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Tennessee Titans at Buffalo Bills - 2022 Week 2

Page 1

The Titans opened the season last week at home against the New York Giants. They never trailed until late in the fourth quarter, when Giants running back Saquon Barkley scored on a two-point conversion to put his team ahead 21-20. A last-minute drive by the Titans came up empty as a 47-yard field goal attempt sailed wide left as time expired.Quarterback

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE SEPTEMBER 12, 2022

THE BILLS

The Titans defense totaled five sacks and two takeaways. Defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons had two sacks, including a strip-sack, while second-year outside linebacker Rashad Weaver notched his first two career sacks.

Quarterback Josh Allen is in his fifth season since being selected by the Bills with the seventh pick of the 2018 NFL Draft. In 2021, he passesd for 4,407 yards and 36 touchdowns and added six touchdowns on the ground. Last week at Los Angeles, he completed three touchdown passes and rushed for another score.

The Titans Radio Network and Nashville flagship 104.5 The Zone carry all Titans games across the Mid-South with the “Voice of the Titans” Mike Keith, analyst Dave McGinnis, sideline reporter Amie Wells and gameday host Rhett Bryan

TITANS LOOK TO REBOUND AFTER ONE-POINT LOSS

This is the 50th all-time contest between the organizations, two charter members of the American Football League. The Titans lead the all-time series 30-19, which includes a 2-1 advantage for the Bills in the postseason.

This is the fifth consecutive season in which Titans and Bills have met, the third consecutive season in which they have played in primetime, and the second straight year they have been featured on Monday Night Football. The Titans won the last two primetime matchups, including a Tuesday night contest in 2020 and their 2021 Monday night clash, each of which was played in Nashville.

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Titans (0-1) travel to face the reigning AFC East champion Buffalo Bills (1-0) this week on Monday Night Football. Kickoff at Highmark Stadium (71,621) is scheduled for 7:15 p.m. EDT/6:15 p.m. CDT on Monday, Sept. 19.

A total of eight rookies played for the Titans, including a pair of starters in cornerback Roger McCreary and right tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere. Three other rookies combined for a total of 10 receptions for 132 yards. Fifth-round wide receiver Kyle Philips led the team with six catches for 66 yards, while first-rounder Treylon Burks had three receptions for 55 yards. Tight end Chig Okonkwo added 11 yards on one catch.

The Bills have extended time to prepare for their home opener against the Titans. They launched their season last Thursday night in Los Angeles and earned a convincing 31-10 win against the Rams.

2022 TITANS SCHEDULE REGULAR SEASONKickoff/ TV/ Day Date Opponent Result Score Sun 9/11 N.Y. GIANTS L 20-21 Mon 9/19 at Buffalo 6:15 p.m. ESPN/WZTV Sun 9/25 LAS VEGAS Noon FOX Sun 10/2 at Indianapolis Noon FOX Sun 10/9 at Washington Noon* CBS Sun 10/16 BYE Sun 10/23 INDIANAPOLIS Noon* CBS Sun 10/30 at Houston 3:05 p.m.* CBS Sun 11/6 at Kansas City 7:20 p.m.* NBC Sun 11/13 DENVER Noon* CBS Thu 11/17 at Green Bay 7:15 p.m. Prime Video Sun 11/27 CINCINNATI Noon* CBS Sun 12/4 at Philadelphia Noon* FOX Sun 12/11 JACKSONVILLE Noon* CBS Sun 12/18 at L.A. Chargers 3:25 p.m.* CBS Sat 12/24 HOUSTON Noon* CBS Thu 12/29 DALLAS 7:15 p.m. Prime Video Sat/Sun 1/7-1/8 at Jacksonville TBD TBD All kickoff times Central * Time, TV subject to change All games on Titans Radio Network (flagship 104.5 The Zone) AFC SOUTH STANDINGS TEAM W L T PCT CONF DIV Houston Texans 0 0 1 .500 0-0-1 0-0-1 Indianapolis Colts 0 0 1 .500 0-0-1 0-0-1 Tennessee Titans 0 1 0 .000 0-0-0 0-0-0 Jacksonville Jaguars 0 1 0 .000 0-0-0 0-0-0 LAST WEEK: Ind 20 at Hou 20, Jax 22 at Was 28, NYG 21 at Ten 20 THIS WEEK (central time): Ind at Jax (Sun 12:00), Hou at Den (Sun 3:25), Ten at Buf (Mon 6:15) NEXT WEEK (central time): Hou at Chi (Sun 12:00), KC at Ind (Sun 12:00), LV at Ten (Sun 12:00), Jax at LAC (Sun 3:05) TITANS TRAVEL TO BUFFALO FOR MONDAY NIGHT BATTLE WITH BILLS Tennessee Titans (0-1) at Buffalo Bills (1-0) Monday, Sept. 19, 2022 • 6:15 p.m. CDT • Highmark Stadium • Orchard Park, N.Y. • TV: ESPN & WZTV-17

Additionally, Westwood One Sports will broadcast the game to a national radio audience. Play-by-play announcer Tom McCarthy and analyst Ross Tucker have the call.

THE BROADCAST

ESPN will broadcast the game to a national audience, while the telecast also can be seen locally in Nashville on WZTV Fox 17. The broadcast team includes play-by-play announcer Steve Levy, analysts Louis Riddick and Dan Orlovsky, and reporter Laura Rutledge

Ryan Tannehill passed for 266 yards and a pair of touchdowns, finishing with a 106.4 passer rating. Both of his touchdown tosses went to running back Dontrell Hilliard

Led by head coach Sean McDermott, who is in his sixth season as head coach, the Bills are looking for their fourth consecutive playoff berth in 2022. Like the Titans, their three playoff appearances since 2019 include back-to-back division titles in the past two campaigns.

Fans in Nashville can stream live Titans games with the newly-launched NFL+ subscription service, which offers access to all local games and all primetime games on phones and tablets, live local and national audio for every NFL game, and more.

Location

Referee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shawn Smith Television . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ESPN & WZTV In Nashville. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WZTV Fox 17 Mobile* NFL+ * Live local and primetime games only. Subscription required. Play-by-Play Steve Levy Analyst Louis Riddick Analyst Dan Orlovsky Reporter Laura Rutledge Radio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Titans Radio Network Flagship WGFX 104.5 FM-The Zone Satellite Radio Sirius 81, XM 226, SiriusXM 226 (Internet 830) Play-by-Play Mike Keith Analyst Dave McGinnis Gameday Host Rhett Bryan Reporter Amie Wells National Radio . . . . . . . . . . Westwood One Sports Play-by-Play Tom McCarthy Analyst Ross Tucker GAME INFORMATION SERIES AT A GLANCE ¾ Overall series (regular & postseason): Titans lead 30-19 ¾ Regular season series: Titans lead 29-17 ¾ Postseason series: Bills lead 2-1 ¾ Total points: Titans 1,089, Bills 963 ¾ Current streak: Two wins by Titans ¾ Titans at home vs. Bills: 16-8 (including 1-0 in playoffs) ¾ Titans on the road vs. Bills: 14-11 (including 0-2 in playoffs) ¾ Longest winning streak by Titans: 10 (1967-78) ¾ Longest losing streak by Titans: 3 (four times, last 2015–2019) ¾ Titans vs. Bills at Nissan Stadium: 5-2 (including 1-0 in playoffs) ¾ Last time at Nissan Stadium: Bills 31 at TITANS 34 (10-18-21) ¾ Titans vs. Bills at Highmark Stadium: 6-8 (including 0-2 in playoffs) ¾ Last Time at Highmark Stadium: Titans 12 at BILLS 13 (10-7-18) ¾ First time: Oilers 24 at BILLS 25 (10-30-60) ¾ Mike Vrabel’s record vs. Bills: 2-2 ¾ Sean McDermott’s record vs. Titans: 2-2 ¾ Mike Vrabel’s record vs. Sean McDermott: 2-2 A

Amy Adams Strunk (Chairman, Board of Directors); Kenneth S. Adams, IV (Board of Directors); Barclay Adams; Susan Lewis

Owner/President Kim Pegula

Capacity

Titans

2022 NFL Offensive

EVP/General Manager Jon Robinson

Give the Titans their third consecutive win over the Bills. Mike Vrabel’s career record to 44-28 as a head coach, including regular season and playoffs. Vrabel would tie Jack Pardee (44-35) for the third-highest win total in franchise history behind only Jeff Fisher (147) and Bum Phillips (59). QB Ryan Tannehill’s combined starting record in the regular season and playoffs to 75-63, including a 33-17 record with the Titans.

Buffalo Bills (1-0)

Game

Offensive Coordinator

¾ Give

Visiting Team . . . . . . . . . . .

Home Team

¾ Give

2022 NFL Defensive Rank

¾ Improve

Monday, Sept. 19, 2022 7:15 p.m. EDT/6:15 p.m. CDT Highmark Stadium Orchard Park, N.Y.

Defensive Coordinator Shane Bowen Offensive Coordinator Todd Downing

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 2 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIASTATISTICS

¾

Website www.buffalobills.com

Surface

Def. Coord./Asst. Head Coach Leslie Frazier Ken Dorsey Special Teams Coordinator Matthew Smiley Rank 6 (Total), 14 (Rush), 6 (Pass) 2 (Total), 1 (Rush), 7 (Pass) TITANS

¾ Improve

Give the organization an all-time record of 26-18 on Monday Night Football, including a 15-7 mark in the "Titans era" (since 1999). the Titans a three-game winning streak on Monday Night Football and nine wins in an 11-game span on Monday nights. the Titans a four-game winning streak in primetime games during the regular season.

Website

2022 NFL Defensive Rank 23 (Total), 30 (Rush), 4 (Pass)

General Manager Brandon Beane

Tennessee (0-1) www.TennesseeTitans.com

Head Coach Sean McDermott (since 2017)

VICTORY WOULD ... ¾

www.TennesseeTitans.com/Media

Franchise since 1960 Owner/CEO Terry Pegula

Head Coach Mike Vrabel (since 2018)

Date of

Kickoff Time

Ownership

2022 NFL Offensive Rank 14 (Total), 18 (Rush), 9 (Pass)

Venue

Media Guide

President/CEO Burke Nihill

. . . . . . . . . . . .

Opened in 1973 A-Turf Titan 71,621

Franchise since 1960 (1960-96 Houston Oilers; 1997-98 Tennessee Oilers)

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 3 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSSTATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIA

TE AUSTIN HOOPER

DT JEFFERY SIMMONS

¾ Can register his third consecutive game with at least one sack.

In the regular season and postseason, the Titans and Bills have met a total of 49 times. The Titans hold a 30-19 advantage in the series, dating back to the inaugural AFL season.

¾ Can record his 29th career 100-yard rushing game, including regular season and playoffs.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR THIS WEEK

Titans 2022 Media Guide

On Jan. 1, 1989, the Bills hosted the Oilers in a wild card game and won 17-10.

InXXXIV.a1992 wild card game, the Bills achieved a similarly miraculous win. Trailing 35-3 in the third quarter, the Bills rallied to score 35 consecutive points and eventually won 41-38 in overtime.

¾ Can record his 100th career start.

ALL-TIME SERIES RESULTS

The franchises have met three times in the playoffs, with Buffalo holding a 2-1 advantage. The last playoff matchup between the two teams was in 1999, when the Titans defeated the Bills 22-16 in an AFC wild card game. In a play known as the “Music City Miracle,” Kevin Dyson returned a Frank Wycheck lateral on a kickoff return 75 yards for a touchdown with only 16 seconds left in the game, giving Tennessee the win. The Titans went on to beat Indianapolis and Jacksonville before falling to St. Louis in Super Bowl

The last time the Titans and Bills met at Highmark Stadium was Oct. 7, 2018. Stephen Hauschka’s 46-yard field goal as time expired capped the third consecutive one-point game between the clubs.

¾ Needs one win to reach 44 career wins with the franchise, including playoffs. He would tie Jack Pardee (44-35) for the third-highest win total in franchise history behind only Jeff Fisher (147) and Bum Phillips (59).

The momentum in the series has swung back and forth. From 1967 until 1978, the Oilers had a 10-game winning streak over the Bills, the longest streak in the series. From 1983–94, Buffalo controlled most of the results, going 8-3. Tennessee then won eight out of nine, including five consecutive matchups from 2003-12, before the Bills won the next three games.The Titans took the last two meetings at Nissan Stadium. On Oct. 13, 2020, they won 42-16 in game that was played on a Tuesday night after a postponement due to the Titans' COVID-19 outbreak. Then on Oct. 18, 2021, the Titans hosted the Bills on a Monday night and won 34-31.

Watch PostgameHighlights

The Titans and Bills rivalry brings together two of the original teams of the American Football League, founded by two of the visionaries who helped set in motion one of the most significant eras in football history. It was in 1960 that K.S. “Bud” Adams, Jr.’s then-Houston Oilers and Ralph Wilson, Jr.’s Bills became two of the eight teams that began play in the newly-formed league. Adams, Wilson and the other original AFL owners were dubbed the “Foolish Club” for their choice to accept the seemingly-impossible task of competing with the National Football League. Ten seasons later, the burgeoning league’s success was more than apparent, as the AFL and NFL completed a historic merger.

Jim Wyatt: Six Things That Stood Out Game Photos

Titans Tickets

¾ Needs two touchdowns (68 career) to become the third player in franchise history with 70 total touchdowns, joining Eddie George (74) and Earl Campbell (73).

Press Conference Video: Mike Vrabel

K RANDY BULLOCK

T TAYLOR LEWAN

¾ Can extend his career-best streak to 17 consecutive games with at least one passing or rushing touchdown.

Titans in the Community Nissan Stadium Information Titans Podcasts

From Last Week's Game Game Center Gamebook (PDF)

RB DERRICK HENRY

Date Site W/L Score

Titans Information

10-30-60 Buf L 24-25 12-11-60 Hou W 31-23 10-8-61 Hou L 12-22 10-29-61 Buf W 28-16 9-9-62 Buf W 28-23 10-7-62 Hou W 17-14 9-28-63 Buf W 31-20 10-20-63 Hou W 28-14 10-11-64 Hou L 17-48 11-1-64 Buf L 10-24 10-31-65 Buf W 19-17 12-5-65 Hou L 18-29 9-25-66 Buf L 20-27 11-20-66 Hou L 20-42 9-17-67 Buf W 20-3 10-29-67 Hou W 10-3 10-27-68 Buf W 30-7 12-7-68 Hou W 35-6 9-21-69 Buf W 17-3 10-5-69 Hou W 28-14 12-12-71 Buf W 20-14 11-10-74 Buf W 21-9 9-19-76 Buf W 13-3 10-15-78 Hou W 17-10 9-25-83 Buf L 13-30

¾ With 23 career interceptions, he needs one interception (23 interceptions entering the season) to tie Zeke Moore (24) for 10th place on the alltime franchise interception list.

QB RYAN TANNEHILL

SERIES HISTORY

QUICK CLICKS

¾ Needs two interceptions to tie Michael Griffin and Ken Houston (25) for eighth place all-time for the franchise. He would tie Griffin for the most interceptions for the franchise during its "Titans era" (1999–present).

HEAD COACH MIKE VRABEL

S KEVIN BYARD

¾ Needs 121 rushing yards to become the fourth player in franchise history to reach 7,000 career rushing yards. He would join Eddie George (10,009), Earl Campbell (8,574) and Chris Johnson (7,965).

¾ Needs four field goals to reach 200 for his career. Eight active NFL players have reached the mark.

TITANS vs. BILLS Titans lead 30-19, including playoffs

Date Site W/L Score

11-10-85 Buf L 0-20 12-21-86 Hou W 16-7 9-20-87 Buf L 30-34 1-1-89 Buf L 10-17 (Div) 9-24-89 Hou L 41-47 OT 11-26-90 Hou W 27-24 12-27-92 Hou W 27-3 1-3-93 Buf L 38-41 OT (WC) 10-11-93 Buf L 7-35 9-18-94 Hou L 7-15 12-24-95 Buf W 28-17 11-23-97 Tenn W 31-14 1-8-00 Ten W 22-16 (WC) 9-3-00 Buf L 13-16 12-14-03 Ten W 28-26 12-24-06 Buf W 30-29 11-15-09 Ten W 41-17 12-4-11 Buf W 23-17 10-21-12 Buf W 35-34 10-11-15 Ten L 13-14 10-7-18 Buf L 12-13 10-6-19 Ten L 7-14 10-13-20 Ten W 42-16 10-18-21 Ten W 34-31

¾ Can record his 25th career 300-yard passing game and his ninth such performance since joining the Titans in 2019. Nine 300-yard games with the Titans would put him ahead of Marcus Mariota (eight) for fourth place in franchise history.

¾ Can record his fifth consecutive regular-season game with a passer rating of 100.0 or greater. It would tie for the best such streak of his career, matching his personal best from the 2020 campaign.

¾ Needs one reception to reach 300 career receptions.

WR ROBERT WOODS

Stephen Hauschka’s 46-yard field goal as time expires provides the win for the Bills ... The Titans take a 12-10 lead with 4:43 remaining on a 50-yard field goal by Ryan Succop but allow Josh Allen and the Bills the ensuing drive for the game-winning score ... The Titans turn the ball over three times—two lost fumbles and one interception ... Succop boots four field goals to score all of Tennessee’s points ... LeSean McCoy has 85 of Buffalo’s 144 rushing yards on 43 total carries.

¾

OLB BUD DUPREE

On 10/18/21 against Buffalo on Monday Night Football, Long Jr. led the team with a career-high 14 tackles.

In the Monday night game’s final minute, Bills quarterback Josh Allen is stopped by Jeffery Simmons on a fourth-and-one quarterback sneak at Tennessee’s three-yard line ... Derrick Henry rushes for 143 yards and three touchdowns on 20 carries, including a 76-yard touchdown ... Ryan Tannehill rushes for the Titans’ other touchdown and completes all nine of his passes in the fourth quarter to help the Titans score the final 10 points of a game that featured seven lead changes ... Harold Landry III registers two sacks, and Kevin Byard sets up a touchdown with an interception ... Allen passes for 353 yards and three touchdowns for the Bills.

On 1/4/20 against Buffalo in the Wild Card Round, Cunningham became the third player in Texans history to record at least five total tackles (nine), a tackle for loss and a pass defensed in a postseason game, joining Johnathan Joseph (2011) and J.J. Watt (2012).

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 4 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIASTATISTICS

2019 Week 5 • Oct. 6, 2019 • BILLS 14 at Titans 7

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On 11/13/14 against Buffalo, Tannehill completed 26 passes on 34 attempts for 240 yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions for a passer rating of 114.8 while with the Miami Dolphins.

¾

On 10/2/18 against Buffalo, Tannehill completed 16 of 24 passes for 137 yards and three touchdowns with one interception for a passer rating of 103.6 during his tenure as a Dolphin.

2020 Week 5 • Oct. 13, 2020 • Bills 16 at TITANS 42

¾

2021 Week 6 • Oct. 18, 2021 • Bills 31 at TITANS 34

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¾ On 1/9/21 at Buffalo on Wild Card Weekend, Autry registered postseason career-bests with 1.5 sacks, one forced fumble and four tackles with the Indianapolis Colts.

Click to access the 2022 Titans Media Guide

¾

In six career games against Buffalo, Bullock has made 10 of 11 field goal attempts (90.9 percent), including a long of 55 yards, and all 14 extra point tries.

¾

On 10/6/19 against Buffalo, Byard tallied seven tackles and one five-yard interception return.

¾

On 10/13/20 against Buffalo, Tannehill was 21-of-28 passing for 195 yards and three touchdowns with zero interceptions for a 129.3 passer rating. Added four carries for 42 yards and one touchdown. Recorded the second game of his career with at least three passing touchdowns and at least one rushing touchdown.

¾

On 10/18/21 against Buffalo on Monday Night Football, Henry was named AFC Offensive Player of the Week after carrying the ball 20 times for 143 yards and three scores, including a 76-yard touchdown. His 76-yard touchdown run was the third-longest touchdown run of his career, his fourth career rushing touchdown of at least 75 yards and his fifth overall touchdown of at least 75 yards (one receiving). Scored the eventual gamewinning touchdown on a 13-yard rush in the fourth quarter.

In 13 career games against the Bills, Tannehill has completed 253 of 421 passes for 2,531 yards and 18 touchdowns, including a 66-yard touchdown pass. He has also rushed 38 times for 155 yards and two scores.

¾ On 12/4/16 against Buffalo, Autry tallied three tackles and a sack with the Oakland Raiders.

DB LONNIE JOHNSON JR.

NOTABLE PERFORMANCES VS. THE BILLS

MOST RECENT MATCHUPS

On 9/28/14 against Buffalo, Bullock converted all three field goal tries, including a 55-yarder that tied for the second-longest in his career, and both extra point kicks while with the Houston Texans.

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2018 Week 5 • Oct. 7, 2018 • Titans 12 at BILLS 13

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On 10/13/20 against Buffalo, Henry rushed 19 times for 57 yards and two touchdowns.

DT JEFFERY SIMMONS

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On 10/18/21 against Buffalo on Monday Night Football, Bullock made both field goal attempts and all four extra points in the win.

On 10/18/21 against Buffalo on Monday Night Football, Simmons tallied five tackles and one sack. He sealed the win by stonewalling Bills quarterback Josh Allen for no gain on a fourth-and-one quarterback sneak inside the Titans’ five-yard line with less than 30 seconds remaining.

On 10/3/21 at Buffalo, Johnson Jr. posted eight tackles and one 32-yard interception as a member of the Houston Texans.

On 12/11/16 at Buffalo, recorded his first career multi-sack game with 2.5 sacks for the Steelers and added six tackles.

K RANDY BULLOCK

Bills quarterback Josh Allen throws two touchdown passes, including a seven-yarder to Duke Williams in the fourth quarter that proves to be the game-winning score ... Derrick Henry scores the Titans’ lone touchdown on a one-yard run ... Cairo Santos misses all four field goal attempts for the Titans ... Marcus Mariota is sacked five times by Bills defenders, including three sacks by defensive tackle Jordan Phillips, while the Titans record four sacks of Allen.

On 10/14/18 against Buffalo, Cunningham tallied a then-career-high 13 tackles while with the Houston Texans.

RB DERRICK HENRY

¾

S AMANI HOOKER

S KEVIN BYARD

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On 9/27/20 at Buffalo, Woods tallied five catches for 74 yards and a score against his former team while with the Los Angeles Rams. He added three carries for 30 yards.

Following a 16-day gap between games due to a COVID-19 outbreak, the Titans play the NFL’s second Tuesday game since 1946 and the first since 2010 ... The Titans score 21 points off three turnovers by the Bills, sparked by cornerback Malcolm Butler’s two interceptions off Josh Allen and 97 total return yards ... Ryan Tannehill completes three touchdown passes, including two to Jonnu Smith, and also rushes for a score ... . Derrick Henry adds two touchdown runs ... In the Titans’ first game of 2020 that is opened to fans on a limited basis, the announced attendance is 8,403.

LB ZACH CUNNINGHAM

QB RYAN TANNEHILL

LB DAVID LONG JR.

On 10/18/21 against Buffalo on Monday Night Football, Hooker recorded nine tackles and one forced fumble.

DL DENICO AUTRY

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On 10/18/21 against Buffalo on Monday Night Football, Byard notched two tackles and one 16-yard interception that he returned to the Bills’ 11-yard line.

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LT D.Dawkins DT 98 S.Lotulelei

DEFENSE

RB 22 D.Henry S 37 A.Hooker

A.Brown

79

RT 72 D.Quessenberry S 31 K.Byard

TE D.Knox DT 91 E.Oliver

QB J.Allen S 21 J.Poyer D.Singletary S 23 M.Hyde

FR:

DEFENSE

Passing Att Cmp Yds TD Lg IN Rt R.Tannehill 29 18 216 0 48 1 70.5 Total 29 18 216 0 48 1 70.5

D. Long 14-9-5; A. Hooker 9-6-3; E. Molden 8-6-2

Titans D.Henry 13 yd. run (R.Bullock kick) 4-3:05

LT 77 T.Lewan ILB 54 R.Evans

WR 11 C.Beasley CB 27 T.White E.Sanders CB 39 L.Wallace

LG 76 R.Saffold OLB 58 H.Landry

Bills T.Bass 24 yd. Field Goal 1-6:07

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CLICK TO HIGHLIGHTSWATCH

TITANS-BILLS: THE LAST MEETING

Receiving No Yds Avg Lg TD 7 91 13.0 22 0 3 59 19.7 48 0 N.Westbrook-Ikhine 3 27 9.0 14 0 D.Henry 2 13 6.5 9 0 A.Firkser 1 11 11.0 11 0 G.Swaim 1 8 8.0 8 0 C.Rogers 1 7 7.0 7 0

In the fourth quarter, with help from a 20-yard reception by WR A.J. Brown, the Titans moved into field goal range and Bullock converted a 38-yard kick to make it 31-27, Bills. Later in the fourth quarter, the Titans took the lead and didn’t relinquish it as Henry tallied his third rushing score of the day. A 13-yard touchdown put the Titans ahead, 34-31. Despite Buffalo

TITANS INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

SCORING 1 2 3 4 Final Buffalo 3 17 11 0 31 Tennessee 0 17 7 10 34 TEAM STATISTICS Bills Titans TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 28 16 THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY 7-13-53.8% 4-10-40.0% FOURTH DOWN EFFICIENCY 0-1-0.0% 1-1-100.0% TOTAL NET YARDS 417 362 Plays - Avg. 73-5.7 51-7.1 NET YARDS RUSHING 82 146 Rushes - Avg. 23-3.6 22-6.6 NET YARDS PASSING 335 216 Sacks - Yards Lost 3-18 0-0 PASS ATT-COMP-INT 47-35-1 29-18-1 PUNTS - Avg 2-46.5 2-53.5 Net Punting Average 46.5 50.5 PUNT RETURNS - Yards 2-6 1-0 KICKOFF RETURNS - Yards 3-77 7-132 INTERCEPTIONS - Yards 1-17 1-16 PENALTIES Number and Yards 8-60 7-91 FUMBLES Number and Lost 1-0 0-0

WR 14 S.Diggs LDE 50 G.Rousseau

J.Jones

RB 26

Time of Game: 3:08

3 4 EXTRA POINTS Made-Attempts 3-3 4-4 RED ZONE EFFICIENCY 2-5-40% 3-3-100% GOAL TO GO EFFICIENCY 1-2-50% 1-1-100% SAFETIES 0 0 GIVEAWAYS 1 1 TAKEAWAYS 1 1 TIME OF POSSESSION 32:50 27:10

Interceptions No Yds Avg Lg TD K. Byard 1 16 16.0 16 0

C 60 B.Jones ILB 51 D.Long

Bills T.Sweeney 1 yd. pass from J.Allen (D.Knox-J.Allen pass) 3-0:27

driving into the red zone with under a minute to play, the Tennessee defense halted their opponent with a late-game stand and a fourth-and-one stop to deny Buffalo a first down inside the Titans five-yard line. Tennessee won at home by a final score of 34-31.

Leading Tacklers (Press Box Totals)

TOUCHDOWNS

C 60 M.Morse MLB 49 T.Edmunds

Total 18 216 12.0 48 0

None FF: None FR: None

Missed FGs: None

Bills C.Beasley 29 yd. pass from J.Allen (T.Bass kick) 2-0:40

Titans R.Bullock 43 yd. Field Goal 2-5:04

Titans R.Bullock 38 yd. Field Goal 4-9:45

Before the end of the first half, Buffalo tacked on another touchdown on a 10-play scoring drive. Diggs added two catches for 29 yards, as Allen ultimately connected with Bills WR Cole Beasley for a 29-yard touchdown on third-and-12. Buffalo took a 20-17 advantage into half time.The Bills opened up the second half with a 52-yard field goal to make it a 23-17 contest. However, Tennessee took the lead back on their next drive with a 12-play scoring possession. Henry rushed five times for 29 yards and one three-yard rushing touchdown as the Titans retook the lead, 24-23. Next, Buffalo recorded the sixth lead change of the game with a 75yard scoring drive that culminated in a one-yard touchdown pass by Allen to Bills TE Tommy Sweeney. 31-24, Bills.

Referee: Clete Blakeman

RG 64 N.Davis CB 20 J.Jenkins

Titans D.Henry 76 yd. run (R.Bullock kick) 2-11:20

WR 2 J.Jones CB 3 C.Farley

BILLS OFFENSESTARTERS

17

RG D.Williams LB 58 M.Milano

RT S.Brown NCB 24 T.Johnson

In Week 6 of the 2021 season, the Titans hosted the Bills for a Monday Night Football contest and won by a score of 34-31. RB Derrick Henry totaled three touchdowns as the Titans offense put up 362 total yards and 146 rushing yards against a Buffalo defense that was ranked first overall (251.8 yards allowed per game) and third against the run (78.4) entering the contest.Buffalo built a 6-0 lead with a field goal in each of the first two quarters. The matchup featured seven lead changes, and in the second quarter, Tennessee took the lead on a oneplay scoring drive as Henry broke free for a 76-yard touchdown, 7-6 Titans. On the ensuing Buffalo possession, Bills QB Josh Allen led his team on a 72-yard scoring drive that resulted in a 14-yard touchdown pass from Allen to Bills WR Stefon Diggs, 13-7 Buffalo. On the Titans following possession, QB Ryan Tannehill connected with WR Julio Jones for a 43-yard pass to move the sticks before K Randy Bullock converted a 43-yard field goal. 13-10, Buffalo. On the Bills’ first play of their next drive, Allen was intercepted by S Kevin Byard who returned the ball to the Buffalo 11-yard line. Henry rushed the ball seven yards before Tannehill took it into the end zone on a four-yard rushing score, and the Titans took the lead, 17-13.

Titans R.Tannehill 4 yd. run (R.Bullock kick) 2-4:23

WR 80 C.Rogers DL 96 D.Autry

Monday, Oct. 18, 2021 • 7:15 p.m. CT • Nissan Stadium

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 5 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSSTATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIA

TEAM SCORING PLAY TIME

2021 Week 6: Titans 34, Bills 31

WR 1

Attendance: 69,419

TITANS OFFENSESTARTERS

FF: A. Hooker 1 None

Bills S.Diggs 14 yd. pass from J.Allen (T.Bass kick) 2-7:54

Total 1 16 16.0 16 0

Sacks: H. Landry 2; J. Simmons 1

76

Sacks:

Weather: 65°, Clear, Wind N 0 mph

BILLS INDIVIDUAL

Bills T.Bass 28 yd. Field Goal 2-11:36

Bills T.Bass 52 yd. Field Goal 3-10:49

TE 87 G.Swaim NT 93 T.Tart

QB 17 R.Tannehill CB 24 E.Molden

WR 11 A.Brown DT 98 J.Simmons

STATISTICS Rushing Att Yds Avg Lg TD D.Singletary 5 27 5.4 14 0 J.Allen 9 26 2.9 7 0 Z.Moss 8 24 3.0 7 0 I.McKenzie 1 5 5.0 5 0 Total 23 82 3.6 14 0 Passing Att Cmp Yds TD Lg IN Rt J.Allen 47 35 353 3 31 1 107.8 Total 47 35 353 3 31 1 107.8 Receiving No Yds Avg Lg TD S.Diggs 9 89 9.9 17 1 C.Beasley 7 88 12.6 29 1 E.Sanders 5 91 18.2 31 0 D.Singletary 5 16 3.2 6 0 D.Knox 3 25 8.3 11 0 G.Davis 2 25 12.5 20 0 Z.Moss 2 15 7.5 12 0 I.McKenzie 1 3 3.0 3 0 T.Sweeney 1 1 1.0 1 1 Total 35 353 10.1 31 3 Interceptions No Yds Avg Lg TD J. Poyer 1 17 17.0 17 0 Total 1 17 17.0 17 0 Leading Tacklers (Press Box Totals) T. Edmunds 10-8-2; T. Johnson 6-4-2; J. Poyer 4-3-1

Titans D.Henry 3 yd. run (R.Bullock kick) 3-4:23

73

Rushing Att Yds Avg Lg TD D.Henry 20 143 7.2 76 3 R.Tannehill 2 3 1.5 4 1 Total 22 146 6.6 76 4

LG J.Feliciano RDE 55 J.Hughes

88

Avg

Weaver 2.0 Bills V. Miller 2.0 Tackles Tot Solo Asst Titans K. Byard 12 8 4 Bills T. Edmunds 10 7 3

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 6 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIASTATISTICS

REGULAR SEASON Date Opponent W/L Score

12/01 at New England 12/11 N.Y. Jets 12/18 Miami 12/24 at Chicago 01/02 at Cincinnati 01/08 New England

Bills

2022 SCHEDULE & RESULTS

Kickoff

No.

09/08 at L.A. Rams W 31-10 09/19 Tennessee 09/25 at Miami 10/02 at Baltimore 10/09 Pittsburgh 10/16 at Kansas City 10/30 Green Bay 11/06 at N.Y. Jets 11/13 Minnesota 11/20 Cleveland 11/24 at Detroit

2022 REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL LEADERS R. Stonehouse 6 342 57.0 46.7 0 3 66 0 Bills (none) No. FC Yds Lg TD K. Philips 4 2 62 15.5 46 0 Crowder 1 3 21 21.0 21 0 Returns Yds Avg Lg TD T. Cannon 2 33 16.5 19 0 (none) FG Pts Titans R. Bullock 2/2 2/3 8 Bills T. Bass 4/4 1/1 7 Sacks Tot Titans J. Simmons, R.

REGULAR SEASON Date Opponent W/L Score

Titans

Punt Returns

Passing Att Cmp Yds Pct Y/Att TD Int Lg Sack/Lost Rtg Titans R. Tannehill 33 20 266 60.6 8.1 2 0 31 1/0 106.4 Bills J. Allen 31 26 297 83.9 9.6 3 2 53t 2/5 112.0 Rushing No. Yds Avg Long TD Titans D. Henry 21 82 3.9 18 0 Bills J. Allen 10 56 5.6 13 1 D. Singletary 8 48 6.0 13 0 Receiving No. Yds Avg Long TD Titans K. Philips 6 66 11.0 21 0 D. Hilliard 3 61 20.3 31 2 T. Burks 3 55 18.3 27 0 G. Swaim 3 19 6.3 9 0 Bills S. Diggs 8 122 15.3 53t 1 Z. Moss 6 21 3.5 8 0 G. Davis 4 88 22.0 47 1 Interceptions No. Yds Avg Long TD Titans A. Hooker 1 0 0.0 0 0 Bills C. Basham 1 21 21.0 21 0 J. Poyer 1 6 6.0 6 0 D. Jackson 1 2 2.0 2 0 Punting No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B Titans

Titans

Bills J.

Scoring/Kickers PAT

2022 TALE OF THE TAPE OFFENSE Tenn. Buf f. NFL/Avg GAMES (Won-Lost) 0-1 1-0 FIRST DOWNS 19 23 19.4 Rushing 2 7 6.1 Passing 13 15 11.3 Penalty 4 1 2.0 YDS GAINED (tot) 359 413 327.8 Avg per Game 359.0 413.0 349.6 RUSHING (net) 93 121 112.2 Avg per Game 93.0 121.0 119.6 Rushes 26 25 24.9 Yards per Rush 3.6 4.8 4.5 PASSING (net) 266 292 215.6 Avg per Game 266.0 292.0 230.0 Passes Att. 33 31 33.4 Completed 20 26 21.2 Pct Completed 60.6 83.9 63.3 Yards Gained 266 297 231.3 Sacked 1 2 2.4 Yards Lost 0 5 15.7 Had intercepted 0 2 0.8 Yards Opp Ret 0 5 7.6 Opp TDs on Int 0 0 0.1 PUNTS 6 0 4.0 Avg Yards 57.0 0.0 48.0 PUNT RETURNS 4 1 1.9 Avg Return 15.5 21.0 8.9 Returned for TD 0 0 0.0 KICKOFF RETURNS 2 0 1.2 Avg Return 16.5 0.0 19.6 Returned for TD 0 0 0.0 PENALTIES 7 5 5.8 Yards Penalized 50 35 46.2 FUMBLES BY 2 2 1.6 Fumbles Lost 1 2 0.5 Opp Fumbles 2 1 1.6 Opp Fum Lost 1 0 0.5 POSS. TIME (avg) 31:06 31:14 30:00 TOUCHDOWNS 2 4 2.3 Rushing 0 1 0.7 Passing 2 3 1.5 Returns 0 0 0.1 EXTRA-PT KICKS 2/2 4/4 92% 2-PT CONVERSIONS 0/0 0/0 45% FIELD GOALS/FGA 2/3 1/1 1/2 POINTS SCORED 20 31 20.0 DEFENSE Tenn. Buf f. NFL/Avg POINTS ALLOWED 21 10 20.0 OPP FIRST DOWNS 19 19 19.4 Rushing 11 3 6.1 Passing 7 14 11.3 Penalty 1 2 2.0 OPP YARDS GAINED 394 243 327.8 Avg per Game 394.0 243.0 349.6 OPP RUSHING(net) 238 52 112.2 Avg per Game 238.0 52.0 119.6 Rushes 32 18 24.9 Yards per Rush 7.4 2.9 4.5 OPP PASSING(net) 156 191 215.6 Avg per Game 156.0 191.0 230.0 Passes Att. 21 41 33.4 Completed 17 29 21.2 Pct Completed 81.0 70.7 63.3 Sacked 5 7 2.4 Yards Lost 32 49 15.7 INTERCEPTED BY 1 3 0.8 Yards Returned 0 29 7.6 Returned for TD 0 0 0.1 OPP PUNT RETURNS 5 0 1.9 Avg return 12.4 0.0 8.9 OPP KICKOFF RET 2 4 1.2 Avg return 20.5 16.8 19.6 OPP TOUCHDOWNS 3 1 2.3 Rushing 1 0 0.7 Passing 2 1 1.5 Returns 0 0 0.1

09/11 N.Y. Giants L 20-21 09/19 at Buffalo 09/25 Las Vegas 10/02 at Indianapolis 10/09 at Washington 10/23 Indianapolis 10/30 at Houston 11/06 at Kansas City 11/13 Denver 11/17 at Green Bay 11/27 Cincinnati 12/04 at Philadelphia 12/11 Jacksonville 12/18 at L.A. Chargers 12/24 Houston 12/29 Dallas 01/07-08 at Jacksonville

Bills Josh Allen 1 2t

Bills Josh Allen 112.0 5

Passer Rating Titans Ryan Tannehill 106.4 7

2022 INDIVIDUAL NFL RANKINGS

Interceptions Titans Amani Hooker 1 1t Bills (three tied) 1 1t

Rushing Yards Titans Derrick Henry 82 10t Bills Josh Allen 56 18

Rushing Average Titans Derrick Henry 3.90 28

Category Team Player Stat NFL Rank

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 7 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSSTATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIA

Rushing TDs Titans (none)

Passing TDs Titans Ryan Tannehill 2 6t Bills Josh Allen 3 3t

Receptions Titans Kyle Philips 6 20t Bills Stefon Diggs 8 7t

(qualifiers only, where applicable)

Bills Devin Singletary 6.00 7t

Passing Yards Titans Ryan Tannehill 266 13 Bills Josh Allen 297 6

LAST WEEK’S STARTERS TITANS OFFENSE TE 87 Geoff Swaim LT 77 Taylor Lewan LG 55 Aaron Brewer C 60 Ben Jones RG 64 Nate Davis RT 78 Nicholas Petit-Frere WR 15 Nick Westbrook-Ikhine WR 2 Robert Woods QB 17 Ryan Tannehill FB 44 Tory Carter RB 22 Derrick Henry TITANS DEFENSE DE 95 DeMarcus Walker DT 98 Jeffery Simmons NT 93 Teair Tart OLB 92 Ola Adeniyi LB 41 Zach Cunningham LB 51 David Long Jr OLB 48 Bud Dupree CB 21 Roger McCreary CB 26 Kristian Fulton S 37 Amani Hooker S 31 Kevin Byard BILLS DEFENSE EDGE 50 Gregory Rousseau DT 91 Ed Oliver DT 92 DaQuan Jones EDGE 40 Von Miller WLB 58 Matt Milano MLB 49 Tremaine Edmunds NCB 7 Taron Johnson CB 47 Christian Benford CB 30 Dane Jackson S 23 Micah Hyde S 21 Jordan Poyer BILLS OFFENSE WR 13 Gabe Davis WR 6 Isaiah McKenzie LT 73 Dion Dawkins LG 76 Rodger Saffold III C 60 Mitch Morse RG 71 Ryan Bates RT 79 Spencer Brown TE 88 Dawson Knox WR 14 Stefon Diggs QB 17 Josh Allen RB 26 Devin Singletary Titans vs. Giants | Bills vs. Rams 2022 SITUATIONAL RECORDS TENNESSEE TITANS Total 0 - 1 Home 0 - 1 Away 0 - 0 Grass 0 - 1 Turf 0 - 0 AFC 0 - 0 NFC 0 - 1 In Division 0 - 0 Out Division 0 - 1 Indoor 0 - 0 Outdoor 0 - 1 September 0 - 1 Sunday 0 - 1 BUFFALO BILLS Total 1 - 0 Home 0 - 0 Away 1 - 0 Grass 0 - 0 Turf 1 - 0 AFC 0 - 0 NFC 1 - 0 In Division 0 - 0 Out Division 1 - 0 Indoor 0 - 0 Outdoor 1 - 0 September 1 - 0 Thursday 1 - 0 THIS WEEK’S NFL SCHEDULE All Times Central Thursday, September 15 L.A. Chargers at Kansas City Prime Video 7:15 Sunday, September 18 Miami at Baltimore CBS 12:00 N.Y. Jets at Cleveland CBS 12:00 Washington at Detroit FOX 12:00 Indianapolis at Jacksonville CBS 12:00 Tampa Bay at New Orleans FOX 12:00 Carolina at N.Y. Giants FOX 12:00 New England at Pittsburgh CBS 12:00 Atlanta at L.A. Rams FOX 3:05 Seattle at San Francisco FOX 3:05 Cincinnati at Dallas CBS 3:25 Houston at Denver CBS 3:25 Arizona at Las Vegas CBS 3:25 Chicago at Green Bay NBC 7:20 Monday, September 19 Tennessee at Buffalo ESPN 6:15 Minnesota at Philadelphia ABC 7:30 THE TITANS HAVE WON EIGHT OF THEIR LAST 10 GAMES ON MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL

Receiving Yards Titans Kyle Philips 66 26t Bills Stefon Diggs 122 6

Sacks Titans J. Simmons, R. Weaver 2.0 3t Bills Von Miller 2.0 3t

Receiving TDs Titans Dontrell Hilliard 2 1t Bills (three tied) 1 8t

2022 DEFENSIVE STATISTICS AND NFL RANKING TITANS BILLS

In 2019, Buffalo posted their first 10-win season since 1999 as they secured a playoff spot after a week 15 win at Pittsburgh on Sunday Night Football.

Rushing Yards / Play 3.58 (20) 4.84 (11)

Passing Yards / Game 266.0 (9) 292.0 (6)

Passing Yards / Game 156.0 (4) 191.0 (7)

Yards / Play 5.98 (8) 7.12 (2)

Yards / Game 394.0 (23) 243.0 (2)

Points / Game 20 (17t) 31 (4)

Interception Rate 4.76% (7) 7.32% (3)

McDermott arrived in Carolina following 12 seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles (1998-2010). He spent his last two seasons in Philadelphia as defensive coordinator, helping the Eagles to the playoffs in each of those seasons (2009-10). McDermott coached the secondary and linebackers before becoming defensive coordinator, learning under the late Jim Johnson (2004-08).

Yards / Play 6.79 (28) 3.68 (2)

4th Down Pct 0.00% (14t) 0.00% (14t)

● vs. Titans: 2-2

Points / Game 21 (15t) 10 (5t)

In his first year in Buffalo (2017), McDermott led the Bills to their first playoff berth since 1999 with a 9-7 record. He became the franchise's third head coach to earn a playoff berth in his first season, joining Joe Collier (1966) and Wade Phillips (1998).

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 8 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIASTATISTICS

SEAN McDERMOTT AT Regular season record: 50-32 Postseason record: 3-4 Overall record: 53-36

Punt Return Avg 12.4 (26) 0.0 (3t)

2017- 22: Buffalo Bills - Head Coach 2011-16: Carolina Panthers - Defensive Coordinator 2009-10: Philadelphia Eagles - Defensive Coordinator & Secondary Coach 2008: Philadelphia Eagles - Linebackers Coach 2007: Philadelphia Eagles - Secondary Coach 2004-06: Philadelphia Eagles - Assistant Defensive Backs Coach 2002-03: Philadelphia Eagles - Defensive Assistant & Quality Control 2001: Philadelphia Eagles - Assistant to the Head Coach 1999-00: Philadelphia Eagles - Scouting Administrative Coordinator 1998: William & Mary - Graduate Assistant

Sean McDermott was named the 19th head coach of the Buffalo Bills on Jan. 11, 2017. McDermott joined the Bills after spending six seasons as the defensive coordinator of the Carolina Panthers.

A GLANCE ●

DEFENSIVE CATEGORY STAT (RANK) STAT (RANK)

Point Differential / Game -1.0 (17t) 21.0 (2)

Red Zone Pct 66.67% (11t) 100.00% (1t)

Rushing Yards / Game 238.0 (30) 52.0 (1)

Yard Differential / Game -35.0 (18t) 170.0 (3)

Turnover Ratio +1 (6t) -1 (17t)

2022 OFFENSIVE STATISTICS AND NFL RANKING TITANS BILLS

Rushing Yards / Game 93.0 (18) 121.0 (14)

An All-Atlantic 10 Conference choice at safety for William & Mary as a senior in 1997, McDermott graduated with a degree in finance and began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at his alma mater in 1998.

In 2021, Buffalo went 11-6, locking up back-to-back division titles. The Bills beat New England 47-17 in the Wild Card game at Highmark Stadium before falling to Kansas City in overtime during the Divisional round.

3rd Down Pct 27.27% (24) 90.00% (1)

Punt Return Avg 15.5 (3) 21.0 (1)

4th Down Pct 100.00% (26t) 66.67% (22t)

SEAN MCDERMOTT’S BACKGROUND:

Interception Rate 0.00% (1t) 6.45% (27)

Passing Yards / Play 7.43 (22) 4.66 (3)

Passing Yards / Play 8.06 (5) 9.42 (1)

First Downs / Game 19.0 (14t) 23.0 (9t)

Red Zone Pct 66.67% (16t) 50.00% (11t)

OFFENSIVE CATEGORY STAT (RANK) STAT (RANK)

While in Carolina, McDermott developed a top-10 defense in four of his six seasons. Over his six-year tenure, the Panthers defense ranked second in the NFL in sacks (261) and third in turnovers forced (169). In his time in Carolina, McDermott helped the Panthers to three division titles and a trip to Super Bowl 50.

In 2013, McDermott was named The Sporting News Coordinator of the Year when his unit ranked second in total defense (301.3). The Panthers also led the league in sacks (60) while finishing second in scoring defense (15.1).

Sacks / Pass Attempt 23.81% (1) 17.07% (2)

Field Goals Made 66.67% (18t) 100.00% (1t)

First Downs / Game 19.0 (14t) 19.0 (14t)

Sean McDermott’s Assistant Coaching Staff: Ken Dorsey Offensive Coordinator Matthew Smiley Special Teams Coordinator Leslie Frazier Defensive Coordinator/ Asst. Head Coach Bobby Babich Linebackers Rob Boras Tight Ends Joe Brady Quarterbacks John Butler Defensive Backs/Passing Game Coordinator Jayon Finner Defensive Quality Control Austin Gund Offensive Quality Control Chad Hall Wide Receivers Cory Harkey Assistant Special Teams Aaron Kromer Offensive Line Marc Lubick Assistant Quarterbacks/Game Management Jim Salgado Safeties Mike Shula Senior Offensive Assistant Kyle Shurmur Defensive Quality Control Kelly Skipper Running Backs Eric Washington Senior Defensive Assistant/Defensive Line Ryan Wendell Assistant Offensive Line Will Greenberg Assistant Strength & Conditioning Hal Luther Assistant Strength & Conditioning Nick Lacy Strength & Conditioning Assistant Jason Oszvart Strength & Conditioning Assistant

Yards / Game 359.0 (14) 413.0 (6)

Goal to Go% 100.00% (17t) 100.00% (17t)

Goal to Go% 100.00% (1t) 100.00% (1t)

Sacks / Pass Attempt 3.03% (8) 6.45% (14)

BILLS HEAD COACH SEAN McDERMOTT

3rd Down Pct 20.00% (2t) 46.15% (23)

With four playoff appearances under his belt in his first five seasons, he transformed a franchise that had not experienced a postseason berth since 1999.

● on the road vs. Titans: 1-2 at home vs. Titans: 1-0 vs. Mike Vrabel: 2-2 Year as Bills head coach: 6 Year as NFL head coach: 6

Kickoff Return Avg 20.5 (21) 16.8 (18)

In 2015, McDermott’s defense helped lead the way for the Panthers’ 15-1 regular season and run to Super Bowl 50.

McDermott worked as Philadelphia’s assistant defensive backs coach in 2003 and as the defensive assistant/quality control coach from 2001-02, assisting with linebackers. He joined the organization in 1998 as a scouting administrative coordinator before being promoted to assistant to the head coach in 1999.

Rushing Yards / Play 7.44 (29) 2.89 (6)

Kickoff Return Avg 16.5 (14) 0.0 (20t)

In 2020, the Bills went 13-3 and captured their first division title and their first playoff win since 1995. The 13 wins tied for the most in team history. McDermott finished second in voting for the NFL’s coach of the year honors.

WHERE THE TEAMS RANK IN 2022

In 2018, he helped lead the Bills to the NFL’s second-overall ranking in total defense, allowing 294.1 yards per game, and the league’s top-ranked pass defense (179.2 yards per game).

Avg Time of Possession 31:06 (15) 31:14 (14)

G Rodger Saffold (2010-18) Kromer (2017-20) Von Miller

Bills offensive lineman Bobby Hart played in three games with one start for the Titans in 2021.

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 9 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSSTATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIA

BUF (c/a) Joe Brady (2019)

QB Case Keenum (2018)

OLB Ola Adeniyi (2018-20)

(c/a) Aaron

TEN DT Teair Tart (2016-19)

TEN (c/a) Frank Piraino (2011 12)

(c/a) Leslie Frazier (2016)

TEN OLB Ola Adeniyi (2015-17)

OLB

¾

C Ben Jones (2012-15)

RB Dontrell Hilliard (2018-20) Austin Hooper (2020-21)

BUF DT DaQuan Jones (2010-12)

TE

WR Robert Woods (2017-21)

TEAM AND LOCAL CONNECTIONS

RB Taiwan Jones (2011-16)

OLB Mike Vrabel (2001-08)

QB Ryan Tannehill (2012-18) (c/a) Terrell Williams (2015-17)

Bolded name indicates a player. Italicized name indicates a player that was drafted by this team. Underlined indicates a coach or administrative role (c/a).

