh’s work and made him the linebackers coach in Jacksonville where he’d spend the next two years. After all of that, in 2017, Kyle Shanahan called him up and offered him the job as defensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers. After consistently coaching one of the best defenses in the NFL, Joe Douglas called Robert Saleh and asked if he wanted to be the next head coach of the New York Jets, which Saleh accepted. Obviously, the Jets’ tenure ended up not going well, which led to Saleh’s firing, which is still debated to this day about who was to blame. After that, he took a small job in Green Bay as an offensive consultant, more so as something to do, before going back to San Francisco, where he has killed it.

Positives of Saleh​


Now, Robert Saleh is a very interesting case, as he has a lot more positives than the typical retread because of how questionable his time with the Jets was. The first one is probably the one that has been talked about the most when it comes to Saleh’s positives, and that’s his connections in the NFL. He is the rare type of head coaching candidate who is a defensive mind. If anything, hiring Saleh might be better for Cam’s development than even some offensive-minded head coaches would be. There are so many names that come to mind with Saleh when it comes to who he would decide to hire as his offensive coordinator. If Mike McDaniel gets fired, that combination may be a shoo-in for the Titans or any team in general when it comes to the search. Or, how about Brian Daboll? They never really met up anywhere, but I’m sure they connected at some point, with them being head coaches just a few miles away from each other, and I’m sure they’ve connected with both of them being respected names across the NFL as well. If he can’t get a retread, though, he may be able to poach one of Mike LaFleur or Clay Kubiak from their positions. Even though they are already offensive coordinators, they could very easily be tempted by the allure of play calling and being given the duty of developing their own QB, and with offense being in a Kubiak’s blood apparently, and with how many offensive master minds LaFleur has rubbed shoulders with, they could very easily be very solid play callers and we just don’t know it. I know LaFleur was an offensive coordinator with Saleh, but how much can we judge him on having to call plays for Zach Wilson? Anyway, his offensive coordinator connections are golden. The other two big positives of Saleh are his defense and his culture/discipline. Look, one of the best parts of covering a retread is that we already know what some things look like, for example, how disciplined a Saleh-led team is, and how does he do with his specialty? Well, before Rodgers came in, the Jets’ culture was solid, and his teams were pretty disciplined. In his first two years, the Jets were ranked 18th and 17th in penalties per game, which isn’t great, but it’s better than anything we’ve had. He also had a solid culture, and he had his guys bought in, even with Zach Wilson doing Zach Wilson things. The biggest standout of the Saleh tenure, though, was how good his defenses were. After a mediocre first year for the defense, Saleh’s defense was ranked 4th in the NFL and was elite in pass defense, and his 2023 defense took a bit of a fall, but it was still ranked 12th, which is very solid. He was also never too terrible with clock management, and his teams would always fight for him. It even came out later that his players defended him in private, and his players also defended him in public. All of that is the stuff the Titans need right now, and he has head coaching experience on top of that, which makes him a great candidate for what the Titans are looking for and a great fit.

