NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Titans opened the 2026 league year by setting fire to the salary cap. In a dizzying 48-hour span, General Manager Mike Borgonzi and Head Coach Robert Saleh committed over $270 million to new contracts. They secured a flashy slot weapon in Wan’Dale Robinson and built a secondary that looks like a track team. But for Cam Ward—the franchise cornerstone coming off a rookie season spent mostly on his back—the view from the pocket remains terrifyingly familiar.
The Titans spent big to fix the defense. They dumped the L’Jarius Sneed contract and immediately replaced him with Alontae Taylor (three years, $60 million) and Cor’Dale Flott (three years, $45 million). Combine those with the addition of Joshua Williams, and Tennessee has effectively rebuilt its defensive backfield from scratch. Individually, the moves make sense. Collectively, they signal a front office that thinks stopping the pass is more important than protecting the person throwing it.
Prioritizing the Perimeter Over the Trenches
While the secondary got a $105 million facelift, the offensive line received the equivalent of a bargain-bin patch. Austin Schlottmann and Cordell Volson are the headliners for the front five. Schlottmann is a career journeyman likely tasked with starting at center. Volson arrives as a low-risk option coming off major shoulder surgery. For a 3-14 team that surrendered 54 sacks last year, these aren’t solutions; they’re placeholders.
The logic is baffling. Brian Daboll was brought in as Offensive Coordinator specifically to unlock Cam Ward. The team handed Wan’Dale Robinson a staggering four-year, $78 million deal to be the primary chain-mover. They restructured Calvin Ridley to keep him through 2026. Tennessee has the routes. They have the weapons. They just don’t have the time. Adding elite receivers without securing the blind side is like buying a Ferrari and parking it in a neighborhood where the roads are made of gravel.
“We wanted players who fit our identity—aggressive, fast, and resilient. Alontae and Cor’Dale bring that edge to the back end. We’re building this the right way, from the ground up.”
— Robert Saleh, Titans Head Coach
The Sophomore Slump Trap
The Titans are banking heavily on the upcoming NFL Draft to find starting-caliber tackles, but that’s a dangerous game to play with a sophomore quarterback’s confidence. John Franklin-Myers (three years, $63 million) will undoubtedly help the pass rush, but his presence doesn’t help Ward when a blindside rusher is closing in on third-and-long.
If Tennessee doesn’t find a way to add a veteran tackle before training camp, the 2026 season could mirror the disaster of 2025. Ward has the talent to be a top-ten signal-caller in this league, but even the best players can’t produce from the turf. The front office spent Week 1 winning the “paper” championship on defense. Now, they have to prove they can keep their best asset upright long enough to see the results.