BUF (c/a) Marcus West (2009-15)

BUF (c/a) Bobby Babich (2006)

TEN (c/a) Frank Piraino (2013-18)

T/G David Quessenberry (2017)

DT Jordan Phillips (2015-18)

T Bobby Hart (2015-17)

BUF FB Reggie Gillam (2016-19)

QB Case Keenum (2013-14) (c/a) John Butler (2014-17)

DL Denico Autry (2014-17) (c/a) Terrell Williams (2014-16) (c/a) Todd Downing (2015-17) (c/a) Rob Moore (2015-17)

TEN S Amani Hooker (2016-18)

P Sam Martin (2020-21) (c/a) Mike Shula (2020-21)

DE Da’Shawn Hand (2018-21)

P Sam Martin (2013-18)

OLB Von Miller (2011-21)

LS Morgan Cox (2010-20)

K Randy Bullock (2016)

OLB Derrek Tuszka (2021)

FORMER TITANS

Bills defensive tackle DaQuan Jones was drafted by Tennessee in the fourth round (112th overall) in the 2014 NFL Draft. Jones played seven seasons in Nashville, appearing in 99 games with 93 starts. He tallied 136 tackles, 10 sacks, 19 tackles for loss and three forced fumbles.

TEN CB Kristian Fulton (2016-19)

(c/a) Kelly Skipper (2007-14)

(c/a) Craig Aukerman (2011-12)

DL DeMarcus Walker (2017-20)

(c/a) Rob Boras (2010-11)

LB Tyler Matakevich (2016-19)

BUF (c/a) John Butler (2012-13)

¾

TEN (c/a) Tim Kelly (2012-13)

BUF TE Dawson Knox (2016-18)

K Randy Bullock (2013-15) (c/a) Tim Kelly (2014-21) (c/a) Anthony Midget (2014-19) (c/a) Mike Vrabel (2014-17) (c/a) Brian Bell (2015-17) (c/a) Pat O’Hara (2015-17) (c/a) Shane Bowen (2016-17) (c/a) Bobby King (2017-21)

(c/a) Todd Downing (2009-13) (c/a) Jim Schwartz (2009-13)

BUF LB Matt Milano (2013-16)

¾ Bills offensive lineman David Quessenberry played three seasons for the Titans (2019-21) where he appeared in 33 games with 23 starts at both left and right tackle, including starting all 17 games in 2021 at right tackle.

TEN (c/a) Scott Booker (2003-08)

Titans offensive coordinator Todd Downing, wide receivers coach Rob Moore and senior defensive assistant Jim Schwartz all spent the 2014 season on the Bills coaching staff. Schwartz served as the defensive coordinator, Downing served as the quarterbacks coach, and Moore was the receivers coach.

TEN FB Tory Carter (2017-20)

NFL CONNECTIONS

BUF DE A.J. Epenesa (2017-19)

TEN S A.J. Moore (2014-17)

BUF OLB Von Miller (2007-10)

LB Dylan Cole (2017-20)

OLB Derrek Tuszka (2020)

TITANS BILLS

TITANS-BILLS CONNECTIONS

S Jordan Poyer (2013-16) (c/a) Bobby Babich (2013-15)

WR Isaiah McKenzie (2017-18)

BUF (c/a) Bobby Babich (2016)

BUF LB Tyler Matakevich (2012-15)

BUF TE Tommy Sweeney (2015-18)

¾

(2021) (c/a) Todd Downing (2018) WR Stefon Diggs (2015-19) Bold and underlined indicates a connection from a current coach’s former playing career.

OL Ryan Wendell (2008-15)

QB Case Keenum (2020-21)

Bolded name indicates a player. Underlined name indicates a coach or administrative role (c/a).

LB Zach Cunningham (2017-21)

(c/a) Mike Sullivan (2013)

OLB Bud Dupree (2015-20)

TEN QB Ryan Tannehill (2008-11)

¾

TEN Corey Levin (2013-16)

COLLEGE CONNECTIONS

TEN (c/a) Anthony Midget (2013)

K Randy Bullock (2016-20)

K Randy Bullock (2016)

T Bobby Hart (2017-20)

TEN (c/a) Brian Bell (2012-13)

¾ Titans wide receiver Robert Woods was drafted by Buffalo in the second round (41st overall) of the 2013 NFL Draft. Woods played four seasons with the Bills (2013-16) and saw action in 57 games with 48 starts. He registered 203 catches for 2,451 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns.

(c/a) Marc Lubick (2010-13)

Bills offensive lineman Rodger Saffold III played for the Titans from 2019 through 2021. In three seasons, he started 46 games at left guard. In 2021, he was named to his first career Pro Bowl.

FORMER BILLS

¾ Bills assistant defensive line coach Marcus West coached the defensive line at Chattanooga from 2009-15.

¾ Bills assistant special teams coach Cory Harkey spent the 2021 season as Tennessee State’s tight ends coach.

¾ Bills head of strength and conditioning Eric Ciano began his career at the University of Tennessee as a graduate assistant from 1997-99. He later returned from 2002-04 as the associate head strength and conditioning coach.

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Yds Avg Lg TD

0 0 0 0

TITANS WITH NEW YORK AREA CONNECTIONS

¾ Titans wide receivers coach Rob Moore hails from Hempstead, N.Y., and played collegiately at Syracuse from 1987-89, starting all three seasons. He set team records for receiving yards per game (75.8) and career touchdown receptions (22) while going to three consecutive bowl games. He was on Syracuse’s undefeated (11-0-1) team in 1987, and in 1999, he was named to Syracuse’s All-Century Team.

Titans offensive line assistant Jason Houghtaling is a native of Walton, N.Y. He spent 12 seasons coaching at Wagner College, including 2015–2019 as head coach. He also had coaching stints at Hudson Valley, Cornell and Colgate.

CAREER GAME-BY-GAME STATS VS. THE BILLS: TITANS OFFENSE

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Cmp Pct Yds Yd/A TD TD% Int Int% Lg Sk Lst Rate

Ryan Tannehill (Passing)

¾

¾ Bills defensive quality control coach Kyle Shurmur played quarterback for Vanderbilt University from 2015-18. Shurmur set the single-season school record for touchdown passes (26) and total touchdowns (29) in 2017. He also set four school records over his career in passing attempts (1,264), completions (722), passing yards (8,865) and touchdown passes (64). Shurmur returned to Vanderbilt as a volunteer assistant during the 2020 season.

BILLS WITH NASHVILLE/TENNESSEE AREA CONNECTIONS

¾ Bills assistant quarterbacks/game managment coach Marc Lubick coached wide receivers at Vanderbilt in 2014.

¾ Bills linebacker Tyrel Dodson is a native of Franklin, Tenn., and attended Centennial High School.

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 10 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIASTATISTICS

¾ Bills tight end Dawson Knox attended Brentwood (Tenn.) Academy. His father, David Knox, played basketball for Belmont University.

¾ Titans vice president of football administration Vin Marino is from the Bronx, N.Y. and attended Fordham University.

QUARTERBACKS

Ryan Tannehill (Rushing)

TITANS-BILLS CONNECTIONS

Totals 6-7 13/13 421 253 60.1 2531 6.0 18 4.3 12 2.9 66t 35 248 79.6

11/15/12 @ Buf L QB 1 7 7.0 7 0 12/23/12 Buf W QB 6 44 7.3 31 0 10/20/13 Buf L QB 3 5 1.7 3 0 12/22/13 @ Buf L QB 0 0 0 9/14/14 @ Buf L QB 4 11 2.8 6 0 11/13/14 Buf W QB 4 16 4.0 15 0 9/27/15 Buf L QB 1 -1 -1.0 -1 0

Malik Willis

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Cmp Pct Yds Yd/A TD TD% Int Int% Lg Sk Lst Rate None Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0 0

11/15/12 @ Buf L QB 28 14 50.0 141 5.0 1 3.6 2 7.1 19 3 17 46.9 12/23/12 Buf W QB 25 13 52.0 130 5.2 2 8.0 0 0.0 30 2 11 93.8 10/20/13 Buf L QB 37 19 51.4 194 5.2 3 8.1 2 5.4 46 2 21 71.2 12/22/13 @ Buf L QB 27 10 37.0 82 3.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 13 7 46 45.6 9/14/14 @ Buf L QB 49 31 63.3 241 4.9 1 2.0 1 2.0 18 4 31 73.6 11/13/14 Buf W QB 34 26 76.5 240 7.1 2 5.9 0 0.0 32 5 35 114.8 9/27/15 Buf L QB 49 26 53.1 297 6.1 2 4.1 3 6.1 46 2 8 59.7 11/8/15 @ Buf L QB 35 26 74.3 307 8.8 0 0.0 0 0.0 46 2 27 100.5 10/23/16 Buf W QB 25 15 60.0 204 8.2 1 4.0 0 0.0 66t 1 6 99.4 10/2/18 Buf W QB 24 16 66.7 137 5.7 3 12.5 1 4.2 18 3 22 103.6 12/30/18 @ Buf L QB 31 18 58.1 147 4.7 0 0.0 2 6.5 19 4 24 43.3 10/13/20 Buf W QB 28 21 75.0 195 7.0 3 10.7 0 0.0 20 0 0 129.3 10/18/21 Buf W QB 29 18 62.1 216 7.5 0 0.0 1 3.4 48 0 0 70.5

11/8/15 @ Buf L QB 2 3 1.5 3 0 10/23/16 Buf W QB 6 21 3.5 13 0 10/2/18 Buf W QB 3 -5 -1.7 -1 0 12/30/18 @ Buf L QB 2 9 4.5 12 0 10/13/20 Buf W QB 4 42 10.5 23 1 10/18/21 Buf W QB 2 3 1.5 4t 1 Totals 6-7 13/13 38 155 4.1 31 2

10/7/18 @ Buf L RB 11 56 5.1 14 0 0 0 0 10/6/19 Buf L RB 20 78 3.9 24 1 0 0 0 10/13/20 Buf W RB 19 57 3.0 12 2 1 6 6.0 6 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 10/13/20 Buf W 1 7 7.0 7 0 10/18/21 Buf W 3 27 9.0 14 0 Totals 2-0 2/0 4 34 8.5 14 0

WIDE RECEIVERS

Julius Chestnut Rushing Receiving

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD None

Trenton Cannon Rushing Receiving

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 10/18/21 Buf W 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/0 0 0 - - 0 0 0 - - 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD None

Robert Woods

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

Nick Westbrook-Ikhine

Tory Carter (FB) Rushing Receiving

Treylon Burks

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0 - - 0

Cody Hollister

11/11/18 Buf L 4 30 7.5 21 0 1 5 5.0 5 0 12/9/18 @ Buf W 5 3 0.6 4t 1 1 4 4.0 4 0 9/8/19 Buf L 0 0 0 0 0 0

Kyle Philips

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 10/1/17 Buf L 5 50 10.0 18 0 Totals 0-1 1/0 5 50 10.0 18 0

Chig Okonkwo

10/18/21 Buf W RB 20 143 7.2 76t 3 2 13 6.5 9 0 Totals 2-2 4/4 70 334 4.8 76t 6 3 19 6.3 9 0

Dontrell Hilliard Rushing Receiving

RUNNING BACKS

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CAREER GAME-BY-GAME STATS VS. THE BILLS: TITANS OFFENSE

TIGHT ENDS

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 9/27/20 @ Buf L WR 5 74 14.8 31 1 Totals 0-1 1/1 5 74 14.8 31 1

Totals 1-2 3/0 9 33 3.7 21 1 2 9 4.5 5 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD None

Geoff Swaim

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD None Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0 0

Derrick Henry Rushing Receiving

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0

11/10/19 Buf W 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD None

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 12/27/15 @ Buf L 0 0 0 10/13/20 Buf W TE 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W TE 1 8 8.0 8 0 Totals 2-1 3/2 1 8 8.0 8 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 10/13/20 Buf W 1 12 12.0 12 0 Totals 1-0 1/0 1 12 12.0 12 0

Austin Hooper

Date Opp W-L G/S Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

Hassan Haskins Rushing Receiving

12/15/19 Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR None Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Avg Lg TD None

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

CAREER GAME-BY-GAME STATS VS. THE BILLS: TITANS DEFENSE

9/28/14

PUNTERS THE BILLS:

12/4/16 Buf W DE 3 1.0 0 0 0 10/29/17 @ Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W DL 0 0.0 0 0 0

0.0 0 0 0 0 0

1/9/21 (WC) @ Buf L DE 4 1.5 0 1 0 Totals 0-1 1/1 4 1.5 0 1 0

Denico Autry (DL)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR

Totals 3-1 4/2 4 1.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/18/21 Buf W CB 2 0.0 0 0 0

Totals 1-0 1/1 2 0.0 0 0 0

Kristian Fulton (CB)

RETURNERS

Ugo Amadi (DB)

Date Opp W-L Yds Totals 0-0

PR FC Yds Avg Lg TD KR

FGM FGA Pct XPM XPA 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lg KO TB

Buf W 3 3 100.0 2 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 2-2 55 6 3 11/12/15 Buf L 1 1 100.0 2 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 29 4 3 1/3/16 @ Buf L 1 2 50.0 2 2 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-1 0-0 39 4 2 10/8/17 Buf W 2 2 100.0 2 2 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-0 0-0 30 5 4 9/22/19 @ Buf L 1 1 100.0 2 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0 43 4 3 10/18/21 Buf W 2 2 100.0 4 4 0-0 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-0 43 7 4 Totals 3-3 10 11 90.9 14 14 0-0 2-2 3-3 3-4 2-2 55 30 19

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Kevin Byard (S)

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Caleb Farley (CB)

12/13/20 @ Buf L 1 0.0 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W 1 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-2 3/0 2 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR None

10/7/18 @ Buf L FS 6 0.0 0 0 0

Kyle Philips

Date Opp W-L

Bud Dupree (OLB)

Dontrell Hilliard

Date Opp W-L PR FC Yds Avg Lg TD KR Yds Avg Lg TD 11/10/19 Buf W 1 2 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1 2 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Randy Bullock

Ola Adeniyi (OLB)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/14/18 Buf W WLB 13 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/1 13 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR None Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR None

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR None

Zach Cunningham (LB)

Da'Shawn Hand (DE)

TITANS SPECIALISTS

Tre Avery (CB)

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Dylan Cole (LB)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 12/21/14 Buf W 1 0.0 0 0 0

Ryan Stonehouse Date Opp W-L Num Blk Yds Avg Lg TB In20 NetAvg None Totals 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 CAREER GAME-BY-GAME STATS VS.

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 12/11/16 @ Buf W OLB 6 2.5 0 0 0 12/15/19 Buf L OLB 3 0.0 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W 2 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 2-1 3/2 11 2.5 0 0 0

KICKERS

10/6/19 Buf L FS 5 0.0 1 0 0 10/13/20 Buf W FS 2 0.0 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W FS 2 0.0 1 0 0 Totals 2-2 4/4 15 0.0 2 0 0

Playoffs 1/4/20 Buf W MLB 9 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/1 9 0.0 0 0 0

Playoffs

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR None

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 9/24/17 @ Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 12/19/20 Buf L 1 0.0 0 0 0 10/3/21 @ Buf L 4 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 0-3 3/0 5 0.0 0 0 0

CAREER GAME-BY-GAME STATS VS. THE BILLS: TITANS DEFENSE

David Long Jr. (LB)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR

Jeffery Simmons (DT)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 12/19/20 Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 0-1 1/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

1/4/20 Buf W 0 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

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11/24/19 @ Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 12/19/20 Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W 0 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-2 3/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Joshua Kalu (DB)

Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/18/21 Buf W 3 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/0 3 0.0 0 0 0

Playoffs

Joe Jones (LB)

DeMarcus Walker (DL)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR None Totals 0-0 0/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/18/21 Buf W NT 1 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/1 1 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/14/18 Buf W 0 0.0 0 0 0 10/3/21 @ Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-1 2/0 0 0.0 0 0 0 Playoffs 1/4/20 Buf W 0 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/6/19 Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 10/13/20 Buf W 2 0.0 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W LB 14 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 2-1 3/1 16 0.0 0 0 0

Amani Hooker (S)

A.J. Moore Jr. (S)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/3/21 @ Buf L FS 8 0.0 1 0 0 Totals 0-1 1/1 8 0.0 1 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/18/21 Buf W DT 5 1.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/1 5 1.0 0 0 0

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR

Naquan Jones (DT)

Date Opp W-L G/S Tackle Sack Int FF FR 10/13/20 Buf W 0 0.0 0 0 0 Totals 1-0 1/0 0 0.0 0 0 0

10/6/19 Buf L 0 0.0 0 0 0 10/13/20 Buf W 2 0.0 0 0 0 10/18/21 Buf W S 9 0.0 0 1 0 Totals 2-1 3/1 11 0.0 0 1 0

Lonnie Johnson Jr. (DB)

Kevin Strong (DE)

Derrek Tuszka (OLB)

Teair Tart (DT)

Rashad Weaver (OLB)

2022 & Career G/GS: 1/1

RG 64-Nate Davis (6-3, 316, 4th Year/4th with Titans, Charlotte) - The 2019 third-round pick started 12 contests at right guard as a rookie and followed with 16 starts in his second season and 14 starts in 2021.

G GS Att Cmp Pct Yds TD Int Lg Sk Rate 2022 1 1 33 20 60.6 266 2 0 31 1 106.4

2022 G/GS: 1/0, Career G/GS: 35/21

LG 55-Aaron Brewer (6-1, 295, 3rd Year/3rd with Titans, Texas State) - The former undrafted free agent appeared in 12 games in each of his first two seasons, including five starts in 2021. He has experience at guard and center.

2022 1 2 3 66.7 46 2 2 8

TE 87-Geoff Swaim (6-4, 260, 8th year/3rd with Titans, Texas) - Swaim was signed as a free agent in 2020 after previous stints with the Cowboys (201518) and Jaguars (2019). He was a seventh-round pick with Dallas in 2015.

WR 15-Nick Westbrook-Ikhine (6-2, 211, 3rd Year/3rd with Titans, Indiana)The former undrafted free agent emerged as a regular on offense in 2021, appearing in 16 games with seven starts. He ranked second on the team in catches (38), receiving yards (476) and receiving touchdowns (four).

2022 1 0 2 8 4.0 5 0 3 61 20.3 31 2

2022 1 1 1 13 13.0 13 0

QB 7-Malik Willis (6-1, 219, Rookie, Liberty) - The third-round pick spent three total years at Liberty after transferring from Auburn. During two seasons as Liberty’s starter (2020-21), he directed the Flames to two bowl victories and led the FBS with 74 total passing (47) and rushing (27) touchdowns.

G GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2022 1 1 1 13 13.0 13 0

2022 G/GS: 1/0, Career G/GS: 183/0

2022 G/GS: 1/1, Career G/GS: 104/99

RB 22-Derrick Henry (6-3, 247, 7th Year/7th with Titans, Alabama) - The former Heisman winner, 2016 second-round pick and two-time NFL rushing champion (2019-20) was limited by injuries to eight games in 2021 after winning AP Offensive Player of the Year honors in 2020. No player had more rushing yards (6,307) or rushing touchdowns (60) from 2017 to 2021.

G GS Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2022 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career 9 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

FB 44-Tory Carter (6-0, 229, 2nd Year/2nd with Titans, Louisiana State)After entering the NFL as an undrafted free agent in 2021, he appeared in eight games with two starts as a rookie. Prior to the NFL, he played 42 games at LSU, where he was part of a 2019 national championship season.

WR 18-Kyle Philips (5-11, 189, Rookie, UCLA) - The fifth-round pick started 23 of his 34 games at UCLA, totaling 163 receptions for 1,821 yards and 17 touchdowns. He added 25 punt returns for 496 yards (19.8 avg.) with two touchdowns.

OFFENSIVE RESERVES

G GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2022 1 1 3 19 6.3 9 0

RB 25-Hassan Haskins (6-2, 228, Rookie, Michigan) - The fourth-round pick appeared in 36 games with 22 starts at Michigan, where he totaled 452 carries for 2,324 yards and 30 scores. He was named first-team All-Big Ten in 2021 after rushing for 1,327 yards and a school-record 20 touchdowns.

REGULAR TITANS LINEUP

OL 71-Dennis Daley (6-6, 326, 4th Year/1st with Titans, South Carolina) - The former sixth-round pick was acquired in a trade with Carolina prior to the 2022 regular season. He totaled 34 games played with 21 starts during his first three NFL campaigns with the Panthers.

Career 31 9 42 522 12.4 46 4

G GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

K 14-Randy Bullock (5-9, 210, 11th Year/2nd with Titans, Texas A&M)After spending his first nine NFL seasons primarily in Houston (2012-15) and Cincinnati (2016-20), he joined the Titans in 2021. His 120 points in 2021 ranked ninth in franchise history.

G GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

WR 2-Robert Woods (6-0, 195, 10th Year/1st with Titans, Southern California) - Acquired in a trade with the Rams in 2022, the former second-round pick of the Bills spent his first four NFL seasons in Buffalo before joining the Rams. He totaled 570 receptions for 7,077 yards and 35 touchdowns in 125 games prior to arriving in Tennessee.

RB 40-Dontrell Hilliard (5-11, 202, 5th year/2nd with Titans, Tulane) - The former undrafted free agent arrived in October 2021 after previous time in Cleveland (2018-20) and Houston (2020). He set career highs with five starts and 350 rushing yards in 2021.

2022/Career 1 0 6 66 11.0 21 0

OFFENSIVE STARTERS

G FGM FGA Pct Lg XPM XPA Pts

QB 17-Ryan Tannehill (6-4, 217, 11th Year/4th with Titans, Texas A&M)Acquired via trade from Miami in 2019, he led the Titans to three consecutive playoff appearances and two division titles in his first three seasons. From the time he took over as the Titans’ starter in 2019 through 2021, his 102.3 passer rating ranked sixth in the NFL.

TE 85-Chig Okonkwo (6-3, 238, Rookie, Maryland) - The fourth-round pick appeared in 37 games with 20 starts over four seasons (2018-21) at Maryland, totaling 77 receptions for 717 yards and eight touchdowns. His 52 receptions as a senior ranked second in program history by a tight end.

C 60-Ben Jones (6-3, 308, 11th Year/7th with Titans, Georgia) - Added as an unrestricted free agent in 2016, the former fourth-round pick played four previous seasons with the Houston Texans. He started 96 of 97 possible games during his first six seasons in Tennessee.

G GS Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD '22/Career 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

G GS Att Cmp Pct Yds TD Int Lg Sk Rate '22/Career 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

G GS Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2021 1 1 21 82 3.9 18 0 0 0 0 0

G GS Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

WR 16-Treylon Burks (6-2, 225, Rookie, Arkansas) - The 18th overall draft pick played three seasons at Arkansas (2019-21), where he became the sixth alltime leading receiver in Razorbacks history (146 receptions for 2,399 yards) and tied for the fifth-most touchdown catches in school annals (18).

Career 41 5 80 455 5.7 68t 4 44 347 7.9 31 2

2022 G/GS: 1/1, Career G/GS: 44/43

G GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

2022 G/GS: 1/0, Career G/GS: 29/1

G GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2022/Career 1 0 1 11 11.0 11 0

OL 75-Dillon Radunz (6-6, 301, 2nd Year/2nd with Titans, North Dakota State) - The second-round draft pick in 2021 appeared in 12 games with one start as a rookie. He started 32 games at left tackle in college.

SPECIALISTS

LS 46-Morgan Cox (6-4, 233, 13th Year/2nd with Titans, Tennessee) - Cox was signed as an unrestricted free agent in 2021 after playing his first 11 seasons in Baltimore, where he earned four Pro Bowl berths.

LT 77-Taylor Lewan (6-7, 309, 9th Year/9th with Titans, Michigan) - The team’s first-round pick in 2014 (11th overall) was voted to the Pro Bowl each season from 2016-18. He appeared in 103 games (98 starts) in his first eight seasons, including 13 starts in 2021.

G GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2022/Career 1 0 3 55 18.3 27 0

Career 70 45 91 713 7.8 43 5

C/G 62-Corey Levin (6-4, 307, 4th Year/4th with Titans, Chattanooga) - A sixthround pick in 2017, Levin re-joined the Titans in 2021 after being claimed off waivers from the N.Y. Jets. He has also spent time with the Broncos, Bears and Patriots.

2022 G/GS: 1/0, Career G/GS: 13/1

2022 1 0 1 6 6.0 6 0

Career 134 132 4,242 2,722 64.2 30,995 201 102 91t 351 91.8

Career 124 196 236 83.1 57 259 272 847

TE 81-Austin Hooper (6-4, 254, 7th year/1st with Titans, Stanford) - The two-time Pro Bowl selection amassed 298 receptions for 3,024 yards and 23 touchdowns in six seasons before joining the Titans. A third-round pick by the Falcons in 2016, he spent four seasons in Atlanta before playing the past two campaigns in Cleveland.

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2022 G/GS: 1/1, Career G/GS: 25/7

RT 78-Nicholas Petit-Frere (6-5, 316, Rookie, Ohio State) - The third-round draft pick played in 35 games with 20 starts at Ohio State, including 12 starts at left tackle as a junior in 2021.

Career 89 57 299 3,030 10.1 88t 23

Career 126 116 571 7,090 12.4 94t 35

Career 87 56 1,422 6,879 4.8 99t 65 94 846 9.0 75t 3

2022 G/GS: 1/1, Career G/GS: 161/140

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Career 42 40 149 15.5 98 19 0 12 2 3

CB 3-Caleb Farley (6-2, 197, 2nd Year/2nd with Titans, Virginia Tech) - The 22nd overall pick in 2021 was limited to three games as a rookie due to injuries. He had six interceptions in 24 games at Virginia Tech.

Pittsburgh

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 4 0.0 0 0 1 1 0 0

CB 21-Roger McCreary (5-11, 190, Rookie, Auburn) - The second-round pick (35th overall) was a two-year starter at Auburn, where he compiled six interceptions and 35 passes defensed in 42 games (23 starts).

P 4-Ryan Stonehouse (5-10, 193, Rookie, Colorado State) - The undrafted rookie appeared in 53 games over five seasons at Colorado State (2017-21) and set the NCAA record for career gross punting average (47.8). In 2021, he recorded a 50.9-yard average on 58 punts.

2022 1 1 6 0.0 0 0 0 0 1 0

ILB 53-Dylan Cole (6-0, 237, 6th Year/2nd with Titans, Missouri State) - Cole joined the Titans during the 2021 campaign and set a career high with 10 special teams tackles. Prior to arriving in Tennessee, he totaled 37 games with the Texans after entering the NFL as a rookie free agent in 2017.

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 0 1 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 0 3 0.0 3 0 0 1 0 0 Career 21 1 29 1.0 5 1 0 2 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 0 4 0.0 2 0 0 0 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 0 1 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 0 5 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Career 39 15 148 0.0 9 9 2 9 1 0

Career 29 0 11 0.0 0 0 0 1 1 0

Career 50 8 83 12.5 23 14 0 2 2 1

Career 114 67 252 39.5 99 60 0 25 3 3

- The 2020 second-rounder had one interception in six games as a rookie. He followed that with 13 starts, two interceptions and a team-high 14 passes defensed in his second campaign.

Career 47 1 73 1.0 3 6 2 8 0 1

Career 45 16 123 0.0 0 2 6 13 1 00

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 1 1.0 6 1 0 0 0 1

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 8 0.0 2 1 0 0 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career 24 0 18 2.0 7 2 0 0 1 0 OLB 99-Rashad

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 6 2.0 6 2 0 0 1 0

DB 28-Joshua Kalu (6-0, 203, 4th Year/3rd with Titans, Nebraska) - The former undrafted free agent rejoined the Titans in 2022 after a season with the Giants. He played in 28 games for the Titans from 2018 to 2020, totaling 26 tackles, 15 special teams stops and a blocked field goal.

Career 4 1 5 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 12 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 2 0.0 2 0 0 0 0 0

DEFENSIVE RESERVES

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0

DB 32-Ugo Amadi (5-9, 201, 4th Year/1st with Titans, Oregon) - Acquired in a trade with Philadelphia during the 2022 preseason, the former fourth-round pick of the Seahawks spent 2019 through 2021 in Seattle, totaling 12 starts, 125 tackles and one interception in 47 total games.

DEFENSIVE STARTERS

Career 93 73 249 43.5 85 56 1 12 9 4

OLB 96-Denico Autry (6-5, 285, 9th Year/2nd with Titans, Mississippi State)Originally a rookie free agent with the Raiders in 2014, he totaled 96 games with the Raiders (2014-17) and Colts (2018-20) before joining the Titans. In 2021, he played in all 17 games and matched a career high with nine sacks.

NT 93-Teair Tart (6-2, 304, 3rd Year/3rd with Titans, Florida International)Originally an undrafted free agent in 2020, he totaled 18 games in his first two seasons, including 10 starts in 2021.

Career 19 12 23 0.0 7 3 0 1 0 0

S 31-Kevin Byard (5-11, 212, 7th Year/7th with Titans, Middle Tennessee State) - The 2016 third-round pick appeared in all 97 games with 88 starts during his first six seasons. He ranked third in the NFL from 2017-21 with 23 total interceptions. His five interceptions in 2021 helped him earn AP All-Pro honors and his second career Pro Bowl.

OLB 92-Ola Adeniyi (6-1, 248, 5th Year/2nd with Titans, Toledo) - The former undrafted free agent with Pittsburgh in 2018 was signed by the Titans in 2021. He tied for third on the Titans in 2021 with 10 special teams tackles and added a career-high 2.5 sacks.

DE 97-Kevin Strong (6-4, 295, 4th Year/2nd with Titans, Texas-San Antonio)After two-plus seasons in Detroit, where he totaled 15 games played and one start, he joined the Titans practice squad during the 2021 campaign and was later promoted to the 53-man roster.

Career 77 71 585 6.5 12 29 1 18 5 3

ILB 51-David Long Jr. (5-11, 227, 4th Year/4th with Titans, West Virginia)The 2019 sixth-round pick emerged as a starter in the second half of 2020. In 2021, he set career highs with nine starts and 75 tackles, which tied for second place on the squad.

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 6 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Career 20 16 62 1.0 1 1 3 15 1 0

CB 26-Kristian Fulton (5-11, 197, 3rd Year/3rd with Titans, Louisiana State)

Career 48 12 112 0.0 0 6 1 13 2 1

Career 44 19 159 0.0 5 1 3 13 0 0

DE 95-DeMarcus Walker (6-4, 280, 6th Year/1st with Titans, Florida State)

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR '22/Career 1 1 2 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

S 37-Amani Hooker (5-11, 210, 4th Year/4th with Titans, Iowa) - The fourthround pick in 2019 played in 44 games in his first three seasons. He made 12 starts in 2021 and set a career high with 62 tackles.

OLB 59-Derrek Tuszka (6-5, 246, 3rdYear/1st with Titans, North Dakota State) - Acquired off waivers from prior to the 2022 season, former spent his 2020 rookie season with 2021. Weaver (6-4, 259, 2nd Year/2nd with Titans, Pittsburgh) a rookie in 2021, the fourth-round pick suffered a season-ending injury in the third game of the season. At Pittsburgh, he was a consensus All-American as a senior after totaling 14.5 tackles for loss and 7.5 sacks.

in Denver before totaling two sacks

seventh-round pick of the Broncos

DB 20-Lonnie Johnson Jr. (6-2, 213, 4th Year/1st with Titans, Kentucky)Acquired off waivers from Kansas City during the 2022 preseason, the former second-round pick of the Texans spent 2019 through 2021 in Houston, totaling 19 starts, 159 tackles and three interceptions in 44 total games.

- As

OLB 48-Bud Dupree (6-4, 269, 8th Year/2nd with Titans, Kentucky) - The former first-round pick signed in Tennessee in 2021 following six seasons in Pittsburgh, where he totaled 39.5 sacks in 81 games. In his first season with the Titans, he appeared in 11 games and totaled three sacks.

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 1 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 0 4 2.0 3 2 0 0 0 0 Career 3 0 6 2.0 3 2 0 0 0 0

the

DT 98-Jeffery Simmons (6-4, 305, 4th Year/4th with Titans, Mississippi State) - The 19th overall draft pick in 2019 made his first Pro Bowl in 2021 after setting career highs in several categories, including games (17), starts (17), tackles (54), sacks (8.5) and passes defensed (six). He appeared in 29 consecutive games through the end of 2021.

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

REGULAR TITANS LINEUP

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 15 PREVIEWGAME ROSTERSSTATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMMEDIA

- Signed as a free agent in 2022, the former second-round pick arrived in Tennessee with 49 games of experience with the Denver Broncos (2017-20) and Houston Texans (2021).

G Punt Blk Yds Avg Lg TB I20 NetAvg '22/Career 1 6 0 342 57.0 66 0 3 46.7

Career 49 2 30 2.5 21 3 0 1 0 1

ILB 41-Zach Cunningham (6-3, 238, 6th Year/2nd with Titans, Vanderbilt)The Pinson, Ala., native was claimed off waivers from Houston in 2021. In four-plus seasons with the Texans, the second-round pick played 72 games with 570 tackles, 6.5 sacks and one interception.

Career 98 89 548 4.0 15 13 23 62 3 3

the Steelers in

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

KICKOFF RETURNS - Yards 2-41 2-33

Sept. 11, 2022 • 3:25 p.m. CT • Nissan Stadium

CLICK TO HIGHLIGHTSWATCH

QB 17 R.Tannehill CB 26 K.Fulton

TE 87 G.Swaim DE 95 D.Walker

GOAL TO GO EFFICIENCY 2-2-100% 1-1-100%

Passing Att Cmp Yds TD Lg IN Rt R.Tannehill 33 20 266 2 31 0 106.4 Total 33 20 266 2 31 0 106.4

GIANTS OFFENSESTARTERS

PASS ATT-COMP-INT 21-17-1 33-20-0 PUNTS - Avg. 6-51.5 6-57.0

PUNT RETURNS - Yards 5-62 4-62

RT 78 N.Petit-Frere LB 51 D.Long

WR 2 R.Woods CB 21 R.McCreary

D.Henry

LT 77 T.Lewan DT 98 J.Simmons

NET YARDS RUSHING 238 93 Rushes - Avg. 32-7.4 26-3.6

QB 8 D.Jones CB 22 A.Jackson

SCORING 1 2 3 4 Final Giants 0 0 13 8 21 Tennessee 7 6 7 0 20

TE 82 D.Bellinger DL 99 L.Williams

Missed FGs: R.Bullock 47WL

Titans R.Bullock 23 yd. Field Goal 2-6:57

DEFENSE

INTERCEPTIONS - Yards 0-0 1-0

New York took the lead in the fourth quarter as a 73-yard scoring drive culminated in a one-yard touchdown pass from Jones to Giants FB Chris Myarick. New York elected to go for two, and the conversion attempt was successful as Jones connected with Bar kley on a shovel pass for a 21-20 lead with just over a minute remaining in regulation.

WR 19 K.Golladay CB 33 A.Robinson

A.Hooper 1 6 6.0 6 0 Total 20 266 13.3 31 2

C 76 J.Feliciano OLB 53 O.Ximines

Titans R.Bullock 46 yd. Field Goal 2-12:35

LG 55 A.Brewer NT 93 T.Tart

RG 64 N.Davis LB 41 Z.Cunningham

Week 1: Titans 20, Giants 21

TEAM STATISTICS

WR 15 N.Westbrook-Ikhine OLB 48 B.Dupree

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THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY 2-10-20.0% 3-11-27.3%

RED ZONE EFFICIENCY 2-3-67% 2-3-67%

TITANS OFFENSESTARTERS

DEFENSE

LG 68 B.Bredeson DE 93 N.Williams

Giants C.Myarick 1 yd. pass from D.Jones (D.Jones-S.Barkley pass) 4-1:06

TOTAL NET YARDS 394 359 Plays - Avg. 58-6.8 60-6.0

Time of Game: 3:00

Weather: 75°, Cloudy, Wind WSW 9 mph

Later in the third quarter, New York tied the score 13-13 as Jones connected with Giants WR Sterling Shepard for a 65-yard touchdown. However, Tennessee respond ed on the ensuing possession with a 75-yard scoring drive. Aided by a 20-yard catch by Philips and a 27-yard gain by Burks, Tannehill was able to connect with Hilliard for a 23-yard score and a 20-13 Titans advantage.

FB 85 C.Myarick S 20 J.Love

Interceptions No Yds Avg Lg TD

Referee: Jerome Boger

Leading Tacklers (Press Box Totals)

RB 26 S.Barkley S 29 X.McKinney

RT 73 E.Neal ILB 48 T.Crowder

Giants

TEAM SCORING PLAY TIME

PENALTIES Number and Yards 8-45 7-50

NET YARDS PASSING 156 266 Sacks - Yards Lost 5-32 1-0

Rushing Att Yds Avg Lg TD 21 82 3.9 18 0 D.Hilliard 2 8 4.0 5 0 R.Tannehill 2 7 3.5 9 0 C.Okonkwo 1 -4 -4.0 -4 0 Total 26 93 3.6 18 0

Sacks: J.Simmons 2; R.Weaver 2; B.Dupree 1

EXTRA POINTS Made-Attempts 2-3 2-2

RB 22 D.Henry S 31 K.Byard

Sunday,

FF: K.Fulton 1; J.Simmons 1 FR: B.Dupree 1

FUMBLES Number and Lost 2-1 2-1

In Week 1 of the 2022 season, the Titans hosted the New York Giants and fell by a score of 21-20. Despite limiting the Giants to two third-down conversions on 10 attempts and racking up five sacks in the contest, Tennessee was unable to mount a late-game comeback.TheTitans got on the board on their opening possession with a five-play scoring drive that was jumpstarted by a 46-yard punt return by WR Kyle Philips. Tennessee began the possession at the Giants’ 45-yard line, and QB Ryan Tannehill connected with WR Treylon Burks for a 20-yard pass before connecting with RB Dontrell Hilliard for a seven-yard score. Tennessee took an early 7-0 lead.

Titans D.Hilliard 7 yd. pass from R.Tannehill (R.Bullock kick) 1-9:48

Net Punting Average 41.2 46.7

Attendance: 67,805

In the second quarter the Titans extended their lead. Tannehill tossed first-down passes to TE Geoff Swaim, Hilliard and WR Nick Westbrook-Ikhine, which put K Randy Bullock in position to successfully make a 46-yard field goal, 10-0 Titans. On the ensuing New York possession, Giants QB Daniel Jones was strip-sacked by DT Jeffery Simmons, and the ball was recovered by OLB Bud Dupree at the Giants’ 42yard line. Tennessee capitalized on the turnover with a 23-yard field goal, 13-0 Titans.

Tennessee rallied to attempt a game-winning score, taking the ball down into Giants territory, but Bullock’s field goal attempt sailed wide left as the Titans fell at home.

RG 64 M.Glowinski OLB 55 J.Ward

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 19 19

GIANTS INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing Att Yds Avg Lg TD S.Barkley 18 164 9.1 68 1 D.Jones 6 25 4.2 11 0 M.Breida 5 24 4.8 9 0 K.Toney 2 23 11.5 19 0 R.James 1 2 2.0 2 0 Total 32 238 7.4 68 1 Passing Att Cmp Yds TD Lg IN Rt D.Jones 21 17 188 2 65 1 115.9 Total 21 17 188 2 65 1 115.9 Receiving No Yds Avg Lg TD S.Barkley 6 30 5.0 7 0 R.James 5 59 11.8 16 0 S.Shepard 2 71 35.5 65 1 K.Golladay 2 22 11.0 15 0 W.Robinson 1 5 5.0 5 0 C.Myarick 1 1 1.0 1 1 Total 17 188 11.1 65 2 Interceptions No Yds Avg Lg TD None Leading Tacklers (Press Box Totals) T.Crowder 7-4-3; J.Ward 6-5-1; D.Holmes 6-5-1 Sacks: T.Fox 1 FF: None FR: None

Giants S.Barkley 4 yd. run (run failed) 3-11:16

TITANS INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

Titans D.Hilliard 23 yd. pass from R.Tannehill (R.Bullock kick) 3-2:54

Titans

Giants S.Shepard 65 yd. pass from D.Jones (G.Gano kick) 3-8:48

New York got on the board in the third quarter with help from Giants RB Saquon Barkley who contributed a 68-yard rush to flip field position. Ultimately, Barkley ran a four-yard touchdown into the end zone, but the extra point snap was botched and recov ered by Tennessee, 13-6 Titans.

TOUCHDOWNS 3 2

A.Hooker 1 0 0.0 0 0 Total 1 0 0.0 0 0

K.Byard 12-8-4; D.Long 8-5-3; K.Fulton 6-5-1; Z. Cunningham 6-5-1

FB 44 T.Carter S 37 A.Hooker

Receiving No Yds Avg Lg TD K.Philips 6 66 11.0 21 0 D.Hilliard 3 61 20.3 31 2 T.Burks 3 55 18.3 27 0 G.Swaim 3 19 6.3 9 0 C.Hollister 1 22 22.0 22 0 R.Woods 1 13 13.0 13 0 N.Westbrook-Ikhine 1 13 13.0 13 0 C.Okonkwo 1 11 11.0 11 0

LT 78 A.Thomas DL 97 D.Lawrence

GIVEAWAYS

SAFETIES 0 0 2 1 TAKEAWAYS 1 2 TIME OF POSSESSION 28:54 31:06

WR 13 D.Sills ILB 59 A.Calitro

LAST WEEK VS. THE GIANTS

FOURTH DOWN EFFICIENCY 1-1-100.0% 0-0-0.0%

C 60 B.Jones OLB 92 O.Adeniyi

¾ Recorded a 27-yard catch in the third quarter.

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¾ Credited with his first career forced fumble in the fourth quarter when he knocked the ball out of Saquon Barkley’s hands, but the ball went out of bounds.

¾ Became the first Titans running back with two or more touchdown receptions in a game since DeMarco Murray had two touchdown catches against the Minnesota Vikings on Sept. 11, 2016.

TE AUSTIN HOOPER

¾ Made field goals in the second quarter of 46 and 23 yards and missed in the fourth quarter from 47 yards. He made each of his extra point attempts.

OLB BUD DUPREE

WR TREYLON BURKS

¾ The Titans won the time-of-possession battle, holding the ball for 31 minutes and 6 seconds.

¾ Titans rookies accounted for a total of 10 receptions for 132 yards. Fifth-round wide receiver Kyle Philips led the team with six catches for 66 yards, while first-rounder Treylon Burks had three receptions for 55 yards. Tight end Chig Okonkwo added 11 yards on one catch.

RB DERRICK HENRY

¾ Added four tackles.

¾ Posted one reception for six yards in his first game with the Titans.

¾ Made his NFL debut and caught three passes for 55 yards. He tied for second place on the team in receptions.

¾ Added a 31-yard reception to convert a third down in the second quarter. It was the longest reception of his career.

¾ Set a career high and tied for third on the team with six total tackles.

S KEVIN BYARD

¾ Registered his fourth career fumble recovery in the second quarter, gaining control of the ball after it was fumbled by Daniel Jones on a sack by Jeffery Simmons. The takeaway led to a Titans field goal.

¾ A total of eight rookies made their NFL debuts against the Giants: punter Ryan Stonehouse, wide receivers Treylon Burks and Kyle Philips, cornerbacks Roger McCreary and Tre Avery, running back Hassan Haskins, right tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere and tight end Chig Okonkwo. The eight rookies to play in the opener tied for the team’s second-highest total since 1999. It matched the team’s eight rookies who played in the 2015 and 2012 openers and trailed only the nine rookies to play in the 2004 opener.

¾ The Titans totaled five sacks, including one by outside linebacker Bud Dupree, two by outside linebacker Rashad Weaver and two by defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons. It was the most by the defense in the regular season since a five-sack performance at the Los Angeles Rams on Nov. 7, 2021.

¾ The Titans defense kept the Giants off the scoreboard in the first half, marking the second consecutive regular-season game the unit accomplished the feat, including the 2021 season finale at Houston. Additionally, for the fifth time in their last six regular-season games, the Titans did not allow their opponents to score a touchdown in the first half.

¾ Recorded his first career touchdown reception in the first quarter, hauling in a seven-yard pass from Ryan Tannehill for the score.

¾ Cornerback Roger McCreary and right tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere became the 20th and 21st rookies for the Titans since 1999 to start the season opener. Since head coach Mike Vrabel arrived in 2018, McCreary and Petit-Frere became the third and fourth rookies to start in Week 1, joining wide receiver A.J. Brown (2019) and defensive back Chris Jackson (2020).

TEAM NOTES

CB TRE AVERY

¾ Since 1970, his 55 receiving yards ranked sixth among Titans/Oilers rookies and first-year players in a Week 1 game.

¾ The Titans defense limited the Giants to a pair of third-down conversions on 10 attempts (20.0 percent). It was second-best thirddown percentage by the Titans defense since the beginning of the 2021 season and the best performance by the unit since the Steelers converted twice on 11 attempts (18.2 percent) at Pittsburgh on Dec. 19, 2021.

¾ Led the team with 21 carries for 82 yards, including an 18-yard run in the second quarter.

¾ Recorded a six-yard sack in the first quarter.

¾ Led the team with three total special teams tackles in his NFL debut.

¾ Picked up 20 yards and a first down on his first NFL reception in the first quarter. The catch led to a Titans touchdown on the next play.

¾ Recorded his second touchdown reception in the third quarter on a 23-yard pass from Tannehill.

NOTES FROM LAST WEEK’S GAME

RB DONTRELL HILLIARD

S AMANI HOOKER

CB KRISTIAN FULTON

¾ Totaled three receptions and set career highs with 61 receiving yards and two touchdowns. He added two carries for eight yards.

¾ The Titans won the turnover battle with a plus-one ratio. They registered one interception and one fumble recovery on defense and lost a fumble on special teams.

¾ Led the team with 12 tackles.

K RANDY BULLOCK

¾ Notched an interception in the end zone in the fourth quarter. On a play from Tennessee’s eight-yard line, he stepped in front of Daniel Jones’ pass to Saquon Barkley to record his sixth career interception.

QB RYAN TANNEHILL

¾ Completed a seven-yard touchdown pass to running back Dontrell Hilliard in the first quarter. It was the 200th touchdown pass of his career, making him the 47th player in NFL history to reach the plateau. He added a 23-yard touchdown pass to Hilliard in the third quarter

¾ Launched a 62-yard punt in the third quarter to help pin the Giants on their 10-yard line.

T NICHOLAS PETIT-FRERE

¾ Totaled six tackles, two sacks and one forced fumble.

¾ In franchise history, his 57.0-yard gross punting average ranked fifth for a single game (minimum four punts).

¾ Posted a 66-yard punt early in the fourth quarter. It was the longest punt for the Titans since Brett Kern booted a 66-yarder at Denver on Sept. 14, 2020.

¾ He and cornerback Roger McCreary became the 20th and 21st rookies for the Titans since 1999 to start a season opener. Since head coach Mike Vrabel arrived in 2018, Petit-Frere and McCreary became the third and fourth rookies to start in Week 1, joining wide receiver A.J. Brown (2019) and defensive back Chris Jackson (2020).

¾ Tackled Saquon Barkley for a six-yard loss in the fourth quarter.

¾ Tied for second on the team with three receptions, totaling 19 yards.

¾ Logged his 26th game for the Titans with a passer rating of at least 100.0. Since Tannehill command as the team’s starter in Week 7 of the 2019 campaign, only Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers (28) has more games with a 100-plus passer rating than Tannehill.

¾ Notched his second sack in the third quarter, taking down Jones for a two-yard loss on third down to end a Giants drive.

¾ Including the 2021 regular-season finale at Houston (one sack on Jan. 9) and the team’s postseason game against Cincinnati (three sacks on Jan. 22), Simmons notched a total of six sacks in a three-game period.

¾ Recorded a five-yard sack in the first quarter, taking down Giants quarterback Daniel Jones

¾ Registered a strip-sack in the second quarter, forcing Daniel Jones to fumble on a sack. The ball was recovered by outside linebacker Bud Dupree. It was the first strip-sack of Simmons’ career and the second forced fumble of his career. The takeaway led to a Titans field goal.

¾ Made his Titans debut and caught one pass for 13 yards in the first quarter.

¾ Registered his third career regular-season game with multiple sacks, in addition to one multi-sack performance in the postseason. He improved his career total to 15.5 sacks.

DT JEFFERY SIMMONS

¾ Registered a 54-yard punt on his first career attempt in the first quarter.

TE GEOFF SWAIM

OLB RASHAD WEAVER

WR ROBERT WOODS

¾ Totaled four tackles and his first two career sacks.

¾ Gained 46 yards on the first punt return of his career in the first quarter.

NOTES FROM LAST WEEK’S GAME

¾ Recorded a start in his NFL debut and posted two tackles.

¾ Among all Titans/Oilers rookies since 1970, his six receptions tied Corey Davis (six receptions against Oakland on Sept. 10, 2017) for the second-best total in a Week 1 game, behind only Tajaé Sharpe’s seven receptions against Minnesota on Sept. 11, 2016. Also since 1970, Philips’ 66 receiving yards ranked fifth among franchise rookies in a Week 1 game.

P RYAN STONEHOUSE

¾ He and right tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere became the 20th and 21st rookies for the Titans since 1999 to start a season opener. Since head coach Mike Vrabel arrived in 2018, McCreary and Petit-Frere became the third and fourth rookies to start in Week 1, joining wide receiver A.J. Brown (2019) and defensive back Chris Jackson (2020).

WR KYLE PHILIPS

¾ By starting his 44th consecutive game with the club, he passed Steve McNair for the most consecutive starts in Titans/Oilers history by a quarterback. McNair started 43 consecutive games from 2001 to 2003.

¾ Made his NFL debut and led the team with six receptions and 66 receiving yards. He added four punt returns for 62 yards and a 15.5yard average.

¾ Made his NFL debut and punted six times for a 57.0-yard gross average and a 46.7-yard net average. He placed three of his punts inside the 20.

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¾ Made his NFL debut and recorded his first career reception in the fourth quarter, picking up 11 yards on a pass from Ryan Tannehill

¾ With his 77th and 78th touchdown passes in a Titans uniform, he took possession of fifth place on the franchise’s passing touchdowns list. He passed Marcus Mariota (76) and now trails only Warren Moon (196), George Blanda (165), Steve McNair (156) and Dan Pastorini (96).

¾ Extended his career-best streak to 16 consecutive games with at least one passing or rushing touchdown.

¾ Recorded his first career sack in the first quarter, dropping Daniel Jones for a five-yard loss.

¾ Completed 20 of 33 passes for 266 yards and two touchdowns for a 106.4 passer rating.

TE CHIG OKONKWO

¾ Recorded a start at right tackle in his NFL debut.

¾ Registered his first career reception in the third quarter for a gain of 20 yards. He added a 21-yard catch in the fourth quarter.

CB ROGER McCREARY

Was (Dontrell) Hilliard as much a factor in the passing game as you expected coming into the season he can be? Yeah, we built up a lot of confidence in Dontrell (Hilliard) over last season when he joined us and we had the whole spring so we were able to move around a little bit. He showed up big for us today, one down or two down in the red zone. But he does a good job for us on third downs, and he has some natural feel and ability to be able to get himself open.

Anytime you lose it’s a gut punch. We put a lot in to it. We got it started how we wanted to. I give them a lot of credit. We went flat and we weren’t able to get anything going there in the second half.

Why did you call a timeout on the last drive?