Negatives of Robert Saleh​


The negatives are nowhere near as long as the positives, but the negatives are still very serious concerns that, for some people, take him out of the race completely. First off, although I do blame the Jets tenure mostly on bad QB management from the front office, and I do believe if Tyrod Taylor was the QB, those first 3 years there would’ve been better results, we still need to recognize how it felt like he was slowly losing the locker room as time went on. This could be more of a knock on Rodgers than it was on Saleh, but we don’t know that for certain. The reality Titans fans refuse to accept is that maybe Saleh was more responsible than we think, and maybe we’re over exaggerating how good Saleh actually was because of the serious chance that he ends up our next head coach. There was always talk about how the locker room was lost under his watch. Again, this could be more of a thing against Rodgers than Saleh, but he still isn’t pardoned from all blame just yet; he’d need another chance at a job to be fully pardoned. Also, even though I’ve talked about how good his defense has been, his rushing defense was always a big negative. Over his four years with the New York Jets, he only had one defense that ranked above the 20s. So, as good as his pass defense was, it was always more of a pick your poison with his defense because even though the pass D would be one of the best in the league on a consistent basis, there was also the run D that they always had to worry about. This is the thing Jets fans point toward the most when they defend the organization’s decision to move on from him, outside of the potential locker room problems. Now, this negative is something that actually could be completely reversed in Tennessee because of the Titans’ D-line. Most people know that Jeffery Simmons and T’Vondre Sweat are some of the best run-stopping D-linemen in the NFL, and Femi’s best quality when he was healthy was that even though he was raw, he could stop the run pretty well, and he was really catching on before he got hurt. The point is, add a pass rusher to this defensive line next year, I think the run-stopping could be much better under Saleh in Tennessee than in New York. Now, don’t take that as a guarantee from me; the run-stopping could be just as bad in Tennessee, and it is something worth worrying about. All in all, while Saleh has a smaller number of negatives, his biggest negative is enough for anyone, including the front office, to take him out of the race.

How likely is Saleh to get hired?​


So, since I’ve gotten permission to do articles for MCM, the articles I have done were over coaching candidates that I don’t think are likely to land or pursue this offseason, so I thought I’d cover one this week. It was either gonna be this, or Mike Kafka if he won on MNF, which obviously didn’t happen. So, if that didn’t give it away, then I’ll spell it out: I think Robert Saleh is very likely to be the next head coach, not the favorite, but still very likely. I believe this because of his former head coaching experience and his hard-nosed attitude, which is so opposite of Brian Callahan’s. I 100% believe this dude will be a finalist at the very least, and honestly, he is my personal favorite of not only the retreads, but he is my favorite of all the likely head coaching candidates for the Titans. His offensive coordinator connections, combined with his tough attitude and what he brings to the defensive side of the ball, make him too good to pass up on. I also still believe he is better for Cam Ward’s development than a lot of the offensive coordinator candidates. Now, I do worry about his ability to fully keep the locker room for the next however many years, but again, there’s no real way of knowing that until he is fully separated from his time in New York. So I say, it is 100% worth the risk for the Titans to potentially get a culture-changing, hard-nosed head coach with a good offensive coordinator.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...see-titans-head-coaching-profile-robert-saleh
 
5 Titans coaching candidates who would be culture builders

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Tennessee Titans defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons discussed how the team’s upcoming head coaching search has to focus on leadership and building the culture following Sunday’s embarrassing 25-3 Week 13 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars. That got us thinking. Which potential coaching candidates would be culture-driven hires?

We’ve identified five in particular.

Mike McCarthy, unemployed​


Mike McCarthy enjoyed two lengthy stints as the head coach of the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys. He has direct ties to Titans president Chad Brinker, who was alongside him in Green Bay for a period. A Super Bowl winner with a 60.8% all-time win percentage, there’s no doubt that McCarthy checks the Titans’ experience boxes with a strong resume of building locker room culture.

Robert Saleh, 49ers DC​


Is there a tougher coach in the NFL than San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh? His viral skirmish with Jaguars head coach Liam Coen proved he doesn’t mess around. Saleh flamed out with the New York Jets, but ownership and Zach Wilson/Aaron Rodgers made that a borderline impossible job.

Jesse Minter, Chargers DC​


Albert Breer of SI recently reported that Los Angeles Chargers defensive coordinator Jesse Minter is among the candidates gaining consideration from the Titans. Minter has more than 10 years of coordinating experience at the NCAA and NFL level. He’s spent considerable time with the hard-nosed Jim Harbaugh, indicating he’s probably learned how to run a tight ship.

Chris Shula, Rams DC​


Los Angeles Rams defensive coordinator Chris Shula is also a potential candidate, per Breer. The grandson of the legendary Don Shula, he possesses legitimate NFL bloodlines. He’s also coached under Sean McVay since 2017, and his defense currently ranks second in the NFL in points allowed.

