NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Tennessee Titans have been among the league’s biggest spenders in free agency, and they still won’t be able to fill all the remaining holes with only seven selections in this NFL draft.
Neither general manager Ran Carthon nor first-year head coach Brian Callahan are giving hints to the position Tennessee will fill first. Even after a busy start to free agency, this remains a roster under major renovation after losing 18 of 24 games to cost Mike Vrabel his job after six seasons.
Callahan, who will call the offense after being a coordinator at Cincinnati, has dropped hints that a coach can never have enough fast, explosive players. Carthon knows the Titans still must bulk up both the offensive and defensive lines.
“We’re still working on that,” Carthon said.
Callahan said they know what they need for a team that went 6-11 with the Titans working their way back up from the bottom of the AFC South.
Hilarious voice to text messages that'll make you wish people still used landlines
VOX POPULI: Manga artist exposes the juicy dynamics behind ‘oden’ factions
VOX POPULI: Ruling may be near on how to best romanize Japanese
'Barbie' makes history with $1 billion at the box office
Zimbabwe frees prisoners, including those sentenced to death, in an independence day amnesty
VOX POPULI: Scent of snow fills the air after Tokyo receives a wet, wintry mix
VOX POPULI: Manga artist exposes the juicy dynamics behind ‘oden’ factions
VOX POPULI: Voters won’t forget ‘politics of oblivion’ in the next election
Man fleeing cops in western Michigan dies after unmarked cruiser hits him
Bullying rife at Buller High School, students say
Rybakina, Vondroušová into Stuttgart quarters while Jabeur out
Bullying rife at Buller High School, students say