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Are guard Aaron Brewer’s holding calls something to be concerned about?

I’m not going to even get into that. That’s part of the game.

Top targets Kyle (Philips) and Treylon (Burks) both getting the majority of the target share, what was going right in that sense of the game where you felt comfortable going to Kyle so often especially late when you guys kind of had your backs against the wall?

SELECT TITANS POSTGAME QUOTES

On the 65-yard touchdown where the Giants wide receiver Sterling Shepard got behind cornerback Kristian Fulton, was it just a blown coverage?

Frustrating not be able to build on the lead when you’re up 13-nothing? Yeah, no doubt. Coming into the half, we felt like we left some meat on the bone and didn’t score once we were in the red zone and expected to come out and be able to score more points than we did in the second half. Regardless of the opponent, that’s just our mentality – that we should be able to score more points than we did in the second half. So, we’ve got to get a lot of things cleaned up and looking forward to another opportunity next week.

SATURDAY, HEAD2022COACH

We go in with a gameplan and there’s a short-yardage plan. Some of the stuff that we had prepared for, that was one of the plays. We gave it out to Derrick (Henry) on the Wildcat and that one didn’t work either. We just all have to come back, be better, prepare and get ready to go to face Buffalo.

What was your angle on the kick? And did you think it was good at the start, and maybe how deflating was it when you saw it sail left? Yeah, I couldn’t really see the angle on it when it came off his foot. I have a lot of faith in Randy (Bullock) and know that he’s going to be able to make the next one, so this doesn’t change my belief in him or our team’s belief in him. He’s made a lot of kicks for us in the past. He’s going to continue to do that.

Where was running back Dontrell Hilliard down the stretch as effective as he was early on?

Was there any desperation any point in that drive? Or did you guys feel like you were doing exactly what you wanted to do?

No, I think we had a good gameplan coming in. I felt really confident about it. I feel like we had opportunities for some of the stuff that we were trying to hit, just inconsistent and didn’t take advantage of some of those opportunities when they arose. You don’t get (inaudible) in this league if you don’t take advantage of the plays whenever you get the opportunity, you’re

Would you say you went flat emotionally or just in terms of performance?

You have to feel pretty good about some of the things that wide receiver Kyle Philips gave you in this first game. Those are all secondary, we expect those guys to play well. We have to take care of the football. A lot of good things along with some of those things that are going to get you beat that we have to eliminate. We’ve been through that. I give the Giants a ton of credit. They stuck around and made the plays that they needed to make, especially down the stretch.

That is something that we’ve done a good job of, and this is an unforgiving league. When you don’t play your gaps or you don’t tackle it’s a very unforgiving league, especially with an excellent back.

Just like everything else, if it’s a bad play then everybody is included. Randy Bullock has made a bunch of kicks for us, and he’ll continue to make a bunch of big kicks for us.

I was just making sure we wanted it on the correct hash and just making sure everybody was on the same page. We felt good about having 18 seconds. That was something that we’d worked where you could reasonably center the football and put it on the hash that you want and then get back to the line to clock it. We’ve worked those numerous times. If it gets below that you run the risk of a pile up or the ball getting kicked around or crazy things. I thought we handled that situation well.

What do you think led to having such a bad day stopping the run? A good player, poor defense, and poor gap integrity. A couple of times it was edge, sometimes it was inside tackling. We’ll have to really reevaluate what we’re doing. Give them credit. They were able to run football which was the number one key for us on defense.

No, I don’t think there was any desperation at all. I felt great. I felt like we had some opportunities there. We were steady gaining some yards and had some opportunities to complete a pass there to Kyle (Philips), one he got held on and the other we were able to hit. I felt in control and felt like they were up there trying to ease up a little bit where we were able to have answers and gain yards on those situations, and unfortunately we just didn’t finish them.

How much of a gut punch was this loss for you?

Hindsight is 20/20 but would you have rather given running back Derrick Henry the football on third-and-one rather than giving it to tight end Chig Okonkwo?

Was there anything in particular you guys gameplanned for this week that you weren’t able to do in the game? Or was it just a matter of inconsistency?

It’s all. It is everybody. The execution, third down, and they hit some big plays. We weren’t able to convert in the red zone and defensively we could not stop the run. That was the number one key to the game and that is why you lose, not because you missed a field goal at the end of the game. It’s a lot of things up to that.

Why the issue with the clock in terms of the delay of game penalties? The one down in the red zone, clearly that was on me. Those are critical. The team bailed me out. I was just trying to look to make sure that we were in the right formation. Normally I would use a timeout, but we just know how critical those timeouts are. The team bailed us out, and then we needed all the timeouts that we could to put ourselves in position there at the end.

With it normally being a strength, what was it like to not be able to stop the run?

SEPT. 11,

Was everything good operationally on the kick?

He wasn’t available just some of the distance. We’ll evaluate him and see where he’s at tomorrow.

MIKE VRABEL

What are your thoughts? You dominated during parts but couldn’t really put them away. Yeah, we just gave up some opportunities out there. We didn’t make some plays that were there. You’ve got to play a full game. I don’t think we finished the way, obviously, that we wanted to. We didn’t move the ball effectively enough throughout the game. And like you said, we had spurts where we did some good things. We’ve just got to be more consistent.

QUARTERBACK RYAN TANNEHILL

Kyle (Philips)’s made a bunch of plays for me this training camp. We built up that relationship and he’s shown that he can win consistently in practice, so that translates over to the game. He gets put into that situation, man-to-man coverage, he wins in practice, so I expect him to win in a game situation. We come in, we had some plays that we wanted to try to get him down the field on and he was able to make some of those plays for us. So, some more opportunity where I thought we had some shots down the field, we weren’t able to connect. We just look forward to continue to try to take advantage of those situations.

You’ll have a chance to ask Kristian (Fulton) here in three minutes when I finish.

going to come up short a lot of the time.

and we’ve just got to be better next week.

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RUNNING BACK DERRICK HENRY

Oh yeah, I felt good. Wish the result would be better. Wish (I was) saying different things. But this is one game. I don’t think it defines us that we could have played better and should’ve been better in a game we got to slip by. But you’ve just got to let it motivate you, make corrections tomorrow and get ready for the week coming up.

SELECT TITANS POSTGAME QUOTES

Derrick, this team seems to take a loss, and a tough loss and rebound and play well the next week. How does this team seem to do that so consistently on the games when you do lose?

I took my eye of the ball, should have secured the ball first and then make my read and hit the hole, but got too excited and dropped the ball. No excuses. Got to be better and continue to work on that and try to get better at it.

Yeah, we’ve got a good group of guys. I think over the course of training camp we kind of built that trust across the room and it’s going to take all those guys making plays. It’s going to be some games where one guy gets a few more targets than the other guys, but over the course of this season that’s going to shift and ebb and flow depending on the game. So, we’re going to need all those guys in that room to come out big for us at different times this year.

It seemed like they were able to get to you a lot of times they got on the line of scrimmage. Anything in particular happening that was allowing them to do that?

Might it have helped if you have gotten some play in preseason or that you felt that made no difference or not?

What happened on the Wildcat play?

What went into using that final timeout when you guys did? It seems like maybe you could have used it a couple of seconds later? We were just trying to get the ball on the right hash there. The timeout wasn’t really a factor. Just trying to be able to move with the ball with the right hash, we were able to clock it, so it ended up being the same type of situation.

What do you see from Dontrell (Hilliard)?

Losing sucks no matter when it happens. I never want to start off the season on the wrong foot, especially at home in front of your own fans. You’ve got to turn the page quickly though. It’s a long season. It’s just one game and we’ve got to keep that mentality to be able to take a real look at what happened, get it fixed quickly and turn the page and get ready to go for next week.

You have to ask Vrabes (Mike Vrabel) about that. That’s the information I got, so that’s what we went with.

Yeah, definitely and then we got in the red zone and couldn’t score. So, I know we’ve got to be better as a whole on offense. We know that we get in the red zone, we’ve got to put it in there, got to score touchdowns, and Coach (Vrabel) put heavy emphasis on that. And we didn’t do that. So, we don’t hit some of the keys that you want that you think that can help you impact the game and win the game. And that’s what happens. And we didn’t take advantage of being in the red zone.

It’s a long season, but as much time as you spend thinking about this game, how terrible does 0-1 feel?

Yeah, he did a great did a great job on one-on-one matchups. He’s been winning all camp. He got in the game and he did the same thing. So, he made some big plays when we needed them, and I am happy for him

Did you think about holding the timeout to try and make the kick a little bit closer? Was that a discussion that went on at all? Or was the priority the hash mark there?

Derrick, how tough is this a way to start a season? It’s tough. We didn’t play good enough. They were the better team. That’s why they won. We didn’t play up to our standard and let them hang around and capitalize off of it. We’ve got to play better on all three phases. It just wasn’t good enough and to our standard.

Didn’t feel like it should be more than 13-0 at the half, you guys seemingly controlled the game on both sides of the ball?

How big is this week coming up with Buffalo, you have no time to fret over this one I guess with a big game coming up next Monday night? Well, like I said, tomorrow make corrections on the film. I’m definitely going to put heavy emphasis on myself and see the things I did and things I can get better at. And then I know we’ll do it as a whole. We watch film and be honest with each other, and what we need to get better at. Like you said we’ve got a tough game with Buffalo and then start getting prepared for that and move on.

There’s conversation about the game and what we need to do to try to be better, and just having a conversation about us as a team and some of the things that happened in the game. And I’m sure we will have more conversations. We’ll get in tomorrow probably what we need to do as units and as a team to be better.

Were you physically - how you feeling after you actually going into a full game?

Yeah, as leaders you just want to make sure everybody rallies together. Stay with it, and we let one slip away. Stuff happens and so you can’t get down on yourself and you’ve got to come back this week and be positive. Make the corrections and hold each other accountable and get ready to go.

I feel like it made absolutely no difference. I felt really confident going out there today. And from the start of the game, I felt like I was seeing things clearly and putting the ball where I wanted to. So, I don’t think that was a factor.

What’s the approach in the locker room from leaders on the team when you’re coming off the loss like this and you’re looking down the barrel of a big game like you guys have come off this week what do you guys say to some of the guys on this team to get them to the place they need to be able to compete at a higher level?

It’s a long season and stuff like this happens, and you don’t want it to happen. And it’s like you said, it’s another game the next week. We’ve got Buffalo. You’ve got to have a short memory on what happened, but make the corrections, be better and improve. Hold each other accountable individually and as a team.

This was one of the more balanced pass attacks that I’ve seen from you guys. Is it different when you don’t have that dominant, top number one? As opposed to now where you have a group of solid pass catchers?

You still have a good amount of time in the locker room. Was that kind of like to get together and just plan how you spring forward for the week?

We just have to be better in the run game, all 11 of us, and we all know that. And just continue to work on it. It wasn’t good today, wasn’t good enough for us to win a game and for us to have the explosive runs and want to play the style of football that we play. We know it wasn’t good enough. No excuses

WIDE RECEIVER KYLE PHILIPS

Like Coach (Vrabel) said, we shouldn’t even be in that situation. I feel like we had plenty of opportunities to win the game and it’s not Randy (Bullock)’s fault. We are going to rally behind Randy. He’s an efficient kicker. He’s a great kicker and stuff like that happens. But we should have not left it in Randy’s hands. I feel like we should have done what we needed to do on our end to be able to win this game.

On the kick, expected to go in and then it went left?

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Obviously, individually with two touchdown catches, how disappointing is it that you guys weren’t able to finish off today? We just have to come back and pull everything, come together as a unit and just finish the game. You can’t get too lackadaisical. Just finish our plays. It’s the NFL, so guys are going to play and you’ve got to hold everybody accountable.

TACKLE TAYLOR LEWAN

We always have got confidence in everyone on our team, whatever their job is. So, definitely.

So you were trying to stay out there, and just what was the flow like, with that and just continue to build that with (Ryan) Tannehill?

(on the loss)

You ran a great route to set up the field goal at the end there. What can you take them through that play?

OUTSIDE LINEBACKER BUD DUPREE

I don’t know if we need any more motivation. You’ve got to win every week, so we’re here to do our jobs and to perform at a high level, and win at all costs.

Your two touchdown catches. Was that kind of the plan coming in, to get you more involved in the passing game this week?

Obviously, you gear up to stop a guy like (Saquon) Barkley all week long, and he’s able to make the plays he was able to make today. What adjustments did they make in the second half offensively to kind of move the ball a little bit?

I didn’t start enough, far enough right. There’s a little right to left, when I got through it. Hit it hard, and it just kind of moved on me.

Like you said, you guys were flat after halftime. I think you guys would think that you’re better than being able to come out like that. Yeah, I think historically, in the last five or six years it hasn’t been us. Usually we’re a second half team that really puts it down, and runs off the ball and finishes, and finishes long drives. Those hard drives, those 12 to 15-play drives. Well, for whatever reason, there’s not a specific play. That’s the thing. It wasn’t like we won last year. It was like that, and that, and that. It’s just a lot of unfortunate things we’ve got to own up to from an accountability standpoint. All of us. And figure out how we can get better, because we’ve got a Monday Night Football game next week.

Hats off to them for executing their plays. We had the opportunities to make the plays and to make the stops, but we didn’t. So, there’s something for us to go into the film room and continue to progress.

I think everybody is saying, ‘You’ve made a lot of kicks here and you’ll continue to.’ I feel the same way. This will hurt today and we’ll move forward to Buffalo and get back on track.

RUNNING BACK DONTRELL HILLIARD

How does your team kind of like, build you up, after something like a missed kick happens?

Well, we’ll have to watch the film. Obviously, they ended up scoring more points than we did. So, not trying to be that guy, but we come out, we run the first play at the half, we get five or six yards. And then it’s just quite unfortunate things. The good thing is, in this (locker) room, when we when we lose, everybody’s pointing to themselves saying, ‘I could’ve done this, but I could’ve done this better.’ So, there’s a lot to learn from this game. A lot to learn from a huge, missed opportunity, right? We’ve just got to be better. You can’t have that.

Did they (Giants) do anything different defensively, in the second half? I think they started adding the front more. But other than that, I don’t know. They run pressure, but that’s what Wink (Don Martindale) does. Wink runs a lot of pressure. I don’t know what it was. We had to be efficient on first, second and third down.

At the end of day, like I said, we try to do our best and we’ve got to do better at what we’re doing. So we rally behind him, and at the end of the day that’s our guy. That’s who we depend on.

How confident were you about the right spot?

How tough was (Daniel) Jones? Seemed like he hung in there. You guys hit him a lot, knocked him around a lot, but he kind of stood in there and was able to make some plays. Yeah, he continued. He’s a tough cat. He continues and continues to play hard every opportunity he gets to go out there and perform. Even when you think you’ve got inside a player like that and contained, he’s always trying to make a play. So, it’s on us. We should have come out and stopped them a little more.

We’ve just got to finish. That’s our biggest thing and that’s what we’re going to hone in on for next week. Take everything one step at a time, one day at a time, to get better.

Randy (Bullock) lines up for the field goal. Are you guys on the sideline, thinking that he’s going to put it through?

Randy (Bullock) lines up for the field goal. What were you thinking at that time? Are you thinking he’s going to he’s going to put it through? Yeah, Randy (Bullock) is a solid guy. He makes a lot of big-time kicks all the time. Great player. Things happen. This game is not on him. We had an opportunity to make a stop and we didn’t.

KICKER RANDY BULLOCK

Just had a corner route. They went to man and I ran the route. Ryan (Tannehill) threw me a really good ball. I was able to come down with it.

At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter because we lost. We’ve got to hold ourselves accountable and just go out and play ball.

Randy (Bullock) lines up for the kick. What were you thinking at that time? Were you thinking when Randy lines up for the kick, he was going to make it?

SELECT TITANS POSTGAME QUOTES

We’ve just got to make plays when we’ve got to make plays. Continue to play better in those situations, and this won’t occur. When adversity hits, we’ve got to continue to push and push along the way. They’re an NFL team too. We’ve got to know when they keep throwing and keep throwing, eventually (they) are going to come out with a play. So we’ve got to be prepared for that. Just knowing the situational opportunities.

Can you talk through it? Was the operation smooth so far?

What do you think happened offensively in that second half where they kind of slowed you guys down?

Yeah, I felt great about going into it. Unfortunately, it didn’t go through. But I’ve had a really strong offseason, training camp, preseason, everything. This one kick isn’t going to define me. I’m going to come to work and be ready to go and on to Buffalo.

How do you guys use this as motivation going forward into Buffalo?

It felt good. Got some catches in and there’s a few I left out there, so I’m a little disappointed in that. You go and watch the film and see what we can fix, and just move on from there.

(inaudible)

All primetime results in the “Titans era” (since 1999):

2017 Thur., Nov. 16 at Pittsburgh (NBC/NFLN) 17-40 L

2022 Mon., Sept. 19 at Buffalo (ESPN)

1972 Oct. 9 OAKLAND (ABC) 0-34 L

1994 Oct. 3 at Pittsburgh (ABC) 14-30 L

1976 Nov. 1 at Baltimore (ABC) 14-38 L

2000 Mon., Oct. 16 JACKSONVILLE (ABC) 27-13 W

2019 Thur., Sept. 19 at Jacksonville (NFLN) 7-20 L

2020 Mon., Sept. 14 at Denver (ESPN) 16-14 W

2009 Nov. 23 at Houston (ESPN) 20-17 W

2010 Mon., Oct. 18 at Jacksonville (ESPN) 30-3 W

2020 Sun., Dec. 27 at Green Bay (NBC) 14-40 L

2020 Sept. 14 at Denver 16-14 W

2009 Fri., Dec. 25 SAN DIEGO (NFLN) 17-42 L

2007 Mon., Nov. 19 at Denver (ESPN) 20-34 L

2012 Thur., Oct. 11 PITTSBURGH (NFLN) 26-23 W

1979 Dec. 10 PITTSBURGH (ABC) 20-17 W

2015 Thur., Nov. 19 at Jacksonville (NFLN) 13-19 L

2018 Nov. 5 at Dallas (ESPN) 28-14 W

1975 Nov. 24 PITTSBURGH (ABC) 9-32 L

2017 Oct. 16 INDIANAPOLIS (ESPN) 36-22 W

Year Date Opponent Score Result

1992 Dec. 7 CHICAGO (ABC) 24-7 W

2018 Mon., Nov. 26 at Houston (ESPN) 17-34 L

2001 Nov. 12 BALTIMORE (ABC) 10-16 L

MONDAY NIGHT HISTORY

2017 Mon., Oct. 16 INDIANAPOLIS (ESPN) 36-22 W

2007 Sun., Dec. 30 at Indianapolis (NBC) 16-10 W

2021 Sun., Nov. 7 at Los Angeles Rams (NBC) 28-16 W

2022 Thur., Nov. 17 at Green Bay (Prime Video)

1979 Nov. 5 at Miami (ABC) 9-6 W

1991 Dec. 2 PHILADELPHIA (ABC) 6-13 L

JACKSONVILLE (ABC) 27-13 W

2016 Thur., Oct. 27 JACKSONVILLE (NFLN) 36-22 W

2013 Thur., Nov. 14 INDIANAPOLIS (NFLN) 27-30 L

2018 Sun., Dec. 30 INDIANAPOLIS (NBC) 17-33 L

2001 Sun, Sept. 9 MIAMI (ESPN) 23-31 L 2001 Mon., Oct. 29 at Pittsburgh (ABC) 7-34 L

2007 Mon., Sept. 24 at New Orleans (ESPN) 31-14 W

2003 Mon., Dec. 1 at New York Jets (ABC) 17-24 L 2004 Mon., Oct. 11 at Green Bay (ABC) 48-27 W

2000 Oct. 16

1988 Nov. 7 CLEVELAND (ABC) 24-17 W

2004 Dec. 13 KANSAS CITY (ABC) 38-49 L

2007 Sept. 24 at New Orleans (ESPN) 31-14 W

2018 Thur., Dec. 6 JACKSONVILLE (FOX/NFLN) 30-9 W

1990 Nov. 26 BUFFALO (ABC) 27-24 W

1991 Sept. 16 KANSAS CITY (ABC) 17-7 W

2022 Thur., Dec. 29 DALLAS (Prime Video)

2021 Thur., Dec. 23 SAN FRANCISCO (NFLN) 20-17 W

1999 Sun., Nov. 7 at Miami (ESPN) 0-17 L

2008 Oct. 27 INDIANAPOLIS (ESPN) 31-21 W

2004 Mon., Dec. 13 KANSAS CITY (ABC) 38-49 L 2004 Sat., Dec. 25 DENVER (ESPN) 16-37 L

1993 Oct. 11 at Buffalo (ABC) 7-35 L

2012 Mon., Dec. 17 N.Y. JETS (ESPN) 14-10 W

The Titans play on Monday Night Football this week for the 44th time in franchise history. The team enters the game with an all-time record of 25-18 on the Monday primetime stage.

1980 Sept. 15 at Cleveland (ABC) 16-7 W

1982 Dec. 13 DALLAS (ABC) 7-37 L

1994 Nov. 21 N.Y. GIANTS (ABC) 10-13 L

2022 Sept. 19 at Buffalo (ESPN)

1994 Oct. 24 at Philadelphia (ABC) 6-21 L

2000 Mon., Oct. 30 at Washington (ABC) 27-21 W 2000 Mon, Dec. 25 DALLAS (ABC) 31-0 W

2009 Thurs., Sept. 10 at Pittsburgh (NBC) 10-13 L (OT) 2009 Sun., Oct. 11 INDIANAPOLIS (NBC) 9-31 L

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Year Day, Date Opponent Score Result

1970 Dec. 7 CLEVELAND (ABC) 10-21 L

2004 Oct. 11 at Green Bay (ABC) 48-27 W

2010 Thur., Dec. 9 INDIANAPOLIS (NFLN) 28-30 L

2014 Mon., Nov. 17 PITTSBURGH (ESPN) 24-27 L

Mike Vrabel is 3-1 as a head coach on Monday Night Football, while quarterback Ryan Tannehill is 3-3 (2-0 with the Titans).

1981 Oct. 26 at Pittsburgh (ABC) 13-26 L

2000 Oct. 30 at Washington (ABC) 27-21 W

1980 Nov. 10 NEW ENGLAND (ABC) 38-34 W

2012 Dec. 17 N.Y. JETS (ESPN) 14-10 W

All-time Monday night games in Oilers/Titans history:

2021 Mon., Oct. 18 BUFFALO (ESPN) 34-31 W

1978 Nov. 20 MIAMI (ABC) 35-30 W

2001 Oct. 29 at Pittsburgh (ABC) 7-34 L

2009 Mon., Nov. 23 at Houston (ESPN) 20-17 W

2014 Thur., Dec. 18 at Jacksonville (NFLN) 13-21 L

1978 Oct. 23 at Pittsburgh (ABC) 24-17 W

All-Time Monday Night Record 25-18

1999 Thurs., Dec. 9 OAKLAND (ESPN) 21-14 W 2000 Sun., Sept. 3 at Buffalo (ESPN) 13-16 L

2003 Sun., Sept. 7 OAKLAND (ESPN) 25-20 W

2020 Thur., Nov. 12 INDIANAPOLIS (FOX/NFLN) 17-34 L

CINCINNATI (ABC) 26-24 W

2000 Dec. 25 DALLAS (ABC) 31-0 W

2001 Mon., Nov. 12 BALTIMORE (ABC) 10-16 L 2001 Sat., Dec. 22 at Oakland (ABC) 13-10 W 2002 Mon., Dec. 16 NEW ENGLAND (ABC) 24-7 W

2022 Sun., Nov. 6 at Kansas City (NBC)

2007 Nov. 19 at Denver (ESPN) 20-34 L

2008 Mon., Oct. 27 INDIANAPOLIS (ESPN) 31-21 W

2018 Nov. 26 at Houston (ESPN) 17-34 L

2003 Dec. 1 at New York Jets (ABC) 17-24 L

2010 Oct. 18 at Jacksonville (ESPN) 30-3 W

2020 Tues., Oct. 13 BUFFALO (CBS) 42-16 W

2014 Nov. 17 PITTSBURGH (ESPN) 24-27 L

In the franchise’s “Titans era” (since 1999), the Titans are 14-7 on Monday night, including wins on eight of the last 10 occasions.

2021 Oct. 18 BUFFALO (ESPN) 34-31 W

2002 Dec. 16 NEW ENGLAND (ABC) 24-7 W

PRIMETIME GAMES IN THE TITANS ERA

2018 Mon., Nov. 5 at Dallas (ESPN) 28-14 W

1989 Nov. 13

Total sacks in Week 1 by the Titans defense. It was the most by the defense in the regular season since a five-sack performance at the Los Angeles Rams on Nov. 7, 2021.

Rush Attempts 31 Derrick Henry Den Mon 9/14/20

FRANCHISE PRIMETIME SUMMARY

12 Drew Bennett KC Mon 12/13/04

23

44

31 Eddie George NE Mon 12/16/02

Sacks 3.0 Jeffery Simmons @LAR Sun 11/7/21

Pass Completions 29 Ryan Tannehill Den Mon 9/14/20

RECEIVING

2.5 Henry Ford @Mia Sun 11/7/99

Overall Pct. Home Road

147.7 Marcus Mariota Hou Mon 11/26/18

3 (Twice, last by Ryan Tannehill vs. Buffalo, Tues., 10/13/20)

DEFENSE

3 Derrick Henry Buf Mon 10/18/21

Passing Attempts 48 Steve McNair Bal Mon 11/12/01

This week’s game is the first of four scheduled primetime appearances for the Titans in 2022. They also play at Kansas City on Sunday night, Nov. 6; at Green Bay on Thursday night, Nov. 17; and host Dallas on Thursday night, Dec. 29.

8

5

Passing Stat Player Opp Night Date

Passing Stat Player Opp Night Date

Consecutive winning seasons for the Titans from 2016 to 2021—every season since executive vice president/general manager Jon Robinson joined the team. It is the second-longest such streak in franchise history trailing only the Oilers’ seven consecutive winning records from 1987 through 1993. The Titans and Kansas City Chiefs were the only teams to post winning seasons every year from 2016 to 2021.

7,090

3 Keith Bulluck @NO Mon 9/24/07

Monday Night 25-18 .581 15-9 10-9

Passer Rating 148.1 Marcus Mariota Jax Thu 10/27/16

6,879

Below are the Titans' top individual statistical performances in primetime games during the "Titans era" (1999–present):

Receptions

Tuesday Night 1-0 1.000 1-0 0-0

Saturday Night 1-2 .333 0-2 1-0 Sunday Night 12-11 .522 8-5 4-6

Career games played for the Titans by left tackle Taylor Lewan, who has more games with the team than any other player on the current roster

2 (six times, last by Malcolm Butler vs. Buf., Tues., 10/13/20)

Career receiving yards by Robert Woods, who ranks 13th among all active players.

7

Passing Stat Player Opp Night Date

Day

Interceptions from 2017 to 2022 by Titans safety Kevin Byard, who ranks first among safeties and third in the NFL in that time period behind Xavien Howard (27) and J.C. Jackson (25).

44 Matt Hasselbeck Pit Thu 10/11/12

12 Derrick Mason Bal Mon 11/12/01

Totals 46-42 .523 31-21 15-21

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Touchdown percentage of the Titans offense in the red zone since 2019. They lead the NFL during that time period.

6

306 Marcus Mariota Ind Mon 10/16/17

199 Eddie George Oak Thu 12/9/99

145 A.J. Brown SF Thu 12/23/21

Total sacks by defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons in his last three combined regular season and postseason games.

Receiving Yards 233 Drew Bennett KC Mon 12/13/04

Total wins, including playoffs, by Mike Vrabel as a head coach. He needs one more win to tie Jack Pardee (44-35) for the third-highest win total in franchise history.

29 Billy Volek KC Mon 12/13/04

Thursday Night 7-10 .412 7-4 0-6

Rushing Yards 238 Derrick Henry Jax Thu 12/6/18

201

KEY NUMBERS

2 (Twice, last by Jonnu Smith vs. Buf., Tues., 10/13/20)

All-time, the Titans are 46-42 in primetime telecasts, which includes regular season games played on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings.

8

TOP PRIMETIME PERFORMANCES, 1999–2022

43

Rushing TDs 4 Derrick Henry Jax Thu 12/6/18

PASSING

Titans victories from 2018 to 2021 after trailing by seven or more points in the fourth quarter, which was the most in the NFL.

Passing Stat Player Opp Night Date

104

RUSHING

Career touchdown passes by Ryan Tannehill, who in Week 1 became the 47th player in NFL history to reach 200 touchdown passes.

Franchise history in primetime games:

Rookies who made their NFL debuts in Week 1 against the Giants.

Wins by the Titans in their last 10 Monday Night Football games entering this week's game at Buffalo.

Consecutive starts by Ryan Tannehill, who set the franchise record for consecutive starts by a quarterback in Week 1.

Career rushing yards by Derrick Henry, who ranks fourth in franchise history.

Passing Yards 426 Billy Volek KC Mon 12/13/04

71.1

Receiving TDs 3 Drew Bennett KC Mon 12/13/04

6

Passing TDs 4 Billy Volek KC Mon 12/13/04

Friday Night 0-1 .000 0-1 0-0

Interceptions

¾ With 65 career rushing touchdowns, he needs nine more to break Earl Campbell's career franchise record of 73 rushing touchdowns.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR – TEAM

¾

¾ Can join Mike Holovak (1989–1993) as the only two general managers in franchise history to oversee five or more playoff seasons.

¾ Can join Jeff Fisher (six) and Jack Pardee (four) as the only head coaches to lead the franchise to at least four playoff appearances.

¾ Can join Warren Moon (1987–1993) as the only starting quarterbacks in franchise history to lead the club to the playoffs in four consecutive seasons.

¾ Can oversee a winning season for the seventh consecutive season since joining the Titans in 2016. He already is the only general manager in franchise history to oversee six total seasons above the .500 mark.

¾

Entering 2022 with a record of 107-78 in regular season games at Nissan Stadium, the Titans need six wins at home to match the 113 wins the franchise had in regular season contests at the Astrodome (113-1032). Seven home wins would give the franchise more victories at Nissan Stadium (114) than any other single venue.

¾ Can become the team's only player since 2000 other than Keith Bulluck (2003-05) to record at least three sacks and five passes defensed in three consecutive seasons.

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 24 PREVIEWGAME NOTESTEAM ROSTERSNOTESPLAYERMEDIASTATISTICS

¾ Can produce his seventh career season with at least 3,000 passing yards and his third career season with at least 4,000 passing yards.

¾ Enters 2022 with an active streak of 43 consecutive starts. With a start in the season opener, he will break a tie with Steve McNair (43 consecutive starts from 2001 to 2003) for the most consecutive starts in franchise history by a quarterback.

¾ Needs 3,500 passing yards to tie Warren Moon (1989–1991) for the most seasons in franchise history with at least 3,500 passing yards. Tannehill reached the mark in each of the past two campaigns.

WR ROBERT WOODS

¾ With 68 total career touchdowns, he needs seven more to break Eddie George's career franchise record of 74 total touchdowns.

QB RYAN TANNEHILL

The Titans can log their fourth consecutive season with at least five road victories, which would be the longest such streak in franchise history (1978–1980 and 1998–2000).

¾ Needs 2,000 rushing yards to become the first player in NFL history to reach the mark in two different seasons.

GM JON ROBINSON

WHAT TO LOOK FOR IN 2022

¾ Can become the first player in franchise history with multiple career seasons with at least 30 touchdown passes.

The Titans can earn their third consecutive division title. The only other three-year streak of division titles in franchise annals was when the Oilers won the AFL Eastern division each season from 1960 to 1962.

¾ With a winning record in 2022, Mike Vrabel would become the only head coach in franchise history to begin his tenure with at least five consecutive winning seasons. Vrabel and Jack Pardee are the organization's only head coaches with as many as three such seasons to begin their tenures.

¾

DT JEFFERY SIMMONS

HEAD COACH MIKE VRABEL

S KEVIN BYARD

¾

¾ Needs 1,500 rushing yards and 15 rushing touchdowns to become the first player in NFL history to reach both marks in three different seasons.

¾ Currently at 6,797 career rushing yards, he will pass Chris Johnson (7,965) for third place on the franchise's all-time career rushing list with 1,169 more rushing yards.

history to reach the mark in five consecutive seasons, joining LaDainian Tomlinson (nine), Adrian Peterson (seven), Shaun Alexander (five) and Michael Turner (five).

¾

¾ Can join Buffalo's Josh Allen (2018–2020) as the NFL's only quarterbacks since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger with at least seven rushing touchdowns in three consecutive seasons. He became the first quarterback in franchise history with at least seven rushing touchdowns in back-to-back seasons from 2020 to 2021.

¾ Can join George Blanda (1960-63) as the only players in franchise history to throw at least 20 touchdown passes in four consecutive seasons.

The Titans have had a winning record each season since 2016, when general manager Jon Robinson arrived in Tennessee. The Titans went 9-7 each year from 2016 to 2019, achieved an 11-5 finish in 2020, and then earned a 12-5 mark in 2021. A seventh consecutive season above .500 would tie the franchise's all-time best streak. The only previous stretch in which the club achieved seven straight winning records was 1987 to 1993.

RB DERRICK HENRY

¾ Needs five touchdown receptions to join Jerry Rice and Tyreek Hill as the NFL's only players since 1970 with at least 40 receiving touchdowns and five rushing touchdowns. Woods enters the campaign with 35 career touchdown catches to go along with five rushing touchdowns.

¾ Needs two interceptions to tie Michael Griffin and Ken Houston (25) for eighth place all-time for the franchise.

A third consecutive season with 11 or more wins would mark the first time in franchise history the team has accomplished such a streak.

¾ Can lead the team in interceptions for the fifth time, which would tie Darryll Lewis' franchise record (1994-98).

¾ Can record his 10th consecutive season to begin his career with at least 40 receptions. He and DeAndre Hopkins are tied for the secondlongest such active streak in the NFL with nine seasons, behind only Emmanuel Sanders (10).

¾ Needs one interception in 2022 (23 interceptions entering the season) to tie Zeke Moore (24) for 10th place on the all-time franchise interception list.

¾ Needs three interceptions to tie Mike Reinfeldt (26) for seventh all-time for the franchise and pass Michael Griffin (25) for the most interceptions for the franchise in its "Titans era" (1999–present).

The Titans can earn their fourth consecutive playoff berth. It would be the organization’s first time doing so since a franchise-record seven consecutive playoff appearances from 1987 to 1993.

¾ Needs a pair of 200-yard rushing games to give him seven for his career, which would set the NFL record. He would surpass O.J. Simpson and Adrian Peterson, who each have six such performances.

¾

¾ Can become the first player to lead the team in tackles for three consecutive seasons since Keith Bulluck (2002-06).

¾ Needs 10 rushing touchdowns to become the fifth running back in NFL

EVP/GENERAL MANAGER JON ROBINSON

2022: After the NFL's new league year began in March 2022, Robinson engineered a trade with the Rams to acquire veteran wide receiver Robert Woods, who totaled 570 receptions for 7,077 yards in nine previous seasons in Buffalo and Los Angeles.

The Titans finished with a winning record in each of his first six seasons on the job. They had four consecutive 9-7 records from 2016 to 2019, followed by an 11-5 mark in 2020 and a 12-5 record in 2021. It was the first time the organization produced at least six consecutive winning seasons since a seven-year run of winning records from 1987–1993. The Titans and Kansas City Chiefs were the only NFL teams without a losing season from 2016 to 2021.

2021: In 2021, the Titans struck several deals with veterans in the initial days of free agency. The incoming players included Pittsburgh Steelers outside linebackers Bud Dupree and Ola Adeniyi, New Orleans Saints cornerback Jackrabbit Jenkins, Indianapolis Colts defensive lineman Denico Autry and Baltimore Ravens long snapper Morgan Cox. The Titans also re-signed several of their own free agents: tight ends Anthony Firkser and Geoff Swaim and inside linebacker Jayon Brown Autry proved to be a key addition for the defense. He appeared in every game in his first season with the club and finished second on the team with nine sacks. His sack total tied his career high, matching the nine sacks he had in 2018 as a member of the Indianapolis Colts.

Family of Titans GM Fights Diabetes With Love and Support, Buoyed by Daughter's Strength

Jon Robinson was hired as Titans general manager on Jan. 14, 2016 after spending two years as director of player personnel for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Nearly one year later, on Jan. 5, 2017, he was promoted to executive vice president/general manager.

Video: Jaimie Robinson's Work with Diabetes Nonprofit JDRF

Out of Bounds Podcast: Jon Robinson

In 2021, the Titans won their second consecutive AFC South crown with a 12-5 mark, celebrating the franchise's first back-to-back division championships since the Oilers took the first three AFL Eastern division titles from 1960 to 1962.

Robinson has overseen a nearly complete overhaul of the roster during his tenure. In seven drafts as general manager from 2016 to 2022, he selected 52 total players, and 27 of those players were still with the organization prior to the 2022 regular season (as of Sept. 4, 2022). The only member of the roster who predated Robinson at that time was tackle Taylor Lewan. During that same time period, he engineered 33 total trades.

Robinson then went to work in the free agent market, highlighted by the addition of two-time Pro Bowl tight end Austin Hooper, who played his first four seasons with the Atlanta Falcons before spending a pair of campaigns with the Cleveland Browns.

The Titans also were active in re-signing several of their own key free agents, including center Ben Jones and Pro Bowl outside linebacker Harold Landry III

Video: Titans GM Jon Robinson on Social Justice

Video: Jon Robinson discusses the Titans 2022 draft class

In 2020, Robinson and the Titans clinched the 2020 AFC South title with an 11-5 record in the regular season, claiming their best record and first division title since going 13-3 in 2008. They did so while navigating the challenges associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.

During the first round of the 2022 NFL Draft, the Titans acquired the 18th overall selection and an additional third-rounder from Philadelphia in a trade that sent wide receiver A.J. Brown to the Eagles. With the 18th pick, Robinson and the Titans grabbed Arkansas wide receiver Treylon Burks

Jim Wyatt: Jon Robinson Tackles the Past, the Present, and What's Next for the Titans

Robinson became the first general manager in franchise history with six seasons above the .500 mark, surpassing Bum Phillips (1975, 1977–1980) and Mike Holovak (1989-93). Robinson's winning records from 2016 to 2021 also eclipsed Holovak for the most consecutive winning seasons by a Titans/Oilers general manager.

Robinson's work helped the team go from three wins in the season prior to his arrival (2015) to a divisional round playoff finish following the 2017 campaign. He became the fifth general manager in franchise history to have the team in the playoffs within his first two full seasons.

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Robinson would execute two more trades during the draft to end up with nine total players, including Auburn cornerback Roger McCreary in the second round.

During the 2021 NFL Draft, Robinson led the selection of eight total players, beginning with Virginia Tech cornerback Caleb Farley with the 22nd overall selection in the first round. In the second round, the Titans chose North Dakota State offfensive lineman Dillon Radunz, followed by Georgia linebacker Monty Rice and Washington defensive back Elijah Molden in Round 3.

Then, in 2019, the team he constructed advanced to the AFC championship game. It was the organization's first appearance in the conference title game in 17 seasons (2002).

Late in the 2021 campaign, Robinson claimed inside linebacker Zach Cunningham off waivers from the division rival Houston Texans. Over three seasons from 2019 to 2021, Cunningham's 392 total tackles were more than every NFL player other than Seattle's Bobby Wagner (467) and Chicago's Roquan Smith (402).

2020: Early in 2020, the Titans reached an agreement on a multi-year contract to keep quarterback Ryan Tannehill in Tennessee. The Titans also re-signed tackle Dennis Kelly, who would go on to start all 16 games at rightAftertackle.initially placing the franchise tag on running back Derrick Henry, the Titans and Henry were able to come to an agreement on a multi-year contract extension in July 2020.

The Titans went to the playoffs four times in Robinson's first six seasons with the club: 2017, 2019, 2020 and 2021. The four playoff appearances tied for the third-most in the league during that time, and only Kansas City (six) and the New England Patriots (five) had more. Robinson's four playoff campaigns already place him in the top three in team annals along with Holovak (five) and Floyd Reese (four).

Robinson acquired Tannehill for the Titans in a 2019 trade with the Miami Dolphins. In his first three seasons in Tennessee, Tannehill built a 3013 record as a starting quarterback and became the franchise's first starting quarterback since Warren Moon (1987 to 1993) to direct his team to the playoffs in at least three consecutive seasons. He started every game from Week 7 of the 2019 campaign through the end of 2021, and during that time, Tannehill's 102.3 passer rating ranked sixth in the NFL. He became the only quarterback other than Moon (1989–1991) to record multiple seasons with at least 3,500 passing yards with the franchise. Also, Tannehill's 13 total game-winning drives in that span ranked second in the NFL behind only Raiders quarterback Derek Carr's 14. In 2019, Tannehill was named to his first Pro Bowl earned the 2019 Associated Press Comeback Player of the Year Award.Aftersecuring his multi-year extension in 2020, Henry produced one of the greatest seasons in NFL history by a running back. He led the NFL in rushing for the second consecutive season with 2,027 rushing yards, which was only the eighth 2,000-yard rushing season in league annals, and also paced the league with 17 rushing touchdowns. He was recognized with the Associated Press Offensive Player of the Year Award.

Then, in the 2019 NFL Draft, Robinson directed the selection of six total players, including Mississippi State defensive lineman Jeffery Simmons in the first round (19th overall), Ole Miss wide receiver A.J. Brown in the second round (51st overall) and Charlotte offensive lineman Nate Davis in the third round (82nd overall).

In his first three seasons, Brown led the Titans in every major receiving category, totaling 185 receptions, 2,995 receiving yards, a 16.2-yard receiving average and 24 touchdown catches. Since 1970, Brown was only the fourth NFL player to reach all of those numbers within his first three seasons, joining Randy Moss, Jerry Rice and John Jefferson. He was named to the Pro Bowl in 2020 after totaling 70 receptions for 1,075 yards and 11Simmonstouchdowns.wasnamed to the Pro Bowl in 2021 and added Associated Press second-team All-Pro honors. He ranked sixth in the NFL among defensive tackles with 8.5 sacks, and he set a franchise single-game postseason record with three sacks.

Jones became a foundational member of the offensive line. From 2016 to 2021, he was one of only eight offensive lineman to start at least 96 of a possible 97 games. He finished the 2021 campaign with an active streak of 40 consecutive starts, ranking third among centers.

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Robinson's 2018 draft class was comprised of four players after he used multiple trades to go up and get his targets. It included first-round linebacker Rashaan Evans from Alabama (22nd overall pick) and secondround outside linebacker Harold Landry III from Boston College (41st overall).From the start of his rookie season through 2021, Landry's 31 total sacks led the Titans, and other than Jevon Kearse (37), it was the highest total by a Titans/Oilers player in his first four NFL seasons since individual sacks became an official NFL statistic in 1982. In 2021, Landry was named to his first Pro Bowl after his career-high 12 sacks ranked 10th in the NFL.

2016: In his first year as an NFL general manager, Robinson's leadership and decision-making helped the Titans triple their win total from the previous season, finishing 9-7 in 2016 after a 3-13 finish in 2015. The sixwin improvement tied for the most in franchise history (1967 and 1974) and doubled the previous club benchmark for the most wins in the first year under a new general manager (three by Bum Phillips in 1975).

2017: During the 2017 offseason, Robinson used free agency to address needs on defense and special teams. Most notably, he spearheaded deals for cornerback Logan Ryan (New England) and special teams contributor and 2017 Pro Bowler Brynden Trawick (Oakland).

Saffold also earned his first career Pro Bowl berth in 2021, the third consecutive season since he arrived in Tennessee in which the team finished in the top five in rushing.

Henry, a second-round pick by Robinson in 2016, led the Titans in rushing every season from 2017 through 2021, during which time he also led the NFL with 6,307 total rushing yards. In 2019, he won his first of two consecutive NFL rushing crowns with 1,540 yards and tied for the NFL lead with 16 rushing touchdowns.

On April 14, 2016, two weeks before the NFL Draft, Robinson and the Titans dealt the first overall pick to the Los Angeles Rams in one of the biggest trades in recent NFL history. The Titans gave up the No. 1 pick and a fourth-rounder in order to receive the 15th overall pick, two secondrounders and a third-rounder in 2016, plus the Rams’ first- and third-round picks in 2017. From 1990–2015, there were seven trades involving the No. 1 overall pick, but this was the first since 2004, when the San Diego Chargers selected Eli Manning with the first pick and dealt his rights to the New York Giants.

All 10 members of Robinson's first draft class played in at least one game in 2016. They accumulated a total of 110 games played and 38 starts, including 16 starts at right tackle by Conklin. The eighth-overall pick capped his successful rookie campaign by being named first-team All-Pro by AssociatedThird-roundPress.safety Kevin Byard has become one of the most successful players at his position in franchise history. He finished the 2021 campaign as a three-time team captain, two-time Pro Bowl selection and a two-time Associated Press first-team All-Pro. Over a five-year period from 2017 through 2021, Byard led all NFL safeties and ranked third in the NFL with 23 interceptions. His career interception total was 11th on the franchise's all-time list and sixth among all Titans/Oilers safeties.

Prior to joining Tampa Bay, Robinson spent 12 years with the New England Patriots, including his last five years (2009-13) as the director of college scouting. In the five years heading up their college scouting, the Patriots added a number of key components to their roster that won the Super Bowl in 2014, including wide receiver Julian Edelman, defensive back Devin McCourty, tight end Rob Gronkowski, tackle Nate Solder and defensive end Chandler Jones. He joined the Patriots as an area scout in 2002, a role he served for four seasons. Robinson then spent two years (2006-07) as a regional scout, before being promoted to assistant director of college scouting in 2008 and then director of college scouting in 2009. In his time scouting for the Patriots the team won 10 division titles, four conference titles and two Super Bowls (2003, 2004).

Within the first four months at his post, Robinson pulled the trigger on several key personnel decisions. On March 9, 2016, he made his first major acquisition, swapping fourth-round draft picks with the Philadelphia Eagles in exchange for running back DeMarco Murray. The trade provided major dividends in 2016, as Murray led the AFC and ranked third in the NFL with 1,287 rushing yards.

PRIOR HISTORY: Robinson arrived in Tennessee with a wide range of experience from working his way up on the personnel side of the NFL. From 2014–2015, he served as director of player personnel for the Buccaneers and oversaw both college and pro departments as the team rebuilt its roster. The 2015 Buccaneers draft class made a significant impact, including four rookie starters: quarterback Jameis Winston, tackle Donovan Smith, guard Ali Marpet and linebacker Kwon Alexander

2018: The Titans' 2018 free agent class included Pro Bowl cornerback Malcolm Butler. In his three seasons in Tennessee, Butler played in 41 games (36 starts) and totaled nine interceptions. In early August 2018, the Titans signed Vaccaro, who went on to start 42 games over his three seasons with the club.

Robinson played three years at Southeast Missouri State as a

Around the same time, Robinson began to work the free agent market. Center Ben Jones and wide receiver Rishard Matthews highlighted the haul, and both were instrumental in helping to transform the Titans offense into the 11th-ranked unit in the NFL.

Click to play the latest episode of "Out of Bounds," a new lifestyle and sports podcast from Jaimie Robinson and Abby Flittner.

2019: Near the beginning of the 2019 free agent signing period, Robinson worked quickly to add several veterans from other teams who played key roles, including Tannehill and former Rams guard Rodger Saffold Robinson also worked to re-sign safety Kenny Vaccaro and punter Brett Kern

In the 2020 NFL Draft, the Titans had six total picks, including Louisiana State cornerback Kristian Fulton in the second round (61st overall). Fulton emerged as a full-time starter in 2021 and tied for 11th place in the NFL with a team-high 14 passes defensed.

In the 2017 NFL Draft, Robinson spent first-round picks on wide receiver Corey Davis (fifth overall) and cornerback Adoree' Jackson (18th overall). It marked the first time the franchise had a pair of first-round draft selections since 1987. The Titans' 2017 draft haul also featured tight end Jonnu Smith in the third round and linebacker Jayon Brown in the fifth round.The 2017 Titans advanced to the playoffs for the first time since 2008. Robinson became the fifth general manager in franchise history to have the team in the postseason within his first two full seasons.

The Titans had their hands at one point or another on 17 selections in the 2016 draft due to five different trades (including one trade in 2015), and in the end, they ended up with a class of 10 players, including four of the top 45 picks. Robinson swung a draft-day trade with the Cleveland Browns to move back up to the eighth slot to choose Michigan State tackle Jack Conklin

2006-07: New England Patriots - Regional Scout

Don Klosterman (1966-1969) 1 1 25 30 3 .457

2009-13: New England Patriots - Director of College Scouting

Patrick

Blaise Taylor Pro Scout Brandon Taylor Pro Scout Casey Callahan College Scout

2017-22: Tennessee Titans - Executive Vice President/General Manager

O.A. "Bum" Phillips (1975-1980) 5 3 59 38 0 .608

Floyd Reese (1994-2006)

Team Total Seasons 1. Kansas City Chiefs 9

tied) 2

2008: New England Patriots - Assistant Director of College Scouting

Reg. Seasons Playoff

WINNING SEASONS

. . . . . . . . .

Ladd Herzeg (1981-1988)

. . . . . .

Patrick Callaway College Scout

Tom Roth College Scout Slay College Scout Riederer Pro Scouting Coordinator Woo Scouting Coordinator Cooper Scouting Assistant Johnson Scouting Assistant Sanders Assistant Curtis Assistant to EVP & General Manager/Football Administration Coordinator

4 4 111 106 0 .512

Jon Robinson Executive Vice President/General Manager Vin Marino Vice President of Football Administration Ryan Cowden Vice President of Player Personnel Monti Ossenfort Director of Player Personnel Brian Gardner Director of Pro Scouting

2002-05: New England Patriots - Area Scout

2016: Tennessee Titans - General Manager

3 2 46 36 0 .561

1999-01: Nicholls State - Assistant Coach

Jon Salge Director of College Scouting Turks Assistant Director of Pro Scouting Thomas Personnel Analyst Boni National Scout Dale Thompson National Scout

Carroll Martin (1964-1965) 0 0 8 20 0 .286

2 2 44 80 0 .355

Adam Bondi Lead Developer of Football Technology Matt Iammarino Asst. Developer, Analytical Football Research

With a winning record secured during the 2021 regular season, the Titans recorded their sixth season with a winning record in six seasons since Jon Robinson was hired as general manager.

. . . . . . .

Franchise general managers, in order of career wins (records include postseason):

TITANS FOOTBALL ADMINISTRATION/ PLAYER PERSONNEL STAFF

Max

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Aaron

Matt

Corey

Mike Holovak (1989-1993)

. . . . . .

T.J. Earley College Scout Miller College Scout

Note: No general manager title was held in 1960 or 1970.

. . . . . . . Executive

With this year's record, plus their 2020 finish of 11-5 and their 9-7 marks every season from 2016 through 2019, the Titans have built the second-longest active streak of winning seasons in the NFL.

. . . . . . . .

John Breen (1971-1972) 0 0 5 22 1 .196

Mike Reinfeldt 2007-2011)

WINNINGEST GMs IN FRANCHISE HISTORY

Jon Robinson (2016-2021)

1998: Southeast Missouri State - Assistant Coach

. . . . . . . .