Arthur Smith, Steelers OC​


Culture and leadership wasn’t a problem when Arthur Smith was the Atlanta Falcons’ head coach, and the team has actually gotten worse since firing him despite spending premium resources at quarterback. Smith was well-liked within the Titans’ organization, and his offense was the best Nashville had seen in decades. Amy Adams Strunk may strongly consider him.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...hing-candidates-who-would-be-culture-builders
 
Titans Fan Confidence Survey Week 14

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Well, last week I said I could see voting that I am confident in the direction of the Tennessee Titans after watching Cam Ward play really well against two good defenses. Then, Ward and the Titans come out and look completely lifeless against the Jacksonville Jaguars. That’s what I get for having some actual hope.

So, this week, I will offer no indication of how anyone should vote. This team is definitely the worst team in the league. This year has been lost. The only hope for the team going forward is that they can have a really good offseason with the right coaching hire, adding free agents that can come in and help, and compiling a really good draft class.

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Titans fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/tennessee-titans-news/62917/titans-fan-confidence-survey-week-14
 
Sunday is not Cam Ward vs. Shedeur Sanders

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Look, most of you who are reading this are really smart people. That means you already know what I am about to lay out here, but for the rest of the world that is going to try to make a declaration on these two quarterbacks based on this game, it needs to be said. The Tennessee Titans are playing the Cleveland Browns on Sunday. Yes, Cam Ward is the quarterback of the Titans, and Shedeur Sanders is the quarterback of the Browns, but the result of this game says nothing about what those two quarterbacks are going to become.

You also already know that this game is probably not going to go well for Ward. The Browns’ defense is really good. They rank 2nd in total yards allowed per game, 3rd in passing yards allowed per game, 10th in rushing yards allowed per game, and 14th in points allowed per game. They have Miles Garrett, who is the best defensive player on the planet. He already has 19 sacks on the season. That is only 3.5 behind the single season record. He might break the record on Sunday.

When the Titans signed Dan Moore this offseason, there was talk that he was pretty good when not facing Garrett. Well, guess what, he faces Garrett on Sunday. Last season, when Garrett had four sacks in two games against the Moore and the Pittsburgh Steelers.

All of that to say, it would be shocking if Sanders didn’t put better numbers than Ward on Sunday. The Titans’ defense has been playing well for the personnel that they have, but the personnel that they have isn’t very good. Sanders also has a better offensive line and better weapons than Ward.

There is a long way to go with both Ward and Sanders before anyone knows what either of them will be as an NFL quarterback. In two years, this game will be nothing more than a blip on the radar. Don’t be one of the people who make it more than that on Sunday night.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...950/sunday-is-not-cam-ward-vs-shedeur-sanders
 
NFL Draft order: Tennessee Titans fall from first with their win

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The Tennessee Titans entered Week 14 with the number one pick in the 2026 NFL Draft secured. Now maybe that isn’t as important with Cam Ward in the fold and not needing to go QB, but they still lost draft position on Sunday by beating a lowly Cleveland Browns team.

The New York Giants, on a bye in Week 14, moved past the Titans into the top spot in the draft. That could still theoretically change based on strength of schedule, but the Giants are comfortably ahead at this time.

The Giants have a SOS of .538 while the Titans are at .573, per Tankathon.

The New Orleans Saints beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to move to three wins on the season instead of a tie at 2-11. The Las Vegas Raiders can still join New York and Tennessee at 2-11 with a late afternoon loss.

New York Giants remaining schedule​


The Giants don’t play any playoff teams down the stretch with games against the Washington Commanders, Minnesota Vikings, Las Vegas Raiders, and the Dallas Cowboys.

Tennessee Titans remaining schedule​


The Titans are up against much more stiff competition with games against three playoff teams in the San Francisco 49ers, Kansas City Chiefs, and Jacksonville Jaguars plus a game against the New Orleans Saints.

Las Vegas Raiders remaining schedule​


After today’s game against the Denver Broncos, the Raiders play the Philadelphia Eagles, Houston Texans, and Kansas City Chiefs plus a game against the new York Giants. That Giants game could ultimately decide the number one overall pick.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...nnessee-titans-fall-from-first-with-their-win
 
5 observations from the Titans’ Week 14 win over the Browns

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The Tennessee Titans defeated the Cleveland Browns 31-29 in Sunday’s Week 14 game. The now 2-11 Titans are no longer overwhelming favorites to earn the No. 1 overall selection in the 2026 NFL Draft. We’ve conjured up five observations following Tennessee’s dominant victory.

Cam Ward goes 149 passes without an interception​


Titans rookie quarterback Cam Ward entered the game having thrown 143 straight passes without an interception. The Fox broadcast crew mentioned it so often that it felt destined to end. Ward’s seventh passing attempt came on 3rd-and-long. The Browns blitzed a linebacker and dropped another in coverage. Under duress, Ward threw a slant pass that the underneath linebacker picked off. It officially went down as 149 passes without an INT, and with his fourth-quarter TD pass to Chimere Dike, he had his first 2-TD passing game of the season.

On the board first after a 14 yard TD pass from @Cameron7Ward to @ElicAyomanor

📺: #TENvsCLE on @NFLonFOX & NFL+ pic.twitter.com/51FVYXf0ko

— Tennessee Titans (@Titans) December 7, 2025

Neutralizing Myles Garrett​


Browns defensive end Myles Garrett entered Sunday’s contest four sacks away from setting the single-season record. The Titans had a terrific gameplan throughout the first half to neutralize him. On the opening drive, they constantly ran away from him, at him, chipped him, and called quick-developing passing plays. The one longer developing passing play had max protection and resulted in a 14-yard TD from Ward to Elic Ayomanor, Tennessee’s first opening-possessing touchdown of the season. An anxious Garrett was later called for jumping offside, and only had one sack throughout the entire game.

Titans lose control of No. 1 overall pick​


The Titans took a sizable first-half lead on the Browns, and later mounted a comeback after forcing multiple turnovers in the second half. With this win, the Titans lose control of the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, with the New York Giants (2-11) taking real-time control. Was this victory worth it?

Is Corey Levin better than Lloyd Cushenberry?​


Veteran center Corey Levin made his second consecutive start with Lloyd Cushenberry sidelined by injury. In the first half, Levin threw a key block on a career-long 65-yard TD run by Tony Pollard, and he did it again for Pollard’s 32-yard TD in the second half. He’s played better than Cushenberry this campaign, who is still recapturing his best form after last year’s season-ending Achilles tear.

CAREER LONG 65 YARD TOUCHDOWN FOR @Tp__5#ProBowlVote + @Tp__5

📺: #TENvsCLE on @NFLonFOX & NFL+ pic.twitter.com/Duk2dacAPc

— Tennessee Titans (@Titans) December 7, 2025

Defense… Out of sorts​


The Titans have had to shuffle things in the secondary. Injuries have them playing Marcus Harris and Darrell Baker Jr. at outside cornerback with rookie safety Kevin Winston replacing Harris in the slot. The Browns had two passing plays gain more than 50 yards apiece in the first half alone, including a 60-yard TD from Shedeur Sanders to Jerry Jeudy. A shoestring tackle at the 2-yard line prevented Quinshon Judkins from having his own 60-yard TD. Things got significantly better in the second half, with multiple sacks and turnovers.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...s-from-the-titans-week-14-win-over-the-browns
 
Titans vs. 49ers opening odds: Tennessee a big underdog again

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Today, I am wearing my “Victory Monday” Tennessee Titans sweatshirt. I’ve had this shirt for almost two years and have been able to wear it four times. I cheated once last year and wore it after they ended up with the first overall pick. There probably won’t be an opportunity to wear it next week.

The Titans opened as a 12.5-underdog on the road at the San Francisco 49ers next week over at FanDuel Sportsbook. That number, like most numbers that I see at the beginning of the week, feels low. The 49ers are 9-4 and in third place in a very tough AFC West. They have been banged up for most of the season, but should be pretty healthy when the Titans get to San Francisco, with the 49ers coming off their bye week.