In the "Titans era" (1999–present), the team never before had as many as three consecutive winning campaigns.

Most current consecutive winning seasons (through 2021): 2013–2021 (four

defensive lineman after starting his college career at the Air Force Academy. Following his college career as a player, he spent one season (1998) coaching at his alma mater and three years (1999-2001) coaching at Nicholls State.

Wes

Robinson has the most winning seasons of any general manager in franchise history. His career win total ranks behind only Floyd Reese (111, including playoffs), and his four playoff seasons, including 2021, are tied with Reese for second place. Only Mike Holovak (five) oversaw more postseason qualifiers.

5 5 52 34 0 .605

Sid Gillman (1973-1974) 0 0 8 20 0 .286

2. Tennessee Titans 6 2016–2021 3. Los Angeles Rams 5 2017–2021 New Orleans Saints 5 2017–2021 5. Buffalo Bills 3 2019–2021 Green Bay Packers 3 2019–2021 7.

Don Suman (1961-1962) 2 2 22 7 1 .750

6 4 62 43 0 .590

SIX CONSECUTIVE

. . . . . . . .

Jay

General Manager Above .500 Seasons W L T Pct

Ruston Webster (2012-2015) 0 0 18 46 0 .281

A native of Union City, Tenn., Robinson and his wife, Jaimie, have two daughters, Taylor and Bailey.

Rob

Mical

. . . . Scouting

Jon Robinson constructed a roster that produced six consecutive winning seasons in Robinson's first six years on the job, including a 12-5 mark during the 2021 regular season. Prior to 2021, the club went 9-7 in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 with postseason berths following the 2017 and 2019 campaigns. Then, in 2020, the Titans finished the regular season 11-5 and won the team's first division championship since 2008.

JON ROBINSON’S BACKGROUND:

2014-15: Tampa Bay Buccaneers - Director of Player Personnel

Pop Ivy (1963) 0 0 6 8 0 .429

Kevin

Mike

6a 204 Theo Jackson S Tennessee

2019

1 8

3

7

3 72

2022

5

2020

reserve

2016

2

4 135 Rashad Weaver OLB Pittsburgh

6b 219 Chance Campbell LB Mississippi

1

3b 86 Malik Willis QB Liberty

4a 131 Hassan Haskins RB Michigan

2

5 155

4

1 5

6

the Titans roster, practice

7

2 33

Rd. Pick Player Pos. College 22 Rashaan Evans * LB Alabama 41 Harold Landry III OLB Boston College Dane Cruikshank * DB Arizona Luke Falk QB Washington State

1 18

3 92 Monty Rice ILB Georgia

2018

6

Rd. Pick Player Pos. College

The 2022 Titans draft class: (top row, left to right) OL Nicholas Petit-Frere, LB Chance Campbell, QB Malik Willis, RB Hassan Haskins, WR Treylon Burks, (bottom row, left to right) TE Chig Okonkwo, WR Kyle Philips, S Theo Jackson, CB Roger McCreary

5a 163 Kyle Philips WR UCLA

7

2 61 Kristian Fulton CB Louisiana State

4 109 Dez Fitzpatrick WR Louisville

= currently on another NFL roster, practice squad or reserve list

4b 143 Chig Okonkwo TE Maryland

5 152

7 241

6 205 Racey McMath WR Louisiana State

2

*

5 157

Bold = currently on squad or lists

3a 69 Nicholas Petit-Frere OL Ohio State

Rd. Pick Player Pos. College

2

5

7 227

6 199

1 19 Jeffery Simmons DT Mississippi State 51 A.J. Brown * WR Mississippi 82 Nate Davis OL Charlotte 116 Amani Hooker DB Iowa 168 D’Andre Walker OLB Georgia 188 David Long Jr. LB West Virginia

5

Rd. Pick Player Pos. College Corey Davis * WR Western Michigan Adoree’ Jackson * CB Southern California Taywan Taylor WR Western Kentucky Jonnu Smith * TE Florida International Jayon Brown * LB UCLA Corey Levin OL Chattanooga Josh Carraway OLB Texas Christian 236 Brad Seaton T Villanova Khalfani Muhammad RB California

DRAFT CLASSES

1a 18 Treylon Burks WR Arkansas

1 29 Isaiah Wilson T Georgia

3 100 Elijah Molden CB Washington

3

7

6 215 Brady Breeze S Oregon

Rd. Pick Player Pos. College Jack Conklin * T Michigan State Kevin Dodd OLB Clemson 43 Austin Johnson * DL Penn State 45 Derrick Henry RB Alabama 64 Kevin Byard S Middle Tennessee St. 140 Tajaé Sharpe * WR Massachusetts LeShaun Sims CB Southern Utah 193 Sebastian Tretola G Arkansas 222 Aaron Wallace OLB UCLA Kalan Reed CB Southern Mississippi

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Rd. Pick Player Pos. College

3 100

1 22 Caleb Farley CB Virginia Tech

6 217

2a 35 Roger McCreary CB Auburn

2021

2 53 Dillon Radunz T North Dakota State

3 93 Darrynton Evans * RB Appalachian State 174 Larrell Murchison DL North Carolina State 224 Cole McDonald QB Hawaii 243 Chris Jackson DB Marshall

7 253

2017

JON ROBINSON’S

Rd. Pick Player Pos. College

KR/WR Eric Weems Atlanta

RB D’Onta Foreman Carolina

LS Morgan Cox Baltimore

DT Abry Jones Jacksonville

WR Josh Reynolds L.A. Rams

DL Austin Johnson N.Y. Giants

NT Sylvester Williams Denver

LB Steven Johnson Pittsburgh

T Christian DiLauro Pittsburgh

LB Zach Brown Buffalo

DE Matt Dickerson Las Vegas

WR Tajaé Sharpe Minnesota

TE Ryan Hewitt Indianapolis

CB Kevin Johnson Cleveland

2020

WR Josh Malone Green Bay

CB Brice McCain Miami

LB Nick Dzubnar L.A. Chargers

WR Cameron Batson Atlanta

DT Trevon Coley N.Y. Jets

WR Eric Decker N.Y. Jets

CB Demontre Hurst Chicago

OLB Erik Walden Indianapolis

WR Corey Davis N.Y. Jets

S Rashad Johnson Arizona

Free Agents Lost New Team

ILB Rashaan Evans Atlanta

DL Jack Crawford Atlanta

DT Bruce Hector Carolina

OL David Quessenberry Buffalo

OLB Jadeveon Clowney Cleveland

DB A.J. Moore Houston

2019

S Matthias Farley N.Y. Jets

CB Kevin Peterson Arizona

WR Cody Hollister New England

Free Agents Signed Former Team

WR Eric Decker New England

RB Brian Hill Atlanta

DB Ibraheim Campbell Green Bay

QB Brandon Weeden Houston

OL Xavier Su'a-Filo Houston

C Ben Jones Houston

OLB Cameron Wake Miami

WR Marcus Johnson San Francisco

OL Tim Lelito New Orleans

WR Michael Campanaro Baltimore

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CB Johnathan Joseph Houston

RB Trenton Cannon San Francisco

Free Agents Lost New Team

2022

LB Justin March-Lillard Dallas

G/C Jamil Douglas Buffalo

WR Rishard Matthews Miami

WR Kalija Lipscomb Green Bay

TE Luke Stocker Atlanta

DB Joshua Kalu N.Y. Giants

UNRESTRICTED FREE AGENCY UNDER ROBINSON

Free Agents Signed Former Team

WR Nick Williams Atlanta

OLB Ola Adeniyi Pittsburgh

Free Agents Lost New Team

CB Valentino Blake N.Y. Giants

RB Senorise Perry Buffalo

QB Marcus Mariota Las Vegas

CB Chris Milton N.Y. Giants

S Brynden Trawick Oakland

RB Jeremy McNichols Atlanta

Free Agents Signed Former Team

QB Matt Cassel Dallas

CB Logan Ryan New York Giants

G Quinton Spain Buffalo

S Dane Cruikshank Chicago

DT Woodrow Hamilton IV Carolina

DL Frank Herron New England

2016

2021

OL Joe Looney Dallas

LB Daren Bates Oakland

DL DeMarcus Walker Houston

RB Dion Lewis New England

LB Justin Lawler L.A. Rams

G Rodger Saffold L.A. Rams

ILB Jayon Brown Las Vegas

CB Logan Ryan New England

CB Chris Jones Minnesota

S Johnathan Cyprien Jacksonville

CB Greg Mabin Jacksonville

G Chance Warmack Philadelphia

CB Valentino Blake Pittsburgh

S Kenny Vaccaro New Orleans

WR Kalif Raymond Detroit

CB Tye Smith Minnesota

DT DaQuan Jones Carolina

LB B.J. Bello L.A. Chargers

WR Kendall Wright Chicago

WR Adam Humphries Tampa Bay

CB Coty Sensabaugh Los Angeles

TE Anthony Firkser Atlanta

Free Agents Signed Former Team

T Kendall Lamm Cleveland

DT Kyle Peko Las Vegas

G/C Brian Schwenke New England

CB Desmond King Houston

2017

LB Avery Williamson N.Y. Jets

DL Brent Urban Baltimore

CB LeShaun Sims Cincinnati

LB Sean Spence Indianapolis

Free Agents Signed Former Team

T/G Byron Bell Dallas

G Kevin Pamphile Tampa Bay

TE Anthony Fasano Miami

LB Sean Spence Pittsburgh

T Jack Conklin Cleveland

Free Agents Lost New Team

DB Curtis Riley N.Y. Giants

TE MyCole Pruitt San Francisco

2018

QB Blaine Gabbert Arizona

FB Khari Blasingame Chicago

DL Denico Autry Indianapolis

S Kendrick Lewis Baltimore

OLB Bud Dupree Pittsburgh

CB Malcolm Butler New England

T Ty Sambrailo Atlanta

DL Bennie Logan Kansas City

Free Agents Lost New Team

WR Fred Brown Denver

C/G Brian Schwenke Indianapolis (later re-signed in Tennessee)

TE Austin Hooper Cleveland

OLB Vic Beasley Jr. Atlanta

LB Will Compton Washington

Free Agents Lost New Team

TE Jonnu Smith New England

Free Agents Lost New Team

OL Jamarco Jones Seattle

Free Agents Signed Former Team

CB Jackrabbit Jenkins New Orleans

Free Agents Signed Former Team

WR Darius Jennings L.A. Chargers

Green Bay Receives: Draft Choice: Round 3, 2021 #85 WR Amari Rodgers

Trade Date/Teams Compensation

Philadelphia Receives: Player: WR A.J. Brown

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2021 #232 (DT Phil Hoskins)

Pick originally from Houston

Overall Player Selected Note

TRADES BY JON ROBINSON

Pick traded to Minnesota

Draft Choice: Round 4, 2023

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2022 #18 WR Treylon Burks

1. March 17, 2021

3. April 28, 2022 (Draft Day Trade)

Pick originally a New Orleans compensatory selection

Draft Choice: Round 7, 2024

Tennessee Receives: Player: DB Ugo Amadi

Overall Player Selected Note

3. May 1, 2021 (Draft Day Trade)

6. Aug. 24, 2022

Pick originally a New Orleans compensatory selection; traded to NY Jets

2022 TRADES

Tennessee Receives: Player: S Tyree Gillespie

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Draft Choice: Round 3, 2022 #69 OL Nicholas Petit-Frere

Philadelphia Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2024

Trade Date/Teams Compensation

2. April 28, 2022 (Draft Day Trade)

Las Vegas Receives: Draft Choice: Round 3, 2022 #90 G Dylan Parham

Conditional draft choice

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2020 #237 (CB Thakarius Keyes)

Draft Choice: Round 7, 2022 #247 QB Skylar Thompson

Draft Choice: Round 5, 2021 #166 DB Keith Taylor

Tennessee Receives: Player: OL Dennis Daley

Pick originally from New England; traded to Kansas City Denver Receives: Player: DT Jurrell Casey

Draft Choice: Round 5, 2022 #163 WR Kyle Philips

2021 TRADES

1. March 23, 2022

Draft Choice: Round 3, 2022 #101 TE Jeremy Ruckert

2. April 30, 2021 (Draft Day Trade)

Conditional draft choice

2020 TRADES

7. Aug. 29, 2022

Draft Choice: Round 4, 2021 #135 OLB Rashad Weaver

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 3, 2022 #86 QB Malik Willis

Carolina Receives: Draft Choice: Round 5, 2024

Trade Date/Teams Compensation

Draft Choice: Round 7, 2021 #232 DT Phil Hoskins

4. June 6, 2021

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 3, 2021 #92 ILB Monty Rice

Tennessee Receives: Player: WR Julio Jones Draft Choice: Round 6, 2023

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 4, 2021 #109 WR Dez Fitzpatrick

Pick originally from Pittsburgh N.Y. Jets Receive: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2022 #26 OLB Jermaine Johnson

Las Vegas Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2024

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 2, 2022 #35 CB Roger McCreary

Pick originally from Atlanta through Miami

Overall Player Selected Note

Pick originally from Atlanta; traded to Carolina Miami Receives: Player: T Isaiah Wilson

Draft Choice: Round 7, 2024

Atlanta Receives: Draft Choice: Round 2, 2022 #58 LB Troy Andersen

Draft Choice: Round 5, 2022 #169 (RB Ty Chandler)

5. Aug. 17, 2022

Draft Choice: Round 3, 2022 #101 (TE Jeremy Ruckert)

Tennessee Receives: Player: WR Robert Woods L.A. Rams Receive: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2023

Pick originally from New Orleans

1. March 19, 2020

Carolina Receives: Draft Choice: Round 4, 2021 #126 RB Chuba Hubbard

4. April 29, 2022 (Draft Day Trade)

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 5, 2018 #152 DB Dane Cruikshank

Draft Choice: Round 6, 2018 #215 (C Bradley Bozeman)

Draft Choice: Round 6, 2019 #188 LB David Long Jr Miami Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2019 #233 RB Chandler Cox

Trade Date/Teams

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 3, 2017 #72 WR Taywan Taylor Pick originally from Carolina

4. August 28, 2018

Pick traded to Pittsburgh

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 2, 2018 #41 OLB Harold Landry III

2017 TRADES

2019 TRADES

Pick traded to Philadelphia

Draft Choice: Round 5, 2019 #157 LB Blake Cashman

Draft Choice: Round 6, 2017 #214 DT Elijah Qualls

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2020 #224 QB Cole McDonald

Tennessee Receives: Player: OLB Reggie Gilbert Green Bay Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2020 #208 C Jake Hanson

Baltimore Receives: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2018 #25 TE Hayden Hurst

1. April 26, 2018 (Draft Day Trade)

Trade Date/Teams Compensation

Pick originally from Jacksonville

Overall Player Selected Note

2. April 27, 2019 (Draft Day Trade)

Overall Player Selected Note

1. March 15, 2019

Pick traded to L.A. Chargers

Baltimore Receives: Draft Choice: Round 5, 2018 #162 WR Jordan Lasley

Draft Choice: Round 4, 2017 #124 (LB Jalen Reeves-Maybin) Pick traded to Detroit

Pick traded to L.A. Rams

Cleveland Receives: Player: WR Taywan Taylor

2018 TRADES

Pick traded back to Baltimore

4. August 31, 2019

1. April 28, 2017 (Draft Day Trade)

Draft Choice: Round 6, 2017 #200 (T Adam Bisnowaty)

3. August 29, 2019

Pick originally from Baltimore

TRADES BY JON ROBINSON

Pick originally from Atlanta

Trade Date/Teams Compensation

Philadelphia Receives: Draft Choice: Round 5, 2017 #164 (G Isaac Asiata) Pick traded to Miami

3. April 28, 2018 (Draft Day Trade)

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2021 #215 S Brady Breeze Kansas City Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2020 #237 CB Thakarius Keyes Pick originally from New England through Denver

Baltimore Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2019 #191 (DB Marcus Epps)

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 5, 2017 #155 LB Jayon Brown

Jacksonville Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2021 #249 (WR Ben Skowronek) Pick traded to L.A. Rams

2. April 29, 2017 (Draft Day Trade)

Pick traded to Minnesota

Tennessee Receives: Player: CB Desmond King II L.A. Chargers Receive: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2021 #185 LB Nick Niemann

3. Oct. 14, 2020

Oakland Receives: Draft Choice: Round 2, 2018 #57 DT P.J. Hall

Draft Choice: Round 6, 2018 #215 C Bradley Bozeman

New England Receives: Draft Choice: Round 3, 2017 #83 DE Derek Rivers

2. April 27, 2018 (Draft Day Trade)

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2018 #22 LB Rashaan Evans Pick originally from Kansas City through Buffalo

Compensation

Draft Choice: Round 4, 2020 #135 (G Kevin Dotson)

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 4, 2019 #116 DB Amani Hooker Pick originally from Miami through New Orleans

Player: OLB Kamalei Correa

Draft Choice: Round 5, 2019 #168 OLB D’Andre Walker Pick originally from New Orleans N.Y. Jets Receive: Draft Choice: Round 4, 2019 #121 TE Trevon Wesco

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2021 #185 (LB Nick Niemann)

Draft Choice: Round 4, 2018 #125 (DB Avonte Maddox)

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Pick traded to N.Y. Giants; originally from Indianapolis

4. Nov. 2, 2020

Draft Choice: Round 3, 2018 #89 (T Joseph Noteboom)

Overall Player Selected Note

Tennessee Receives: Player: LB Kamalei Correa

2. April 25, 2020 (Draft Day Trade)

Tennessee Receives: Player: QB Ryan Tannehill

Pick traded from Tennessee to Denver

Cleveland Receives: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2016 #15 WR Corey Coleman Pick originally from Los Angeles

4. April 30, 2016 (Draft Day Trade)

Draft Choice: Round 7, 2017 #227 OLB Josh Carraway

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 5, 2016 #157 CB LeShaun Sims Pick originally from N.Y. Jets

Denver Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2016 #176 RB Andy Janovich

Pick traded from Philadelphia to Cleveland to Oakland

Draft Choice: Round 2, 2016 #43 DL Austin Johnson Pick originally from Philadelphia

Pick originally from Cleveland Draft Choice: Round 6, 2017 #203 RB De’Angelo Henderson

3. April 29, 2017 (Draft Day Trade)

Tennessee Receives: Player: G/T Dennis Kelly Philadelphia Receives: Player: WR Dorial

Tennessee Receives: Player: RB DeMarco Murray

2. April 14, 2016

Pick traded from Tennessee to Cleveland

Draft Choice: Round 3, 2017 #100 TE Jonnu Smith Compensatory pick

Ryan Tannehill was acquired in a trade in 2019.

L.A. Rams Receive: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2016 #1 QB Jared Goff

Kansas City Receives: Draft Choice: Round 7, 2018 #243 (DB Keion Crossen)

Draft Choice: Round 6, 2016 #177 TE Temarrick Hemingway

Tennessee Receives: Player: DE David King

Pick traded from Tennessee to Los Angeles to Chicago

Draft Choice: Round 2, 2016 #45 RB Derrick Henry

Draft Choice: Round 3, 2016 #76 T Shon Coleman Pick originally from Los Angeles Draft Choice: Round 2, 2017 #52 QB DeShone Kizer

Green-Beckham

Draft Choice: Round 6, 2016 #176 (RB Andy Janovich)

Draft Choice: Round 4, 2016 #113 (LB Nick Kwiatkoski)

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2016 #15 (WR Corey Coleman)

Pick traded from Tennessee to Cleveland

4. April 29, 2017 (Draft Day Trade)

5. Aug. 16, 2016

TRADES BY JON ROBINSON

Draft Choice: Round 7, 2017 #241 RB Khalfani Muhammad N.Y. Giants Receive: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2017 #200 T Adam Bisnowaty

Draft Choice: Round 7, 2016 #253 CB Kalan Reed

2016 TRADES

Trade Date/Teams Compensation

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2017 #207 (DB Brandon Wilson)

5. Sept. 1, 2017

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2017 #217 OL Corey Levin Compensatory pick

Philadelphia Receives: Draft Choice: Round 4, 2016 #100 (QB Connor Cook)

Pick originally from Indianapolis through New England

Conditional draft choice; traded to New England

Draft Choice: Round 3, 2016 #76 (T Shon Coleman)

Pick traded to Cincinnati

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Draft Choice: Round 1, 2017 #5 WR Corey Davis

Draft Choice: Round 4, 2016 #113 (LB Nick Kwiatkoski)

Pick originally from Philadelphia; traded from Los Angeles to Chicago

3. April 28, 2016 (Draft Day Trade)

1. March 9, 2016

Tennessee Receives: Draft Choice: Round 1, 2016 #8 T Jack Conklin

Cincinnati Receives: Draft Choice: Round 6, 2017 #207 DB Brandon Wilson

Pick originally from N.Y. Giants

Overall Player Selected Note

Pick originally from Miami through Philadelphia

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Titans to AFC Championship Game in Vrabel's Second Season

In 2019, Vrabel became the first head coach in the organization's history to win multiple playoff games within his first two seasons. The Titans won a pair of road games—at New England in the wild card round and at Baltimore in the divisional round—to advance to the 2019 AFC championship game, falling at Kansas City to the eventual Super Bowl champion Chiefs.

The 2019 Titans ranked in the NFL's top 10 in scoring margin (eighth, +71), turnover margin (sixth, +6), offensive yards per play (fourth, 6.12), rushing offense (third, 138.9 yards per game), red zone efficiency (first, 75.6 percent), total touchdowns (tied for third, 54) and third-down defense (eighth, 36.3 percent).

also ranked eighth on third down (43.6 percent), fifth in the red zone (63.9 percent) and first in goal-to-go efficiency (87.5 percent).

The Titans won the 2020 AFC South title with an 11-5 record in the regular season, claiming their best record and first division title since going 13-3 in 2008. They finished with a 5-1 record within the division and a 6-2 mark in road games, all while navigating the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.TheTitans led the NFL in 2020 with a plus-11 turnover differential. Their 23 takeaways ranked seventh in the NFL, while their 12 turnovers were the second-fewest in the league in 2020 and tied for the ninth-lowest number since the NFL went to a 16-game schedule in 1978.

Vrabel was named the Associated Press NFL Coach of the Year in 2021 after directing the Titans to a 12-5 record during the regular season. The Titans won the AFC South, and they claimed the top seed in the AFC playoff field for the first time since 2008. They did so despite needing to use 91 total players during the season—the most in NFL history in a non-strike year. After the final preseason roster cuts through the end of the season, the team placed 26 different players on injured reserve and 21 different players on the reserve/COVID-19 list, plus additional practice squad players that received those designations.

Video: Introducing Mike Vrabel's Second and Seven Video:FoundationIgniting the Fire - Who is Mike Vrabel?

Video: Watch "The Mike Vrabel Show"

Mike Vrabel was named head coach of the Titans on Jan. 20, 2018, becoming the 19th head coach in franchise history.

Click For Complete Online Bio

Titans Take the AFC South in Year 3 Under Vrabel

The Titans began the 2019 campaign with two wins in their first six games but rallied to win seven of their final 10 games in the regular season. From the time the NFL went to its current playoff format in 1990 through 2019, 345 teams went 2-4 or worse in their first six games of a season. From that group, the Titans became only the third team to advance to a conference championship game, joining the 2002 Titans (2-4) and the 1996 Jacksonville Jaguars (2-4).

In his first season as head coach, Vrabel directed the Titans to a 9-7 record. His nine wins tied for the fourth-highest total in franchise history by a first-year head coach.

COACH MIKE VRABEL MIKE VRABEL AT A GLANCE ● Year as Titans head coach: 5 ● Year as NFL head coach: 5 ● Regular season record: 41-25 ● Postseason record: 2-3 ● Overall record: 43-28 ● Regular season home record: 22-12 ● Regular season road record: 19-13 ● vs. Bills: 2-2 ● At home vs. Bills: 2-1 ● On the road vs. Bills: 0-1 ● vs. Sean McDermott: 2-2 Mike Vrabel’s Career Coaching Ledger: Years Team Position 2018-22 Tennessee Titans Head Coach 2017 Houston Texans Defensive Coordinator 2014-16 Houston Texans Linebackers Coach 2012-13 Ohio State University Defensive Line Coach 2011 Ohio State University Linebackers Coach Mike Vrabel’s Career Playing Ledger: Years Team Position 2009-10 Kansas City Chiefs Linebacker 2001-08 New England Patriots Linebacker 1997-00 Pittsburgh Steelers Linebacker

The 2021 Titans ranked second in rushing defense (84.6 yards allowed per game), 12th in total defense (329.8), sixth on third down (36.7 percent), sixth in scoring defense (20.8 points per game) and ninth in sacks (43). Offensively, the Titans finished fifth in rushing (141.4 yards per game) despite missing Derrick Henry for nine games due to injury. The offense

Situationally, Vrabel's teams fared well among the NFL leaders in his first four seasons as head coach. From 2018 to 2021, their .909 winning percentage (40-4) in regular season games in which they had a fourthquarter lead ranked second in the NFL behind the New Orleans Saints (.939). In the same time period, the Titans had a .714 winning percentage in three-point games (15-6), which led the league. Vrabel's team was 5-1 in overtime games from 2018 through 2021, tying the Saints (5-1) for the most overtime

The 2020 Titans joined the 1997 Detroit Lions as the only teams in NFL history to feature a 2,000-yard rusher, a 3,000-yard passer and a 1,000-yard receiver. Henry led the NFL in rushing for the second consecutive season, and his 2,027 rushing yards gave him the fifth-best total in league history. Meanwhile, Ryan Tannehill passed for 3,819 yards, and his 106.5 passer rating was the fifth-best number in the NFL. A.J. Brown was named to the Pro Bowl after recording his second consecutive 1,000-yard season (1,075) and tying for fifth place in the NFL with 11 touchdown catches.

HEAD

With only 82 penalties enforced against the Titans in 2018, Vrabel's team led the NFL and set a franchise record (16-game season) for fewest penalties in a season. The 2018 Titans also placed third in points allowed (18.9 per game), eighth in total defense (333.4 yards per game), sixth in passing defense (216.9), second in red zone defense (44.7 percent

Vrabel Honored as NFL's Top Coach in 2021

Video: Watch Mike Vrabel's latest press conference

Mike Vrabel Named AP 2021 NFL Coach of the Year

In his first four seasons as head coach, Vrabel led the Titans to a 43-27 overall record and three postseason appearances. He joined Jack Pardee and Jerry Glanville as the only head coaches in team annals to preside over at least three playoff squads in their initial four seasons as head coach, and he tied Pardee (43-26) for the most total wins by a head coach in his first four seasons with the organization. The Titans won back-to-back AFC South titles in 2020 and 2021, marking the first time the organization accomplished the feat since the Oilers won the first three AFL Eastern division titles from 1960 to 1962.

Fromwins.2018 to 2021, the Titans had the NFL's second-best rushing offense, averaging 143.7 rushing yards per game. Only the Baltimore Ravens were better (173.6). On the other side of the ball, the Titans ranked seventh in rushing defense, allowing 106.2 rushing yards per contest. Also from 2018 to 2021, the Titans tied for eighth in scoring defense (22.0 opponent points per game) and tied for the eighth-best turnover margin (+13). The Titans were called for 370 penalties from 2018 through 2021, which was the sixth-fewest total in the NFL.

In 2020, the Titans tied for second place in total offense (396.4 yards per game) and ranked fourth in scoring offense (30.7 points per game). They became the first team in NFL history to generate at least 2,500 rushing yards (2,690) and 3,500 net passing yards (3,653) while surrendering 25 or fewer sacks (25). Their 6,343 total yards and 381 first downs established franchise records, while their 491 points amounted to the organization's second-best total.

Frank

Wins Losses Ties Pct. Appearances 1.

Booker Safeties

Erik

Brian

Vrabel, Pardee and Jerry Glanville (1986–1989) are the only head coaches in team annals to preside over at least three playoff squads in their initial four seasons. All three of Pardee’s first four teams made the postseason, while Glanville’s Oilers advanced to the postseason in his second, third and fourth years.

1. Jack Pardee 1990-1993 4 43 26 0 .623

Zak

When the Titans defeated the Houston Texans on Jan. 9, 2022, Mike Vrabel won his 43rd game, including postseason, since taking over as Titans head coach in 2018. In doing so, he tied Jack Pardee for the most total wins by a head coach in his first four seasons with the organization. In Pardee’s first four seasons as head coach from 1990 through 1993, the Oilers were 43-26, including playoffs.

Piraino Director, Sports Performance

7. Mike Munchak 2011-2013 0 22 26 0 .458

Aukerman . . . . . Special Teams

Sullivan Assistant Offensive Line

N.Y. Giants 9 23 0 .281 0 7. Steve Wilks Arizona 3 13 0 .188 0

3. O.A. “Bum” Phillips 1975-1978 1 35 26 0 .574

Coach Team Mike Vrabel Tennessee 43 27 0 .614 3 Frank Reich Indianapolis 38 30 0 .559 2 Matt Nagy Chicago 34 33 0 .507 2 Jon Gruden Las Vegas 22 31 0 .415 0 Matt Patricia Detroit 13 29 1 .314 0 Pat Shurmur

Background as a Player and Coach

Vrabel was selected by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the third round (91st overall) of the 1997 NFL Draft, after his playing career at Ohio State, where he earned All-America honors and Big Ten Conference Defensive Lineman of the Year in both 1995 and 1996.

Keith

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Rouse . . . . . . . . . Sports Performance Assistant

5. Jeff Fisher 1995-1998* 0 31 33 0 .484

Between 2014-16, the Texans defense ranked third in the NFL in yards allowed per game (319.9) and net passing yards (218.4). Houston also ranked first in third-down defense (33.6), fourth in opponent completion percentage (59.5) and sixth in points allowed per game (19.8). The 2016 defense ranked number one in the NFL, for the first time in franchise history, in yards allowed (301.3).

Todd

touchdown rate) and seventh in rushing offense (126.4) in the league rankings.

Bobby

Shane

Mike Vrabel 2018-2021 3 43 27 0 .614

In 2017, his first year as a defensive coordinator, the Texans finished the campaign with 19 players on injured reserve. Despite the injuries, Vrabel led the defense to the fifth-best third-down percentage in the NFL and a franchise-record 3.97 yards per carry by opponents. Houston also had 18 different players record at least half a sack last year and 26 players tally at least one tackle for loss.

McMillan . . . . . Defensive Line Assistant Anthony Midget Secondary

MOST WINS IN FIRST FOUR SEASONS

Kylan

3.

Vrabel Head Coach

Carter Offensive Line

Vrabel arrived in Tennessee with 18 years of NFL experience, including four seasons as a coach and 14 seasons as a player. His distinguished playing career included three Super Bowl wins (2001, 2003 and 2004), one Pro Bowl selection (2007) and an All-Pro honor (2007). Vrabel played in 206 NFL games and totaled 57 sacks, 496 tackles, 11 interceptions, 20 forced fumbles, nine fumble recoveries and 10 touchdown receptions. Additionally, his teams advanced to the playoffs eight times (20 postseason games), with Vrabel recording eight postseason sacks and two postseason touchdown receptions.Vrabel joined the Titans after four seasons with the Houston Texans, spending the first three seasons (2014-16) coaching linebackers and one year (2017) as the team’s defensive coordinator. During his time in Houston, the Texans built one of the best defenses in the NFL and experienced tremendous success as a team – earning two division titles (2015, 2016).

Tyler

Jim

John

Prior to joining the NFL coaching ranks, Vrabel transitioned immediately from an NFL player to college coach. He started as the linebacker coach at Ohio State in 2011 and coached the defensive line from 2012–2013. The 2012 Buckeyes finished the season undefeated at 12-0. He also was named Big Ten Recruiter of the Year by ESPN.com in 2012.

Houghtaling Offensive Line Assistant

10. Lou Rymkus 1960-1961 1 12 7 1 .625

Moore Wide Receivers

Kelly Passing Game Coordinator

Playoff

sacks in a season with 45 - 22.5 coming from Vrabel’s linebacking corps.

6.

Pat

Most total wins from 2018 to 2021 by head coaches hired during the 2018 offseason (through 2021):

Coach Seasons Season 1-4 W L T Pct

King . . . . . . . . . . Inside Linebackers

Williams Defensive Line

9. Frank “Pop” Ivy 1962-1963 1 17 12 0 .586

Vrabel spent his career playing and coaching with accomplished leaders, including Bill Belichick, Bill Cowher, Romeo Crennel, Urban Meyer, Bill O’Brien and Todd Haley

TITANS COACHING STAFF

Bell Sports Performance Coordinator

* Does not include interim seasons

Chase

Luke

Blackburn . . . . Assistant Special Teams

When Vrabel was hired in 2018, he joined six other head coaches who joined (or rejoined) their respective clubs in the same offseason: Jon Gruden (Oakland/Las Vegas Raiders), Matt Nagy (Chicago Bears), Matt Patricia (Detroit Lions), Frank Reich (Indianapolis Colts), Pat Shurmur (New York Giants) and Steve Wilks (Arizona Cardinals). Of those seven coaches, Vrabel had the most wins from 2018 to 2021.

Terrell

Clinton

O'Hara . . . . . . . . . . Quarterbacks

Most total wins in Titans/Oilers history in a head coach’s first four seasons, including playoffs*:

Craig

Ryan

Crow . . . . . . . . . . Outside Linebackers

Rob

Scott

2.

Jerry Glanville 1986-1989* 3 35 33 0 .515

Playoff Berths

4.

A native of Akron, Ohio, Vrabel attended Walsh Jesuit High School. He and his wife, Jennifer, have two sons: Tyler and Carter.

8. Mike Mularkey 2016-2017* 1 19 15 0 .559

Mike

Dews Running Backs

Frazier . . . . . . . . . . Offensive Skill Assistant

Steckel Tight Ends

As the Texans linebackers coach from 2014-16, Vrabel developed several players into top-notch performers, including Jadeveon Clowney (Pro Bowl, 2016), Whitney Mercilus, Benardrick McKinney (secondteam All-Pro, 2016) and Brian Cushing. The 2015 Texans defense had the top third-down defense in the NFL (28.5 percent), which was the lowest percentage in franchise history and the lowest by any NFL team since the 2003 Titans (27.7 percent). The 2015 defense also set a franchise mark for

Streicher . . . . . . . Football Development Coordinator

Jason

Mike

Butler . . . . . . . . . Offensive Assistant

5.

Tony

Downing Offensive Coordinator

Schwartz Senior Defensive Assistant

Kuhr Inside Linebackers Assistant

Note: Munchak, Mularkey, Ivy and Rymkus coached fewer than four seasons

Of all Titans/Oilers head coaches with at least four seasons with the franchise, Vrabel’s career winning percentage ranks the highest.

6. Wally Lemm 1966-1969* 2 25 30 3 .457

Bowen Defensive Coordinator

Vrabel, Reich and Nagy each led their respective teams to the playoffs twice in their first three seasons, while Vrabel was the only one from the group to go to the playoffs a third time in that span.

Tim

Mike Vrabel 2018-22 43 28 0 .606

Lou Rymkus 1960-61 12 7 1 .625

O.A. “Bum” Phillips 1975-80 59 38 0 .608

A native of Pickerington, Ohio, Bowen was a three-year letter winner at Georgia Tech as an outside linebacker.

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Mike Mularkey 2015-17 21 22 0 .488

¾ Downing was promoted to offensive coordinator in 2021 after initially joining the Titans in 2019 as tight ends coach. He came to the team with 18 years of previous NFL coaching experience.

¾ In 2021, the Titans ranked second in rushing defense (84.6), 12th in total defense (329.8 per game), sixth on third down (36.7 percent) and sixth in scoring defense (20.8 points per game). They tied for ninth in sacks (43), while outside linebacker Harold Landry III (12 sacks) and defensive linemen Denico Autry (nine sacks) and Jeffery Simmons (8.5) made the Titans the only NFL team in 2021 to have three players with at least eight sacks. Landry, Simmons and safety Kevin Byard were all named to the Pro Bowl, with Byard adding firstteam All-Pro honors.

Ken Whisenhunt 2014-15 3 20 0 .130

¾

¾

Chuck Studley 1983 2 8 0 .200

Bill Peterson 1972-73 1 18 0 .052

Hugh Campbell 1984-85 8 22 0 .266

Downing spent three seasons (2015-17) with the Oakland Raiders, first as quarterbacks coach and then one season as offensive coordinator. In each of his three seasons with the Raiders, quarterback Derek Carr earned a Pro Bowl invitation.

TITANS ASSISTANT COACHES

Sammy Baugh 1964 4 10 0 .285

In 2021, the Titans offense ranked fifth in rushing (141.4 yards per game) despite missing Derrick Henry for nine games due to injury. The offense also ranked eighth on third down (43.6 percent), fifth in the red zone (63.9 percent) and first in goal-to-go efficiency (87.5 percent). Injuries led to the Titans tying for the league high with 39 total players used on offense. They had 25 offensive players with at least one scrimmage touch, which tied for the league's third-highest total.

Among their peers in 2020, the Titans tight end corps ranked second in total touchdowns (14), third in touchdown receptions (12), sixth in receptions (94) and ninth in receiving yards (967). Jonnu Smith tied the franchise single-season record for tight ends with eight touchdown catches, which also tied for third place in the NFL in 2020.

Sid Gillman 1973-74 8 15 0 .347

Mike Vrabel 2018 2019 (Year 2) 2

Titans/Oilers head coaches in the playoffs within their first two full seasons:

Hugh “Bones” Taylor 1965 4 10 0 .285

Click For Complete Online Bio

Wally Lemm 1961, 1966-70 38 40 4 .487

¾

Jeff Fisher 1994-2010 147 126 0 .538

He also served at Kennesaw State as linebackers coach (2013-15), at Ohio State as a defensive graduate assistant (2012). He began his coaching career as an assistant at Georgia Tech (2009-11).

¾

Frank “Pop” Ivy 1962-63 17 12 0 .586

¾ In 2020, he added defensive play-caller to his responsibilities as outside linebackers coach. The Titans defense ranked seventh in the NFL with 23 takeaways, which tied for the most by a Titans defense since 2013 (25). The Titans also tallied 15 interceptions, which ranked seventh in the NFL and the most by the Titans since 2012 (19).

¾

In his first season with the Titans (2019), Downing helped Smith set then-career highs in receptions (35) and yards (439), while Anthony Firkser (15 games) and MyCole Pruitt (10 starts) emerged as steady contributors.

He spent 2018 as the tight ends coach for the Minnesota Vikings, helping Pro Bowl tight end Kyle Rudolph post the second-highest reception (64) and yardage totals (634) of his career.

TITANS/OILERS HEAD COACH HISTORY

In 2019, Titans head coach Mike Vrabel became the franchise’s sixth head coach in franchise annals to have the team in the playoffs within his first two full seasons.

Jack Pardee 1990-94 44 35 0 .556

¾

SHANE BOWEN

In 2016, Bowen was part of a Texans staff that produced the NFL’s number one defense (yards allowed) for the first time in franchise history. In 2017, the defense ranked fifth in third-down defense and set a franchise record for yards per carry by opponents (3.97).

Records include postseason

Ed Biles 1981-83 8 23 0 .258

¾ Bowen was promoted to defensive coordinator in 2021 after spending his first three seasons with the Titans as outside linebackers coach.

Wally Lemm 1966* 1967 (Year 2) 0

TODD DOWNING OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR

Frank “Pop” Ivy 1962 1962 (Year 1) 0 Lou Rymkus 1960 1960 (Year 1) 1

1st Full Season Postseason Berths Playoff Wins in Head Coach as Head Coach in 1st 2 Seasons 1st 2 Seasons

Mike Mularkey 2016* 2017 (Year 2) 1

DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR

Ed Hughes 1971 4 9 1 .321

WON LOST TIED PCT.

* Mularkey served as interim head coach for the final nine games of the 2015 season. Lemm was the head coach for the 1961 AFL Champion Oilers after taking over as head coach for the final nine games of the season. He left the team following the season and returned in 1966.

¾

TITANS TO PLAYOFFS IN YEAR 2 UNDER VRABEL

Jerry Glanville 1985-89 35 35 0 .500

Mike Munchak 2011-13 22 26 0 .458

COACH YEARS

Vrabel was the fourth head coach in Titans/Oilers history to win at least one playoff game in his first two full seasons, joining Mike Mularkey (2017 playoff victory), Jack Pardee (1991) and Lou Rymkus (1960 and 1961). He became the first head coach in the team's history to win multiple playoff games within his first two seasons.

Jack Pardee 1990 1990, 1991 (Years 1 & 2) 1

Downing coached the quarterbacks for one season (2014) in Buffalo and spent five seasons (2009-13) with the Detroit Lions. He originally joined the Lions as an offensive quality control coach and worked his way up to

¾

¾ Bowen joined the Titans in 2018 after spending two seasons (2016-17) as a defensive assistant for the Houston Texans. He arrived with nine years of coaching experience.

From 2019 to 2020, the Titans tight ends' 21 touchdowns tied for the third-highest total in the NFL among tight end groups. Over those two seasons the Titans tight ends also produced the league’s seventh-best receiving yardage total (1,915) and tied for the eighth-best reception total (170).

¾

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾

Originally signed as an undrafted rookie free agent by the Giants in 2005, Blackburn led the team in special teams tackles for six consecutive years from 2005 to 2010. In 2008, he was named a Pro Bowl alternate as a cover specialist, and he earned two Super Bowl rings with the Giants (XLII and XLVI).

¾

¾ Bell joined the Titans in 2018 after spending three seasons with the Houston Texans as assistant strength and conditioning coach. He was a member of back-to-back AFC South Division Championships in his first two campaigns in Houston.

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¾ The 2018 Titans set the NFL kickoff return average record (32.0).

¾ Blackburn joined the Titans in 2022 after six seasons on the Carolina Panthers staff, including four years (2018-21) as special teams coordinator.

¾ Bell was an assistant strength and conditioning coach at Penn State from 2012-13 and the head football strength and conditioning coach at his high school alma mater, DeMatha Catholic, in Hyattsville, Md., from 2011-12.

BRIAN SPORTSBELLPERFORMANCE COORDINATOR

of 30).

¾

Blackburn made his coaching debut in 2016 after serving as a coaching intern with the Panthers during the 2016 offseason.

¾

The Pittsburgh, Pa., native played collegiately at Kent State.

¾ As a player, Blackburn played 10 NFL seasons for the New York Giants (2005-12) and Panthers (2013-14). His career totals included 265 tackles, 4.5 sacks and four interceptions in 132 games (45 starts). As a special teams player, he tallied 123 career tackles, two forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries.

Booker began his coaching career at his alma mater Kent State as a graduate assistant (2003-04) and secondary coach (2005-08).

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾

¾ In 2021, Booker helped Kevin Byard earn firstteam All-Pro and Pro Bowl honors. Byard became the franchise's first player to lead the team in tackles (88) and interceptions (five) in the same season since the team began tracking individual tackle statistics in 1974. Byard's 13 passes defensed led all NFL safeties. Meanwhile, Amani Hooker was a full-time starter for the first time in his career and totaled a career-best 62 tackles.

¾ He spent the 2017 season as the safeties coach/special teams coordinator at Nebraska.

Aukerman was a two-time NAIA All-American at the University of Findlay (Ohio), where he played defensive back and wide receiver from 1995-98.

SCOTT SAFETIESBOOKER

Click For Complete Online Bio

Click For Complete Online Bio

Click For Complete Online Bio

TITANS ASSISTANT COACHES

The Marysville, Ohio, native was a three-year starter at linebacker and defensive end for Akron.

In 2020, Titans punter Brett Kern's 59.5 percent (22 of 37) of punts placed inside the 20 was the best of any player with at least 30 punts in a season since 1991.

Previously, Booker spent seven years (2010-16) at Notre Dame, as a tight ends/special teams coordinator (2012-16) and offensive intern (2010-11). He coached the secondary at Western Kentucky for one season (2009).

¾ He spent four seasons (2013-16) with the San Diego Chargers working with their special teams, first as an assistant special teams coach (201315) and then as the special teams coordinator (2016).

¾

¾ Graham Gano earned his first Pro Bowl selection in 2017 after setting a franchise record with an NFL-leading 96.7 field goal percentage (29

CHASE ASSISTANTBLACKBURNSPECIAL TEAMS

¾

In 2019, the Titans finished fourth in the NFL in net punting and tied for the NFL lead with four total blocked kicks. Brett Kern was named to his third consecutive Pro Bowl.

In 2021, kicker Randy Bullock finished ninth in franchise history with 120 points in a single season, while Brett Kern had the league's thirdbest ratio of punts inside the 20 to touchbacks (18:1). Chester Rogers ranked fifth in the NFL with a 9.8-yard punt return average, the best by a Titans player since 2012 (13.2 by Darius Reynaud). The kickoff coverage unit ranked eighth in the league (20.3yard average).

¾ Downing began his NFL coaching career with the Minnesota Vikings (2001-05) and then the St. Louis Rams (2006-08).

¾

In the college ranks, he coached at Findlay (2000), Miami (Ohio) (200102, 2005-08), Western Kentucky (2003-04), and Kent State (2009).

¾ The Minneapolis, Minn., native attended the University of Minnesota.

¾

¾ Aukerman was promoted to special teams coach in 2018. He joined the Titans in January 2017 as the assistant special teams coach.

¾

KYLAN OFFENSIVEBUTLERASSISTANT

¾

Booker joined the Titans in 2018 after spending 15 seasons in the college coaching ranks. After two seasons as a defensive assistant, he was promoted to safeties coach in 2020.

¾

¾ In 2020, Carolina posted the NFL’s seventh-ranked kickoff return average (25.3) and placed seventh in kickoff return average allowed (20.6).

¾ He spent two years at Glenville (W.Va.) State College, first as running backs coach in 2017 and then as offensive coordinator/wide receivers coach in 2018.

¾ A native of Antioch, Calif., he appeared in 35 career games as a running back and on special teams for the Arizona Wildcats.

¾ Under Blackburn in 2021, the Panthers ranked eighth in punt return coverage (7.4 yards per opponent return) and eighth in field goal percentage (89.7).

quarterbacks coach for the final three seasons.

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ Panthers rookie kicker Joey Slye set a franchise record in 2019 by connecting on an NFL-best eight field goals of 50 yards or longer In 2018, the Panthers ranked sixth in the league in field goal accuracy (19-of-21) and fifth in the NFL in average starting field position (27.1).

¾

CRAIG SPECIALAUKERMANTEAMS

Butler began his coaching career in 2014 at his alma mater, the University of Arizona, and spent three total seasons as an offensive graduate assistant.

¾ In 2020, the Titans defense ranked seventh in the NFL with 15 interceptions, which was most by the Titans since 2012. Safety Kevin Byard led the defense and set a career high with 111 tackles.

¾ Before arriving in Tennessee, he spent two seasons coaching wide receivers at Morehead State University. He also served as co-special teams coordinator in 2019 and was promoted to associate head coach for 2020-21. After the fall 2020 season was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Butler helped coach the team in its games during the spring of 2021.

¾ Prior to his arrival in Tennessee, he gained 17 years of coaching experience, including 10 seasons on the college level and seven years in the NFL.

¾

¾

¾ He also spent time in the NFL on the coaching staffs with the Jacksonville Jaguars (2011-12) and Denver Broncos (2010).

Bell was a tight end and fullback at Kent State from 2002-06. In 2007, Bell signed with the Washington Commanders as an undrafted free agent and served on the team’s practice squad.

¾

¾ Butler joined the Titans for 2021 as part of the The NFL Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship after seven years coaching at the collegiate level.

¾ In 2018, the Titans finished with the NFL’s seventh-ranked rushing offense, as Henry ranked second in the AFC with 1,059 rushing yards.

¾ Also had previous stints coaching at Delaware Valley (wide receivers, 2014; wide receivers/quarterbacks, 2015), Dayton (wide receivers, 2016), Northwestern (graduate assistant, 2017) and Western Illinois (wide receivers, 2018).

¾

¾ Dews joined the Titans in 2018 with 20 previous years of coaching in the college ranks.

¾ In 2019, the Titans finished third in the NFL in rushing offense with Henry leading the league in rushing yards (1,540). Rookie Nate Davis started 15 consecutive games (including playoffs) at right guard.

¾ After serving as a defensive assistant for his first two seasons with the Titans, his title was changed to assistant special teams coach in 2020.

TITANS ASSISTANT COACHES

¾ Crow served as a graduate assistant at Ohio State (2017) and worked primarily with linebackers.

Prior to arriving in Tennessee, he spent three seasons with the Atlanta Falcons as running backs coach (2017) and assistant offensive line coach (2015-16). The 2016 Falcons offensive line protected NFL MVP Matt Ryan and paved the way for the NFL’s fifth-best rushing attack while also winning the NFC Championship.

¾

¾ The Downington, Pa., native was a tight end, H-back and fullback at UCLA.

¾ In 2020, the Titans had the NFL’s second-ranked rushing offense (168.1 yards per game). Derrick Henry led the NFL in rushing for the second consecutive season and produced the eighth 2,000-yard rushing season in league history. Henry's 2,027 rushing yards ranked fifth in NFL history.

¾ Crow was promoted to outside linebackers coach in 2021 after initially joining the Titans in 2018. He arrived with seven previous seasons of coaching experience in the college ranks.

¾ In 2021, injuries forced the Titans use seven different starting offensive line combinations, including five different starters at left tackle. However, the offense managed to finish fifth in rushing, averaging 141.4 rushing yards per game. Left guard Rodger Saffold III was named to his first career Pro Bowl.

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¾

KEITH CARTER OFFENSIVE LINE

¾

JASON HOUGHTALING

¾ In 2021, Titans outside linebackers accounted for 19 total sacks, including 12 sacks by Harold Landry III, who led the team, set a career high and ranked 10th in the NFL. Landry was named to his first career Pro Bowl.

¾ In 2021, the Titans were fifth in rushing offense, averaging 141.4 rushing yards per game. Derrick Henry ranked ninth in the NFL with 937 rushing yards despite missing nine games. With Henry out, D'Onta Foreman (566 rushing yards) and Dontrell Hilliard (350) each set career highs in rushing yards.

¾

In the college ranks, Carter has experience as the offensive line/run game coach at San Jose State (2014), tight ends (2009) and offensive line coach (2010-11) at the University of San Diego, offensive line coach at University of the Redlands (2007-08), tight ends coach at Wagner College (2006) and as an undergraduate assistant at UCLA (2005).

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¾ He tallied two seasons as the offensive quality control coach for the Seattle Seahawks (2012-13).

¾ A native of Philadelphia, Pa., he earned Division II All-America honors in 2011 as a wide receiver at Kutztown University.

¾ Houghtaling spent 12 total seasons over three stints at Wagner College (2006-09, 2011-12, 2014-19), including serving as head coach for the Seahawks from 2015 to 2019.

¾

¾

A native of Windsor, N.Y., he attended Lafayette College and played defensive line before injuries ended his career. He graduated from the University of Binghamton.

¾

Click For Complete Online Bio

In 2021, Frazier contributed to an offense that ranked fifth in rushing (141.4 yards per game) eighth on third down (43.6 percent), fifth in the red zone (63.9 percent) and first in goal-to-go efficiency (87.5 percent).