The total for this game is 44. That is 10 points higher than the total for the game against the Cleveland Browns. The Titans almost hit the over in that one by themselves. Can they keep the offense going this week?

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...s-opening-odds-tennessee-a-big-underdog-again
 
Every Titans rookie/sophomore who made an impact in Week 14 win over Browns

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The Tennessee Titans claimed an upset victory over the Cleveland Browns on Sunday, winning 31-29 in Week 14. The Titans received some big-time performances and impact plays from various young talents. We’ve identified every rookie and sophomore player that made a game-changing play.

QB Cam Ward​


Rookie quarterback Cam Ward completed 14-of-28 passing attempts for 117 yards, two touchdowns, and one interception. It was his first multi-passing TD game of the season, and the Titans also scored their first opening-possession TD of the campaign. Ward played within the structure of the offense as he finally got some help from his teammates in a complete team performance.

Cam Ward to Chimere Dike! Titans lead 28-17

TENvsCLE on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/1PwPVJLsbZ

— NFL (@NFL) December 7, 2025

WR Chimere Dike​


Chimere Dike caught Ward’s second touchdown, as seen above. The former Florida standout finished with five receptions for 24 yards and a score. Dike also returned the opening kickoff for 41 yards near midfield, kickstarting the Titans’ opening possession touchdown.

CB Marcus Harris​


Rookie cornerback Marcus Harris has kicked outside from nickel to boundary corner due to injury. In the second half, Harris utilized his helmet on a perfectly-placed hit to force a Dylan Sampson fumble. It was recovered by sophomore linebacker Cedric Gray, and the Titans extended their advantage.

WR Elic Ayomanor​


Elic Ayomanor caught Ward’s opening-possession TD. The 14-yard score was Ayomanor’s only reception of the afternoon, but it was obviously notable. Despite being hurt earlier this season, the Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada native still leads all Titans pass catchers in first downs (21).

Rookie connection gets the Titans on the board

TENvsCLE on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/cWUOSNSssu

— NFL (@NFL) December 7, 2025

S Kevin Winston Jr.​


Kevin Winston Jr. played every defensive snap as the nickel defender for the second consecutive week. Like Harris, the Titans have moved Winston around the secondary due to injuries. He’s responding to the challenge by playing quality football at an uncomfortable position.

TE Gunnar Helm​


Tight end Gunnar Helm only had one reception for eight yards, but he did selfless work as a blocker. On Tony Pollard’s explosive 65-yard TD run, Helm threw this key block in space to spring his experienced ball-carrier. He also helped the offensive line hold a stout Browns defensive line to just one sack.

CAREER LONG 65 YARD TOUCHDOWN FOR @Tp__5#ProBowlVote + @Tp__5

📺: #TENvsCLE on @NFLonFOX & NFL+ pic.twitter.com/Duk2dacAPc

— Tennessee Titans (@Titans) December 7, 2025

OT JC Latham​


JC Latham was whistled for two penalties, but did not allow a single sack on Sunday afternoon. With the Titans shifting protection to Myles Garrett, sometimes triple-teaming him, Latham was asked to survive on an island at right tackle.

NT T’Vondre Sweat​


Browns star running back Quinshon Judkins rushed for just 26 yards via 14 carries (1.9 YPC). Sophomore nose tackle T’Vondre Sweat played a big role in Tennessee’s run-stopping success on Sunday. Sweat also applied some pressure on Shedeur Sanders in the pocket.

LB Cedric Gray​


Cedric Gray recovered the aforementioned fumble forced by Harris. He also registered a team-high 10 tackles. Gray leads the Titans in tackles with an astounding 128, good for fifth in the entire NFL.

LB James Williams Sr.​


Sophomore linebacker James Williams Sr. blocked a fourth-quarter Browns punt that led to a crucial Titans field goal. It was the Titans’ first blocked punt since 2012 (Tim Shaw). It’s been a tough season for Williams, who lost out on a starting gig to Gray, but he’s been outstanding on special teams.

Titans block the punt!

TENvsCLE on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/dzFvtEfFt9

— NFL (@NFL) December 7, 2025

EDGE Jaylen Harrell​


Jaylen Harrell played 36 snaps against the Browns. That accounted for 52% of Tennessee’s defensive plays. Harrell shared a sack with Jeffery Simmons, and routinely did good work as a pass rusher and run defender.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...who-made-an-impact-in-week-14-win-over-browns
 
Colts sign QB Phillip Rivers (no, seriously)

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The standings are incredibly tight in the AFC South. The Jacksonville Jaguars lead the division at 9-4. The Houston Texans and Indianapolis Colts are 8-5 apiece. Unfortunately the 2-11 Tennessee Titans are the AFC South’s only non-competitive team.

The Colts are on a downslide. Things have gone disastrously since they traded two first-round selections to the New York Jets for cornerback Sauce Gardner. Gardner suffered a multi-week injury, and things got worse on Sunday.

Starting quarterback Daniel Jones suffered a season-ending Achilles injury. It’s a brutal blow for a potential Comeback Player of the Year candidate on an expiring contract. There’s a discussion to be had over culpability, considering the Colts were letting Jones play through a broken fibula injury.

Anthony Richardson is on IR with a self-inflicted eye injury suffered during a workout. It’s been approximately two months since Richardson went on IR. It feels like the Colts are done with him. Rookie sixth-round quarterback Riley Leonard replaced Jones in Week 14, but suffered a knee injury that makes him week-to-week.

Left with literally no healthy quarterbacks on their roster in the midst of a tight-knit postseason race, the Colts have done the unthinkable. On Monday evening, they worked out 44-year-old retired quarterback Phillip Rivers. Following that successful workout, the Colts agreed to terms with Rivers, signing him to the practice squad.

ESPN Sources: 44-year-old Philip Rivers, who has not played in the NFL since the 2020 COVID season, is signing to the QB-needy Indianapolis Colts practice squad. pic.twitter.com/oOIVQEY38x

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 9, 2025

Rivers hasn’t played in the NFL since 2020, when he completed a lone campaign with the Colts. They went 11-5 and qualified for the playoffs. Colts head coach Shane Steichen spent nine seasons on the Los Angeles Chargers coaching staff (2011-12, 2014-2020) alongside Rivers, including a stint (2019-20) as his offensive coordinator.

You sort of have to applaud the Colts’ creativity. There isn’t a practice squad QB available to come in and save the Colts’ season. Mike White, Bailey Zappe, and Trevor Siemian were probably the best options. Rivers probably has more upside. Alternatively, could they have considered former Titans QB Ryan Tannehill, who hasn’t played since 2023?

Rivers also has more upside than Leonard, an inexperienced sixth-round rookie. We’ll be watching the Colts-Rivers reunion with fascination.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...019/colts-sign-qb-phillip-rivers-no-seriously
 
A Titans Head Coaching Profile: Jesse Minter

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Jesse Minter is the current defensive coordinator for the Los Angeles Chargers and was known as the second-hottest coaching candidate for first-timers, at least at the beginning of the season, behind Joe Brady. While his star has fallen in the eyes of fans because of his injured defense, he still has an innovative scheme with great potential. With a lot of the guys on this list, I’ve been very familiar with them. Robert Saleh has been my favorite candidate since late October, Chris Shula was a hot name after he forced Darnold into four picks, and Klint Kubiak was a dude I got in on the hype on early with. Jesse Minter, though, is a guy I was not as familiar with. I’d heard the name, sure, and I knew that he had the Mike MacDonald defense, but nothing past that. So, this was one I was looking forward to and was interested to see how his profile stacked up compared to all the other candidates. So, without any further delays, here is the head coaching profile of Jesse Minter.