RUNNING BACKS

¾ Crow spent three seasons at Baldwin Wallace University as offensive coordinator/offensive line coach (2015-16) and offensive line coach (2014). He also spent three seasons at Purdue as a graduate assistant working with the offensive line (2012-13) and one season as assistant strength coach (2011).

In 2020, while using three different starting left tackles, the Titans had the NFL’s second-ranked rushing offense (168.1 yards per game), and the unit's 25 sacks allowed was the sixth-best finish in the league. Derrick Henry (2,027 rushing yards) led the NFL in rushing for the second consecutive season and recorded the fifth-highest single-season rushing total in NFL history.

Prior to his arrival in Tennessee, Dews coached running backs at West Virginia in 2017.

¾ In 2021, injuries forced the Titans to use seven different starting offensive line combinations, including five different starters at left tackle. However, the offense managed to finish fifth in rushing, averaging 141.4 rushing yards per game. Left guard Rodger Saffold III was named to his first career Pro Bowl.

A native of Clifton,Va., Dews played tight end at Liberty University, where he was the team’s leading receiver in both of his final two seasons.

¾ Frazier joined the Titans in 2021 after two seasons as wide receivers coach/pass game coordinator at Montana State.

A native of Findlay, Ohio, Crow played linebacker at Bowling Green and earned a scholarship after initially walking on.

¾ Served as the Bill Walsh Minority Intern with the New York Giants (2019), Minnesota Vikings (2018) and Kansas City Chiefs (2017).

¾

TONY DEWS

OFFENSIVE LINE ASSISTANT

¾ He also served as head coach at Hudson Valley Community College in 2010 and as the offensive coordinator at Cornell in 2013.

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RYAN CROW OUTSIDE LINEBACKERS

¾ Carter joined the Titans in 2018 with 13 years of prior coaching experience, including five seasons in the NFL.

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Dews had stints coaching wide receivers at Arizona (2012-16), tight ends at Pittsburgh (2011), wide receivers at Michigan (2008-10), wide receivers at West Virginia (2007), linebackers at UNLV (2006), special teams (2005) and tackles/tight ends (2004) at Central Michigan, defensive line at Holy Cross (2002), offensive line at California (Pa.) and defensive line at Millersville (1998). He was a graduate assistant at West Virginia from 1999-2001.

ERIK OFFENSIVEFRAZIERSKILL ASSISTANT

¾ Houghtaling (pronounced (HO-tail-ing) joined the Titans in 2021. He spent 2020 as offensive line coach with Colgate.

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ In 2019, the Titans finished third in the NFL in rushing offense with Henry leading the league with 1,540 rushing yards.

¾

A Florida native, Midget was a three-year starter at cornerback for Virginia Tech and was a fifth-round selection by the Atlanta Falcons in 2000.

¾ McMillan was defensive line coach at the University of Tennessee at Martin from 2017-19 and also held the titles of defensive run game coordinator and co-special teams coordinator in his time with the Skyhawks. He coached four all-conference performers during his tenure and in 2019 helped UTM lead the conference with 25 sacks.

As a college player, Kelly played 48 games at defensive tackle and served as a team captain for Eastern Illinois.

In 2021, he guided quarterback Davis Mills to the second-best passer rating (88.8) among all rookie quarterbacks.

In 2020, Titans defense ranked seventh in the NFL with 15 interceptions. Cornerback Malcolm Butler's five combined interceptions in the regular season and postseason tied for fourth in the league. Safety Kevin Byard led the defense and set a career high with 111 tackles.

CLINTON McMILLAN

PASSING GAME COORDINATOR

¾ Midget was hired by the Titans in 2020 to coach the Titans secondary. He arrived in Tennessee with 14 years of coaching experience, including six seasons (2014-19) with the Houston Texans.

¾

INSIDE LINEBACKERS ASSISTANT

¾

¾ He spent two seasons at Texas State. In addition to coaching running backs for the Bobcats from 2017-18, he was the co-offensive coordinator in 2017 and the offensive coordinator/assistant head coach in 2018.

DEFENSIVE LINE ASSISTANT

¾

INSIDE LINEBACKERS

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾

¾

¾ King spent seven seasons in the college game with stops at West Texas A&M (2008-09, 2005), Baylor (2006-07) and his alma mater, Texas–El Paso (2002-03), where he previously was a two-year starter on the defensive line.

¾ He coached running backs at Rutgers in 2016.

Kelly also has six years of college coaching experience with stops at Penn State (2012-13), Ball State (2011), Minnesota State–Moorhead (2010) and Illinois Wesleyan (2008-09).

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾

¾

¾ King joined the Titans in 2022 after spending the previous five seasons with the Houston Texans.

In 2019, his first season as offensive coordinator, Kelly’s offense featured a 3,500-yard passer (Watson), a 1,000-yard receiver (DeAndre Hopkins) and a 1,000-yard rusher (Carlos Hyde).

BOBBY KING

¾ McMillan initially joined the Titans in 2021 as part of the NFL's Bill Walsh Coaching Fellowship.

¾

¾ In 2018, linebacker Benardrick McKinney earned Pro Bowl honors after posting 105 stops, seven passes defensed, five tackles for loss, 1.5 sacks, a forced fumble and an interception. The Texans 2018 defense led the league in opponent average rushing yards per carry (3.44) and ranked third in rushing yards allowed (1,323).

¾ King arrived in Tennessee with 12 years of NFL coaching experience, including eight total seasons with the Houston Texans (2017-21, 2011-13). He coached the defensive line in 2021 after leading the inside linebackers from 2017 to 2020.

Click For Complete Online Bio

From 2018-19, he was the Texans secondary coach. In 2018, the Texans finished ninth in the NFL with 15 interceptions and ranked fourth in points allowed (19.8 per game).

¾

¾ In 2021, he primarily worked with the Titans outside linebackers. The group accounted for 19 total sacks, including 12 sacks by Harold Landry III, who led the team, set a career high and ranked 10th in the NFL. Landry was named to his first career Pro Bowl.

McMillan played four years at defensive tackle for the University of Florida, appearing in 48 games and helping the Gators win the 2006 national championship.

¾

¾ Following the 2013 season as a graduate assistant at Old Dominion, he spent two years at James Madison, where he coached running backs in

Before joining the NFL, he spent one season at Penn State coaching safeties (2013) and five seasons (2008-12) at Georgia State, including his final season there as defensive coordinator.

A native of Jacksonville, Fla., he attended the University of Florida.

He began his coaching career at Sanford Seminole High School and Winter Park High School before stints at Weber State (2012-14), Marshall (2014-16) and Ohio Dominican (2017).

¾

He joined the Texans in 2014 as the assistant secondary coach and spent four seasons in that role before being promoted.

2014 and added co-offensive coordinator to his title in 2015.

In 2020, he directed an offense that ranked fourth in passing yards and 13th overall. Quarterback Deshaun Watson led the NFL with a careerbest 4,823 passing yards, while also setting career marks in passing touchdowns (33), passer rating (112.7) and lowest interception total (seven).

TITANS ASSISTANT COACHES

¾

TIM KELLY

¾ Before returning to the Texans in 2017, King spent three seasons (201416) with the San Diego Chargers as assistant linebackers coach. His first stint in Houston was as assistant linebackers coach (2012-13) and defensive assistant (2011). He entered the NFL as defensive quality control/assistant linebackers coach for Dallas in 2010.

¾

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In 2021, the Titans secondary incorporated new regular starters at cornerback (Kristian Fulton and Jackrabbit Jenkins), safety (Amani Hooker) and nickel back (Elijah Molden). The defense tied for 10th place in the NFL with 16 interceptions and tied for fourth place in the NFL with 83 passes defensed. Safety Kevin Byard was a first-team All-Pro and Pro Bowl selection with a team-high five interceptions. Fulton tied for 11th place in the NFL with 14 passes defensed.

In 2020, linebacker Zach Cunningham led the NFL with a career-high 163 tackles on the season.

ZAK KUHR

He interned under Urban Meyer at Ohio State from 2011 to 2012 after a two-year stint as a special teams coordinator at Edward Waters College.

¾

¾

¾

¾ In 2021, the rotation at inside linebacker included Rashaan Evans, Jayon Brown, David Long Jr. and Zach Cunningham. The quartet accounted for 212 total tackles and five interceptions, including Long's career highs of 75 tackles and two interceptions.

¾

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ Kuhr joined the Titans in 2020 after a season as offensive analyst at the University of Texas in 2019.

McMillan was a senior analyst at Florida State from 2020 until joining the Titans in 2021.

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾

His college coaching career started at his alma mater as a graduate assistant at Virginia Tech (2007) after entering coaching at Lake Worth (Fla.) High School from 2003-06.

¾ Kelly joined the Titans in 2022 after three seasons as the offensive coordinator for the Houston Texans.

Kelly arrived in Tennessee with eight years of NFL experience, all with the Texans. He initially joined the Texans as an offensive quality control coach in 2014 and then was named offensive quality control/assistant offensive line coach in 2016. He was promoted to tight ends coach in 2017 and then elevated to offensive coordinator in 2019.

ANTHONY SECONDARYMIDGET

¾

JIM SENIORSCHWARTZDEFENSIVE ASSISTANT

¾ Schwartz rejoined the Titans in 2021 as senior defensive assistant. He previously spent 10 seasons with the Titans from 1999 to 2008 and was the team's defensive coordinator from 2001 to 2008.

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¾ A native of Hempstead, N.Y., Moore had a 12-year NFL career playing for the New York Jets (1990-94) and Arizona Cardinals (1995-2001).

Moore spent three seasons (2015-17) as the wide receivers coach for the Oakland Raiders and one year (2014) with the Buffalo Bills.

PAT QUARTERBACKSO'HARA

In 2018, quarterback Marcus Mariota set a then-franchise record with a 68.9 completion percentage. He also finished with a career-best average of 7.64 yards per attempt and a career-low eight interceptions.

¾

¾ Piraino joined the Titans in 2019 after serving as head strength and conditioning coach for football at Boston College, where he spent six total seasons (2013-18).

TYLER ROUSE

¾ Rouse joined the Titans in 2022 as sports performance assistant after five seasons coaching in the collegiate ranks.

¾

FRANK PIRAINO

Click For Complete Online Bio

TITANS ASSISTANT COACHES

WIDE RECEIVERS

During his one year in Buffalo, he worked with Sammy Watkins, who set franchise records for a rookie with 65 receptions for 982 yards.

In 2020, Brown was selected to the Pro Bowl in his second year after posting 70 receptions for 1,075 yards and 11 touchdowns. Corey Davis set career highs with 984 receiving yards and five touchdowns and tied his career high with 65 catches.

¾

Piraino graduated from the University of Akron and later earned a master’s degree from Michigan State.

In 2019, Tannehill led the NFL in passer rating (117.5—fourth in NFL history) and passing average (9.6). Tannehill set franchise records in both categories in addition to the team's completion percentage benchmark (70.3).

¾ The Baldwinsville, N.Y., native received his bachelor’s degree from Boston College in 2017 and added a master’s in sport administration in 2019.

In 2019, Brown led the 2019 NFL rookie class in receiving yards (1,051), tied for the rookie lead in touchdown receptions (eight), ranked fifth among rookies in receptions (52) and ranked second among all NFL players in receiving average (20.2).

¾

¾ In Philadelphia’s 2017 Super Bowl winning season, he guided the Eagles to the league’s best rushing defense (79.2 yards allowed), the third best third-down defense (32.2 percent) and the fourth best takeaway total (31).

O'Hara spent 10 years coaching in the Arena Football League, including stints as a head coach for the Los Angeles Avengers (2009), Tri-Cities Fever (AF2, 2009), Orlando Predators (2010-11) and New Orleans VooDoo (2012-14).

In 2021, Ryan Tannehill placed third on the franchise's single-season passing charts in attempts (531), completions (357) and completion percentage (67.2), and he ranked fourth with 3,734 passing yards. He became the only quarterback other than Moon (1989–1991) to record multiple seasons with at least 3,500 passing yards with the franchise.

DIRECTOR, SPORTS PERFORMANCE

¾

¾ In 2020, the Eagles defense ranked third in the NFL with 49 sacks, and in 2019, the team led the NFL in forcing three-and-out drives (27.5 percent).

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾

In 2020, Tannehill ranked fifth in the NFL with a 106.5 passer rating, which was second in franchise history behind Tannehill's own 2019 record of 117.5. Tannehill produced top-five numbers on several other franchise single-season lists in 2020, including 40 total touchdowns (first), 3,819 passing yards (third), 33 touchdown passes (tied for second), 65.5 completion percentage (fourth) and 7.9 yards per attempt (tied for fifth).

¾

During his three years in Oakland, he worked with Amari Cooper and Michael Crabtree, who totaled 435 receptions, 5,556 receiving yards and 43 touchdowns in that time.

¾

He served on the strength and conditioning staff at the University of Florida for five years (2005-09), during a stretch when Florida won a pair of national championships (2006 and 2008) under head coach Urban Meyer.

In 2021, Brown posted a team-best 63 receptions, 869 receiving yards and five touchdown catches, becoming the first player in franchise annals to begin his career with at least 50 receptions and five touchdown receptions in three consecutive seasons. Nick Westbrook-Ikhine set career highs with 38 receptions, 476 receiving yards and four touchdown catches, helping to make up for significant time lost in 2021 by the receiving corps due to injuries. Brown, Julio Jones, Marcus Johnson, Cameron Batson and Racey McMath all had at least one stint on injured reserve.

¾

¾ From 2016 to 2020, Schwartz was the defensive coordinator with the Philadelphia Eagles. During his five seasons in Philadelphia, the Eagles ranked third in third-down defense (35.9 percent), sixth in red-zone defense (52.7 percent), third in rushing defense (99.1 yards per game) and seventh in sacks (208).

¾

Piraino joined head coach Steve Addazio at Boston College after spending two seasons (2011-12) as his head strength and conditioning coach at Temple and one year as the head strength and conditioning coach for football at Marshall (2010).

¾ He has 14 years of experience as an NFL defensive coordinator and an additional five years as the head coach of the Detroit Lions (2009-13).

He also spent time at Notre Dame (2004), Michigan State (2003-04) and Walsh Jesuit (Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio) High School (2000-03), as well as an internship with the Cleveland Indians (2000-01).

¾

In 2018, Davis, led the offense in his second season with 65 receptions, 891 receiving yards and four touchdowns, seeing dramatic increases from his rookie campaign.

¾ Moore also spent time coaching at Syracuse (2010-13), Phoenix (Ariz.) Junior College (2009) and Montclair (N.J.) High School (2002-03).

¾ In 2021, Rouse was on the staff at Colorado State University as assistant strength and conditioning coach. He spent the previous four seasons (201720) with the same title at his alma mater, Boston College.

¾

ROB MOORE

¾

¾

¾ O’Hara was an offensive coordinator for the AFL’s Tampa Bay Storm for three seasons (2005, 2007-08).

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Click For Complete Online Bio

¾

SPORTS PERFORMANCE ASSISTANT

¾ In 2021, he helped the Titans finish second in rushing defense (84.6), 12th in total defense (329.8 per game), sixth on third down (36.7 percent) and sixth in scoring defense (20.8 points per game).

¾ Schwartz originally joined the Titans as a defensive assistant (1999) and then linebackers/third-down package (2000) before taking the reins as defensive coordinator in 2001.

¾ He is a native of Baltimore, Md., and a graduate of Georgetown University.

¾ A native of Santa Monica, Calif., O’Hara was a 10th round selection for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 1991 NFL Draft.

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ Moore joined the Titans in 2018 with 16 years of NFL experience as a player and coach.

¾ During a four-year playing career as a running back at Boston College, Rouse appeared in 48 games and rushed for 852 yards and 12 touchdowns on 199 attempts. A three-year starter, he added 22 receptions for 284 yards and a score and also returned 24 punts for 313 yards.

¾ O’Hara joined the Titans in 2018 after spending three seasons (2015-17) with the Houston Texans as an offensive assistant who helped coach quarterbacks. He arrived in Tennessee with 19 previous seasons of coaching experience.

¾

¾ A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Streicher went to James Madison after spending six seasons on the football staff at Ohio State.

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ The 2019 Titans ranked third in the NFL in rushing, first in red zone efficiency and fourth in yards per play.

¾ Steckel joined the Titans in 2013 as an assistant to the head coach and was promoted to offensive assistant the following season. He also served as assistant wide receivers coach in 2017.

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¾ A native of Chicago, Ill., Sullivan played in 48 games for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1992-95.

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ During Williams’ tenure with the Dolphins, Cameron Wake tallied 29 sacks, the eighth-highest total by a player, and Ndamukong Suh posted 15.5 sacks, the eighth-highest number of sacks among defensive tackles.

LUKE TIGHTSTECKELENDS

¾ Sullivan spent four seasons (2009-12) as offensive line coach for the San Diego Chargers. He had two other stints with the Browns as offensive line coach (2007-08) and assistant offensive line coach (2001-04).

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ In 2021, the Titans defensive line accounted for 22 total sacks, including nine sacks by free agent acquisition Denico Autry, who tied his career high. Jeffery Simmons was named to his first career Pro Bowl after setting career highs in several categories, including sacks (8.5), tackles (54), quarterback pressures (58), tackles for loss (12) and passes defensed (six).

¾ In 2020, the Titans offense ranked second overall (396.4 yards per game), second in rushing (168.1) and fourth in scoring (30.7 points per game).

¾ Williams joined the Titans in 2018 with 20 previous years of coaching experience, including six seasons in the NFL.

¾ He joined the Titans in 2014 after one season as offensive line coach for the Cleveland Browns (2013).

¾ He spent three seasons coaching the defensive line with the Miami Dolphins (2015-17).

¾ In 2019, the Titans finished third in the NFL in rushing offense with Henry leading the league in rushing yards (1,540). Rookie Nate Davis started 15 consecutive games (including playoffs) at right guard.

¾ Steckel was promoted to tight ends coach in 2021 following eight previous years with the organization.

¾ Streicher joined the Titans in 2018 following two years (2016-17) as Texas State’s director of football operations. There he managed the dayto-day operations of the program and oversaw recruiting under Bobcats head coach Everett Withers.

¾ In 2020, the Titans had the NFL’s second-ranked rushing offense (168.1 yards per game), and the unit's 25 sacks allowed was the sixth-best finish in the league. Derrick Henry led the league and recorded the fifthhighest single-season rushing total in NFL history with 2,027 rushing yards.

¾ In 2018, Casey was named to the Pro Bowl after leading the defense with seven sacks. The Titans defense ranked eighth overall and third in points allowed.

¾ Williams also spent three seasons coaching the defensive line with the Oakland Raiders (2012-14).

Prior to joining the NFL coaching ranks, Williams spent time at Texas A&M (2010-11), Purdue (2006-09), Akron (2004-05), Youngstown State (2002-03), North Carolina A&T (1999-2001) and Fort Scott Community College (1998).

DEFENSIVE LINE

¾ He joined the Titans after spending four seasons (2009-2012) with the Cleveland Browns as the assistant to the head coach.

JOHN COORDINATORSTREICHEROF FOOTBALL DEVELOPMENT

Click For Complete Online Bio

¾ He spent three seasons as a linebacker at Princeton (2004-06), where he helped lead the Tigers to an Ivy League Championship.

¾ Streicher was promoted to coordinator of football development in 2020 after previously serving the team as assistant to head coach Mike Vrabel.

¾ In 2021, Sullivan completed his eighth season with the team. Injuries forced the Titans to use seven different starting offensive line combinations, including five different starters at left tackle. However, the offense managed to finish fifth in rushing, averaging 141.4 rushing yards per game. Left guard Rodger Saffold III was named to his first career Pro Bowl.

In 2019, Williams helped acclimate Simmons to the NFL as a first-round rookie, while veteran Jurrell Casey earned his fifth consecutive Pro Bowl berth.

He has three seasons of college experience, as offensive line coach for Western Michigan (2005-06) and as a graduate assistant for the University of Miami (Fla.) (2000).

¾ He is the son of former Titans offensive coordinator Les Steckel and attended Brentwood (Tenn.) High School.

¾

A native of Los Angeles, Calif., Williams played collegiately at East Carolina as a nose tackle.

¾

¾ Sullivan joined the Titans in 2014 and has worked with the offensive line since that time.

¾ Sullivan began his coaching career in 1997, spending five seasons coaching in Europe.

¾

TERRELL WILLIAMS

¾ In 2021, Steckel worked with a core group of tight ends that included Geoff Swaim, MyCole Pruitt and Anthony Firkser. Swaim set career highs in starts (16), receptions (31) and touchdowns (three), while Pruitt established career bests in receptions (14), receiving yards (145) and touchdowns (three). Firkser totaled 34 catches for 291 yards and a career-best two touchdown receptions.

¾ From 2014-15, Streicher served on James Madison’s football staff. He was promoted to the director of football operations and player personnel in 2015 after originally joining JMU as special assistant to the head coach.

TITANS ASSISTANT COACHES

MIKE ASSISTANTSULLIVANOFFENSIVE LINE

¾ In 2020, Simmons continued to emerge as one of the NFL's top young talents. Simmons ranked second on the team with 19 quarterback pressures and became the first player in the franchise's "Titans era" (since 1999) to post at least three fumble recoveries, three sacks and five passes defensed in the same season.

The Titans at Nissan Stadium

TICKET INFORMATION

Titans/Oilers all-time regular-season record by home venue:

Tickets for the 2022 season at Nissan Stadium are now on sale. To find out about ticket options, fans can visit TennesseeTitans.com/tickets, email ticketsales@titans.nfl.com or call (615) 565-4200. Information on season ticket memberships, single-game tickets, flex plans, group tickets, suite sales and “Fireball Fast Passes” is available.

Regular Season 186 107-79 .575

NISSAN STADIUM

Postseason 6 2-4 .333 Combined 192 109-83 .568

Stadium Seasons W-L-T Pct. Jeppesen Stadium 1960-1964 25-11-0 .694 Rice Stadium 1965-1967 11-10-0 .524 Astrodome 1968-1996 113-103-2 .523

Record When ... Reg. Season Playoffs

Against own division 43-32 0-1 Against AFC 77-61 2-4 Against NFC 30-18

Overtime games 7-6 1-0 In primetime 14-11 Temperature 80+ 7-6 Temperature <40 9-10 1-2 Titans score 20 points 90-33 2-0 Titans score 30 points 39-6 1-0 Titans allow <20 points 69-13 1-2 Titans allow <10 points 16-0 Titans net 300 yards 79-47 1-3 Opponents net <300 yards 51-11 1-2 Titans commit 0 turnovers 37-11 Titans force 2 turnovers 70-24

Liberty Bowl 1997 6-2-0 .750 Dudley Field (Vanderbilt Stadium) 1998 3-5-0 .375 Nissan Stadium 1999-2022 107-79-0 .575

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October 25-21

January 3-1 2-4 Thursday 5-3 Friday 0-1 Saturday 2-1 2-2 Sunday 92-71 0-2 Monday 7-3 Tuesday 1-0

In 2015, the Titans and Nissan North America announced the formation of a 20-year, exclusive namingrights partnership that rebranded Nashville’s downtown stadium as Nissan Stadium.

Nissan Stadium hosts all Titans home football games, Tennessee State University football games, the Music City Bowl, the CMA Music Festival and numerous other events.

Since the 2016 season, the Titans have been one of the NFL's most successful teams at home. In 2021, they went 7-2 at home. They were one of four teams to win at least seven games at home, along with Green Bay (8-0), Tampa Bay (7-1) and Kansas City (7-2). Highest winning percentage in home games (regular season) since 2016: Team Wins Losses Ties Win Pct 1. Green Bay Packers 37 10 1 0.781 2. Kansas City Chiefs 37 12 0 0.755 3. Pittsburgh Steelers 35 13 1 0.724 4. New England Patriots 35 14 0 0.714 5. Baltimore Ravens 34 15 0 0.694 6. New Orleans Saints 32 16 0 0.667 7. Tennessee Titans 33 17 0 0.660 8. Minnesota Vikings 32 17 0 0.653 9. Seattle Seahawks 31 17 0 0.646 10. Buffalo Bills 31 18 0 0.633 Dallas Cowboys 31 18 0 0.633 NISSAN STADIUM RECORD WHEN ... WINNING AT HOME

September 21-17

Titans season ticket members receive the best seat locations at the best price, flexible interest-free payment plans and playoff ticket priority. Additional benefits include access to exclusive VIP events year-round, special discounts on concession items, pre-sales to Nissan Stadium events and concerts, and a unique season ticket member gift each season.

The procurement of naming rights to Nissan Stadium fit the automotive company’s ‘Fewer, Bigger, Better’ marketing strategy, which has included ongoing sponsorships of NBC’s ‘The Voice,’ the Heisman House college football program and a major advertising presence in this year’s Super Bowl. Nissan is also now the official automotive partner of the Tennessee Titans.Nissan’s ever-growing footprint in Tennessee includes vehicle and powertrain manufacturing facilities in Smyrna and Decherd respectively, along with its North American headquarters in Franklin.

The Nissan Smyrna Plant began operations in 1983 and employs more than 8,400 people. In 2014, the Smyrna plant assembled more than 648,000 vehicles, making it the highest volume automotive assembly plant in North America. Nissan also has a major manufacturing presence in Canton, Miss., along with research and development groups in California, Arizona and Michigan. In total, the company employs more than 22,000 employees in the U.S.

One component of the Titans-Nissan partnership is assisting charitable organizations throughout Middle Tennessee in an array of community outreach programs. A centerpiece of this is the annual “Taste of Titans” charitable event, for which Nissan serves as presenting sponsor. During the course of a 20-year relationship, a total of more than $1 million resulting from these annual events is anticipated to be distributed to local non-profit organizations.NissanStadium is a city-owned venue that has housed the Titans since 1999. The naming rights agreement includes the opportunity for Nissan branding on the exterior of the stadium, as well as stadium signage and other unique displays inside the stadium. LP Building Products held the naming rights to the stadium from 2006 until the Nissan partnership was established in 2015.

Games(1999-present):Record Pct.

November 24-18 December 34-22

All-time division titles by the Oilers/Titans: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1967, 1991, 1993, 2000, 2002, 2008, 2020, 2021

As Oilers (1960-1998) 267 307 6

Since Mike Vrabel became the head coach of the Titans in 2018, the Titans are 4-0 following their bye. They won post-bye games in 2018 at the Dallas Cowboys, in 2019 and 2021 against the Jaguars, and in 2020 against the Buffalo Bills (bye adjusted in schedule due to COVID-19).

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between games

record since the formation of the AFC South in 2002. Best division winning percentage in the AFC South from 2017–2022: Team Wins Losses Ties Win % 1. Tennessee Titans 21 9 0 .700 2. Indianapolis Colts 16 14 1 .532 3. Houston Texans 14 16 1 .468 4. Jacksonville Jaguars 9 21 0 .300 Best final division records for the Titans since the AFC South was formed in 2002: Season Wins Losses Win % 1. 2002 6 0 1.000 2. 2021 5 1 .833 2020 5 1 .833 2017 5 1 .833 3. 2008 4 2 .667 2003 4 2 .667 2006 4 2 .667 2007 4 2 .667 7. 2019 3 3 .500 2018 3 3 .500 2011 3 3 .500 TITANS/OILERS ALL-TIME RECORD WINNING IN THE AFC SOUTH SIX CONSECUTIVE WINNING SEASONS

2.

Team W L T Win%

CONSECUTIVE 11+ WIN SEASONS

3.

1. Tennessee Titans 15 7 0 0.682 New Orleans Saints 12 6 0 0.667

All-time playoff appearances by the Oilers/Titans: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1967, 1969, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2008, 2017, 2019, 2020, 2021

With their 2021 record, plus their 2020 finish of 11-5 and their 9-7 marks every season from 2016 through 2019, the Titans have built the second-longest active streak of winning seasons in the NFL.

Green Bay Packers 3 2019–2021 (four tied)

Home 265 209 2

7.

Season 1 Season 2 Total 2020 (11-5) 2021 (12-5) 2 2002 (11-5) 2003 (12-4) 2 1999 (13-3) 2000 (13-3) 2 1979 (11-5) 1980 (11-5) 2

With a winning record secured during the 2021 regular season, the Titans recorded their sixth season with a winning record in six seasons since Jon Robinson was hired as general manager.

2

Most wins in games decided by three points or less, 2018–2022:

5.

Baltimore Ravens 9 8 0 0.529

Super Bowl (XXXIV) 0 1 0

Las Vegas Raiders 12 6 0 0.667 Cleveland Browns 11 6 1 0.639 Seattle Seahawks 10 9 0 0.526

5.

Additionally, the Titans are 4-0 since 2018 on long rest following Thursday night games. That includes wins in 2018 at the New York Giants, in 2019 at the Atlanta Falcons, in 2020 at the Baltimore Ravens and in 2021 against the Miami Dolphins.

In

With a 12-5 record in 2021, the Titans secured the franchise’s fourth all-time set of back-to-back 11-win seasons. As the Oilers, the team went 11-5 in 1979 and in 1980. During the “Titans era” (since 1999), the team was 13-3 in both 1999 and 2000, and then 11-5 and 12-4 in 2002 and 2003, respectively.

Postseason: 17 23 0

In 2021, the Titans were 6-1 in games decided by three points or less. Their six such wins led the NFL and were the most in franchise history. Twenty-seven teams in 2021 had no more than three wins of three points or less.

W L T

As Oilers (1960-1998) 9 13 0

Houston Texans 10 8 1 0.553

1.

Since the beginning of the 2018 season, no NFL team has more wins than the Titans in games decided by three points or less.

8. Green Bay Packers 9 5 1 0.633

In the "Titans era" (1999–present), the team never before had as many as three consecutive winning campaigns.

Consecutive 11-win seasons, franchise history (regular season):

Team Games Wins Losses Ties Win Pct 1. Tennessee Titans 8 8 0 0 1.000 Pittsburgh Steelers 8 8 0 0 1.000 3. Atlanta Falcons 9 7 2 0 .778 Dallas Cowboys 9 7 2 0 .778 5. Indianapolis Colts 8 6 2 0 .750 Kansas City Chiefs 8 6 2 0 .750 Baltimore Ravens 8 6 2 0 .750 8. New Orleans Saints 7 5 2 0 .714 9. Buffalo Bills 6 4 2 0 .667 10. (three tied) .625 Note: Does not include season openers; nine-day rest period does not include game days TITANS ON LONG REST

WINNING CLOSE GAMES

As Titans (1999-present) 8 10 0

Since the start of the 2017 season, the Titans have built the best division record in the AFC South. six divisional games in 2021, the Titans finished with a 5-1 record for the second consecutive season. The mark tied (2017) for their second-best divisional

Road 198 272 4

Home 6 7 0 Road 11 15 0

Los Angeles Rams 9 6 0 0.600

The Titans are one of two undefeated NFL teams since 2018 in regular season games with nine or more rest days in between games. The Pittsburgh Steelers are the other such club. from 2018 to 2021 nine days (regular season):

with

As Titans (1999-present) 196 174 0

Most current consecutive winning seasons (through 2021):

Los Angeles Chargers 10 11 0 0.476

4.

Regular Season: 463 481 6

The Titans won their first three games of 2020 by a total of six points—a 16-14 victory at Denver followed by a 33-30 win against the Jaguars and a 31-30 win at Minnesota. They closed the season with a 41-38 win at Houston.

Pittsburgh Steelers 9 6 2 0.588

Best winning percentage

or more rest

Team Total Seasons Kansas City Chiefs 9 2013–2021 Tennessee Titans 6 2016–2021 Los Angeles Rams 5 2017–2021 New Orleans Saints 5 2017–2021 Buffalo Bills 3 2019–2021

2.

2. Kansas City Chiefs 5

SEVEN-POINT COMEBACKS UNDER VRABEL

2.

Team Season G W L T Win%

Team Players

1. Tennessee Titans 7

Nov. 22, 2020 at Baltimore 13-21 30-24 (OT)

2.

Additionally, the Titans were among the 2021 leaders in total number of starters used.

Most victories since 2018 after trailing by seven or more points in the fourth quarter:

2. Houston Texans 2021 85 Detroit Lions 2021 85 New Orleans Saints 2021 85

49 Jacksonville

Nov. 10, 2019 Kansas City 20-29 35-32

54 4.

With five such wins in consecutive fashion from Week 6 to Week 10, they became the second team in NFL history to win five straight contests with each of the wins coming at the expense of a participant in the previous year’s postseason. They joined the 2003 Philadelphia Eagles as the only teams to do so.

Los Angeles Chargers 4

Oct. 18, 2021 Buffalo 24-31 34-31

49 New

New Orleans Saints 5

New Orleans Saints 2018 8 7 1 0 .875

6. San Francisco 49ers 2020 84 Miami Dolphins 2019 84 Washington Football Team 2021 82 Carolina Panthers 2021 81 Philadelphia Eagles 2020 81 Jacksonville Jaguars 2020 81

8.

1. Tennessee Titans 2021 91 New York Jets 2021 87

Dallas Cowboys 1992 8 7 1 0 .875 9. (10 tied) .857

During the 2021 regular season, a total of 91 players appeared in at least one game for the Titans. More players participated in at least one game for the Titans than any other team in NFL history outside of the 1987 strike season that included replacement players.

Las Vegas Raiders 3

9.

55 3.

8. Baltimore Ravens 3

Washington Commanders 4

Most players used in an NFL season (does not include 1987 season):

Teams with the most players with at least one start in 2021: Team Starters New Orleans Saints 56 Detroit Lions New York Jets Washington Football Team Houston Texans Chicago Bears Philadelphia Eagles Tennessee Titans Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns Jaguars York Giants

49

Chicago Bears 3

Since Vrabel’s tenure began in 2018, the Titans have had the NFL’s most fourth-quarter comebacks of seven or more points.

Most total players used in 2021:

8.

New Orleans Saints 2002 7 7 0 0 1.000

9.

New England Patriots 2010 8 7 1 0 .875

1. Tennessee Titans 91 New York Jets 87 Detroit Lions 85 Houston Texans 85 New Orleans Saints 85 Washington Football Team 82 Carolina Panthers 81 Jacksonville Jaguars 80 Cleveland Browns 79 San Francisco 49ers 79

MOST PLAYERS/STARTERS IN 2021

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In 2021, the Titans played eight games against teams that made the NFL playoffs in 2020 and went 7-1 in those opportunities. Their record included wins against the Seattle Seahawks, Indianapolis Colts (twice), Buffalo Bills, Kansas City Chiefs, Los Angeles Rams and the New Orleans Saints, with their lone loss at the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Dec. 2, 2018 N.Y. Jets 13-22 26-22

49

Indianapolis Colts 2000 8 7 1 0 .875

Sept. 30, 2018 Philadelphia 10-17 26-23 (OT)

Since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger, the Titans were one of eight teams to go 7-1 (.875) or better with a minimum of seven games against the previous season's playoff participants.

New York Jets 3

Sept. 19, 2021 at Seattle 16-30 33-30 (OT)

6.

5. Pittsburgh Steelers 4

The Titans' 34-31 come-from-behind victory over the Buffalo Bills on Oct. 18, 2021 marked the seventh time Mike Vrabel’s Titans won after trailing by at least seven points in the fourth quarter, and it was the second such occasion in 2021. They were down 30-16 at Seattle (Sept. 19) before rallying to win 33-30 in overtime.

Team Season Players

50

2.

Oct. 18, 2020 Houston 29-36 42-36 (OT)

53 5.

1.

51 6.

50 8.

Team Wins

4. Tennessee Titans 2021 8 7 1 0 .875

Minnesota Vikings 3

A league-high total of 43 players were used on defense by the Titans in 2021. Their 39 players on offense tied the Jacksonville Jaguars for the most in the league, while their 78 special teams players tied the New York Jets for the highest total.

9.

7.

Highest winning percentage in a season since 1970 against the previous year’s playoff participants (minimum seven games):

Titans wins from 2018 to 2022 after trailing by seven or more points in the fourth quarter:

DEFEATING LAST YEAR'S PLAYOFF TEAMS

Green Bay Packers 5

Largest 4th Date Opponent Quarter Deficit Final Score

New England Patriots 2003 7 7 0 0 1.000

3.

1. New England Patriots 2007 8 8 0 0 1.000

49

The 2020 Titans were a league-best 94.1 percent (32 of 34) in goal-togo situations. Their percentage was the best in the NFL since the beginning of 2000.

2022: Team

6.

2.

23 5. Indianapolis Colts 22 San Francisco 49ers 22 7. Buffalo Bills 20 Cleveland Browns 20 9. (four tied) 18

4.

127.6 10. San

3.

25.88

4. Green

50.9% 2. Buffalo Bills 48.9% 3. Green

3. Kansas

1.

9.

23 Arizona

7. Indianapolis

2021: Team

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4.

1. Philadelphia

Buccaneers 45.1% 5. Los

145.8 5. Indianapolis Colts 138.6 6. New

In 2020, the Titans tied for second place in total offense (396.4 yards per game), which was the franchise's highest ranking since finishing second in 1991. They also ranked second in rushing offense (168.1) and fourth in points per game (30.7).

The Titans also ranked fifth in the NFL from 2020 to 2021 on third down, converting 187 of their 418 attempts (44.7 percent).

25 2. New

5.

Packers 46.0% 4. Tampa

2.

Chargers 44.7% 6. Tennessee Titans 44.3% 7. Los Angeles Rams 43.7% 8. Baltimore Ravens 42.2% New England Patriots 42.2% 10. Philadelphia Eagles 42.1% Arizona Cardinals 42.1%

3.

8.

10.

Most rushing touchdowns in Rush TD Eagles England Patriots Titans Cardinals

In 2021, the Titans finished with the fifth-ranked rushing offense (141.4 yards per game). They also placed 15th in scoring offense (24.65 points per game) and eighth in third-down percentage (43.6).

2.

Highest third-down percentage to Third Down Pct. City Chiefs Bay Bay Angeles

Team Time of Possession

Best goal-to-go touchdown efficiency from 2019–2022:

49ers 124.4

5.

TIME OF POSSESSION LEADERS IN 2021

9. Arizona

TOP OFFENSES SINCE 2020

NFL's top rushing offenses in 2021:

NFL’s top-ranked rushing offenses from 2020 to 2022 (yards per Teamgame):

1. Tampa

5.

Team Poss TD Pct

Rush Yards Per Game Baltimore Ravens 165.1 Tennessee Titans 152.6 Cleveland Browns Eagles England Orleans Vikings Francisco

4.

3.

24 3. Tennessee

Saints 129.6 9. Minnesota

Since 2019, the Titans have been one of the most efficient NFL teams in scoring in goal-to-go situations. In 2021, they led the NFL in goal-to-go efficiency for the third consecutive season, scoring touchdowns on 28 of their 32 goal-to-go possessions (87.5 percent).

27.12 8. Los

9.

Most points per game from 2020 to 2022:

10.

9.

1. Tennessee Titans 32:35 Green Bay Packers 32:29 Baltimore Ravens 32:05 Indianapolis Colts 31:52 Buffalo Bills 31:32 Cleveland Browns 31:13 Kansas City Chiefs 31:08 Cincinnati Bengals 31:05 Arizona Cardinals 30:55 Washington Commanders 30:51

1.

3.

5. Tennessee

Team Rush Yards Per Game Philadelphia Eagles 2,715 159.7 Indianapolis Colts 2,540 149.4 Baltimore Ravens 2,479 145.8 Cleveland Browns 2,471 145.4 Tennessee Titans 2,404 141.4 Buffalo Bills 2,209 129.9 San Francisco 49ers 2,166 127.4 New England Patriots 2,151 126.5 Dallas Cowboys 2,119 124.6 Arizona Cardinals 2,076 122.1

1. Tennessee Titans 92 83 90.20% Seattle Seahawks 82 67 81.70% Green Bay Packers 107 85 79.40% Tampa Bay Buccaneers 122 95 77.90% Los Angeles Rams 105 81 77.10% Philadelphia Eagles 105 81 77.10% Kansas City Chiefs 106 81 76.40% New York Giants 59 45 76.30% Cleveland Browns 90 68 75.60% New Orleans Saints 93 70 75.30%

2. Buffalo

1. Kansas

7.

6.

Patriots 134.6 7. Arizona Cardinals 129.9 8. New

During the 2021 regular season, the Titans ranked fifth in the NFL with 2,404 rushing yards, an average of 141.4 yards per game. They also tied for third place in the NFL with 23 total rushing touchdowns.

25.88 Seattle

GOAL-TO-GO IN 2021

Highest average time of possession in 2021:

7.

8.

RUSHING OFFENSE IN 2021

Team Points Per Game Bay Buccaneers 30.06 Bills 29.85 City Chiefs 29.32 Bay Packers 28.41 Titans 27.35 Cowboys 27.29 Colts Angeles Chargers 25.94 Cardinals Seahawks

7.

Since the beginning of the 2020 campaign, the Titans have been one of the NFL's most productive offenses.

8.

148.9 4. Philadelphia

2.

10.

6. Dallas

from 2020

The Titans have been one of the NFL's best ball-control teams in the NFL since 2021. Their average of 32 minutes and 35 seconds of possession ranks first in the NFL during that time.

Top red zone offenses (touchdown percentage) in 2021: RZ Drives TD Pct. San Francisco 49ers 54 36 66.7% Tampa Bay Buccaneers 68 45 66.2% Seattle Seahawks 31 64.6% Los Angeles Chargers 48 64.0% Tennessee Titans 39 63.9% Dallas Cowboys 41 63.1% Buffalo Bills 48 62.3% Philadelphia Eagles 61 38 62.3% Minnesota Vikings 33 62.3% SINCE 2019 2019

6.

3.

The 2019 Titans finished the season with 5,805 total yards on 949 total plays. Their average of 6.12 yards per play was the fourth-best in the NFL. They finished fourth again in 2020, averaging 6.15 yards per play (1,031 plays, 6,343 yards).

65

3. San

8. Tampa

6.

3.

10.

61

9.

Most total touchdowns from 2019 to 2022:

8. Baltimore Ravens

2021 RUSHING DEFENSE THIRD-DOWN DEFENSE SINCE 2021

7.

2.

Team Opp Rush Yards Per Game Baltimore Ravens 1,436 84.5 Tennessee Titans 1,438 84.6 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1,573 92.5 New Orleans Saints 1,589 93.5 Cincinnati Bengals 1,742 102.5 Los Angeles Rams 1,754 103.2 San Francisco 49ers 1,760 103.5 Washington Football Team 1,775 104.4 Philadelphia Eagles 1,834 107.9 Indianapolis Colts 1,854 109.1

8.

During the past three seasons, the Titans have fielded the NFL’s most efficient offense in the red zone. From 2019 to 2021, they had 121 touchdowns in 170 possessions inside their opponent's 20-yard line.

7.

4.

Touchdowns

4.

5.

9. Tennessee Titans

48

1. Kansas

1.

2.

Top rushing defenses in 2021 (yards per game):

6. Las

7.

2.

In the final five weeks of the season, no team rushed for more than 83 yards against the Titans defense.

5.

6.

7. Green

248

10. Carolina Panthers 235

7. New

In 2021, the Titans offense was fifth in the NFL with touchdowns on 63.9 percent of trips inside the opponent's 20-yard line (39 of 61).

2.

Team RZ Drives Touchdowns TD Pct.

Team

9.

10.

Highest average yards per play from 2019–2022:

5. Minnesota

5.

5. Minnesota

During the 2021 regular season, the Titans placed second in the NFL in rushing defense. Their opponents rushed for an average of 84.6 yards per contest. Only the Baltimore Ravens (84.5) defense allowed fewer yards on theTheground.Titans allowed only one individual 100-yard rusher in 2021 and did not allow one after Jacksonville's James Robinson had 149 rushing yards in Week 5 (Oct. 10).

In 2020, the Titans finished with 62 total touchdowns, which ranked second in the NFL and second all-time for the franchise (66 in 1961).

Over the final month of the 2021 campaign (Weeks 15-18), the Titans ranked third in the NFL by allowing opponents to convert only 28.6 percent on third down (12 of 42). Only the Buffalo Bills (20.8) and Las Vegas Raiders (26.4) fared better in that span.

6. New

During the 2019 campaign alone, they scored touchdowns on 75.6 percent (34 of 45) of their drives inside the opponent’s 20-yard line to lead the league. That was the third-best figure in the NFL since 1991 and the highest since the 2013 Denver Broncos (76.1 percent).

77

2.

Top red zone offenses (touchdown percentage) from 2019–2022:

10. Cleveland Browns 50 31 62.0% TOUCHDOWNS

1. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 177 Kansas City Chiefs 170 Tennessee Titans 167 Green Bay Packers 165 Baltimore Ravens 163 New Orleans Saints 157 Buffalo Bills 156 Dallas Cowboys 155 Seattle Seahawks 153 San Francisco 49ers 152 Minnesota Vikings 152

6.

Team Total Touchdowns

5.

10.

4.

Since the start of the 2019 season, the Titans rank in the top 10 in the NFL in average net yards per offensive play.

RED ZONE SUCCESS SINCE

7.

4.

2. Tampa

8.

10. Seattle Seahawks

4.

1. Tennessee Titans 173 123 71.1% Seattle Seahawks 164 110 67.1% Green Bay Packers 183 122 66.7% Tampa Bay Buccaneers 186 123 66.1% New Orleans Saints 184 119 64.7% Minnesota Vikings 171 110 64.3% Philadelphia Eagles 166 106 63.9% Baltimore Ravens 182 116 63.7% Cleveland Browns 157 100 63.7% San Francisco 49ers 174 107 61.5%

75

The Titans have fielded one of the NFL's best third-down defenses since the start of the 2021 season. They concluded 2021 ranked sixth on third down, allowing opponents to convert on 77 of their 210 chances for a rate of 36.7 percent.

Top third-down defenses from 2021–2022:Opponents Third-Down... Att Conv Pct Buffalo Bills 227 72 31.7% Baltimore Ravens 215 72 33.5% Dallas Cowboys 237 81 34.2% Tennessee Titans 220 79 35.9% Vikings 223 81 36.3% England Patriots 225 83 36.9% Orleans Saints 253 94 37.2% Bay Buccaneers 90 37.3% Steelers 94 37.9% 90 38.3%

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Since the beginning of the 2019 season, the Titans rank near the top of the NFL in total touchdowns scored.

In 2020, their 75.0 percent rate in the red zone (48 of 64) ranked second to the Green Bay Packers (80.0 percent).

Dallas

Team

3.

8.

1.

3.

Team Yards Per Play City Chiefs 6.15 Bay Buccaneers 5.99 Francisco 49ers 5.93 Cowboys 5.93 Vikings 5.89 Vegas Raiders 5.84 Bay Packers 5.83 5.79 5.77 5.76

241

53

3.

YARDS PER PLAY SINCE 2019

1.

9. Pittsburgh

DEFENSE IN THE RED ZONE

Florida - 5 (Derrick Henry, Nicholas Petit-Frere, DeMarcus Walker, Rashad Weaver, Nick Westbrook-Ikhine)

Fewest total penalties from 2018–2022:

Kentucky - 2 (Bud Dupree, Lonnie Johnson Jr.)

OLB Bud Dupree (2015)

LEAST PENALIZED TEAMS FROM 2018–2022

3.

1. New Orleans Saints 50 22 44.0%

Shortest player: DB Ugo Amadi (5-9) K Randy Bullock (5-9)

4.

TITANS ROSTER BREAKDOWN

Ohio State - 2 (Jamarco Jones, Nicholas Petit-Frere)

T Taylor Lewan (2014)

10.

Georgia - 6 (Kevin Byard, Tory Carter, Bud Dupree, Corey Levin, Chig Okonkwo, Malik Willis)

By Position: OL 9 DL 7 RB/FB 6 CB 5 WR 5 S 5 ILB 4 OLB 4 TE 3 Specialists 3 QB 2

2. New England Patriots 50 23 46.0%

By Age (roster as of Sept. 5; age as of season opener on Sept. 11): 20-24 20 25-28 24 29-32 6 33+ 3

8.

First-Round Draft Picks: WR Treylon Burks (2022)

By Draft Round: First Round 6 Second Round 8 Third Round 5 Fourth Round 7 Fifth Round 3 Sixth Round 4 Seventh Round 2 Undrafted 18

Under head coach Mike Vrabel, who was named to his current post in 2018, the Titans have been one of the NFL’s least penalized teams.

Pro Bowl Seasons: S Kevin Byard (2017, 2021)

MOST SACKS SINCE 2021

From 2018-20, the Titans were called for the second-fewest total penalties in the NFL—267 total infractions. Only the New England Patriots (249) fared better.

9.

Top red zone defenses (touchdown percentage), 2021–2022: Opp

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CB Caleb Farley (2021)

In 2018, the Titans were called for only 82 penalties, leading the NFL and setting a team record for the lowest number in a 16-game season (since 1978, excluding strike-shortened 1982 and 1987 seasons). They received no more than four penalties in nine of their 16 games. The previous franchise record for fewest penalties in a 16-game season was 84 by the 1983 Oilers.

Oldest player: LS Morgan Cox (4/26/86)

TE Austin Hooper (2018-19)

California - 5 (Austin Hooper, Kyle Philips, Ryan Stonehouse, Geoff Swaim, Robert Woods)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 59 31 52.5% New York Giants 74 39 52.7%

3. Pittsburgh Steelers 64 32 50.0% Denver Broncos 42 21 50.0% Seattle Seahawks 61 31 50.8% Buffalo Bills 47 24 51.1% Tennessee Titans 61 32 52.5%

Texas A&M - 2 (Randy Bullock, Ryan Tannehill)

9.

The following is a closer breakdown of the roster (as of Sept. 12, 2022 Years): in NFL (including 2021): 13th 1 12th 0 11th 3 10th 1 9th 2 8th 2 7th 3 6th 4 5th 6 4th 10 3rd 6 2nd 5 1st 0 Rookie 10

Universities that produced the most current Titans:

Arkansas - 2 (Treylon Burks, Cody Hollister)

New players in 2022: 21

10. Los Angeles Rams 58 31 53.4% Miami Dolphins 58 31 53.4%

Team Sacks

T Taylor Lewan (2016-18)

QB Ryan Tannehill (2019)

Most sacks from 2021–2022:

Drafted by the Titans: 19

Team Penalties England Patriots Bay Rams

States that produced the most current Titans (high school location): Texas - 6 (Ola Adeniyi, Aaron Brewer, Randy Bullock, Joshua Kalu, Kevin Strong, Ryan Tannehill)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 51 Miami Dolphins 50 San Francisco 49ers 50 Buffalo Bills 49 Tennessee Titans 48 Cleveland Browns 47

6.

1. New

2.

Out of the 53 players on the Titans roster (as of Sept. 12), there are 25 offensive players, 25 defensive players and three specialists. Twenty-one players were added to the roster since the end of the 2021 campaign.

347 2. Green

LS Morgan Cox (2015-16, RB2019-20)Derrick Henry (2019-20)

Michigan - 2 (Hassan Haskins, Taylor Lewan)

6.

Outside linebacker Harold Landry III led the team with 12 sacks, followed by defensive linemen Denico Autry (nine) and Jeffery Simmons (8.5).

Opponents scored touchdowns on 30 of their 58 drives inside the red zone against the Titans in 2021. The Titans defense finished seventh in the NFL with a rate of 51.7 percent of opponent red-zone drives finishing with touchdowns.