Jesse Minter’s Start​


Jesse Minter got his first coaching gig all the way back in the year 2006 as a defensive intern for the (not robbed of the CFP) Notre Dame Fighting Irish. After a year doing that, he went on to be a grad assistant for 2 years (2007-2008) at the University of Cincinnati, and after this, he finally got his first job as a position coach. In 2009, Minter took the job at Indiana State to be their linebackers coach and stayed at that position for a year before being promoted to defensive coordinator. He did well enough for the two years he was there to the point where Georgia State’s staff decided to give him a chance at the defensive coordinator position. He had a couple of years there where, for Georgia State, his defenses were pretty decent (2013-2016). After his time at Georgia State, he finally got the call up to the NFL and gained his connection to the Harbaugh family as he got a position on the Baltimore Ravens staff as a defensive assistant. After two years at that position, the Ravens promoted Minter to Assistant Defensive Backs coach, and after one year, he was promoted to the main Defensive Backs coach. After spending the pandemic year at that position, Clark Lea called him to come be the Defensive Coordinator for the Vanderbilt Commodores. His defense wasn’t at all good at Vanderbilt, but in year one of Clark Lea, the whole team was overall terrible, so it’s hard to blame that on him. After that miserable year, though, Minter was rewarded. Jim Harbaugh took Minter away from Vanderbilt, and he officially became the Defensive Coordinator for the Michigan Wolverines. He crushed it there for two years, thanks to his innovative defense, and won a National Championship in his last year there. After that last year at Michigan, as Jim Harbaugh left for the NFL, Minter followed along to be his defensive coordinator, which I personally believe was a giant mistake on Michigan’s part, because they should’ve at least thought about Minter. Anyway, this is what Jim Harbaugh had to say on Jesse Minter in the middle of last season,

“He’s a humble warrior, I mean his picture could be right up there next to it,” Harbaugh lavished. “And a jackhammer. I’m about to go into a meeting with Jesse and it’s gonna be ‘we played this’, and he’s gonna want ‘we can get better at this’. ‘We had this many missed tackles, and we had the two defensive offsides penalties back to back.’ He’s always-more is more for Jesse. He’s just intuitive. He knows offensive football almost as well as defensive football. He knows how an offense is going to try to attack” https://boltbeat.com/chargers-dc-jesse-minter-has-perfect-response-amid-head-coaching-buzz#:~:text=%22He’s%20a%20humble%20warrior%2C%20I,of%20the%20National%20Football%20League%22.

That’s high praise from one of the best head coaches when it comes to producing other culture-building head coaches. So, now it’s time to look into his coaching career in more detail with Minter’s positives and negatives in the coaching cycle.

Jesse Minter’s Positives​


Ok, the first and most obvious positive that Minter has going for him is the defensive scheme he runs. This defense is considered to be one of the most innovative and interesting things in the entire NFL. It’s a 3-4 playbook that has a lot more mixed into it, specifically, he loves to blitz, and this has proven to be very confusing for even some of the best quarterbacks. This scheme is absolutely brilliant, and you don’t need to look any further than just Monday Night Football against the Philadelphia Eagles. Jalen Hurts threw four picks against a bruised defense that doesn’t have too much star power currently. Now, Jalen Hurts isn’t the best QB in the NFL, no doubt, but he usually takes care of the ball, and he is still better than a lot of starters in the NFL. This performance was a difference in coaching, and Minter ran circles around Patullo and Sirianni. This is a scheme that has worked, and will continue to work well into this next era of the NFL. Another positive for Jesse Minter is that, for a coordinator looking for his first shot, he has a lot of experience and some good things on his profile. I’m gonna bet that there are very few people reading this who knew, when you do the math, that Jesse Minter had ten years as a defensive coordinator under his belt. Now, of course, only two of those years of experience came in the NFL, but it’s still a lot more experience than almost every other hotshot coordinator in the NFL. To me, this is why he is one of the only first-timers who has ever been mentioned by insiders when it comes to this job. This experience is also beneficial because of the differences in every experience he has had. Going from a D2 school to a very small D1 school, to the (at the time) joke of the SEC, and then coordinating one of the three best national championship defenses of the 2020s in Michigan, and then going to the NFL. That is one of the weirdest cycles I’ve ever heard for a coach, and I love it because of its uniqueness. The last positive I’ll mention is the coaching tree he is from. Now, the coaching tree Minter is a part of obviously hasn’t only produced elite head coaches, but it has produced one of the best lists of names out there. As much crap as he’s gotten, Sherrone Moore led Michigan to a 9-win season in a difficult conference, but the real standout of the Harbaugh group is Mike MacDonald. When looking at Minter, it is very hard not to get a feeling that he could very easily end up being like MacDonald with the way he runs his program. Also, with how hard it is to hang in with the Harbaughs as a coordinator, it should tell you something when Jim has so many good things to say about his defensive coordinator, especially when you’re coaching with a dead man walking in your offensive coordinator (Greg Roman). Jesse Minter’s positives are very big, and his experience is something he can hang over the head of a Klint Kubiak or Chris Shula.