1. Pittsburgh Steelers 62 Minnesota Vikings 55 Los Angeles Rams 52 Chicago Bears 51

Tallest player: T Taylor Lewan (6-7)

Alabama - 2 (Da'Shawn Hand, Derrick Henry)

Youngest player: RB Julius Chestnut (10/26/00)

Mississippi State - 2 (Denico Autry, Jeffery Simmons)

7.

The Titans defense emerged as one of the top units in the NFL in sacking opposing quarterbacks in 2021. With 43 sacks, the Titans tied for ninth place in the NFL and tied for third in the AFC.

Landry, Autry and Simmons made the Titans the only NFL team in 2021 to feature three different players with at least eight sacks. The Pittsburgh Steelers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers accomplished the feat in 2020.

Team RZ Drives Touchdowns TD Pct.

Louisiana State - 2 (Tory Carter, Kristian Fulton)

365 4. Cincinnati Bengals 366 5. Indianapolis Colts 376 6. Tennessee Titans 377 7. New York Giants 381 8. Miami Dolphins 383 9. Minnesota Vikings 384 10. Carolina Panthers 389

North Dakota State - 2 (Dillon Radunz, Derrek Tuszka)

DT Jeffery Simmons (2019)

Packers 363 3. Los Angeles

5.

QB Ryan Tannehill (2012)

Originally a first-round selection (eighth overall) by the Miami Dolphins in the 2012 NFL Draft, Tannehill was acquired by the Titans in a trade with

2022 Game Notes:

In his first three seasons in Tennessee, Tannehill built a 30-13 record as a starting quarterback and led the team to the postseason three times, becoming the franchise's first starting quarterback since Warren Moon (1987 to 1993) to direct his team to the playoffs in at least three consecutive seasons. After appearing in the AFC championship game as a wild card team in 2019, the Titans won consecutive division titles in 2020 and 2021, a first for the franchise since the Oilers took the first three AFL Eastern Division titles from 1960 to 1962. Tannehill's 30 wins were the most by any starting quarterback in franchise history in the player's first three seasons with the organization, surpassing the 28 by George Blanda from 1960 to 1962.

Tannehill started every game from Week 7 of the 2019 campaign through the end of 2021. His 43 consecutive starts in the regular season tied Steve McNair (2001-03) for the most in franchise history by a starting quarterback. During that time, Tannehill's 102.3 passer rating ranked sixth in the NFL. Also, Tannehill's 13 total game-winning drives in that span ranked second in the NFL behind only Raiders quarterback Derek Carr's 14.

A native of Big Spring, Texas, Tannehill attended Texas A&M, where he earned honorable mention All-America honors as a senior. He played both quarterback and wide receiver, passing for 5,450 yards and 42 touchdowns and adding 112 receptions for 1,596 yards and 10 scores.

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

Tannehill is off to one of the best beginnings to any quarterback’s tenure in franchise history. He has more regular season wins—30—than any other starting signal caller in franchise history over the player’s first three years with the club, surpassing George Blanda, who won 28 regular season starts for the Oilers from 1960 to 1962.

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From 2012 through 2015, Tannehill's passing yardage total—15,460 yards—was the third highest mark in NFL history for a player's first four seasons, behind only Peyton Manning and Dan Marino. Tannehill’s two 4,000-yard passing seasons (2015 and 2014) were the only ones recorded by a Dolphins quarterback other than Marino (six times). The Dolphins reached the playoffs in 2016, breaking an eight-year postseason drought.

Tannehill moved past Marcus Mariota (29 wins) and into a tie with Vince Young (30) for fifth place on the team’s all-time wins list for starting quarterbacks. He trails only Steve McNair (76), Warren Moon (70), Dan Pastorini (53) and Blanda (44).

Tannehill was named AFC Offensive Player of the Month for December 2019 and was named to his first career Pro Bowl. He also won the Associated Press Comeback Player of the Year Award.

Also in 2020, Tannehill and Buffalo's Josh Allen became the fourth and fifth quarterbacks in NFL history with at least 3,800 passing yards, 33 passing touchdowns and seven rushing touchdowns in the same season. Only Cam Newton (2015), Daunte Culpepper (2000) and Steve Young (1994) had done so previously.

6-4, 207, 11th Year (4th with Titans), Texas A&M Click for complete bio

In 2019, Tannehill set single-season franchise records and led the NFL with a 117.5 passer rating and a passing average of 9.6 yards per attempt. His passer rating was the fourth-highest figure in NFL history among qualifiers. Additionally, he set a club record and placed third in the NFL with a 70.3 completion percentage.

QUARTERBACKSTITANS

Quarterback Ryan Tannehill is in his 11th NFL season and his fourth campaign with the Titans in 2021.

7 Willis, Malik 6-1 219 R Liberty

In leading the Titans to a 12-5 record during the 2021 regular season, Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill improved to 30-13 as a starter since he was traded from the Dolphins to the Titans in 2019. He started every game from Week 7 of his initial season in Tennessee through the 2021 finale.

Most wins by a starting quarterback in his first three regular seasons with the Titans/Oilers franchise: Wins in … Quarterback Years 1-3 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total 1. Ryan Tannehill 2019-2021 7 11 12 30 2. George Blanda 1960-1962 8 9 11 28 3. Marcus Mariota 2015-2017 3 8 9 20 4. Vince Young 2006-2008 8 9 1 18 5. Kenny Stabler 1980-1981 11 5 16 Pete Beathard 1967-1969 7 3 6 16 7. Kerry Collins 2006-2008 0 1 12 13 8. Steve McNair 1995-1997 2 2 8 12 Warren Moon 1984-1986 3 4 5 12 10. Matt Hasselbeck 2011-2012 9 2 11 Chris Chandler 1995-1996 5 6 11 QB WINS, FIRST THREE SEASONS

the Dolphins on March 15, 2019. The Titans sent a 2019 seventh-round pick and a 2020 fourth-round selection to Miami in exchange for Tannehill and a 2019 sixth-rounder.Overhisseven seasons in Miami, he started 88 games, threw for 20,434 yards and 123 touchdowns, and rushed for 1,210 yards and six scores. When he left Miami, he ranked second in franchise history behind Chad Pennington in both career completion percentage (62.8) and career passer rating (87.0). He authored 13 game-winning drives for the Dolphins.

In 2021, he placed third on the franchise's single-season passing charts in attempts (531), completions (357) and completion percentage (67.2), and he ranked fourth with 3,734 passing yards. He became the only quarterback other than Moon (1989–1991) to record multiple seasons with at least 3,500 passing yards with the franchise. Additionally, he rushed for 270 yards, and his seven rushing touchdowns ranked second among NFL signal callers behind Jalen Hurts' 10. Tannehill was the first quarterback in franchise annals with at least seven rushing touchdowns in back-to-back seasons.After receiving a multi-year contract extension during the 2020 offseason, Tannehill responded with 16 starts for the first time since 2015 and produced one of the best seasons of any quarterback in franchise history. A Titans team captain for the first time, his statistics finished in the top five of several of the organization's single-season record lists, including 40 total touchdowns (first), a 106.5 passer rating (second), 3,819 passing yards (third), 33 touchdown passes (tied for second), 65.5 completion percentage (fourth) and 7.9 yards per attempt (tied for fifth). Tannehill became the fourth player in NFL history with a passer rating of at least 106.0 in consecutive seasons, joining Drew Brees (2018-20), Russell Wilson (2018-19) and Aaron Rodgers (2011-12).

#17 • QB RYAN TANNEHILL

17 Tannehill, Ryan 6-4 217 11 Texas A&M

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), completed 20 of 33 passes for 266 yards and two touchdowns for a 106.4 passer rating. His seven-yard touchdown pass to running back Dontrell Hilliard in the first quarter was the 200th touchdown pass of his career, making him the 47th player in NFL history to reach the plateau. He added a 23-yard touchdown pass to Hilliard in the third quarter. By starting his 44th consecutive game with the club, he passed Steve McNair (43 from 2001-03) for the most consecutive starts in Titans/Oilers history by a quarterback. He extended his careerbest streak to 16 consecutive games with at least one passing or rushing touchdown. With his 77th and 78th touchdown passes in a Titans uniform, he took possession of fifth place on the franchise's passing touchdowns list, passing Marcus Mariota (76). Logged his 26th game for the Titans (48th career) with a passer rating of at least 100.0.

Passing Yards - 220 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

Completion Percentage - 79.3 vs. L.A. Chargers (10/20/19)

Tannehill's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Attempts - 58 at N.Y. Jets (11/29/15)

Rushing Yards - 13 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

Passing Yards - 431 at Arizona (9/30/12)

2018 11 11 274 176 64.2 1,979 7.2 17 6.2 9 3.3 75 35 279 92.7 32 145 4.5 20 0 2019 12 10 286 201 70.3 2,742 9.6 22 7.7 6 2.1 91 31 212 117.5 43 185 4.3 25 4 2020 16 16 481 315 65.5 3,819 7.9 33 6.9 7 1.5 75 24 173 106.5 43 266 6.2 45 7 2021 17 17 531 357 67.2 3,734 7.0 21 4.0 14 2.6 57t 47 327 89.6 55 270 4.9 28 7 2022 1 1 33 20 60.6 266 8.06 2 6.1 0 0.0 31 1 0 106.4 2 7 3.5 9 0

Year G S Att Cmp Pct Yds Yd/Att TD TD% Int Int% Lg Sack Lost Rate Att Yds Avg Lg TD

Rushing Touchdowns - 2 (Three times, last at Houston, 1/3/21)

Long Completion - 45t at Baltimore (1/11/20)

Passing Rushing Date/Opp W-L G/S Att Cmp Pct Yds Yd/Att TD TD% Int Int% Lg Sack Lost Rate Att Yds Avg Lg TD 9/11 vs. NYG L QB 33 20 60.6 266 8.06 2 6.1 0 0.0 31 1 0 106.4 2 7 3.5 9 0 9/19 at Buf 9/25 vs. LV 10/2 at Ind 10/9 at Was 10/23 vs. Ind 10/30 at Hou 11/6 at KC

Passing Rushing

Rushing Yards - 56 (Twice, last vs. Indianapolis, 9/26/21) Long Rush - 48 at Pittsburgh (12/8/13)

Long Completion - 91t at Oakland (12/8/19)

Attempts - 31 at Kansas City (1/19/20)

Passer Rating - 155.3 vs. Oakland (9/23/18)

Completion Percentage - 69.2 vs. Baltimore (1/10/21)

Touchdown Passes - 2 (Twice, last at Kansas City, 1/19/20)

Totals 134 132 4,242 2,722 64.2 30,995 7.31 201 4.7 102 2.4 91t 351 2,597 91.8 391 1,938 5.0 48 24

Completions - 35 (Twice, last vs. Houston, 11/21/21)

2014 16 16 590 392 66.4 4,045 6.9 27 4.6 12 2.0 50 46 337 92.8 56 311 5.6 40 1

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11/13 vs. Den 11/17 at GB 11/27 vs. Cin 12/4 at Phi 12/11 vs. Jax 12/18 at LAC 12/24 vs. Hou 12/29 vs. Dal 1/7-1/8 at Jax

Rushing Attempts - 6 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

2012 16 16 484 282 58.3 3,294 6.8 12 2.5 13 2.7 80 35 234 76.1 49 211 4.3 31 2

Tannehill's Career Regular Season Statistics (2012-18 with Miami):

Passer Rating - 108.1 at Kansas City (1/19/20)

Completions - 21 at Kansas City (1/19/20)

2013 16 16 588 355 60.4 3,913 6.7 24 4.1 17 2.9 67 58 399 81.7 40 238 6.0 48 1

Injured Reserve

Long Rush - 9 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

Tannehill's Career Postseason Statistics: Passing Rushing Year G S Att Cmp Pct Yds Yd/Att TD TD% Int Int% Lg Sack Lost Rate Att Yds Avg Lg TD 2016 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2019 3 3 60 36 60.0 369 6.2 5 8.3 1 1.7 45 5 40 98.5 13 35 2.7 9 1 2020 1 1 26 18 69.2 165 6.3 1 3.8 1 3.8 35 1 7 83.0 2 6 3.0 4 0 2021 1 1 24 15 62.5 220 9.2 1 4.2 3 12.5 41 1 7 66.7 3 12 4.0 8 0 Totals 5 5 110 69 62.7 754 6.9 7 6.4 5 4.5 45t 7 54 85.2 18 53 2.9 9 1

Tannehill's Playoff Single-Game Highs:

Touchdown Passes - 4 (Five times, last at Houston, 1/9/22)

2015 16 16 586 363 61.9 4,208 7.2 24 4.1 12 2.0 54 45 420 88.7 32 141 4.4 28 1

Rushing Touchdowns - 1 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

Rushing Attempts - 8 (Twice, last at N.Y. Jets, 9/16/18)

2016 13 13 389 261 67.1 2,995 7.7 19 4.9 12 3.1 74 29 216 93.5 39 164 4.2 18 1 2017 0 0

Tannehill’s 2022 Game-by-Game Statistics:

Highest passer rating since Ryan Tannehill became the Titans starter in Week 7 of 2019 (minimum 14 attempts per team game): Att Cmp Pct Yds TD Int Rating Drew Brees 720 521 72.4 5,513 49 8 112.3 Aaron Rodgers 1,441 976 67.7 11,021 103 12 110.7 Deshaun Watson 838 575 68.6 7,031 47 16 105.0 Kirk Cousins 1,398 943 67.5 10,992 87 23 104.9 Patrick Mahomes 1,539 1,028 66.8 11,866 92 23 103.6 Ryan Tannehill 1,315 880 66.9 10,417 78 26 102.4 Russell Wilson 1,285 847 65.9 9,731 82 24 102.1 Lamar Jackson 994 643 64.7 7,472 70 24 100.7 Matthew Stafford 1,288 853 66.2 10,322 78 33 100.2

8.

Highest percentage of

9.

5.

attempts for first downs by quarterbacks

Player

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3.

Tannehill also ranked third in the NFL from 2019 through 2021 with 18 rushing touchdowns. Only Josh Allen (23) and Kyler Murray (20) had more. rushing from 2019 50 non-kneel-down attempts):

6.

Since Ryan Tannehill’s first start with the Titans, which took place Oct. 20, 2019 against the Los Angeles Chargers, he has been one of the NFL’s passing leaders in several categories. He is in the NFL's top 10 in passer rating in that time period.

1.

Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill’s ability to rush efficiently has reaped benefits since he arrived in Tennessee. From 2019 through 2021, he had 69 first downs on 106 total non-kneel-down rushing attempts, and in that time period, his 65.1 percent conversion rate was the best in the league among signal callers with 50 such attempts.

to 2021 (kneel-downs excluded; minimum

Rush First First Down Quarterback Att Yards TD Down Pct. 1. Ryan Tannehill 106 754 18 69 65.1 2. Justin Herbert 95 557 8 48 50.5 3. Baker Mayfield 94 466 5 45 47.9 4. Patrick Mahomes 130 952 6 61 46.9 Josh Allen 286 1738 23 134 46.9 6. Teddy Bridgewater 84 442 7 38 45.2 7. Carson Wentz 149 758 7 67 45.0 8. Sam Darnold 90 534 9 40 44.4 9. Aaron Rodgers 78 473 7 34 43.6 10. Jalen Hurts 188 1153 13 81 43.1 Most rushing touchdowns by quarterback from 2019 to 2021: Quarterback Rush TD 1. Josh Allen 23 2. Kyler Murray 20 3. Ryan Tannehill 18 4. Cam Newton 17 5. Lamar Jackson 16 6. Taysom Hill 14 7. Jalen Hurts 13 8. Deshaun Watson 10 9. Sam Darnold 9 10. Jacoby Brissett 8 Tom Brady 8 Justin Herbert 8 RUSHING EFFICIENCY AMONG QBs

10. Dak Prescott 1,232 816 66.2 9,457 65 20 100.1 Jimmy Garoppolo 911 622 68.3 7,721 47 25 100.1 A NEW START RYAN TANNEHILL’S STARTING RECORD WHEN ... Regular Season Playoff Record When Tannehill 2022 2019-22 Career Career Starts at quarterback 0-1 30-14 72-60 2-3 Starts vs. division opponents 0-0 13-3 26-22 0-0 Passes for 300 or more yards 0-0 5-3 11-13 0-0 Completes 1 or more TD passes 0-1 26-13 63-44 2-3 Completes 2 or more TD passes 0-1 19-6 46-18 1-1 Completes 3 or more TD passes 0-0 9-2 20-5 0-0 Starts and passes for no INTs 0-1 20-5 45-20 1-1 Completes 70.0% of his passes 0-0 16-1 35-6 0-0 Has a passer rating of 80.0+ 0-1 27-9 64-29 1-1 Has a passer rating of 90.0+ 0-1 26-6 58-14 1-1 Has a passer rating of 100.0+ 0-1 22-4 40-8 1-1 Sacked 0 times 0-0 4-0 7-3 0-0 Rushes for 1 or more TDs 0-0 10-5 12-9 1-0 Rushes for 2 or more TDs 0-0 3-0 3-0 0-0 Rushes and Passes for 1 TD 0-0 8-4 9-5 1-0 Since the time he took over as the starting quarterback for the Titans in Week 7 of the 2019 season, Ryan Tannehill built one of the NFL's best records. From 2019 through 2021, his .698 winning percentage ranked fifth in the NFL among all signal callers with at least 25 starts during that time. Highest winning percentage by starting quarterbacks from 2019 to 2022 (minimum 25 starts): Quarterback Starts W L T Win Pct. 1. Patrick Mahomes 47 38 9 0 .809 2. Aaron Rodgers 49 39 10 0 .796 3. Lamar Jackson 43 32 11 0 .744 4. Tom Brady 50 37 13 0 .740 5. Josh Allen 50 35 15 0 .700 6. Ryan Tannehill 44 30 14 0 .682 7. Jimmy Garoppolo 37 25 12 0 .676 8. Ben Roethlisberger 33 21 12 0 .636 9. Russell Wilson 46 29 17 0 .630 10. Mitchell Trubisky 25 15 10 0 .600 QB WINNING PERCENTAGE SINCE 2019

2.

4.

7.

Ryan Tannehill finished among the 2020 NFL passing leaders in several categories.

2.

2.

2.

3.

5.

Highest passing average in 2020 (yards per attempt):

Highest passer rating in 2020 (qualifiers only):

4.

8.

Highest touchdown-to-interception ratio in 2020:

3.

1.

Single-season touchdown pass leaders, franchise history:

5.

4.

4.

Player Team Passer Rating Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers 121.5 Deshaun Watson Houston Texans 112.4 Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 108.2 Josh Allen Buffalo Bills 107.2 Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 106.5 Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 106.4 Russell Wilson Seattle Seahawks 105.1 Kirk Cousins Minnesota Vikings 105.0 Tom Brady Tampa Bay Buccaneers 102.2 Derek Carr Las Vegas Raiders 101.4

Player Team Passes Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers 48 Russell Wilson Seattle Seahawks 40 Brady Tampa Bay Buccaneers 40 Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 38 Josh Allen Buffalo Bills 37 Kirk Cousins Minnesota Vikings 35 Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 33 Deshaun Watson Houston Texans 33

In 2019, Tannehill’s passer rating of 117.5 ranked first in the NFL and was one of three major single-season passing records he set for the franchise. He also established new benchmarks for completion percentage (70.3) and passing average (9.6).

4.

5.

Single-season completion percentage leaders, franchise history: Season Comp Pct Ryan Tannehill 2019 70.3 Marcus Mariota 2018 68.9 Ryan Tannehill 2021 67.2 Cody Carlson 1992 65.6 Ryan Tannehill 2020 65.5

7.

2.

1.

Single-season passing average leaders (yards per attempt), franchise

5. Ryan

Ryan Tannehill has enjoyed one of the finest three-year statistical runs of any quarterback in Titans/Oilers franchise history. His performances have ranked among the franchise greats in several passing categories, including his 3,734 passing yards in 2021 (fourth in franchise history) and 67.2 completion percentage (third).

4. Ryan

SINGLE-SEASON FRANCHISE RECORDS

Player

3.

7.

2.

Single-season combined passing and rushing touchdown leaders, franchise history: Pass + Rush TD Tannehill 2020 40 George Blanda 1961 36 Warren Moon 1990 35 Tannehill 2021 28 McNair 2003 28 Mariota 2016 28 Blanda 1960 28

Season Pass Yards

Marcus

8.

Player Team TDs per INT Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers 9.60 Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 6.33 Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 4.71

Player Team Yards/Att Deshaun Watson Houston Texans 8.9 Kirk Cousins Minnesota Vikings 8.3 Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers 8.2 Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 8.1 Josh Allen Buffalo Bills 7.9 Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 7.9 Derek Carr Las Vegas Raiders 7.9 Ryan Fitzpatrick Miami Dolphins 7.8 Matthew Stafford Detroit Lions 7.7 Philip Rivers Indianapolis Colts 7.7

2.

Season TD Passes

3.

1.

TD

9.

2.

Warren

Player Season

Warren

10.

Player Season Rating Ryan Tannehill 2019 117.5 Ryan Tannehill 2020 106.5 Steve McNair 2003 100.4 Warren Moon 1990 96.8 Marcus Mariota 2016 95.6

1. Warren Moon 1991 4,690 Warren Moon 1990 4,689 Ryan Tannehill 2020 3,819 Ryan Tannehill 2021 3,734 Warren Moon 1989 3,631

4.

4.

1.

3.

10.

6.

6.

5.

Player

8. Ben Roethlisberger Pittsburgh Steelers 3.30 9. Baker Mayfield Cleveland Browns 3.25 10. Gardner Minshew Jacksonville Jaguars 3.20 2020 NFL PASSING LEADERS

3.

Tom

1. George Blanda 1961 36 Ryan Tannehill 2020 33 Moon 1990 33 George Blanda 1962 27 Marcus Mariota 2016 26

Deshaun Watson Houston Texans 4.71 Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 4.00 Josh Allen Buffalo Bills 3.70 Tom Brady Tampa Bay Buccaneers 3.33

Warren

Single-season passer rating leaders, franchise history:

1.

Most touchdown passes in 2020:

Player

5.

5.

Ben Roethlisberger Pittsburgh Steelers 33 Justin Herbert Los Angeles Chargers 31

1.

2.

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 50 NOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME NOTESPLAYER ROSTERSSTATISTICSMEDIA

4.

Season

3.

9.

6.

7.

3.

Steve

1. Ryan

2.

Single-season passing yardage leaders, franchise history:

1.

Playerhistory: Yards/Att Ryan Tannehill 2019 9.6 George Blanda 1961 9.2 Steve McNair 2003 8.0 Moon 1990 8.0 Tannehill 2020 7.9 Moon 1988 7.9

5.

George

5.

2.

In 2019, Ryan Tannehill set a new standard for veteran quarterbacks in their first year with a new team. Tannehill, who was acquired in a trade after seven years with the Miami Dolphins, had a passer rating of 117.5. No quarterback has ever finished with a passer rating that high in his first season with a new team after playing at least one year with another team.

Case

LEADING VETERAN QBS ON

8. Len

posted a 145.7 passer

2011, Peyton Manning’s 121.1 in 2004 and Nick Foles’ 119.2 in 2013. Meanwhile, his 9.6-yard passing average tied for eighth in NFL annals. NFL all-time single-season passer rating leaders (through 2019): Player Team Season Rating 1. Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers 2011 122.5 2. Peyton Manning Indianapolis Colts 2004 121.1 3. Nick Foles Philadelphia Eagles 2013 119.2 4. Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 2019 117.5 5. Tom Brady New England Patriots 2007 117.2 6. Matt Ryan Atlanta Falcons 2016 117.1 7. Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 2019 116.3 8. Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 2018 115.7 9. Peyton Manning Denver Broncos 2013 115.1 10. Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 2018 113.8 NFL all-time single-season passing average leaders (through 2019): Player Team Season Yds/Att 1. Sid Luckman Chicago Bears 1943 10.9 2. Otto Graham Cleveland Browns 1953 10.6 3. Otto Graham Cleveland Browns 1947 10.2 4. Norm Van Brocklin Los Angeles Rams 1954 10.1 5. Ed Brown Chicago Bears 1956 9.9 Kurt Warner St. Louis Rams 2000 9.9 7. Otto Graham Cleveland Browns 1949 9.8 8. Chris Chandler Atlanta Falcons 1998 9.6 Ryan Fitzpatrick Tampa Bay Buccaneers 2018 9.6 Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 2019 9.6 SINGLE-SEASON NFL LEADERS

2.

Ryan Tannehill established the fourth-highest single-season passer rating in NFL history in 2019. His 117.5 passer rating is surpassed in league annals by only Aaron Rodgers’ 122.5 passer rating in

Player Season New Team Former Team Rating

Jaguars that at the

6. Tyrod

10. Brian

Sept. 23, 2018). On

NEW TEAMS TEAM SINGLE-GAME PASSER RATING

1. Ryan Tannehill 2019 Tennessee Miami 117.5 Brett Favre 2009 Minnesota N.Y. Jets 107.2 Peyton Manning 2012 Denver Indianapolis 105.8 Vinny Testaverde 1998 N.Y. Jets Baltimore 101.6 Kirk Cousins 2018 Minnesota Washington 99.7 Taylor 2015 Buffalo Baltimore 99.4 Bradford 2016 Minnesota Philadelphia 99.3 Dawson 1962 Dallas Texans Cleveland 98.3 Keenum 2017 Minnesota L.A. Rams 98.3 Griese 2004 Tampa Bay Miami 97.5

the

7. Sam

On Dec. 20, 2020, Ryan Tannehill recorded a 145.8 passer rating against the Detroit Lions. It qualified as the seventh best single-game passer rating in franchise history (minimum Tannehill’s second-highest on Sept. 20, 2020, Tannehill rating against Jacksonville time

passer rating in a qualifying game (155.3 vs. Oakland

ranked seventh in team history Highest single-game passer ratings in franchise history (min. 20 Playerattempts): Opp Date Att Cmp Yds TD Int Rtg 1. Chris Chandler at Cin 9/24/95 26 23 352 4 0 158.3 2. Marcus Mariota GB 11/13/16 26 19 295 4 0 149.8 3. Marcus Mariota Jax 10/27/16 22 18 270 2 0 148.1 4. Marcus Mariota at Hou 11/26/18 23 22 303 2 0 147.7 5. Steve McNair Hou 10/12/03 27 18 421 3 0 146.8 6. Warren Moon at Cle 11/18/90 32 24 322 5 0 146.1 7. Ryan Tannehill Det 12/20/20 27 21 273 3 0 145.8 8. Ryan Tannehill Jax 9/20/20 24 18 239 4 0 145.7 9. Warren Moon Buf 11/26/90 22 16 300 2 0 145.1 10. Chris Chandler Den 11/26/95 26 18 280 3 0 143.1

Brett Favre held the distinction until 2019. In 2009, Favre’s 107.2 passer rating with the Minnesota Vikings became the best figure in league annals by a veteran in his first campaign with a new club.

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 51 NOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME NOTESPLAYER ROSTERSSTATISTICSMEDIA TANNEHILL'S CAREER 300-YARD PASSING GAMES Date Opp W/L Att Cmp Pct Yds TD Int Rtg 9/30/12 at Arizona L 41 26 63.4 431 1 2 86.5 12/21/14 Minnesota W 47 35 74.5 396 4 1 118.7 12/8/19 at Oakland W 27 21 77.8 391 3 1 140.4 12/6/20 Cleveland L 45 29 64.4 389 3 1 104.8 9/18/16 at New England L 45 32 71.1 387 2 2 93.5 10/18/20 Houston W 41 30 73.2 366 4 1 122.6 9/20/15 at Jacksonville L 44 30 68.2 359 2 0 108.0 11/29/15 at N.Y. Jets L 58 33 56.9 351 3 1 84.8 1/3/16 New England W 38 25 65.8 350 2 0 112.8 9/19/21 at Seattle W 40 27 67.5 347 0 0 94.5 12/14/14 at New England L 47 29 61.7 346 1 2 73.5 11/3/19 at Carolina L 39 27 69.2 331 1 2 82.3 12/1/13 at N.Y. Jets W 43 28 65.1 331 2 1 94.2 12/27/15 Indianapolis L 38 26 68.4 329 0 1 84.2 11/21/21 Houston L 52 35 67.3 323 1 4 58.4 9/27/20 at Minnesota W 37 23 62.2 321 0 1 78.8 9/25/16 Cleveland W 39 25 64.1 319 3 2 93.9 9/15/13 at Indianapolis W 34 23 67.6 319 1 0 107.4 10/20/19 L.A. Chargers W 29 23 79.3 312 2 1 120.1 12/15/13 New England W 37 25 67.6 312 3 0 120.6 11/24/13 Carolina L 42 28 66.7 310 1 1 86.4 11/8/15 at Buffalo L 35 26 74.3 307 0 0 100.5 10/6/13 Baltimore L 40 21 52.5 307 1 0 86.1 10/29/15 at New England L 44 28 63.6 300 0 2 64.6

3.

Highest passer rating in a veteran’s first season with a new team (through 2019):

5.

4.

20 attempts) and was

Player Team Yards/Att. Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 9.6 Matthew Stafford Detroit Lions 8.6 Jimmy Garoppolo San Francisco 49ers 8.4 Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 8.3 Dak Prescott Dallas Cowboys 8.2

1. Ryan Tannehill

Player Team TD Pct. Lamar Jackson Baltimore Ravens 9.0 Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 7.7 Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 7.1 Matthew Stafford Detroit Lions 6.5 Russell Wilson Seattle Seahawks 6.0 Kirk Cousins Minnesota Vikings 5.9 Jimmy Garoppolo San Francisco 49ers 5.7 Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 5.4 Jameis Winston Tampa Bay Buccaneers 5.3

6 Russell

Most starts by a quarterback with a passer rating of 130.0 or greater, 1960–2019:

2011

Ryan Fitzpatrick Nov. 10–Nov. 24, 2013 3

Tannehill became the organization’s only quarterback other than Steve McNair in 2003 to lead the NFL in passer rating. New Orleans’ Drew Brees finished in second place behind Tannehill with a 116.3 passer rating.

Tennessee Nov. 10–Dec. 8, 2019 4

6 Aaron

2.

3.

4.

Lamar Jackson Baltimore Ravens 66.1

Highest passing average in 2019 (yards per attempt; qualifiers only):

9. Derek Carr Oakland Raiders 100.8

Player Team Dates Games

2019

6 Tony

6 5.

1. Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 74.3

7. Matt Ryan Atlanta Falcons 66.2

Jameis Winston Tampa Bay Buccaneers 8.2 Kirk Cousins Minnesota Vikings 8.1 Russell Wilson Seattle Seahawks 8.0 Derek Carr Oakland Raiders 7.9

8.

6.

9.

2. Marcus Mariota Nov. 13–Nov. 27, 2016 3

Most touchdown passes in a single postseason, franchise history:

Player Season TD Passes Ryan Tannehill 2019 Moon Marcus Mariota Moon Pastorini McNair Blanda

5 Warren

1991 5 3.

2019 NFL PASSING LEADERS

1978 4 6. Steve

1. Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans Wilson Seattle Seahawks Romo Dallas Cowboys Rodgers Green Bay Packers (seven tied)

2. Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 116.3

9.

Russell Wilson Seattle Nov. 22–Dec. 13, 2015 4

2.

5. Russell Wilson Seattle Seahawks 106.3

1.

6. Deshaun Watson Houston Texans 67.3

GAMES WITH A 130 PASSER RATING

Dan Pastorini Nov. 11–Nov. 22, 1979 3

1.

1992 4 Dan

5

During the 2019 playoffs, Ryan Tannehill completed at least one touchdown pass in all three of the team's games and totaled five touchdown passes. Tannehill tied Warren Moon's 1991 franchise record for the most touchdown passes in a single postseason.

1.

Player Dates Games

Warren Moon Oct. 22–Nov. 5, 1989 3

Tannehill joined Russell Wilson (2015) and John Hadl (1973) as the only players in NFL history to register four consecutive games with a minimum of 10 pass attempts and a passer rating of at least 130.

Ryan Tannehill led the NFL in 2019 with a 117.5 passer rating and a 9.6-yard passing average. He also placed third in completion percentage (70.3) and second in touchdown percentage (7.7).

4.

2017 4 Warren

2002 3 George

1. Ryan Tannehill Nov. 10–Dec. 8, 2019 4

Steve McNair Dec. 2–Dec. 16, 2001 3

1. Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 117.5

4. Kirk Cousins Minnesota Vikings 107.4

7. Patrick Mahomes Kansas City Chiefs 105.3

8. Jimmy Garoppolo San Francisco 49ers 102.0

Highest passer rating in 2019 (qualifiers only):

Player Team Comp. Pct.

4. Kirk Cousins Minnesota Vikings 69.1

Jimmy Garoppolo San Francisco 49ers 69.1

7.

Highest touchdown percentage in 2019 (qualifiers only):

In franchise history, no quarterback prior to Tannehill had ever produced four consecutive starts with a passer rating of 130 or better (minimum 10 attempts per game). Marcus Mariota (2016) was the most recent of six Titans/Oilers signal callers to do so for three games before Tannehill.

5.

Most consecutive games in a single season with a 130 passer rating, franchise history (minimum 10 attempts each game):

10. Philip Rivers Los Angeles Chargers 66.0

Drew Brees New Orleans Saints 7.9

8. Russell Wilson Seattle Seahawks 66.1

6. Matthew Stafford Detroit Lions 106.0

Highest completion percentage in 2019 (qualifiers only):

7.

8.

Deshaun Watson Houston Texans 5.3

3. Lamar Jackson Baltimore Ravens 113.3

1960 3

3.

Most consecutive games in a single season with a 130 passer rating, NFL history (through 2019; minimum 10 attempts each game):

5.

George Blanda Dec. 3–Dec. 17, 1961 3

MOST TD PASSES IN

A POSTSEASON

2. Derek Carr Oakland Raiders 70.4

Player Season Team Games

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4. (several tied) 3

John Hadl L.A. Rams Sept. 16–Oct. 7, 1973 4

Tannehill registered a total of six single-game passer ratings of 130 or greater in only 10 starts during the 2019 regular season. He tied Wilson with the most such performances in 2019 and also tied for the most by any NFL starting quarterback in any season since 1960. Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers (2011) and Dallas’ Tony Romo (2014) are the only other quarterbacks to accomplish the feat.

In franchise history, former Oilers quarterback Chris Chandler previously had the most season games with a 130-plus passer rating, with four in 1995.

2019

During the 2019 campaign, Ryan Tannehill produced a streak of four consecutive games with a passer rating greater than 130. The run included a 133.9 passer rating against the Kansas City Chiefs (Nov. 10), a 155.8 against the Jacksonville Jaguars (Nov. 24), a 131.2 at the Indianapolis Colts (Dec. 1) and a 140.4 at the Oakland Raiders (Dec. 8).

Player Team Passer Rating

10. Dak Prescott Dallas Cowboys 99.7

3. Ryan Tannehill Tennessee Titans 70.3

2014

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During the 2019 season, Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill accomplished a statistical feat only reached previously by a pair of Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterbacks.

In his NFL career, quarterback Ryan Tannehill has led 26 game-winning drives in the fourth quarter or overtime, including the regular season and postseason. That includes 13 total games with the Titans from 2019 to 2021.

Ryan Tannehill’s game-winning drives:

Quarterbacks with the most game-winning drives from 2019 to 2021 season):

Players in NFL history (through 2019) with a completion rate of at least 70.0 percent and a passing average of at least 9.0 yards per attempt (qualifiers only):

Ryan Tannehill Tennessee 2019 70.3 9.6

Joe Montana San Francisco 1989 70.2 9.1 Sammy Baugh Washington 1945 70.3 9.2

Largest 4th Score, Start Drive Tannehill’s Drive Drive Drive Final Date/Opp. Qtr Deficit/Tie of Drive Start Stats (Att-Cmp-Yds, TD, Rushing) Totals End Game-Winning Scoring Play Score Dolphins Career: 11/25/12 at Sea 14-21 21-21 1:32 4-3-51, 0 TD, 1 rush for 15 yds 7-65-1:32 0:00 D. Carpenter 43-yard FG 24-21 9/22/13 vs. Atl 20-23 20-23 4:46 12-9-69, 1 TD, 0 rushes 13-75-4:08 0:38 Tannehill 1-yard pass to D. Sims 27-23 12/8/13 at Pit 24-28 24-28 4:31 3-3-25, 1 TD, 0 rushes 4-80-1:38 2:53 Tannehill 12-yard pass to C. Clay 34-28 12/15/13 vs. NE 17-20 17-20 4:07 8-6-66, 1 TD, 0 rushes 9-60-2:52 1:15 Tannehill 14-yard pass to M. Thigpen 24-20 12/1/14 at NYJ 6-13 13-13 5:42 5-4-43, 0 TD, 0 rushes 9-57-3:45 1:57 C. Sturgis 26-yard FG 16-13 11/15/15 at Phi 13-16 13-16 3:09 (3rd Q) 3-3-62, 1 TD, 0 rushes 7-87-3:14 14:55 Tannehill 4-yard pass to J. Landry 20-19 1/3/16 vs. NE 10-10 10-10 9:50 4-4-77, 1 TD, 0 rushes 6-82-2:52 6:58 Tannehill 2-yard pass to J. Cameron 20-10 9/25/16 vs. Cle 24-24 24-24 9:39 (OT) 1-1-32, 0 TD, 0 rushes 3-44-1:13 8:26 J. Ajayi 11-yard run 30-24 10/23/16 vs. Buf 14-17 14-17 7:45 1-1-18, 0 TD, 0 rushes 6-64-3:49 3:56 D. Williams 12-yard run 28-25 11/20/16 at LAR 0-10 7-10 2:11 5-5-53, 1 TD, 0 rushes 7-75-1:35 0:36 Tannehill 9-yard pass to D. Parker 14-10 9/23/18 vs. Oak 14-17 14-17 8:06 0-0-0, 0 TD, 1 rush for 18 yds 2-70-0:48 7:18 A. Wilson end around 52-yard pass to J. Grant 28-20 12/2/18 vs. Buf 14-17 14-17 12:00 3-3-25, 1 TD, 0 rushes 6-75-3:18 8:42 Tannehill 13-yard pass to K. Stllls 21-17 12/9/18 vs. NE 28-33 28-33 0:07 1-1-69, 1 TD, 0 rushes 1-69-0:07 0:00 K. Drake 69-yard pass play by R. Tannehill 34-33

Montana led the San Francisco 49ers to a Super Bowl XXIV title and won the NFL MVP award following a 1989 season in which he completed 70.2 percent of his passes (271 of 386) and averaged 9.1 yards per attempt (3,521Baughyards).directed the Washington Redskins to the NFL Championship game in 1945, while completing 70.3 percent of his passes (128 of 182) and averaging 9.2 yards per attempt (1,669 yards).

BAUGH, MONTANA & TANNEHILL

In the history of the NFL, only two previous qualifying passers have enjoyed a season in which they completed at least 70.0 percent of their passes and averaged at least 9.0 yards per attempt: Sammy Baugh and Joe Montana

Player GW Drives 1. Derek Carr 14 2. Ryan Tannehill 13 3. Ben Roethlisberger 11 4. Tom Brady 9 Matthew Stafford 9 Russell Wilson 9 7. Josh Allen 8 Kirk Cousins 8 Justin Herbert 8 10. (five tied) 7 GAME-WINNING DRIVES FROM 2019–2021

Per the Elias Sports Bureau, a game-winning drive is defined as when a quarterback’s team scores on an offensive possession to put the team ahead (whether tied or from behind) for good in the fourth quarter or overtime.

From the time Ryan Tannehill joined the Titans in 2019 through the end of the 2021 regular season, he directed 13 total game-winning drives. Only Raiders quarterback Derek Carr (14) has more in that time period.

RYAN TANNEHILL’S GAME-WINNING DRIVES

(regular

Per the Elias Sports Bureau, a game-winning drive is defined as when a quarterback’s team scores on an offensive possession to put the team ahead (whether tied or from behind) for good in the fourth quarter or overtime.

Titans Career: 10/20/19 vs. LAC 10-10 10-10 5:20 (3rd Q) 8-6-76, 1 TD, 1 rush for 2 yds 14-85-7:09 13:11 Tannehill 5-yard pass to T. Sharpe 23-20 10/27/19 vs. TB 20-23 20-23 13:49 11-9-85, 1 TD, 0 rushes 12-90-6:54 6:55 Tannehill 8-yard pass to A. Brown 27-23 11/10/19 vs. KC 20-29 27-32 1:21 3-2-43, 1 TD, 1 rush for 18 yds 4-61-0:58 14:37 Tannehill 23-yard pass to A. Humphries 35-32 9/14/20 at Den 13-14 13-14 3:05 7-5-40, 0 TD, 0 rushes 12-83-2:48 0:17 Gostkowski 25-yard FG 16-14 9/20/20 vs. Jax 30-30 30-30 3:29 4-2-10, 0 TD, 0 rushes 8-29-1:53 1:36 Gostkowski 49-yard FG 33-30 9/27/20 at Min 25-30 28-30 3:42 5-4-34, 0 TD, 0 rushes 9-44-1:58 1:44 Gostkowski 55-yard FG 31-30 10/18/20 vs. Hou 29-36 36-36 10:00 (OT) 2-2-55, 0 TD, 0 rushes 6-82-3:30 6:30 Henry 5-yard run 42-36 11/22/20 at Bal 13-21 24-24 7:58 (OT) 3-3-36, 0 TD, 0 rushes 6-73-2:37 5:21 Henry 29-yard run 30-24 1/3/21 at Hou 31-35 38-38 0:18 1-1-52, 0 TD, 0 rushes 3-56-0:18 0:00 Sloman 37-yard FG 41-38 9/19/21 at Sea 16-30 30-30 7:19 (OT) 0-0-0, 0 TD, 0 rushes 5-21-2:34 4:45 Bullock 36-yard FG 33-30 10/18/21 vs. Buf 24-31 27-31 8:01 5-5-58, 0 TD, 0 rushes 8-70-4:56 3:05 Henry 13-yard run 34-31 10/31/21 at Ind 21-24 31-31 5:48 (OT) 1-2-13, 0 TD, 0 rushes 4-5-1:45 4:03 Bullock 44-yard FG 34-31 12/23/21 vs. SF 17-17 17-17 2:16 2-2-10, 0 TD, 2 rushes for 22 yds 8-49-2:16 0:04 Bullock 44-yard FG 20-17

Tannehill's season statistics included a 70.3 completion percentage and an average of 9.6 yards per passing attempt.

In 2021, Tannehill was credited with four game-winning drives: at Seattle (Sept. 19), against Buffalo (Oct. 18), at Indianapolis (Oct. 31) and against San Francisco (Dec. 23).

Player Team Year Comp % Yards/Att

¾ In his final season at Liberty in 2021, Willis led the Flames to an 8-5 record and a bowl win. He completed 207 of 339 passes for 2,857 yards and 27 touchdowns to go along with 197 rushing attempts for 878 yards and 13 touchdowns.

Henry's performance late in the 2019 season was instrumental in the

25 Haskins, Hassan 6-2 228 R Michigan

From his rookie season through 2021, Henry ranked second in the NFL with 6,797 rushing yards, trailing only Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott (7,386). Henry's 65 rushing touchdowns led the league over the same period. In franchise history, Henry finished 2021 ranked fourth in career rushing yards behind Eddie George (10,009), Earl Campbell (8,574) and Chris Johnson (7,965), and his rushing touchdowns were second behind only Campbell (73).

Henry was a first-time team captain in 2020. He started all 16 regular season games for the first time and became the first player since LaDainian Tomlinson (2006-07) to lead the NFL in rushing yards in consecutive years. He was the first player in more than 50 years to lead the league in rushing yards, attempts and rushing touchdowns in consecutive seasons and the fifth player ever to do so. The most recent prior to him was Cleveland’s Leroy Kelly from 1967 to 1968.

6-1, 219, Rookie, Liberty

¾ Willis was named the 2021 Bobby Bowden Trophy winner. The award is presented annually to “a college football player who epitomizes a student-athlete of faith and conducts himself as an exemplary model in the classroom, on the field, on the campus and in the community.”

¾ He is a native of Atlanta, Ga.

Running back Derrick Henry is in his seventh NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans with the 45th overall pick in the second round of the 2016 NFL Draft.

¾ He was the third quarterback drafted in 2022 after the Titans traded up four spots in the third round to select him.

44 Carter, Tory (FB) 6-0 229 2 Louisiana State

RUNNINGTITANSBACKS

¾ Malik Willis was selected by the Titans in the third round (86th overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft.

In 2020, Henry was named the Associated Press NFL Offensive Player of the Year after an historic campaign in which he totaled 378 rushing attempts for 2,027 yards and 17 touchdowns. His rushing yardage total established a new franchise record and led the NFL. As the eighth player in NFL annals to hit the 2,000-yard mark, his 2,027 yards finished fifth on the all-time single-season rushing charts. He was recognized with his second consecutive Pro Bowl, named first-team Associated Press All-Pro, and won the FedEx Ground Player of the Year Award for the second consecutive year.

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Click for complete bio

MORE TITANS QUARTERBACKS

7 - QB MALIK WILLIS

6-3, 247, 7th Year, Alabama

Henry's 17 rushing touchdowns in 2020 set a career high and finished as the second-best total in franchise history behind Campbell’s 19 rushing touchdowns in 1979.

In 2021, Henry's season was affected by a foot injury that caused him to be placed on injured reserve for the final nine games of the regular season. Prior to the injury, he was leading the NFL with 937 rushing yards and 10 rushing touchdowns, numbers that still ranked ninth and tied for sixth, respectively, at the conclusion of the regular season. He returned to start in the team's divisional playoff contest and rushed for 62 yards and one score.Henry was honored in 2021 with his first career nomination for the NFL's Walter Payton Man of the Year Award.

36 Chestnut, Julius 5-11 228 R Sacred Heart

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

22 Henry, Derrick 6-3 247 7 Alabama

23 Cannon, Trenton 5-11 185 5 Virginia State

With 16 rushing touchdowns in 2019, Henry tied for the NFL lead (Aaron Jones). Adding his two receiving touchdowns, his 18 total touchdowns were third in the NFL and tied for second in franchise annals (19 by Campbell in 1979; 18 by Bill Groman in 1961).

In 2019, Henry was named to his first Pro Bowl and added secondteam Associated Press All-Pro honors after leading the NFL in rushing. In 15 games, he totaled 1,540 yards on 303 carries (5.1 avg.), joining Billy Cannon (AFL, 1961), Campbell (1978-80) and Johnson (2009) as the only running backs in franchise history to lead their respective leagues in rushing. At the time, Henry's single-season total ranked fourth in franchise annals behind Johnson's 2009 total (2,006) and Campbell's 1979 (1,697) and 1980 (1,934) performances.

¾ During his two seasons as Liberty’s starting signal caller, he directed the Flames to a 17-6 record in 23 starts, including two bowl victories. During those two seasons he led the FBS with 74 total passing (47) and rushing (27) touchdowns.

¾ Willis spent three total years at Liberty, including a 2019 redshirt campaign, after transferring from Auburn. In four total seasons, he registered 38 games played with 23 starts, completing 388 of 618 passes for 5,186 yards and 48 touchdowns with 18 interceptions. He also rushed for 2,131 yards and 29 touchdowns on 366 career rushing attempts.

¾ As a junior in 2020, he started all 10 games in which he played in his first season as Liberty’s quarterback after sitting out 2019 due to transfer rules. He won each of his first seven career starts and completed 170 of 265 passes for 2,260 yards, 20 touchdowns and six interceptions during the season. He added 141 rushing attempts for 944 yards and 14 touchdowns, leading all FBS quarterbacks in rushing yards and touchdowns.

40 Hilliard, Dontrell 5-11 202 5 Tulane

#22 • RB DERRICK HENRY

Rushing Touchdowns - 1 (Four times, last vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22)

2022 Game Notes:

Henry authored his first career 1,000-yard season in 2018 and the 28th 1,000-yard rushing season in franchise history, totaling 1,059 yards and 12 touchdowns on 215 carries—all then-career highs.

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), led the team with 21 carries for 82 yards, including an 18-yard run in the second quarter.

Long Reception - 75t at Cleveland (9/8/19)

2020 16 16 378 2,027 5.4 94t 17 19 114 6.0 53 0

2021 8 8 219 937 4.3 76t 10 18 154 8.6 16 0

Receiving Touchdowns - 1 (Three times, last at Carolina, 11/3/19)

The Heisman Trophy winner played three seasons (2013–2015) at the University of Alabama, where he set numerous school and SEC records while helping his team win a National Championship in 2015. He played in 39 games and totaled 602 carries for 3,591 yards and 42 rushing touchdowns and added 285 yards on 17 career receptions with three receiving scores. During Alabama’s victory over Clemson in the 2016 College Football Playoff National Championship, he broke Shaun Alexander’s record for most career rushing yards in Alabama history.

As a rookie in 2016, Henry played in 15 games with one start, splitting reps in the backfield with Murray. He carried the ball 110 times for 490 yards and five touchdowns and added 137 yards on 13 receptions. Henry became the third rookie for the franchise in the “Titans era” to score at least five touchdowns in a season, joining Vince Young (seven rushing touchdowns in 2006) and Johnson (nine rushing and one receiving in 2008).

2016 15 2 110 490 4.5 22 5 13 137 10.5 29 0

2018 16 12 215 1,059 4.9 99t 12 15 99 6.6 21 0

2020 1 1 18 40 2.2 8 0 3 11 3.7 7 0 2021 1 1 20 62 3.1 9 1 0 0 0

In his final collegiate season, Henry rushed for an Alabama and Southeastern Conference record 2,219 yards, which led the nation and ranked fifth in FBS history. He recorded 100-yard rushing games 10 times and had four 200-yard games during the season. His 28 rushing touchdowns were a national best and an SEC record, snapping Tim Tebow and Tre Mason’s old mark of 23. In addition to the Heisman, he also won the Doak Walker Award, Walter Camp Award and Maxwell Award, among a multitude of other honors.

team's run to the AFC championship game. Over the final six games of the regular season plus three playoff appearances, Henry registered seven 100-yard games. During a three-game stretch (Dec. 29 at Houston, Jan. 4 at New England and Jan. 11 at Baltimore), he became the first player in NFL history to rush for at least 180 yards in three consecutive regular season and/or postseason games.

Rushing Touchdowns - 4 vs. Jacksonville (12/6/18)

Receptions - 3 (Twice, last vs. Baltimore, 1/10/21)

Receiving Yards - 35 at Kansas City (1/6/18)

Long Rush - 99t vs. Jacksonville (12/6/18)

Henry was named AFC Offensive Player of the Month for December 2018. His 625 rushing yards in the month were the most by any NFL player in any month during the season.

2017 16 2 176 744 4.2 75t 5 11 136 12.4 66t 1

Rushing Yards - 195 at Baltimore (1/11/20) Long Rush - 66 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

2017 2 2 35 184 5.3 35t 1 5 56 11.2 29 0 2019 3 3 83 446 5.4 66 2 5 21 4.2 22 0

Year GP GS Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

Rushing Yards - 250 at Houston (1/3/21)

Long Reception - 29 at Kansas City (1/6/18)

Receiving Touchdowns - (none)

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In 2017, Henry shared time in the Titans backfield with DeMarco Murray. Henry led the team with 744 rushing yards on 176 carries, and he added 11 receptions for 136 yards and a touchdown. His five rushing touchdowns tied for second on the club.

Henry’s Career Postseason Statistics:

Totals 7 7 156 732 4.7 66 4 13 88 6.8 29 0

Year GP GS Att Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

Henry’s Regular Season Single-Game Highs:

Rushing Attempts - 35 at Seattle (9/19/21)

Henry is a native of Yulee, Fla.

2022 1 1 21 82 3.9 18 0 0 0 0 0

2019 15 15 303 1,540 5.1 74t 16 18 206 11.4 75t 2

His 2018 rushing yardage ranked second in the AFC to Joe Mixon’s 1,168 yards, and he finished seventh in the NFL. Henry’s 12 rushing touchdowns tied James Connor for third place in the NFL behind Todd Gurley (17) and Alvin Kamara (14).

Henry’s Career Regular Season Statistics:

Totals 87 56 1,422 6,879 4.8 99t 65 94 846 9.0 75t 3

Receptions - 6 at Seattle (9/19/21)

Receiving Yards - 75 at Cleveland (9/8/19)

Henry’s Playoff Single-Game Highs: Rushing Attempts - 34 at New England (1/4/20)

Since he entered the NFL as a second-round draft pick in 2016, Derrick Henry ranks second in the NFL in rushing yards. He trails only Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott in that time period, despite not being the Titans' regular starter until 2018. NFL rushing yards leaders since 2016: Player Rushing Yards 1. Ezekiel Elliott 7,438 2. Derrick Henry 6,879 3. Melvin Gordon 5,503 4. Todd Gurley 4,976 5. Nick Chubb 4,957 6. Dalvin Cook 4,910 7. Mark Ingram 4,705 8. Joe Mixon 4,646 9. Jordan Howard 4,361 10. Alvin Kamara 4,277 LEADERS SINCE HENRY'S ROOKIE YEAR

Against the Jacksonville Jaguars on Dec. 6, 2018, Henry recorded one of the greatest single games in franchise history in front of a national television audience. He broke Johnson's single-game franchise record (228) with 238 rushing yards, including a 99-yard touchdown run—one of his four touchdowns in the contest. He joined Tony Dorsett as the only two players in NFL history to rush for a 99-yard score.

Rush

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On Oct. 19, 2021, Henry passed George (64 career rushing touchdowns) for the second-highest total of rushing touchdowns in franchise history. Only Campbell (73) has more with the franchise than Henry.

6.

Despite having not played from Week 9 to Week 18 due to injury, Titans running back Derrick Henry ranked ninth in the NFL in rushing in 2021 after taking the league's rushing crown for the 2019 and 2020 seasons. Henry also tied for sixth place in the NFL in 2021 with 10 rushing touchdowns.

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Henry ranks third in franchise history in total touchdowns. George ranks first with 74 (64 rushing, 10 receiving), followed by Campbell with 73 (73 rushing) and then Henry.

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65-plus yards,

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Franchise all-time rushing leaders:

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NFL rushing leaders in 2021:

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FRANCHISE ALL-TIME LEADERS

Rushing Yards Derrick Henry 65 Todd Gurley 57 Ezekiel Elliott 56 Melvin Gordon 53 Alvin Kamara 47 Aaron Jones 41 Latavius Murray 41 Dalvin Cook 39 Mark Ingram 38 Conner

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2021 NFL RUSHING LEADERS

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Player

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Player Seasons Rushing TDs Earl Campbell 1978–1984 73 Derrick Henry 2016–2022 65 Eddie George 1996–2003 64 Chris Johnson 2008–2013 50 Steve McNair 1995–2005 Lorenzo White 1988–1994 29 Mike Rozier 1985–1990 27 LenDale White 2006–2009 24 (three tied) 21

65+ Yard Scrimmage Player Touchdowns 1. Derrick Henry 9 2. Tyreek Hill 7 3. Robbie Anderson 5 4. Saquon Barkley 4 A.J. Brown 4 Ja'Marr Chase 4 Kenyan Drake 4 JuJu Smith-Schuster 4 Marquez Valdes-Scantling 4 10. (several tied) 3

Most total touchdowns in franchise history: Rec Ret Total Player Seasons TDs TDs TDs TDs Eddie George 1996–2003 64 10 0 74 Earl Campbell 1978–1984 73 0 0 73 Derrick Henry 2016–2022 65 3 0 68 Chris Johnson 2008–2013 50 8 0 58 Charlie Hennigan 1960–1966 0 51 0 51 Ken Burrough 1971–1981 1 47 0 48 Ernest Givins 1986–1994 1 46 1 48 of 2017-22:

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Derrick Henry’s career scrimmage touchdowns of 65-plus yards:

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NFL rushing touchdown leaders since 2016:

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Dec. 6, 2018 Jacksonville Rushing 99 Oct. 18, 2020 Houston Rushing 94 Oct. 18, 2021 Buffalo Rushing 76 Sept. 9, 2019 at Cleveland Receiving 75 Dec. 3, 2017 Houston Rushing 75 Nov. 24, 2019 Jacksonville Rushing Oct. 16, 2017 Indianapolis Rushing Nov. 10, 2019 Kansas Rushing Dec. 2017 Jacksonville Receiving

Since Dec. 6, 2018, when Derrick Henry set a then-franchise record with 238 rushing yards in a game against Jacksonville, he has been the NFL's rushing leader. He has over 900 yards more than any other player since that time.

NFL rushing yards leaders since Week 14 of 2018: Rushing Yards Derrick Henry 5,171 Nick Chubb 4,263 Dalvin Cook 4,244 Ezekiel Elliott 3,675 Lamar Jackson 3,286 Joe Mixon 3,265 Josh Jacobs 3,144 Jonathan Taylor 3,141 Aaron Jones 3,122 David Montgomery 2,834

10.

Date Opponent Rush/Rec Yards

Henry leads the NFL in rushing touchdowns since entering the league. 2016 to 2021, his 65 rushing touchdowns were eight more than the next-closest rusher on the list, Todd Gurley (57).

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Most career rushing touchdowns in franchise history:

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Player Seasons Rushing Yards Eddie George 1996–2003 10,009 Earl Campbell 1978–1984 8,574 Chris Johnson 2008–2013 7,965 Derrick Henry 2016–2022 6,879 Lorenzo White 1988–1994 4,079 Hoyle Granger 1966–1970,1972 3,514 Steve McNair (QB) 1995–2005 3,439 Mike Rozier 1985–1990 3,426 Charles Tolar 1960–1966 3,277 Ronnie Coleman 1974–1981 2,769

8. Drew Hill 1985–1991 0 47 0 47 9. Haywood Jeffires 1987–1995 0 47 0 47 10. Derrick Mason 1997–2004 0 37 3 40 Since the beginning of the 2017 campaign, Derrick Henry has scored nine total touchdowns—seven rushing and two receiving—that went for 65 yards or more. He leads the NFL in that time period. Most scrimmage touchdowns

68

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65+ YARD SCRIMMAGE TOUCHDOWNS

RUSHING YARDS SINCE WEEK 14 OF 2018

74

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Rushing Player Team Games Yards Jonathan Taylor Indianapolis Colts 17 1,811 Nick Chubb Cleveland Browns 14 1,259 Joe Mixon Cincinnati Bengals 16 1,205 Najee Harris Pittsburgh Steelers 17 1,200 Dalvin Cook Minnesota Vikings 13 1,159 Antonio Gibson Washington Football Team 16 1,037 Ezekiel Elliott Dallas Cowboys 17 1,002 Elijah Mitchell San Francisco 49ers 11 963 Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans 8 937 Damien Harris New England Patriots 15 929

4.

City

On Sept. 27, 2020, Titans running back Derrick Henry passed Lorenzo White (4,079 career rushing yards) for fourth place on the franchise’s all-time rushing list. Henry trails only Eddie George (10,009), Earl Campbell (8,574) and Chris Johnson (7,965) on the list.

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TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 57 NOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME NOTESPLAYER ROSTERSSTATISTICSMEDIA Since 2017, running back Derrick Henry has accumulated more rushing yards in the fourth quarter than any other NFL running back, including a league-high 523 fourth-quarter rushing yards in 2020. Most fourth-quarter rushing yards from 2017–2022: Player Att Yds Avg TD 1. Derrick Henry 339 1,815 5.4 16 2. Nick Chubb 220 1,367 6.2 11 3. Ezekiel Elliott 285 1,260 4.4 11 4. Kareem Hunt 271 1,214 4.5 12 5. Melvin Gordon 243 1,102 4.5 8 6. Dalvin Cook 224 1,047 4.7 10 7. Todd Gurley 240 1,014 4.2 12 8. Alvin Kamara 239 1,012 4.2 12 9. Joe Mixon 247 1,000 4.1 12 10. Kenyan Drake 202 962 4.8 10 RUSHING IN THE FOURTH QUARTER Since he entered the NFL as a second-round draft pick in 2016, Derrick Henry has had a league-high 11 touchdown runs of at least 50 yards. Chris Johnson (11) and DeMarco Murray (two) are the only other Tennessee players in the “Titans era” (1999–present) with more than one total rushing touchdown of at least 50 yards. Most rushing touchdowns of 50 yards or more from 2016–2022: Player Rushing TDs 1. Derrick Henry 11 2. Saquon Barkley 6 3. Nick Chubb 5 4. Kenyan Drake 4 5. Isaiah Crowell 3 Aaron Jones 3 Christian McCaffrey 3 Miles Sanders 3 Jonathan Taylor 3 10. (several tied) 2 RUSHING TDS OF 50+ YARDS Among active NFL running backs, Derrick Henry ranks among the career leaders in rushing average (min. 750 career rushing attempts). Best career rushing average among all active NFL running backs (minimum 750 career attempts): Player Rushing Average 1. Nick Chubb 5.33 2. Aaron Jones 5.09 3. Derrick Henry 4.84 4. Dalvin Cook 4.73 5. Alvin Kamara 4.64 6. Kareem Hunt 4.60 7. Christian McCaffrey 4.58 8. Mark Ingram 4.49 9. Ezekiel Elliott 4.48 10. Kenyan Drake 4.44 ACTIVE RUSHING AVERAGE LEADERS BY RBS On Jan. 3, 2021, Derrick Henry rushed for 250 yards to break his own franchise single-game record. He now owns five of the top eight singlegame rushing totals in team annals. Most rushing yards in a game, franchise history: Rushing Player Date Opponent Yards 1. Derrick Henry 1/3/21 at Houston 250 2. Derrick Henry 12/6/18 Jacksonville 238 3. Chris Johnson 11/1/09 Jacksonville 228 4. Eddie George 8/31/97 Oakland 216 Billy Cannon 12/10/61 at New York 216 6. Derrick Henry 12/13/20 at Jacksonville 215 7. Derrick Henry 10/18/20 Houston 212 8. Derrick Henry 12/29/19 at Houston 211 9. Earl Campbell 11/16/80 at Chicago 203 Earl Campbell 10/19/80 Tampa Bay 203 SINGLE-GAME FRANCHISE RUSHING HENRY’S CAREER 100-YARD RUSHING GAMES Date Opp W/L No. Yds. Avg. Lg TD 1/3/21 at Houston W 34 250 7.4 52t 2 12/6/18 Jacksonville W 17 238 14.0 99t 4 12/13/20 at Jacksonville W 26 215 8.3 47 2 10/18/20 Houston W 22 212 9.6 94t 2 12/29/19 at Houston W 32 211 6.6 53t 3 1/11/20 at Baltimore* W 30 195 6.5 66 0 11/10/19 Kansas City W 23 188 8.2 68t 2 9/19/21 at Seattle W 35 182 5.2 60t 3 1/4/20 at New England* W 34 182 5.4 29 1 11/29/20 at Indianapolis W 27 178 6.6 31 3 12/16/18 at N.Y. Giants W 33 170 5.2 22 2 11/24/19 Jacksonville W 19 159 8.4 74t 2 10/3/21 at N.Y. Jets L 33 157 4.8 22 1 1/6/18 at Kansas City* W 23 156 6.8 35t 1 12/1/19 at Indianapolis W 26 149 5.7 34 1 12/20/20 Detroit W 24 147 6.1 33 1 10/18/21 Buffalo W 20 143 7.2 76t 3 11/22/20 at Baltimore W 28 133 4.8 29t 1 10/16/17 Indianapolis W 19 131 6.9 72t 1 10/10/21 at Jacksonville W 29 130 4.5 15 3 9/27/20 at Minnesota W 26 119 4.6 16 2 9/14/20 at Denver W 31 116 3.7 13 0 9/26/21 Indianapolis W 28 113 4.0 19 0 11/1/20 at Cincinnati L 18 112 6.2 21 1 12/3/17 Houston W 11 109 9.9 75t 1 11/12/20 Indianapolis L 19 103 5.4 20 0 12/8/19 at Oakland W 18 103 5.7 24 2 9/29/19 at Atlanta W 27 100 3.7 16 0 * Playoffs

3.

Barry Sanders Detroit 1989–1991 3

SINGLE-SEASON FRANCHISE RUSHING

3. Earl Campbell 1980 373 1,934 5.2 55 13

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10 2020 NFL RUSHING LEADERS Derrick Henry was the eighth player in NFL history to reach the 2,000yard rushing mark in a season. His 2,027 yards rank fifth all-time. All-time NFL single-season rushing leaders: Rushing Player Team Season Yards 1. Eric Dickerson Los Angeles Rams 1984 2,105 2. Adrian Peterson Minnesota Vikings 2012 2,097 3. Jamal Lewis Baltimore Ravens 2003 2,066 4. Barry Sanders Detroit Lions 1997 2,053 5. Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans 2020 2,027 6. Terrell Davis Denver Broncos 1998 2,008 7. Chris Johnson Tennessee Titans 2009 2,006 8. O.J. Simpson Buffalo Bills 1973 2,003 THE 2,000-YARD CLUB

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Most rushing touchdowns in a season, franchise history:

12

Derrick Henry recorded the top rushing season in franchise history with 2,027 rushing yards in 2020. He now owns two of the top five rushing seasons in franchise annals.

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Player Season Rushing TDs Earl Campbell 1979 19 Derrick Henry 2020 17 Derrick Henry 2019 16 LenDale White 2008 15 Eddie George 2000 14 Chris Johnson 2009 14 Earl Campbell 1978 13 Earl Campbell 1980 13 Derrick Henry 2018 12 Earl Campbell 1983 12 Eddie George 2002 12

5. Derrick Henry 2019 303 1,540 5.1 74 16 6. Eddie George 2000 403 1,509 3.7 35 14

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2. Dalvin Cook Minnesota Vikings 1,557

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NFL rushing yardage leaders in 2020:

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1. Derrick Henry 2020 378 2,027 5.4 94t 17

Emmitt Smith Dallas 1994–1996 3

Shaun Alexander Seattle 2001–2005 5

2. Chris Johnson 2009 358 2,006 5.6 91 14

Rudi Johnson Cincinnati 2004–2006 3

Henry became the first player to lead the NFL in rushing in consecutive seasons since LaDainian Tomlinson in 2006 and 2007. Since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger, Henry is the eighth different player to lead the league in rushing in back-to-back seasons. The list includes Tomlinson, O.J. Simpson (1972-73, 1975-76), Earl Campbell (1978-80), Eric Dickerson (1983-84), Emmitt Smith (1991-93), Barry Sanders (1996-97) and Edgerrin James (1999–2000).

4. Aaron Jones Green Bay Packers 1,104

Titans running back Derrick Henry rushed for 2,027 yards and 17 touchdowns in 2020. The performance came after he produced 1,059 rushing yards and 12 rushing touchdowns in 2018, followed by 1,540 rushing yards and 16 rushing touchdowns in 2019.

6.

4. Earl Campbell 1979 368 1,697 4.6 61 19

Most rushing yards in a season, franchise history:

Player Season Att Yds Avg Long TD

Players in NFL history with 1,000 rushing yards and 12 rushing touchdowns in three consecutive seasons:

16

4.

9.

Eric Dickerson L.A. Rams 1983–1985 3

Titans running back Derrick Henry won the NFL’s 2020 rushing title with 2,027 yards in 2020, outdistancing the next-closest competitor by 470 yards (1,557 by Dalvin Cook).

9. Earl Campbell 1981 361 1,376 3.8 43 10 10. Eddie George 1996 335 1,368 4.1 76 8

Player Team Seasons Total

Henry also led the NFL with 17 rushing touchdowns in 2020. The total was tied for the second most in the NFL in a 10-year span (2011-20). In that time, only LeGarrette Blount (18 in 2016) had more than Henry, Todd Gurley (17 in 2018) and LeSean McCoy (17 in 2011).

LaDainian Tomlinson San Diego 2002–2007 6

1,000 RUSH YARDS/12 TOUCHDOWNS

1. Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans 2,027

Player Team Rushing TDs Henry Tennessee Titans Kamara New Orleans Saints Dalvin Cook Minnesota Vikings Josh Jacobs Las Vegas Raiders Cam Newton New England Patriots Nick Chubb Cleveland Browns Jonathan Taylor Indianapolis Colts 11 Antonio Gibson Washington Football Team 11 Kyler Murray Arizona Cardinals Kenyan Drake Arizona Cardinals

Terrell Davis Denver 1996–1998 3

Player Team Rushing Yards

Derrick Henry Tennessee 2018–2020 3

1.

5. James Robinson Jacksonville Jaguars 1,070 David Montgomery Chicago Bears 1,070 Nick Chubb Cleveland Browns 1,067 Josh Jacobs Las Vegas Raiders 1,065 Lamar Jackson Baltimore Ravens 1,005 Melvin Gordon Denver Broncos 986

NFL rushing touchdown leaders in 2020:

17 2. Alvin

In 2019, Henry led the NFL with 1,540 yards, which at the time ranked fourth for a single Titans/Oilers season.

8.

7. Earl Campbell 1978 302 1,450 4.8 81 13 8. Eddie George 1997 357 1,399 3.9 30 6

3. Jonathan Taylor Indianapolis Colts 1,169

Henry became the first NFL player since LaDainian Tomlinson (200207) and the ninth player in NFL history to record at least three consecutive seasons in which he rushed for at least 1,000 yards and 12 touchdowns.

5.

SINGLE-SEASON RUSHING TDS, TEAM HISTORY

Derrick Henry's 17 rushing touchdowns in 2020 gave him the secondhighest single-season total in team history. Only Earl Campbell—with 19 rushing touchdowns in 1979—had more.

2.

12

Earl Campbell Houston 1978–1980 3

1. Derrick

Terrell Davis Denver 1998 392 2,008 5.1 21

¾ Finished the season with 2,141 scrimmage yards (2,027 rushing and 114 receiving), which ranks second in franchise history behind Chris Johnson’s 2,509 scrimmage yards in 2009.

He became the first player in NFL history to produce multiple seasons with a minimum of 300 rushing attempts, a rushing average of at least 5.0 yards per carry and a minimum of 15 rushing touchdowns

¾ Became the fifth player in NFL history with three 200-yard rushing games in a season, joining Earl Campbell (four in 1980), O.J. Simpson (1973), Tiki Barber (2005) and Jay Ajayi (2016).

¾ Became the first player in NFL history to produce more than one overtime touchdown run in a season. He joined LaDainian Tomlinson as the NFL’s only players with multiple career touchdown runs in overtime. Tomlinson had three during his career.

¾ Set a career high with 17 rushing touchdowns in 2020, finishing with the second-best total in franchise history behind Earl Campbell’s 19 rushing touchdowns in 1979.

¾ Became the fifth all-time NFL player to lead the NFL in rushing yards, attempts and rushing touchdowns in consecutive seasons. It is a feat that had not been attained since Cleveland’s Leroy Kelly did it from 1967 to 1968. The only other players to achieve it are Jim Brown (1958-59), Steve Van Buren (1947-49) and Bill Paschal (1943-44).

Dalvin Cook Minnesota 2020 312 1,557 5.0 16

¾ Established a single-game franchise record with 250 rushing yards on Jan. 3 at Houston. He broke his own club record of 238 rushing yards, established against the Jacksonville Jaguars on Dec. 6, 2018. Henry’s 250 rushing yards tied for the 13th-best single-game total in the NFL since 1948.

The only other players to do so once in their careers are O.J. Simpson (1975), Terrell Davis (1998), Priest Holmes (2002), Ahman Green (2003), Larry Johnson (2005), Shaun Alexander (2005), LaDainian Tomlinson (2016), Ezekiel Elliott (2016) and Dalvin Cook (2020).

¾ Joined Terrell Davis (1997-98), Shaun Alexander (2004-05) and Larry Johnson (2005-06) as the only players in NFL history to rush for 1,500 yards and 15 touchdowns in two consecutive seasons

¾ Established a streak of 20 consecutive games in the regular season and playoffs with at least 18 rushing attempts, the second-longest streak of its kind in the NFL since 1948. The only player with more consecutive 18-carry games in the regular season and postseason

¾ Became the fourth player in NFL history with at least five career 200yard rushing games, joining O.J. Simpson (six), Adrian Peterson (six) and Tiki Barber (five).

¾ Led the NFL and set a franchise record with 2,027 rushing yards in 2020, becoming the eighth player in league annals to rush for at least 2,000 yards in a season. His 2,027 rushing yards gave him the fifth-highest total in NFL history behind Eric Dickerson’s 2,105 (1984), Adrian Peterson’s 2,097 (2012), Jamal Lewis’ 2,066 (2003) and Barry Sanders’ 2,053 (1997). Henry broke Chris Johnson’s franchise mark of 2,006 rushing yards in 2009.

was Emmitt Smith, whose streak was 23 games with the Dallas Cowboys from 1995 to 1996.

Shaun Alexander Seattle 2005 370 1,880 5.1 27

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¾ Dating back to 2019, he had a streak of nine consecutive road games with at least 100 rushing yards, passing Chris Johnson (eight games from 2009-10) for the second-longest such streak in NFL history behind only Barry Sanders' 10-game road streak from 1996-97).

¾ Became the NFL’s first player to rush for at least 175 and two touchdowns four times in a season

Player Team Season Att Yards Avg TD

DERRICK HENRY IN 2020

Ezekiel Elliott Dallas 2016 322 1,631 5.1 15

Derrick Henry won the NFL’s rushing title with 303 carries for 1,540 yards and 16 touchdowns in 2019. He followed in 2020 with 378 carries for 2,027 yards and 17 touchdowns.

Derrick Henry Tennessee 2019 303 1,540 5.1 16

Larry Johnson Kansas City 2005 336 1,750 5.2 20

O.J. Simpson Buffalo 1975 329 1,817 5.5 16

Ahman Green Green Bay 2003 355 1,883 5.3 15

LaDainian Tomlinson San Diego 2006 348 1,815 5.2 28

¾ Became the first NFL player since LaDainian Tomlinson (2002-07) and the ninth player in NFL history to record at least three consecutive seasons in which he rushed for at least 1,000 yards and 12 touchdowns

¾ Joined Bo Jackson, Ahman Green, Chris Johnson and Lamar Miller as the only NFL players to record two career rushing touchdowns of at least 90 yards. Henry joined Miller (two 97-yard touchdown runs) as the only players to ever record multiple touchdown runs of at least 94 yards.

Derrick Henry Tennessee 2020 378 2,027 5.4 17

¾ Named the Associated Press NFL Offensive Player of the Year and was named to his second consecutive Pro Bowl. He won his second consecutive FedEx Ground Player of the Year Award and added firstteam AP All-Pro honors. Additionally, he earned first-team All-Pro honors from Pro Football Focus, Pro Football Writers of America and Sporting News and was the 101 Awards AFC Offensive Player of the Year.

¾ Became the first player since LaDainian Tomlinson (2006-07) to lead the NFL in rushing yards in consecutive seasons. Henry previously led the league in 2019 with 1,540 rushing yards.

Individual seasons in NFL history with a minimum of 300 rushing attempts, 15 rushing touchdowns and a 5.0 rushing average in a single season:

¾ Finished the 2020 season with 1,221 rushing yards in road games, the most by any NFL running back since 1948. The previous high was held by Eric Dickerson, who had 1,087 rushing yards in road games for the Los Angeles Rams in 1984.

¾ Became the first player in NFL history with five career games with at least 200 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns

300 CARRIES/15 TOUCHDOWNS/5.0 AVG

¾ Registered 10 games in 2020 with at least 100 rushing yards to tie Earl Campbell (1980) for the third-most in franchise history. Only Campbell in 1979 (11) and Chris Johnson in 2009 (12) had more 100-yard rushing games in a Titans/Oilers season than Henry. Henry’s 10 100-yard games in 2020 were the most in the NFL since Dallas running back DeMarco Murray had 12 in 2014.

Priest Holmes Kansas City 2002 313 1,615 5.2 21

Most consecutive road games with at least 100 rushing yards in NFL history:

2019 NFL RUSHING LEADERS

3.

1,168 5. Chris

New

Player Season with a Rushing TD

Most consecutive team games with a rushing touchdown, franchise history:

Player Team Rushing TDs

1. Christian McCaffrey Carolina Panthers 19 Aaron Jones Green Bay Packers 19

Carolina Panthers 1,098 7. Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans 1,059 8. Adrian Peterson Washington Redskins 1,042 9. Phillip Lindsay Denver Broncos 1,037 10. Nick Chubb Cleveland Browns 996

2018

Additionally, Henry ranked third in the NFL with 18 total touchdowns behind Carolina's Christian McCaffrey and Jones, who each scored 19 total touchdowns.

NFL RUSHING LEADERS

8.

4.

During the 2019 regular season and playoffs, Henry and Carolina Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey (two) were the only two players with multiple 200-yard scrimmage games. Together they accounted for five of the 14 such individual performances.

Derrick Henry recorded a streak in 2020 of at least one rushing touchdown in five consecutive team games. It was his second such streak in as many seasons and tied for the longest such streak in franchise history. DeMarco Murray (2016) and Earl Campbell (twice—1979 and 1983) are the only other franchise players with five consecutive team games with a rushing touchdown.

Games 1.

1. Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans 16 Aaron Jones Green Bay Packers 16

DeMarco Murray 2016 5 Earl Campbell 1983 5 Earl Campbell 1979 5

1.

NFL rushing leaders in 2018 (rushing yards): Player Team Rushing Yards 1. Ezekiel

Henry joined Billy Cannon (AFL, 1961), Earl Campbell (1978-80) and Chris Johnson (2009) as the only running backs in franchise history to lead their respective leagues in rushing.

7.

CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD ROAD GAMES

Titans running back Derrick Henry recorded 149 rushing yards at Indianapolis on Dec. 1, 2019. Over the course of the next year, he registered at least 100 rushing yards in eight more consecutive regular season road games, increasing his streak to nine games before it ended with a 98-yard effort at Green Bay on Dec. 27, 2020.

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DeMarco Murray Dallas 9/14/2014–12/4/2014 6

Gerald Riggs Atlanta 10/13/1985–12/22/1985 6

Derrick Henry 2019 5

4.

2019 TOUCHDOWN LEADERS

5. Ezekiel Elliott Dallas Cowboys 14 Todd Gurley Los Angeles Rams 14

CONSEC. GAMES W/ 200 SCRIMMAGE YDS

5. Todd Gurley Los Angeles Rams 12 Ezekiel Elliott Dallas Cowboys 12

3. Chris Johnson Tennessee 10/18/2009–10/18/2010 8

Consec. Team Games

NFL leaders in rushing touchdowns in 2019:

5.

Player Team Dates Derrick Henry Tennessee Dec. 29, 2019–Jan. 11, 2020 3 Bell Pittsburgh Nov. 17–Dec. 7, 2014 3 Payton Chicago Nov. 13–Nov. 24, 1977 3 (several tied)

Le’Veon

Titans running back Derrick Henry claimed the NFL’s 2019 rushing title with 1,540 yards on 303 carries (5.1 avg.). The next-closest finisher was Cleveland’s Nick Chubb, who had 1,494 rushing yards.

3

6.

9.

1. Derrick Henry 2020 5

Most consecutive games with at least 200 scrimmage yards in the regular season and/or postseason, 1970–present:

FIVE CONSEC. TEAM GAMES WITH RUSHING TD

2

Cincinnati

Titans running back Derrick Henry tied Green Bay's Aaron Jones for the NFL lead with 16 rushing touchdowns in 2019.

4. Marcus Allen L.A. Raiders 11/3/1985–9/14/1986 7

Dallas

Seattle

Player Team Rushing Yards Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans 1,540 2. Nick Chubb Cleveland Browns 1,494 Christian McCaffrey Carolina Panthers 1,387 Ezekiel Elliott Dallas Cowboys 1,357 Chris Carson Seattle Seahawks 1,230 Lamar Jackson Baltimore Ravens 1,206 Leonard Fournette Jacksonville Jaguars 1,152 Josh Jacobs Oakland Raiders 1,150 Joe Mixon Cincinnati Bengals 1,137 Dalvin Cook Minnesota Vikings 1,135

1. Barry Sanders Detroit 11/24/1996–12/14/1997 10

NFL leaders in total touchdowns in 2019:

4. Dalvin Cook Minnesota Vikings 13

3. Christian McCaffrey Carolina Panthers 15

4. Mark Ingram Baltimore Ravens 15

Walter

In NFL history, Henry’s streak is the second-longest continuous stretch of its kind. Detroit’s Barry Sanders had 10 road games in a row with 100plus yards from 1996 to 1997.

1,151 6. Christian

1,251 4. Joe

From the final week of the 2019 regular season (Dec. 29 at Houston) through the Titans' first two playoff games (Jan. 4 at New England and Jan. 11 at Baltimore), Derrick Henry became the first player in NFL history to rush for at least 180 yards in three consecutive regular season or postseason games

1,307 3. Todd

Los

NFL rushing leaders in 2019:

6. (eight tied) 4

1,434 2. Saquon

2. Derrick Henry Tennessee 12/1/2019–12/13/2020 9

10.

He also became only the third player since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger to have 200 scrimmage yards in three consecutive games. The other two players to accomplish the feat were Chicago Bears running back Walter Payton (1977) and Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell (2014).

5. Arian Foster Houston 12/22/2011–11/22/2012 6

Derrick Henry recorded 215 carries in 2018 for 1,059 yards. He ranked second in the AFC in rushing yardage behind Cincinnati's Joe Mixon (1,168) and ranked seventh overall in the NFL. Elliott Cowboys Barkley York Giants Gurley Angeles Rams Mixon Bengals Carson Seahawks McCaffrey

Player Team Total TDs

Player Team Dates Games

3. Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans 18

Rushing

Rushing Player Team Date Opponent Yards

5. Lamar Miller Houston 11/26/18 Tennessee 97t Lamar Miller Miami 12/28/14 N.Y. Jets 97t

1. Derrick Henry 1/3/21 at Houston 250

5.

9. Earl Campbell 11/16/80 at Chicago 203

Player Date Opponent Yards

Additionally, Henry authored one of only four calendar months for the franchise since 1970 in which a player rushed for at least 600 yards. Chris Johnson (800 rushing yards in November 2009) and Earl Campbell (633 in October 1980; 662 in November 1980) were the organization’s only other players to accomplish the feat in that timespan.

In five games in the month of December 2018, Derrick Henry’s rush ing totals included 97 carries for 625 yards and eight touchdowns. His 625 yards were the most by any NFL player in any calendar month in 2018.

On Dec. 6, 2018, Derrick Henry had one of the most memorable rush ing performances in NFL history on Thursday Night Football. He rushed for a then-team-record 238 yards and four touchdowns (tied franchise record), including a 99-yard touchdown run.

9.

8.

8.

DECEMBER TO REMEMBER

9.

Following a franchise-record 238 rushing yards against the Jackson ville Jaguars on Dec. 6, 2018, Derrick Henry then totaled 170 rushing yards at the New York Giants on Dec. 16 to give him a franchise record of 408 rushing yards in a two-game span.

1 Yds Game 2

1. Derrick Henry Tennessee 12/6/18 Jacksonville 99t Tony Dorsett Dallas 1/3/83 Minnesota 99t

11.

RUSHING YARDS IN A TWO-GAME SPAN

Derrick Henry's scored a career-high 12 rushing touchdowns in 2018. He tied for the third-highest rushing touchdown total in the NFL.

Most total rushing yards in two consecutive games, franchise history: Game Yds Total

3.

3. Chris Johnson 11/1/09 Jacksonville 228

Andy Uram Green Bay 10/8/39 Chi. Cardinals 97t Bob Gage Pittsburgh 12/4/49 Chi. Bears 97t

RECORD-SETTING NIGHT

3. Ronald Jones Tampa Bay 11/15/20 Carolina 98t Ahman Green Green Bay 12/28/03 Denver 98t

7. Derrick Henry 10/18/20 Houston 212

6.

The previous record of 405 rushing yards in two games was set by Earl Campbell in 1980, when Campbell posted 203 yards against Tampa Bay (Oct. 19) and 202 yards against Cincinnati (Oct. 26).

Henry's 238 rushing yards set a new franchise record, breaking Chris Johnson’s mark of 228 yards against the Jaguars on Nov. 1, 2009. It was the highest single-game rushing total in the NFL in 2018 and the league's highest total since Doug Martin's 251 rushing yards for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers against the Oakland Raiders on Nov. 4, 2012.

1.

Henry scored on a three-yard run in the first quarter, a 99-yard run in the second quarter, a 16-yard run in the third quarter, and finally a 54yard run in the third quarter. He tied the franchise record and became the third player in franchise history to rush for four touchdowns in a game, joining Earl Campbell (against Miami on Nov. 20, 1978) and Lorenzo White (against Cleveland on Dec. 9, 1990).

Henry later broke his own record with 250 rushing yard at Houston on Jan. 3, 2021 to take possession of five of the top eight single-game rushing totals in team annals.

12.

Billy Cannon 12/10/61 at New York 216

Player Season Month Rushing Yards Chris Johnson 2009 November 800 Earl Campbell 1980 November 662 Earl Campbell 1980 October 633 Derrick Henry 2018 December 625 Derrick Henry 2020 November 594 Derrick Henry 2021 October 584 Earl Campbell 1979 September 569 Derrick Henry 2019 December 549 Eddie George 2000 October 548 Earl Campbell 1979 November 534 Derrick Henry 2020 December 520 DeMarco Murray 2016 October 511 Earl Campbell 1981 October 510

Player

2.

Earl Campbell 10/19/80 Tampa Bay 203

10.

Longest runs from scrimmage in NFL history:

2018 RUSHING TOUCHDOWN LEADERS

Titans/Oilers with 500 rushing yards in any calendar month from 19702021 (includes playoffs):

4. Eddie George 8/31/97 Oakland 216

7.

12 5.

13.

6.

WATCH: Highlights from Derrick Henry's performance on 12/6/18

2.

4.

3.

Henry’s December rushing totals included 40 yards against the New York Jets (Dec. 2), a franchise-record 238 yards against the Jacksonville Jaguars (Dec. 6), 170 yards at the New York Giants (Dec. 16), 84 yards against the Washington Redskins (Dec. 22) and 93 yards against the India napolis Colts (Dec. 30).

7.

Derrick Henry 12/6/18 vs. Jax 238 12/16/18 at NYG 170 408 Campbell 10/19/80 vs. TB 203 10/26/80 vs. Cin 202 405

Most rushing yards in a game, franchise history:

12 4.

The only franchise player with more overall touchdowns in a game than Henry was Oilers running back Billy Cannon, who had five total touch downs (three rushing, two receiving) at the New York Titans on Dec. 10, 1961. Henry became the first NFL player with four rushing touchdowns in a game since New England Patriots running back Jonas Gray at Indianapolis on Nov. 16, 2014.

Henry became the first Titans player with 12 rushing touchdowns in a season since Chris Johnson had 14 rushing touchdowns in 2009.

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8. Derrick Henry 12/29/19 at Houston 211

10.

2. Derrick Henry 12/6/18 Jacksonville 238

Henry’s 99-yard touchdown run tied for the longest scrimmage play in NFL history. It was the 15th such play, including his and Dorsett's runs and 13 passing plays. The last 99-yard scrimmage play before Henry's was New York Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz’s 99-yard reception from Eli Manning against the New York Jets on Dec. 24, 2011.

1.

Player Team

Rushing TDs Todd Gurley Los Angeles Rams 17 Alvin Kamara New Orleans Saints 14 Derrick Henry Tennessee Titans James Conner Pittsburgh Steelers Saquon Barkley New York Giants 11 Melvin Gordon Los Angeles Chargers 10 Phillip Lindsay Denver Broncos 9 Chris Carson Seattle Seahawks 9 Marlon Mack Indianapolis Colts 9 Jordan Howard Chicago Bears 9

Earl

6. Derrick Henry 12/13/20 at Jacksonville 215

In the second quarter, Henry took a handoff from Marcus Mariota inside his own one-yard line and raced 99 yards for a touchdown. It was the second 99-yard run in NFL history, tying Tony Dorsett’s record-set ting touchdown run for the Dallas Cowboys against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 3, 1983. It was also the team record, topping Johnson’s 94-yard touchdown run against the New York Jets on Dec. 17, 2012. The only other runs in franchise history of at least 90 yards were Johnson’s 91-yard rush against the Houston Texans on Sept. 20, 2009 and a 91-yarder by Sid Blanks against the Jets on Dec. 13, 1964.

Most rushing touchdowns in 2018:

For his efforts, Henry was named AFC Offensive Player of the Month.

9 54

On Jan. 4, 2020, Derrick Henry rushed for 182 yards and one touch down on 34 attempts in a wild card playoff victory at New England. In doing so, he set a new franchise single-game postseason record for rushing yards in a game, surpassing Eddie George's 162 yards at Indianapolis on Jan. 16, 2000.One week later, on Jan. 11, 2020, Henry broke his own record, going for 195 rushing yards on 30 carries at Baltimore.

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1 5. Earl

6 135

2. Marcus Allen L.A. Raiders 1983 3 466 155.3 John Riggins Washington 1982 4 610 152.5 Derrick Henry Tennessee 2019 3 446 148.7 Eric Dickerson L.A. Rams 1985 2 294 147.0 Terrell Davis Denver 1997 4 581 145.3 Arian Foster Houston 2011 2 285 142.5 Thurman Thomas Buffalo 1990 3 390 130.0 Brian Westbrook Philadelphia 2006 2 257 128.5 Fred Taylor Jacksonville 1998 2 248 124.0

Player

6 5. Lorenzo

7.

9.

10.

RUSHING YARDS IN A TITANS PLAYOFF GAME

2.

Rush Per

1. Terrell Davis Denver 1998 3 468 156.0

Rushing

1. Eddie George 1999 4 449 Derrick Henry 2019 3 446 Earl Campbell 1978 3 264 Steve McNair 1999 4 209 Derrick Henry 2017 2 184

Henry became the seventh NFL player since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger with at least four rushing touchdowns and at least 200 rushing yards in a game, joining Clinton Portis, Barry Sanders, Doug Martin, Jonas Gray, Mike Anderson and Corey Dillon. Henry became the first to ac complish the feat in fewer than 20 carries (17).

Most rushing touchdowns in a game, franchise history:

8.

Most rushing yards per game in a single NFL postseason (minimum two games):

¾

6.

Season Games Rush Yards

¾

Player Date Opponent Touchdowns

5.

Player Team Season Games Yards

3.

7. Thurman

He matched former Titans running back Chris Johnson as the only play ers in NFL history with a rushing touchdown of at least 90 yards and a rushing touchdown of at least 50 yards in the same game. Johnson accomplished the feat against the Houston Texans on Sept. 20, 2009.

1. Derrick Henry 12/6/18 Jacksonville 4 Lorenzo White 12/9/90 Cleveland 4

5.

1.

3.

1 4. Derrick

5.

0 7. Eddie

Player Team Season Games Yards Game

1

8. Natrone

Henry now owns two of the top three rushing games in franchise post season history.

FRANCHISE PLAYOFF RUSHING LEADERS

His 24 points tied for the fourth-highest single-game total in franchise history, trailing only Billy Cannon (30 on Dec. 10, 1961), Rob Bironas (26 on Oct. 21, 2007) and George Blanda (26 on Sept. 18, 1960). Earl Campbell (Nov. 20, 1978) and Lorenzo White (Dec. 9, 1990) also had 24 points on four touchdowns in a single game.

4 3. Earl

RUSHING YARDS IN A SINGLE POSTSEASON

Most rushing yards in a single postseason, franchise history:

4.

6. Derrick

Earl Campbell 11/20/78 Miami 4

¾

4.

5 2. Derrick

His 238 rushing yards and four rushing touchdowns were each the most in any Thursday Night Football game in history.

4.

In the 2021 postseason, Derrick Henry increased his career playoff totals to 732 rushing yards on 156 attempts. He is second on the franchise's all-time postseason rushing list behind only Eddie George (776). is tied with Earl Campbell for third place on the franchise's alltime postseason leaderboard with four rushing touchdowns, trailing Steve McNair (six) and George (five).

2.

TD 1. Eddie

9. Le’Veon

¾

3.

4. (several tied) 3

2

1 6. Eddie

Henry

Most single-game rushing yards in franchise postseason history:

Henry’s 2019 playoff rushing yardage total ranked sixth in NFL history. It was the most by any NFL player since George's 1999 postseason.

Player

Derrick Henry accumulated 446 rushing yards during the 2019 playoffs. He had 182 yards on 34 carries in the wild card round at New England, followed by 195 yards on 30 attempts in the divisional round at Baltimore. In the AFC championship game, he had 69 yards on 19 rushing attempts.Henry’s average of 148.7 rushing yards per game ranked fourth in NFL history for players with at least two games played. Only a trio of Pro Football Hall of Fame members—Denver Broncos running back Terrell Davis (156.0 in 1998), Los Angeles Raiders running back Marcus Allen (155.3 in 1983) and Washington Redskins running back John Riggins (152.5 in 1982) have averaged more rushing yards in a single postseason than Henry.InTitans/Oilers history, Eddie George established the previous record for average rushing yards in a single postseason during the 1999 playoffs. In four games, George carried the ball 108 times for 449 yards, or an average of 112.3 yards per contest.

¾

1. John Riggins Washington 1982 4 610 Terrell Davis Denver 1997 4 581 Terrell Davis Denver 1998 3 468 Marcus Allen L.A. Raiders 1983 3 466 Eddie George Tennessee 1999 4 449 Henry Tennessee 2019 3 446 Thomas Buffalo 1990 3 390 Means Jacksonville 1996 3 358 Bell Pittsburgh 2016 3 357 Freeman McNeil N.Y. Jets 1982 3 349

10.

4 4. Steve

Most total rushing yards in a single NFL postseason: Rush

Player Date Opp Att Yds Avg TD Derrick Henry 1/11/20 at Bal 30 195 6.5 0 Derrick Henry 1/4/20 at NE 34 182 5.4 1 Eddie George 1/16/00 at Ind 26 162 6.2 Henry 1/6/18 at KC 23 156 6.8 Campbell 12/31/78 at NE 27 118 4.4 George 1/8/00 Buf 29 106 3.7 George 1/30/00 StL (SB) 28 95 3.4

He became the ninth NFL player since 1975 with at least one 90-yard run and at least one 60-yard reception in his career. The others were Tony Dorsett, Garrison Hearst, Tiki Barber, Chris Johnson, Jamaal Charles, Herschel Walker, Warrick Dunn and Adrian Peterson

2.

Additionally, Henry's rushing performance against the Jaguars accom plished the following:

3.

Franchise career postseason rushing leaders: Games Att Yards Avg George 9 206 776 3.8 Henry 7 156 732 4.7 Campbell 420 3.1 McNair 349 6.5 White 264 3.5

George’s 449 yards during the team’s run to Super Bowl XXXIV also established the franchise benchmark for most total rushing yards in a single postseason. Henry came within three yards of the mark in one fewer game.

7 76

¾ Dontrell Hilliard was originally signed to the Titans practice squad on Oct. 27, 2021 and was signed to the 53-man roster on Nov. 23, 2021.

MORE TITANS RUNNING BACKS

¾ As a senior in 2021, played in five games and posted 91 rushes for 542 yards (6.0 avg.) and three touchdowns.

5-11, 228, Rookie, Sacred Heart

¾ During four seasons at Michigan (2018-21), Haskins appeared in 36 career games with 22 starts and carried the ball 452 times for 2,324 yards (5.1 avg.) and 30 touchdowns.

¾ Named 2021 first-team All-Big Ten and earned honorable mention all-conference in 2019 and 2020. Registered 10 career 100-yard rushing games.

¾ As a college player at Tulane, Hilliard played in 47 games and rushed for 2,948 yards and 30 touchdowns.

¾ In 2020, Hilliard recorded nine rushes for 48 yards and returned seven kickoffs for 125 yards while with the Brown and Texans.

¾ In 2021, he appeared in eight games with five starts. He set career highs with 56 rushing attempts and 350 rushing yards and tied a career high with a pair of rushing touchdowns. He added 87 yards on a career-high 19 receptions and added eight kickoff returns for 177 yards (22.1 avg.). In the team's divisional playoff game, he had three receptions for 13 yards and one kickoff return for 26 yards.

¾

Against New York Giants (9/11), totaled three receptions and set career highs with 61 receiving yards and two touchdowns. He added two carries for eight yards. He notched his first career touchdown reception in the first quarter, hauling in a seven-yard pass from Ryan Tannehill for the score, and added his second touchdown reception in the third quarter on a 23-yard pass from Tannehill. He became the first Titans running back with two or more touchdown receptions in a game since DeMarco Murray had two touchdown catches against the Minnesota Vikings on Sept. 11, 2016. He also had a 31-yard reception to convert a third down in the second quarter. It was the longest reception of his career.

Henry broke his own record of 191 scrimmage yards in a wild card playoff contest at Kansas City on Jan. 6, 2018 (156 rushing, 35 receiving).

¾ As a college player, he totaled 4,035 rushing yards and 44 touchdowns during a three-year career at Virginia State.

On Jan. 11, 2020, one week after establishing the current record, Henry had 202 scrimmage yards (195 rushing, seven receiving) at Baltimore, giving him the three biggest scrimmage yards totals in franchise postseason history.

Most single-game scrimmage yards in franchise postseason history:

1. Derrick Henry 1/4/20 at NE 182 22 204

¾ In four seasons at Sacred Heart (2018-21), he saw action in 32 games and logged 593 carries for 3,467 yards (5.8 avg.) and 29 touchdowns. He added 28 receptions for 412 yards (14.7 avg.) and five scores, plus 10 kickoff returns for 108 yards and two punt returns for 10 yards.

3. Derrick Henry 1/6/18 at KC 156 35 191

¾ Tied a Michigan single-game record with five rushing touchdowns and registered a career-best 169 rushing yards against Ohio State on Nov. 27, 2021.

5.

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Hilliard appeared in 32 games over three seasons with stops in Cleveland (2018-20) and Houston (2020). He rushed 22 times for 97 yards and two touchdowns, also registering 22 receptions for 199 yards. As a returner, he posted a 7.1-yard average on 15 punt returns and 23.1-yard average on 23 kickoff returns.

Prior to Henry, the organization record stood for 57 years. It was set on Jan. 1, 1961, when Billy Cannon had 178 scrimmage yards against the Los Angeles Chargers.

2022 Game Notes:

7. Ernest Givins 12/31/89 at Pit 0 136 136

¾ As a junior in 2020, appeared in four games and rushed 93 times for 717 yards (7.7 avg.) and eight scores.

¾ As a senior in 2020, Carter saw action in seven games with one start at fullback and caught four passes for 42 yards, including a long of 15.

¾ He is a native of St. Louis, Mo.

40 - RB DONTRELL HILLIARD 5-11, 202, 5th Year, Tulane

Derrick Henry's 182 rushing yards and 22 receiving yards in the team's wild card playoff victory at New England on Jan. 4, 2020 gave him a franchise-record 204 scrimmage yards.

¾ In 2021, he played in 11 games with San Francisco and ranked second on the team with 10 special teams tackles.

2. Derrick Henry 1/11/20 at Bal 195 7 202

6. Eddie George 1/7/01 Bal 91 52 143

Rush Rec Scrim Player Date Opp Yards Yards Yards

5-11, 185, 5th Year, Virginia State

25 - RB HASSAN HASKINS 6-2, 228, Rookie, Michigan

¾ As a senior in 2021, started all 14 games and carried the ball 270 times for 1,327 yards and a school-record 20 rushing touchdowns. Added 18 receptions for 131 yards. Posted four 150-yard rushing efforts and six overall games with more than 100 rushing yards.

44 - FB TORY CARTER

¾ A native of Valdosta, Ga., he appeared in 42 games with six starts at fullback/tight end over four seasons at Louisiana State (2017-20) and caught 16 passes for 157 yards and two touchdowns.

SCRIMMAGE YARDS IN A TITANS PLAYOFF GAME

4. Billy Cannon 1/1/61 LAC 50 128 178 Eddie George 1/16/00 at Ind 162 14 176

23 - RB TRENTON CANNON

¾ Tory Carter was signed by the Titans as an undrafted free agent on May 14, 2021. He spent the first seven games of the 2021 season on the practice squad before being signed to the 53-man roster on Oct. 30.

¾ In 2021, he appeared in eight games with two starts before landing on injured reserve to finish the season. He recorded two special teams tackles and one fumble recovery on special teams.

¾ Hassan Haskins was selected by the Titans in the fourth round (131st overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft.

6-0, 229, 2nd Year, Louisiana State

¾ Had only 26 negative rushing yards his entire career and did not fumble in 452 rushing attempts.

¾ He originally signed with the Cleveland Browns as a rookie free agent on May 4, 2018.

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¾ Cannon entered the league as sixth-round selection (204th overall) by the Jets in 2018.

¾

He is a native of Bowie, Md.

36 - RB JULIUS CHESTNUT

¾ Julius Chestnut was signed by the Titans as an undrafted free agent on May 13, 2022.

¾ Prior to his arrival in Tennessee, Cannon appeared in 46 NFL games with the New York Jets (2018-19), Carolina Panthers (2020), Baltimore Ravens (2021) and San Francisco 49ers (2021). His totals during those four NFL seasons included 38 special teams tackles, including a team-best 16 special teams stops during his rookie campaign with the Jets. As a kickoff returner, he averaged 23.2 yards on 32 returns, including a 98-yard return for the Panthers in 2020. His rushing totals included 51 attempts for 150 yards and a touchdown, and he added 20 receptions for 160 yards.

¾ Trenton Cannon was signed by the Titans as an unrestricted free agent on March 16, 2022.

STREAKS OF 3+ RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS

Prior to his arrival in Tennessee, Hooper accumulated 298 receptions for 3,024 yards with 23 touchdowns during his time with the Atlanta Falcons (2016-19) and Cleveland Browns (2020-21), registering at least three touchdowns in each of his first six seasons.