Negatives of Jesse Minter​


Now, even though Jesse Minter is a very solid coaching candidate, and fits the profile for what the Titans are looking for in a head coach, potentially the best out of all the newcomers, there are still some negatives. Starting out with my least favorite one, his offensive coordinator connections. Look, obviously, the connections won’t be the breaking point, but there is a lot more pressure on a defensive-minded coach to be able to say that he has a serious candidate for an offensive coordinator. Shula has the McVay tree, which, when it hits, it hits hard; Saleh has the connections around the league and the Shanahan tree, and even Vance Joseph has a certified connection to Davis Webb, who is one of the most loved offensive minds currently in the NFL. What does Minter have? Even though I said the coordinator tree for the Harbaughs is amazing, the position coaches are never the first place a defensive-minded coach goes for his offensive coordinator. The only connection I could make was maybe that his coaching against Davis Webb in the same division might have given them a connection, but that is a big stretch. Not saying this fully takes him out of the race, but it 100% does have a big effect on his chances and his profile in the eyes of many. Another negative of Jesse Minter is that he doesn’t have any head coaching experience. Now, does this make him a terrible head coaching candidate? No, I think I’ve made that clear, especially when I had so much good to say about Shula. Still, though, this has to be accounted for because of how terrible it went the last time we did that. Now, look, of course, compared to other defensive or offensive coordinators, Minter has some experience, but it’s nothing compared to the experience of Mike McCarthy, Robert Saleh, or even Vance Joseph or Matt Nagy. Now, in some instances (like Brandon Staley, who isn’t even being considered for any job), no experience is better, but in this situation, getting a person with experience is a good key to a fast turnaround. The last thing I’ll mention for Minter, and this goes for all the first timers, is the microwaved society we currently live in. For a first-time head coach, it could be very hard to keep an organization’s confidence for long enough to progress as a head coach. With someone experienced, there’s more established trust that they will turn it around even if it gets off to a rough start. Even with that, though, I am nitpicking with negatives with Minter because even though the coordinator thing is huge, it still was very hard to go hard against Minter.

How Likely is Minter to get hired​


Overall, how likely do I think Jesse Minter is to end up with the Tennessee Titans this offseason? Well, he might be the most likely of the newcomers to get the job for the Titans’ head coaching spot. This is one I was kind of on a high for recently, and it is one that has consistently come back to my mind as the process just keeps coming closer. Even though I go back and forth with him, if he ended up as the next head coach, I think other people alongside me could get behind it. His scheme just really sells his profile for me, specifically with how innovative it is. That defense could seriously end up being the saving grace for us, and it could make us even better overall. Even with how confusing his offensive coordinator hiring could be, it is still 100% worth it to at least take a shot at Minter. This is a candidate I will continue to have my eye on for the rest of the season and throughout the entire interview process. Also, just as a quick note, for the rest of my articles, I’ll put a link to some of my video stuff at the end of every article, so y’all can check out more of my content at Titans Rundown.

Source: https://www.musiccitymiracles.com/t...7/a-titans-head-coaching-profile-jesse-minter
 
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