Since entering the NFL third-round pick in 2016, Austin Hooper league's productive tight

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most

No. College

89 Hudson, Tommy (IR) 6-3 255 2 Arizona State

#81 • TE AUSTIN HOOPER Year, Stanford complete bio

2022 Game Notes: ¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), posted one reception for six yards in his first game with the Titans. Hooper’s Career Regular Season Statistics: Year Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2016 Atl 14 3 19 271 14.3 44 3 2017 Atl 16 8 49 526 10.7 88t 3 2018 Atl 16 7 71 660 9.3 36 4 2019 Atl 13 10 75 787 10.5 35 6 2020 Cle 13 13 46 435 9.5 36 4 2021 Cle 16 16 38 345 9.1 34 3 2022 Ten 1 0 1 6 6.0 6 0 Totals 89 57 299 3,030 10.1 88t 23

receptions by a

since 2016:

87 Swaim, Geoff 6-4 260 8 Texas

has been one of the

6-4, 254, 7th

Career Postseason Statistics: Year Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2016 Atl 3 1 6 65 10.8 19t 1 2017 Atl 2 2 4 18 4.5 5 0 2020 Cle 2 2 9 62 6.9 11 1 Playoff Totals 7 5 19 145 7.6 19t 2

Receiving Yards - 130 vs. Tennessee (9/29/19)

2016

In 2021, Hooper started a career-high 16 games and collected 38 receptions for 345 yards with three touchdowns. The only game he missed was due to time on the reserve/COVID-19 list.

Receptions - 7 at Pittsburgh (1/10/21)

Receiving Yards - 46 at Pittsburgh (1/10/21)

Touchdowns - 1 (Twice, last at Pittsburgh, 1/10/21)

Hooper’s

The San Mateo, Calif., native appeared in 27 games in his two seasons playing at Stanford, where he caught 74 passes for 937 yards and eight touchdowns during his career. As a sophomore in 2015, he was a Mackey Award finalist and was selected to the All-Pac-12 first team after recording 34 catches for 438 yards and six touchdowns.

Name Ht Wt Exp

TIGHTTITANSENDS

In 2019, Hooper enjoyed the most productive season of his career in his final campaign with the Falcons. He generated career-bests of 75 receptions, 787 receiving yards and six touchdown catches.

Long Reception - 88t at Chicago (9/10/17) Touchdowns - 2 at Indianapolis (9/22/19)

85 Okonkwo, Chig 6-3 238 R Maryland

1. Travis Kelce 573 2. Zach Ertz 468 3. George Kittle 335 4. Austin Hooper 299 5. Kyle Rudolph 297 6. Jared Cook 280 7. Eric Ebron 279 Jimmy Graham 279 9. Darren Waller 272 10. Mark Andrews 268

Player Seasons

1. Travis Kelce 8 2. Austin Hooper 6 3. Jared Cook 4 Mark Andrews 4 Dallas Goedert 4 6. (five tied) 3

The two-time Pro Bowl selection was originally selected by the Falcons in the third round (81st overall) of the 2016 NFL Draft. After his rookie season in 2016, he ranked first among his team's tight ends in receptions each season from 2017 to 2021.

Tight end Austin Hooper has had a minimum of three touchdown receptions in every season since entering the NFL in 2016. Among tight ends, only Travis Kelce (eight seasons) holds a longer active streak.

ends. Since 2016, only three tight ends—Travis Kelce, Zach Ertz and George Kittle—have more catches than him.

81 Hooper, Austin 6-4 254 7 Stanford

Consecutive

Click for

Hooper’s Playoff Single-Game Highs:

Most consecutive seasons by tight ends with at least three touchdown receptions entering 2022:

Hooper's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Receptions - 10 at Cleveland (11/11/18)

Tight end Austin Hooper is in his seventh NFL season and his first campaign with the Titans in 2022. He was signed by the Titans as a free agent during the 2022 offseason.

RECEPTIONS BY TIGHT ENDS SINCE

Hooper's first season in Cleveland was 2020. He started 13 games and hauled in 46 passes for 435 yards with four touchdowns during the regular season. In the postseason, he started both contests and registered nine receptions for 62 yards and a score.

as a

Long Reception - 19t vs. New England (2/5/17)

Receptions

Player

Most tight end

2022 Game Notes:

¾ He saw action in 12 games (four starts) as a freshman and 12 games (three starts) as a sophomore.

6-4, 260, 7th Year, Texas

¾ In 2021, he established career highs with 16 games played, 16 starts, 31 receptions and three touchdown catches. His 210 receiving yards ranked second in his career. He also started the team's divisional playoff contest.

¾ Originally a seventh-round pick by the Cowboys in the 2015 NFL Draft, Swaim played in 43 total games over five seasons with the Cowboys (2015-18) and the Jaguars (2019). His career totals in that time included 48 catches for 401 yards and a touchdown in his career.

85 - TE CHIG OKONKWO

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), tied for second on the team with three receptions, totaling 19 yards.

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

¾ He sat out the 2020 season with myocarditis due to COVID-19.

¾ Swaim was signed by the Titans prior to the start of the 2020 season.

Okonkwo’s 447 receiving yards were the most by a Terps tight end in a season since Vernon Davis (871 in 2005).

¾ A native of Chico, Calif., Swaim played at Butte College in Oroville, Calif., for two years prior to transferring to Texas.

¾ The Powder Springs, Ga., native appeared in 37 games with 20 starts over four seasons (2018-21) at Maryland and caught 77 passes for 717 yards and eight touchdowns. Okonkwo also added three carries for 72 yards and three touchdowns, including a career-long rush of 54 yards.

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), made his NFL debut and recorded his first career reception in the fourth quarter, picking up 11 yards on a pass from Ryan Tannehill.

Year Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD 2022 Ten 1 0 3 55 18.3 27 0

¾ In 2020, he appeared in 10 games (eight starts) in his first season in Tennessee. He produced nine receptions for 83 yards and one touchdown and helped block for Derrick Henry’s 2,027-yard rushing season. Swaim started one playoff game with one reception for five yards.

87 - TE GEOFF SWAIM

Burks earned All-SEC honors in each of his three seasons: in 2019, second-team All-SEC as a returner and All-Freshman as a receiver; secondteam All-SEC in 2020; and first-team All-SEC in 2021.

Year

2 Woods, Robert 6-0 195 10 Southern California

#16

6-2, 225, Rookie, Arkansas

2022 Game Notes:

MORE TITANS TIGHT ENDS

16 Burks, Treylon 6-2 225 R Arkansas

8 Hollister, Cody 6-4 220 3 Arkansas

Click for complete bio

¾ Chig Okonkwo (pronounced “CHIGG oh-KAHNkwoh”) was selected by the Titans in the fourth round (143rd overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft.

¾ As a senior at the University of Texas, he started all 13 games, spending most of his time helping block for a running game that rushed for 1,786 yards and seven touchdowns. He totaled 13 catches for 84 yards.

Burks' Career College Statistics: Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD Ark 11 9 29 475 16.4 38 0 2020 Ark 9 9 51 820 16.1 68t 7 2021 Ark 12 12 66 1,104 16.7 91t 11 Totals 32 30 146 2,399 16.4 91t 18 • WR TREYLON BURKS

2019

6-3, 238, Rookie, Maryland

15 Westbrook-Ikhine, Nick 6-2 211 3 Indiana

Wide receiver Treylon Burks was selected by the Titans in the first round (18th overall) of the 2022 NFL

As a junior in 2021, Burks was named first-team All-SEC after totaling 66 receptions (seventh in the SEC) for 1,104 yards (fourth) and 11 touchdowns (fourth). His 92.0 receiving yards per game ranked third in the SEC behind only Jameson Williams (104.8) and Wan’Dale Robinson (102.6).As

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), made his NFL debut and caught three passes for 55 yards. He tied for second place on the team in receptions. Since 1970, his 55 receiving yards ranked sixth among Titans/Oilers rookies and first-year players in a Week 1 game. He picked up 20 yards and a first down on his first NFL reception in the first quarter. The catch led to a Titans touchdown on the next play. He also recorded a 27-yard catch in the third quarter.

a sophomore in 2020, he was named second-team All-SEC after contributing 51 receptions for 820 yards and seven touchdowns. His 91.1 receiving yards per game ranked third in the SEC behind only Elijah Moore (149.1) and DeVonta Smith (142.8).

¾ As a senior in 2021, started all 13 games and posted career-high marks with 52 catches for 447 yards and a team-leading five touchdowns. His 52 receptions ranked second in Terrapins history for a single season by a tight end, behind only former Titans tight end Frank Wycheck (58 in 1990).

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2022 Game Notes:

The Warren, Ark., native was drafted with the highest pick of any Arkansas player since Darren McFadden was taken fourth overall in 2008, and Burks was the first Arkansas wide receiver to be selected in the first round since Matt Jones was taken 21st overall by Jacksonville in 2006.

18 Philips, Kyle 5-11 189 R UCLA

WIDETITANSRECEIVERS

13 McMath, Racey (IR) 6-3 217 2 Louisiana State

Draft.Inthree seasons (2019-21) at the University of Arkansas, Burks appeared in 32 career games with 30 starts. He totaled 146 receptions for 2,399 yards and 18 touchdowns to go along with 32 rushing attempts for 222 yards and one score. He returned 13 punts for 134 yards (10.3-yard average) and returned 11 kickoff returns for 226 yards (20.5 avg.).At the conclusion of his collegiate career, he ranked sixth in Razorbacks history in career receptions and receiving yards, and his touchdown reception total tied for fifth all-time. He set an Arkansas record with 10 career 100-yard receiving games, including a school-record six 100yard receiving performances in his final year.

Burks' 2022/Career Regular Season Statistics:

Playoff

6-2, 211, 3rd Year, Indiana

2022 Game Notes:

Rushing Touchdowns - 1 (Five times, last at Houston, 10/31/21) WR ROBERT WOODS

In 2018, Woods posted 86 receptions for a career-high 1,219 yards with six touchdowns in his first season with the Rams. His six touchdown catches also established a career high.

#2 •

Totals 126 116 571 7,090 12.4 94t 35

2018

A native of Lake Mary, Fla., he appeared in 52 games with 36 starts at Indiana University, where he totaled 144 receptions for 2,226 yards with 16 touchdowns over four seasons. He ranked sixth in school history in catches, seventh in yardage and touchdowns, and tied for seventh in 100yard receiving games (six). He became the seventh Hoosier to reach 125 receptions and 2,000 yards. As a senior in 2019, he caught 42 passes for 572 yards and five touchdowns.

Receiving Touchdown - 1 (Four times, last at Houston, 1/9/22)

2015 Buf 14 9 47 552 11.7 37 3 2016 Buf 13 10 51 613 12.0 34 1

Year Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

2022 Ten 1 1 1 13 13.0 13 0

2014 Buf 16 15 65 699 10.8 37 5

Woods missed the final eight games of the 2021 regular season and the entire postseason due to a knee injury, but prior to being placed on injured reserve he registered 45 catches for 556 yards and four touchdowns.

2018 LAR 16 16 86 1,219 14.2 39t 6

Woods' Career Regular Season Statistics:

2021

2020 LAR 16 16 90 936 10.4 56t 6

2020

#15 • WR

Woods entered the league as a second-round pick of the Buffalo Bills in the 2013 NFL Draft out of Southern California and spent his first four NFL seasons with the club. In 57 games with the Bills, he caught 203 passes for 2,451 yards and 12 touchdowns.

Rushes - 4 (Twice, last vs. Chicago, 10/26/20)

2021 Ten 1 0 0 0 0 0

2020 Ten 1 0 2 17 8.5 12 0

6-0, 195, 10th Year, Southern California Click for complete bio

Westbrook-Ikhine's Career Postseason Statistics: Year Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

2013 Buf 14 14 40 587 14.7 57 3

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), caught one pass for 13 yards.

Westbrook-Ikhine's Career Regular Season Statistics: Year Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

Receiving Yards - 107 vs. Houston (11/21/21)

Prior to arriving in Tennessee, Woods produced 570 receptions for 7,077 yards with 35 touchdown catches in 125 career games. He added 74 rushing attempts for 507 yards and five scores.

The Gardena, Calif., native started all 38 games in his three-year career at the University of Southern California and finished his career as the Trojans’ all-time leader with 252 receptions. He placed eighth in program history with 2,930 receiving yards and second with 32 receiving touchdowns.

Wide receiver Robert Woods is in his 10th NFL season and his first campaign with the Titans in 2022. He was acquired in a March 2022 trade in which the Titans sent a 2023 sixth-round draft pick to the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for Woods.

2017 LAR 12 11 56 781 13.9 94t 5

2022 Game Notes:

Click for complete bio

Westbrook-Ikhine's Playoff Single-Game Highs: Receptions - 2 vs. Baltimore (1/10/21)

In 2017, he went to Los Angeles as an unrestricted free agent and in the next five years totaled 367 receptions for 4,626 yards and 23 receiving for the Rams, culminating with the Rams' Super Bowl LVI championship to conclude the 2021 season.

Long Reception - 94t vs. Houston (11/12/17)

Wide receiver Nick Westbrook-Ikhine is in his third NFL season in 2022. He was originally signed by the Titans as a rookie free agent on May 7, 2020.

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), made his Titans debut and caught one pass for 13 yards in the first quarter.

Woods' Regular Season Single-Game Highs:

In 2020, Woods tied a career-best with 90 receptions for 936 yards with six touchdowns. It was his second consecutive season with 90 catches after reaching the mark in 2019.

Receiving Yards - 17 vs. Baltimore (1/10/21)

2021 LAR 9 9 45 556 12.4 28 4

Receiving Yards - 172 at Arizona (12/1/19)

2017 LAR 1 1 9 142 15.8 38 0 LAR 3 3 17 172 10.1 18 0 LAR 2 2 12 96 8 20 1 LAR 0 0 Injured Reserve Totals 6 6 38 410 10.8 38 1

2020 Ten 14 1 3 33 11.0 19 0

As a rookie in 2020, he appeared in 14 games with one start and totaled three receptions for 33 yards, two special teams tackles and one reception for a two-point conversion. In one playoff game, he registered two catches for 17 yards and a special teams tackle.

2019 LAR 15 15 90 1,134 12.6 48 2

2021 Ten 16 7 38 476 12.5 46 4

Long Reception - 46 vs. Houston (11/21/21)

Woods’ Career Postseason Statistics:

Receiving Touchdowns - 2 (Three times, last vs. L.A. Chargers, 9/23/18)

Totals 31 9 42 522 12.4 46 4

Westbrook-Ikhine's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Receptions - 7 vs. Houston (11/21/21)

Receptions - 13 (Twice, last at Arizona 12/1/19)

Totals 2 0 2 17 8.5 12 0

Rushing Yards - 53 at Seattle (10/7/18)

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2022 Ten 1 1 1 13 13.0 13 0

Year Team GP GS Rec Yds Avg Lg TD

Long Reception - 12 vs. Baltimore (1/10/21) NICK WESTBROOK-IKHINE

In 2021, Westbrook-Ikhine appeared in 16 games with seven starts. He ranked second on the team and set career highs with 38 receptions, 476 receiving yards and four touchdown catches, and he added three tackles on special teams. Westbrook-Ikhine was named the team's 2021 recipient of the Ed Block Courage Award.

Long Rush - 56 at Seattle (10/7/18)

Receptions

10. Tyreek Hill 75 418 5.6 Woods 367 5.4 Thielen 5.4

¾ The Bend, Ore., native played in 29 games with 12 starts at Arkansas and caught 27 passes for 342 yards and a touchdown. Also rushed twice for 48 yards and one score.

¾ He initially signed with the Titans as a free agent following a tryout during 2019 rookie minicamp. During the 2019 season he appeared in five games and posted two catches for 13 yards on the season.

Originally signed by the New England Patriots as an undrafted free agent following the 2017 NFL Draft.

Rushing Yards - 9 vs. Dallas (1/12/19) Long Rush - 9 vs. Dallas (1/12/19)

7,000 RECEIVING/500 RUSHING YARDS RECEPTIONS PER GAME, 2017–2021

¾

¾ Placed on injured reserve on Aug. 31.

6-3, 217, 2nd Year, Louisiana State

¾ A native of New Orleans, La., he spent four seasons at LSU, appearing in 34 total games with six starts, 33 receptions for 522 yards and four touchdowns. He was a key contributor during the Tigers’ 2019 national championship campaign.

¾

Adam

Receiving Rushing

4. Keenan Allen 78 509 6.5

In 2021, Robert Woods moved past the 7,000-yard career receiving mark and the 500-yard career rushing mark. In doing so, he joined Jerry Rice and Andre Reed as the only wide receivers since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger to reach both numbers in a career.

¾ In 2021, he spent the final seven games of the regular season and the postseason on the Titans practice squad. He appeared in three games with one start, totaling 33 yards on four receptions.

He registered at least one reception in 32 of his 34 college games, including a streak of 29 consecutive games with at least one catch to end his career.

MORE TITANS WIDE RECEIVERS

8 - WR CODY HOLLISTER

¾

¾

¾ Started 23 of his 34 games during a four-year career at UCLA, where he totaled 163 receptions for 1,821 yards and 17 touchdowns. He added 25 punt returns for 496 yards (19.8 avg.) with two touchdowns.

As a redshirt freshman in 2019, he posted a career-high 60 receptions for 681 yards and five touchdowns.

6-4, 216, 3rd Year, Arkansas

¾ In 2021, he caught two passes for eight yards and added four special teams tackles in nine games.

7. Cooper Kupp 71 433 6.1

Receptions - 9 vs. Atlanta (1/6/18)

¾

68

¾ In 2020, Hollister spent the majority of the season on the practice squad after initially making the 53-man roster in Week 1. He appeared in two total games and caught one pass for 12 yards.

Player Years Yards Yards

Player Games Receptions per Game

Receiving Yards - 142 vs. Atlanta (1/6/18)

1. Michael Thomas 55 418 7.6

70 375

18 - WR KYLE PHILIPS 5-11, 189, Rookie, UCLA

Receiving Touchdowns - 1 at Seattle (1/9/21) Rushes - 2 at New Orleans (1/20/19)

3. DeAndre Hopkins 72 472 6.6

Long Reception - 38 vs. Atlanta (1/6/18)

¾ At the end of his UCLA career, he ranked fourth on the school's all-time career receptions list. He was the first Bruin to lead the team in receptions in three straight seasons since Craig Bragg from 2001 to 2004.

¾ As a senior (2020), started all six games in which he appeared and caught 14 passes for 195 yards and one touchdown. Added a pair of special teams tackles and a forced fumble.

As a junior in 2021, he led the Bruins in receptions (59), receiving yards (739) and receiving touchdowns (10). He also led the team in punt returns (nine) and punt return average (22.6).

He is a native of San Marcos, Calif. 2022 Game Notes:

¾ He is a native of New Orleans, La. 2022 Game Notes:

¾ Cody Hollister joined the Titans in 2019 and has spent most of his time since then on the team's practice squad and active roster.

5. Christian McCaffrey 58 357 6.2 Travis Kelce 78 480 6.2

¾ The Titans selected Kyle Philips with the 163rd overall pick in the fifth round of the 2022 NFL Draft.

2. Davante Adams 71 506 7.1

¾

Woods’ Playoff Single-Game Highs:

Most receptions per game, 2017–2021 (minimum 50 games):

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 67 NOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME NOTESPLAYER ROSTERSSTATISTICSMEDIA

13 - WR RACEY MCMATH

11. Robert

¾ The Titans selected Racey McMath with the 205th overall pick in the sixth round of the 2021 NFL Draft.

¾ In 2019, he appeared in 14 games producing career highs with 17 receptions, 285 receiving yards and three touchdowns during a national championship season.

Jerry Rice 1985–2004 22,895 645 Andre Reed 1985–2000 13,198 500 Robert Woods 2013–2021 7,077 507

Wide receivers from 1970 to 2021 with 7,000 receiving yards and 500 rushing yards:

During his five-year tenure with the Los Angeles Rams, Robert Woods registered 367 catches for 4,626 yards and 23 touchdowns in 68 games. His 5.4 receptions per game tied for the 11th-best figure in the NFL among qualifiers during that time (minimum 50 games).

8. Stefon Diggs 77 459 6.0 9. Julio Jones 66 382 5.8

Against New York Giants (9/11), made his NFL debut and led the team with six receptions and 66 receiving yards. He added four punt returns for 62 yards and a 15.5-yard average. On the first punt return of his career in the first quarter, he gained 46 yards. In the third quarter, he registered his first career reception for 20 yards, and he added a 21-yard catch in the fourth quarter. Among all Titans/Oilers rookies since 1970, his six receptions tied Corey Davis (six receptions against Oakland on Sept. 10, 2017) for the second-best total in a Week 1 game, behind only Tajaé Sharpe’s seven receptions against Minnesota on Sept. 11, 2016. Also since 1970, Philips’ 66 receiving yards ranked fifth among franchise rookies in a Week 1 game.

Aaron Brewer is in his third NFL season in 2022. He was signed by the Titans as an undrafted free agent on May 7, 2020.

6-3, 303, 11th Year, Georgia

73 Jones, Jamarco 6-4 293 5 Ohio State

2022 Ten 1 1 LG-1

Davis started 14 games at right guard in 2021, giving him 42 starts in his first three NFL seasons. Additionally, he started each of the club's five playoff games from 2019 to 2021. He helped the Titans finish fifth in the NFL in rushing in 2021 (141.4 rushing yards per game), marking the third consecutive season the Titans ranked in the top five in rushing.Davis was a part of a 2020 offense that tied for the second-overall ranking in the NFL (396.4 yards per game), finished second in rushing (168.1), and allowed the sixth-fewest sacks (25). Davis helped pave the way for Derrick Henry to produce the NFL's eighth all-time 2,000-yard rushing season (2,027).

2020 Ten 12 1 LG-1

Nate Davis is in his fourth NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the third round (82nd overall) of the 2019 NFL Draft.

Year Team GP GS Starts by Position

2021 Ten 1 0

77 Lewan, Taylor 6-7 309 9 Michigan

Davis’ Career Postseason Games Played/Games Started: Year Team GP GS Starts by Position 2019 Ten 3 3 RG-3 2020 Ten 1 1 RG-1 2021 Ten 1 1 RG-1 Playoff Totals 5 5 RG-5

From 2012 through 2021, Jones appeared in 160 of 161 possible regular season games, including starts in all but one game during his first six seasons in Tennessee. During those six seasons in Tennessee (201621), he was one of only eight offensive linemen to start at least 96 of a possible 97 games. He finished the 2021 campaign with an active streak of 40 consecutive starts, ranking third among centers.

#64 • G NATE DAVIS #55

#60

Brewer’s Career Regular Season Games Played/Games Started:

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In 2020, Jones started every game at center and was a part of an offense that tied for the second-overall ranking in the NFL (396.4 yards per game), finished second in rushing (168.1), and allowed the sixth-fewest • C BEN JONES

Brewer’s Career Postseason Games Played/Games Started:

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

As a senior, he started all 12 contests at right tackle and earned All-Sun Belt second-team recognition. He was the highest-graded offensive lineman in the Sun Belt Conference (82.8) by Pro Football Focus, surrendering just three combined sacks and hits in 496 snaps in pass protection.

78 Petit-Frere, Nicholas 6-5 316 R Ohio State

In 2021, he appeared in 12 games with a career-high five starts, including three starts at right guard and two starts at left guard.

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

Year Team GP GS Starts by Position

6-3, 316, 4th Year, Charlotte

64 Davis, Nate 6-3 316 4 Charlotte

TACKLES

6-1, 295, 3rd Year, Texas State Click for complete bio

Playoff Totals 1 0

TITANSLINEMENOFFENSIVE

Davis’ Career Regular Season Games Played/Games Started: Year Team GP GS Starts by Position 2019 Ten 13 12 RG-12 2020 Ten 16 16 RG-16 2021 Ten 14 14 RG-14 2022 Ten 1 1 RG-1 NFL Totals 44 43 RG-43

As a rookie in 2020, he appeared in 12 games with one start at left guard (Nov. 22 at Baltimore) before landing on reserve/ COVID-19 for the postseason.

NFL Totals 25 7 LG-4, RG-3

2020 Ten 0 0

2021 Ten 12 5 LG-2, RG-3

60 Jones, Ben 6-3 308 11 Georgia

GUARDS

55 Brewer, Aaron 6-1 295 3 Texas State

In four seasons at Charlotte (2015-18), Davis appeared in 41 career games with 37 starts. A four-year starter on the offensive line, Davis started at guard from 2015-17 before switching to right tackle for his senior season in 2018.He is a native of Ashburn, Va.

Center Ben Jones is in his 11th NFL season and his seventh campaign with the Titans in 2022. He was signed as an unrestricted free agent on March 10, 2016.

Click for complete bio

75 Radunz, Dillon 6-6 301 2 North Dakota State • G/C AARON BREWER

62 Levin, Corey 6-4 307 4 Chattanooga

Click for complete bio

CENTERS

71 Daley, Dennis 6-6 326 4 South Carolina

Jones started all 17 games in 2021 and helped the Titans finish fifth in the NFL in rushing (141.4 rushing yards per game), marking the fifth time in his six seasons in Tennessee that he helped the offense rank in the top five in rushing.From 2016 through 2021, the Titans averaged 137.7 rushing yards per game, posting the second-highest average in the NFL behind only the Baltimore Ravens (150.6). The Titans joined the Dallas Cowboys and Indianapolis Colts as the only teams in those six seasons to produce four individual 1,000-yard rushing seasons—three by Derrick Henry and one by DeMarco Murray

As a rookie in 2019, Davis played in 13 games with 12 starts at right guard. It was the highest number of starts at guard by a Titans rookie since Chance Warmack’s 16 starts in 2013. He also started all three of the team’s postseason games.

The Dallas, Texas, native appeared in 48 games with 47 consecutive starts in four seasons at Texas State. During his college career, he started at least five games at every position on the offensive line. He totaled eight starts at left tackle, seven starts at left guard, 15 starts at center, five starts at right guard and 12 starts at right tackle.

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

Click for complete bio

During the franchise's "Titans era," beginning in 1999, Lewan's 98 starts at the conclusion of 2021 ranked ninth for the club. Among Titans offensive linemen, only Michael Roos (148), Benji Olson (139), David Stewart (116) and Brad Hopkins (101) had more starts than Lewan from 1999 through 2021.Lewan's 2020 season was cut short after he was placed on injured reserve on Oct. 19, 2020, one day after suffering a knee injury against the Houston Texans. He started each of the team’s first five games of the season.In 2019, Lewan registered 12 starts during the regular season, anchoring an offensive line that helped running back Derrick Henry win the NFL's rushing title (1,540 yards). He started all three playoff games, including the AFC Championship Game.

In 2016, Lewan started all 16 games for the first time. The left tackle was the anchor a line that helped the Titans finish 11th overall in offense, third in rushing and tied for seventh in fewest sacks allowed.

2016 Ten 16 16 LT-16

On Nov. 3, 2019, Jones' streak of 120 consecutive games played and 88 consecutive starts came to an end when he was deactivated with a concussion. At the time, Jones' consecutive games streak tied Kansas City's Mitchell Schwartz for the longest active streak in the NFL among offensive linemen, and his starting streak ranked first in the NFL among all centers.Jones started all 16 games at center in 2018, registering a start in every contest for the fifth consecutive season, dating back to his third year in Houston (2014).

2014 Ten 11 6 LT-6

In his first year in Tennessee, Jones played a key role in an offensive turnaround. He was a key cog in helping the Titans finish 11th overall in offense, third in rushing and tied for seventh in fewest sacks allowed.

Jones was originally selected by the Houston Texans in the fourth round (99th overall) of the 2012 NFL Draft. Over the following four seasons, he started contests at center and both guard spots. He was a starter on two playoff teams in Houston (2012 and 2015).

2015 Ten 15 15 LT-15

Jones’ Career Regular Season Games Played/Games Started:

2014 Hou 16 16 LG-16

2017 Ten 16 16 C-16

2017 Ten 16 16 LT-16

In 2021, Lewan returned from a season-ending injury in 2020 to start in 13 games. He helped the Titans finish fifth in the NFL in rushing (141.4 rushing yards per game), marking the fifth time during his career in Tennessee that the offense ranked in the top five in rushing.

NFL Totals 104 99 LT-99

NFL Totals 161 140 C-113, LG-16, RG-11

2015 Hou 1 1 C-1

Lewan’s Career Regular Season Games Played/Games Started:

2022 Ten 1 1 C-1

2012 Hou 2 2 RG-2

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Jones’ Career Postseason Games Played/Games Started:

Lewan was named to the Pro Bowl for the third consecutive season in 2018. He played and started in 15 of the team's 16 games at left tackle, marking his fourth consecutive season with at least 15 starts.

As a rookie in 2014, Lewan played in 11 games with six starts before suffering an ankle injury. He played as a reserve for the first five games and then started in six consecutive contests before the injury caused him to be inactive the final five weeks. For his efforts, Lewan was named to the Pro Football Writers of America All-Rookie Team.

2020 Ten 5 5 LT-5 2021 Ten 13 13 LT-13 2022 Ten 1 1 LT-1

A native of Centreville, Ala., Jones attended the University of Georgia, where his 49 total starts ranked third in school annals. He was a two-time All-SEC selection by the league’s coaches and was named to Georgia’s Team of the Decade. As a senior (2011), the team captain earned All-SEC first-team honors.

2021 Ten 1 1 C-1

In four seasons at Michigan, Lewan appeared in 50 games with 48 starts at left tackle. He started the final 41 games of his career and was named the Big Ten Conference Offensive Lineman of the Year in 2012 and 2013. As a senior in 2013, he started all 13 games at left tackle for the third consecutive season and was named second-team Associated Press AllAmerican.Atthe 2014 NFL Scouting Combine, he ran the 40-yard dash in 4.87 seconds, beating all other offensive linemen in his class and clocking the fourth-fastest time among offensive linemen in the last five years (2010-14). He also ranked among the top offensive linemen at the 2014 combine in the broad jump (first at nine feet, nine inches), vertical jump (tied for third at 30.5 inches) and three-cone drill (fourth at 7.39 seconds).

Year Team GP GS Starts by Position

2020 Ten 16 16 C-16

2017 Ten 2 2 C-2

#77 • T TAYLOR LEWAN

Year Team GP GS Starts by Position

In 2015, Jones started every game at center, extending his streak of consecutive regular season games played to 64, which was the secondlongest active streak among NFL centers at the conclusion of the season.

In 2019, Jones captained an offensive line that helped Henry win the NFL's rushing title (1,540 yards). He started all three playoff games en route to an AFC Championship Game appearance.

2018 Ten 16 16 C-16

2019 Ten 3 3 C-3

2020 Ten 1 1 C-1

Playoff Totals 10 10 C-8, RG-2

2012 Hou 16 10 RG-10

In 2015, Lewan started the first 15 games of the season at left tackle before missing the finale with a concussion.

2019 Ten 12 12 LT-12

Year Team GP GS Starts by Position

2013 Hou 16 1 RG-1

In 2017, Lewan became the team's first offensive lineman to make multiple Pro Bowls since center Kevin Mawae from 2008–2009. Lewan started all 16 games for the second consecutive season in 2017 and added starts in both postseason contests.

A native of Cave Creek, Ariz., Lewan became the first offensive tackle selected by the Titans/Oilers in the first round since tackle Brad Hopkins (13th overall) in 1993.

On Dec. 12, 2019, Jones was named the Titans nominee for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award. Considered one of the league's most prestigious honors, the award recognizes an NFL player for outstanding community service activities off the field, as well as excellence on the field.

sacks (25). He helped pave the way for Henry to produce the NFL's eighth all-time 2,000-yard rushing season (2,027).

2021 Ten 17 17 C-17

Tackle Taylor Lewan is in his ninth NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans with the 11th overall pick of the 2014 NFL Draft.

2019 Ten 15 15 C-15

2018 Ten 15 15 LT-15

6-7, 309, 9th Year, Michigan

2015 Hou 16 16 C-16

2016 Ten 16 16 C-16

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Daley played in a total of 34 games with the Panthers, including 21 starts on the offensive line. He started 13 games at left tackle, seven at left guard and one at right guard.

¾ Corey Levin was claimed by the Titans off waivers from the New York Jets on Sept. 1, 2021, rejoining the team that selected him in the sixth round (217th overall) of the 2017 NFL Draft. After spending the first four games of 2021 on the practice squad, he was signed to the 53-man roster on Oct. 8.

73 - OL JAMARCO JONES

¾ He started 32 collegiate games at NDSU and was a member of four Missouri Valley Football Conference championship teams and three NCAA Division I football national championships.

2017 Ten 2 2 LT-2

62 - C/G COREY LEVIN

6-5, 316, Rookie, Ohio State Click for complete bio

¾ In 2021, he played in 15 games for Carolina, logging four starts at left guard, four starts at left tackle and one start at right guard.

¾ He is a native of Becker, Minn.

Year Team GP GS Starts by Position

a junior in 2021, he was named first team All-Big Ten by both the coaches and media after starting all 12 games at left tackle, helping Ohio State lead the nation in total offense and scoring offense. He added firstteam All-American honors by the Football Writers Association of America and CBS Sports.

¾ A native of Chicago, Ill., Jones was a two-year starter at Ohio State, where he appeared in 50 total games and started 27 consecutive contests at left tackle. He was a two-time All-Big Ten honoree. He was a part of Ohio State’s national championship squad as a freshman in 2014.

#78 • T NICHOLAS PETIT-FRERE

¾ As a rookie in 2017, Levin spent the entire season on the 53-man roster but did not see game action. He was inactive 14 times and did not play in two other contests.

6-6, 326, 4th year, South Carolina

2020 Ten 0 0

As a junior in 2019, he started all 16 games at left tackle. In 12 regular season games, he played 682 snaps with 63 knockdowns and zero sacks allowed. NDSU rushed for a school-record 4,601 yards.

Playoff Totals 6 6 LT-6

2021 Ohio St 12 12 LT-12

2019 Ten 3 3 LT-3

¾ As a rookie in 2021, he appeared in 12 games with one start at left tackle.

Petit-Frere is a native of Tampa, Fla.

2022 Ten 1 1 RT-1

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Jones appeared in 36 games with seven starts over three seasons with the Seahawks (2019-21) after missing his entire rookie campaign while on injured reserve. His seven starts came at four different positions: right guard (3), right tackle (2), left guard (1) and left tackle (1).

¾ After beginning his college career at Georgia Military College, Daley played his final two seasons at the University of South Carolina. For the Gamecocks, he started 23 of the last 24 games of his career, registering starts at both left tackle and guard, and earning SEC Academic honors.

The Titans received Daley and a 2024 seventh-round draft pick in exchange for a fifth-rounder in 2024.

2021 Ten 1 1 LT-1

¾ In 2021, he appeared in 12 games as a reserve.

¾ In 2021, he saw action in 10 games with two starts (one at right tackle, one at left guard). He was placed on injured reserve on Nov. 29 and missed five games before returning to the roster on Jan. 1.

2019 Ohio St 13 1 LT-1

¾

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Nicholas Petit-Frere (pronounced "puh-TEET FRAIR") was selected by the Titans with the 69th overall pick in the third round of the 2022 NFL Draft.

2018 Ohio St 3 0

Lewan's Career Postseason Games Played/Games Started:

¾ He played in 16 games during his previous stint with the Titans (2017-18) before spending time with Denver and Chicago in 2019 and New England in 2020. He signed with the Jets during the 2021 offseason and was there through the 2021 preseason.

75 - OL DILLON RADUNZ

¾ Jamarco Jones was signed by the Titans as an unrestricted free agent on March 17, 2022.

¾ The Titans selected Dillon Radunz with the 53rd overall pick in the second round of the 2021 NFL Draft.

¾ In 2019, he set career highs with 15 games played and three starts. He also started both postseason games at left guard.

¾ In 2020, he made his 32nd consecutive and final start at left tackle for the Bison in the Oct. 3 season opener against Central Arkansas and helped the Bison rush for 276 yards in the 39-28 victory.

As a sophomore in 2020, he received second-team All-Big Ten honors after starting seven games at right tackle for the eighth-ranked rushing attack in the country. He was an Academic All-Big Ten selection.

Petit-Frere's College Games Played/Games Started: Year Team GP GS Starts by Position

MORE TITANS OFFENSIVE LINEMEN

6-4, 307, 3rd year, Chattanooga

6-6, 301, 2nd Year, North Dakota State

6-4, 293, 5th year, Ohio State

71 - OL DENNIS DALEY

¾ A native of Dacula, Ga., he appeared in 52 career games with 51 starts at Chattanooga, 45 of which were consecutive. He developed versatility over his four-year collegiate career, making starts at left guard, and both tackle spots.

Petit-Frere's 2022/Career Regular Season Games Played/Games YearStarted: Team GP GS Starts by Position

¾ A native of Becker, Minn., Radunz declared for the NFL Draft after North Dakota State’s lone fall game his senior season, choosing to forego the Bisons’ spring football schedule.

Playoff Totals 35 20 LT-13, RT-7

¾ Dennis Daley was acquired by the Titans in a trade with the Carolina Panthers on Aug. 29, 2022.

In four seasons at Ohio State, Petit-Frere saw action in 35 career games with 20 starts. He was a member of three consecutive Big Ten Conference championship teams (2018-20) and was a part of two Ohio State teams that qualified for the College Football Playoffs (20192020).As

¾ A native of Columbia, S.C., Daley entered the NFL as a sixth-round selection (212th overall) by the Panthers in the 2019 NFL Draft.

2020 Ohio St 7 7 RT-7

¾ In 2018, he appeared in all 16 games for the Titans with one start (Oct. 21 vs. the Chargers in London).

SACKS BY DTs FROM 2018-21

2020 Ind 1 1 4 1.5 2 1 0 0 1 0

7.

In 2018, Autry led the Colts with a career-best nine sacks in his first season in Indianapolis. He also posted career highs with 13 tackles for loss and two forced fumbles.

6. Jonathan

Totals 1 1 3 1.5 2 0 0 1 0 0

Defensive lineman Denico Autry is in his ninth NFL season and his second season with the Titans in 2022. He was signed by the Titans as an unrestricted free agent on March 19, 2021.

10.

Autry’s Career Regular Season Statistics:

2016 Oak 1 0 3 0.0 0 2 0 1 0 0

Overdefensed.afour-season stretch from 2018 to 2021, Autry posted 29 sacks, ranking fifth among all NFL defensive tackles. Only Aaron Donald (59), Chris Jones (41), DeForest Buckner (36) and Cameron Heyward (31) had more during that time.

2014 Oak 10 0 13 0.0 1 3 0 0 0 0

Most total sacks among defensive tackles or nose tackles (primary position) from 2018 to 2021:

Autry’s Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 4 (Three times, last at Buffalo, 1/9/21) Sacks - 1.5 (Twice, last vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22)

After entering the NFL as a rookie free agent with the Oakland Raiders in 2014, Autry played four seasons with the Raiders (2014-17) and then three seasons with the Indianapolis Colts (2018-20). During that time he appeared in 96 games with 56 starts and amassed 200 tackles, 30.5 sacks, 53 quarterback hits, 17 passes defensed, three forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries.

2019 Ind 14 14 32 3.5 11 4 0 4 1 0

In 2020, Autry collected 33 tackles, 7.5 sacks, 10 quarterback pressures and nine tackles for loss in 14 games with the Colts. His 13 starts were the second-highest total of his career (14 in 2019).

93 Tart, Teair 6-2 304 3 Florida International

Javon

2018 Ind 12 11 37 9.0 11 13 0 1 2 1

5. Denico

In the past four seasons, Titans defensive tackle Denico Autry ranks in the NFL's top five in sacks among players at his position.

Year Team GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

2017 Oak 16 3 35 5.0 9 9 0 7 0 0

94 Hand, Da'Shawn 6-3 297 5 Alabama

2020 Ind 14 13 33 7.5 10 9 0 0 0 0

2022 Game Notes:

95 Walker, DeMarcus 6-4 280 6 Florida State

No. Name

Tackles for Loss - 2 (Twice, last at Kansas City, 1/12/19)

2015 Oak 14 8 29 3.0 7 6 0 4 0 0

Autry also has been one of the NFL's best in blocking opponent kicks and punts. From 2014 to 2021, he recorded a league-high total of nine blocks, getting a hand on five extra point attempts, one punt and three field goals, including a blocked field goal in 2021.

97 Strong, Kevin 6-4 295 4 Texas-San Antonio

2.

#96 • DL DENICO AUTRY

From 2018 to 2020, when Autry played for the Indianapolis Colts, he produced a total of 20 sacks. During that time, only five NFL players whose primary position was defensive tackle (or nose tackle) had more sacks than him.

4.

90 Jones, Naquan 6-3 313 2 Michigan State

2021 Ten 1 1 3 1.5 2 0 0 1 0 0

Forced Fumbles - 1 at Buffalo (1/9/21) Passes Defensed - 1 (Twice, last vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22)

1.

Year Team GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

98 Simmons, Jeffery 6-4 305 4 Mississippi State

3.

Player Sacks Aaron Donald 59.0 Chris Jones 41.0 DeForest Buckner 36.0 Cameron Heyward 31.0 Autry 29.0 Allen 25.0 Fletcher Cox 24.0 Armstead 22.5 Hargrave 22.5 Jarran Reed 21.5

2021 Ten 17 11 32 9.0 44 10 0 6 0 0 2022 Ten 1 0 4 0.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 114 67 252 39.5 99 60 0 25 3 3

Autry’s Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 9 vs. Houston (9/30/18) Sacks - 3 at Jacksonville (12/2/18)

In 2021, Autry appeared in all 17 games with 11 starts and finished second on the team with nine sacks. His sack total tied his career high, matching the nine sacks he had in 2018 as a member of the Indianapolis Colts. He added 32 tackles, 44 quarterback pressures, 10 tackles for loss and six passes

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Fumble Recovery - 1 (Three times, last vs. Miami, 11/25/18) Pass Defensed - 2 (Three times, last at L.A. Rams, 11/7/21) Tackles for Loss - 4 vs. Houston (9/30/18)

DEFENSIVETITANSLINEMEN

2018 Ind 2 2 4 1.0 3 2 0 0 0 0

8. Arik

Autry’s Career Postseason Statistics:

6-5, 285, 9th Year, Mississippi State

Click for complete bio

96 Autry, Denico 6-5 285 9 Mississippi State

The Albemarle, N.C., native played in 26 games (23 starts) in two seasons at Mississippi State University, totaling 73 tackles, 16 tackles for loss, six sacks and three forced fumbles. He spent his first two collegiate seasons at East Mississippi Community College where he was an NJCAA All-American and national champion.

Forced Fumbles - 2 at Jacksonville (12/2/18)

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), posted four tackles and two quarterback pressures.

Ht Wt Exp College

Simmons’ Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 8 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22) Sacks - 3 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

Defensive lineman Jeffery Simmons is in his fourth NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the first round (19th overall) of the 2019 NFL Draft.

Cameron Heyward Pittsburgh 89 10.0 9

In 2020, Simmons appeared and started in 15 games. With three defensive fumble recoveries, he tied Chase Young for the most in the NFL in 2020 and was the first Titans defender with three fumble recoveries in a season since 2005, when linebacker Brad Kassell accomplished the feat. Simmons ranked second on the team with 19 quarterback pressures and added 49 tackles, three sacks, three tackles for loss, five passes defensed and one forced fumble. In the franchise's "Titans era" (since 1999), he became the first player to post at least three fumble recoveries, three sacks and five passes defensed in the same season. He also had three tackles and a tackle for loss in one playoff contest.

6-4, 305, 4th Year, Mississippi State

Derek Barnett 2 2 0 4

Simmons’ Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 7 vs. Cleveland (12/6/20) Sacks - 3 at Los Angeles Rams (11/7/21) Forced Fumbles - 1 vs. Chicago (11/8/20) Fumble Recoveries - 1 (Three times, last vs. Detroit, 12/20/20)

Jeffery Simmons Tennessee 54 8.5 6

Simmons' Career Regular Season Statistics:

MOST TOTAL BLOCKS FROM 2014–2021

2. Margus Hunt 2 3 0 5

As a junior in 2018, Simmons was named second-team All-American after totaling 63 tackles, 17 tackles for loss and two sacks. His 17 tackles for loss led the team, ranked fourth in the SEC and were the third-most in single-season school history.

In 2021, Autry's first season in Tennessee, he was credited with a field goal block against the Miami Dolphins on Jan. 2.

Ra'Shede Hageman 1 4 0 5

Player Team Tackles Sacks Defensed

Forced Fumbles - 1 (Twice, last vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22) Fumble Recoveries - 1 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

During his sophomore season (2017), he set a career high with five sacks and added 12 tackles for loss. With three total blocked kicks and punts, he became the first SEC player since 2004 to lead the nation in the category.Simmons

Henry Anderson 2 1 1 4 10. (several tied) 3

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Maxx Crosby Las Vegas 56 8.0 7

Simmons began his rookie season on the non-football injury list due to a knee injury he suffered during training in February 2019. He missed the first six games of the season before joining the 53-man roster in Week 7.

Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2019 9 7 40 2.0 14 2 0 1 0 0 2020 15 15 49 3.0 20 3 0 5 1 3 2021 17 17 54 8.5 58 12 0 6 0 0 2022 1 1 6 2.0 6 2 0 0 1 0 Totals 42 40 149 15.5 98 19 0 12 2 3

During his first eight NFL seasons (2014-21), Denico Autry recorded a total of nine blocks, getting a hand on five extra point attempts, three field goals and one punt. Autry led the NFL in total blocks during that time, four ahead of the next-closest players on the list (five by Margus Hunt and Ra'Shede Hageman).

Vincent Taylor 3 1 0 4

Player FG PAT Punt Total

Cory Littleton 0 0 4 4

is a native of Macon, Miss.

#98 • DT JEFFERY SIMMONS

Blocked ...

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), totaled six tackles, two sacks, six quarterback pressures (tied for team lead) and one forced fumble. In the first quarter, he recorded a five-yard sack, taking down Giants quarterback Daniel Jones. In the second quarter, he registered the first strip-sack of his career, forcing Jones to fumble. The ball was recovered by outside linebacker Bud Dupree. It was the second forced fumble of Simmons' career. The takeaway led to a Titans field goal. It was his third career regular-season game with multiple sacks, in addition to one multi-sack performance in the postseason. Including the 2021 regular-season finale at Houston (one sack on Jan. 9) and the team’s postseason game against Cincinnati (three sacks on Jan. 22), he notched a total of six sacks in a three-game span. He also tackled Saquon Barkley for a six-yard loss in the fourth quarter.

Most total blocked field goals, extra points and punts from 2014 to 2021:

1. Denico Autry 3 5 1 9

4. William Gholston 2 2 0 4

His rookie totals included 40 tackles, two sacks, two tackles for loss, 14 quarterback pressures and one pass defensed in nine games (seven starts). He added four tackles, three quarterback pressures and a fumble recovery in three playoff contests.

2022 Game Notes:

Simmons' Career Postseason Statistics:

Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2019 3 0 4 0.0 3 0 0 0 0 1 2020 1 1 3 0.0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2021 1 1 8 3.0 3 3 0 0 0 0 Totals 5 2 15 3.0 6 4 0 0 0 1

In 2021, Jeffery Simmons was named to his first Pro Bowl after setting career highs with 54 tackles, 8.5 sacks and six passes defensed. He was one of only five NFL players to produce at least 50 tackles, eight sacks and six passes defensed during the season, joining Maxx Crosby, Cameron Jordan, Cameron Heyward and T.J. Watt. Simmons and Heyward were the only interior defensive linemen in the league to accomplish the feat.

NFL players in 2021 with a minimum of 50 tackles, eight sacks and five passes defensed:

Total Passes

Click for complete bio

Shelby Harris 4 0 0 4

During a three-year career as a defensive tackle at Mississippi State, Simmons appeared in 38 contests with 28 starts. He finished his career ranked sixth in school history with 32.5 in tackles for loss. He also tied for sixth in MSU annals with five forced fumbles and tied for fourth with three blocked kicks. His totals also included 163 tackles, seven sacks, seven passes defensed and two defensive touchdowns.

He was a first-team All-SEC selection as a sophomore and junior and was one of two players in the nation to be named a Bednarik Award Semifinalist in both 2017 and 2018.

T.J. Watt Pittsburgh 64 22.5 7

Cameron Jordan New Orleans 59 12.5 6

Before the start of the 2021 season, Simmons was named a team captain for the first time in his career, and he went on to become one of six players on the roster to start all 17 games. He was named to his first career Pro Bowl and added Associated Press second-team All-Pro honors after setting career highs in several categories, including sacks (8.5), tackles (54), quarterback pressures (58), tackles for loss (12) and passes defensed (six). He led the squad in pressures and placed third in sacks. Among all defensive tackles in the NFL, his 8.5 sacks ranked sixth. In the divisional playoffs, he set a franchise postseason record with three sacks.

TACKLES, SACKS & PASSES DEFENSED IN '21

¾ The Cleveland, Texas, product saw action in 47 career games with 40 starts for the University of Texas-San Antonio and totaled 106 tackles, 26.5 tackles for loss, 7.5 sacks, two forced fumbles and two blocked field goals.

¾ His first name is pronounced “tee-AIR.”

¾ Naquan Jones was signed by the Titans as an undrafted free agent on May 14, 2021.

94 - DE Da'SHAWN HAND

¾ The Woodbridge, Va., native appeared in 50 games at the University of Alabama (2015-17) and recorded 64 career tackles, eight sacks, 13.5 tackles for loss, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery.

¾ In 2021, he played in three games with the Lions before concluding the season with the Titans. He played for the Titans in the regular season finale.

6-3, 313, 2nd Year, Michigan State

97 - DE KEVIN STRONG

¾ Prior to arriving in Tennessee, he recorded 54 tackles, three sacks, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery over four seasons (2018-21) with the Detroit Lions. He also spent time on the Indianapolis Colts practice squad.

6-4, 295, 4th Year, Texas-San Antonio

¾ In 2020, he saw action in six games with one start and totaled 15 tackles as well as his first career sack.

¾ In 2020, he appeared in seven games with one start as a rookie and totaled five tackles, two quarterback pressures, one tackle for loss, one pass defensed.

¾ Teair Tart was signed by the Titans as an undrafted free agent on May 7, 2020.

¾ The Philadelphia, Pa., native appeared in 23 games with 10 starts over two seasons at Florida International, totaling 51 tackles, 19.0 tackles for loss, six sacks, one pass defensed, five quarterback pressures and two forced fumbles.

95 - DL DeMARCUS WALKER

¾ In 2020, he played in 13 games during his final season in Denver and established a career high with four starts.

¾ As a senior in 2016, Walker earned ACC Defensive Player of the Year honors and was a consensus All-American, totaling 16 sacks, 21.5 tackles for loss, and 68 stops. His sack total was the second-highest in the nation and third-most recorded by a Seminole in a season.

6-2, 304, 3rd year, Florida International

93 - DT TEAIR TART

¾ DeMarcus Walker was signed by the Titans as a free agent on May 16, 2022.

¾ In 2021, he saw action in 13 games with two starts for the Texans and registered a career-high 31 tackles to go along with two sacks, seven quarterback hits, four tackles for loss, one pass defensed and one forced fumble.

¾ Tart also played at Ellsworth (Iowa) Community College in 2017 and ASA (N.Y.) College in 2016.

¾ In 2020, he played in 10 games with one start for the Lions and totaled 19 tackles, one tackle for loss and one forced fumble.

¾ A native of Foley, Ala., he appeared in 46 games with five starts on the defensive line over four seasons at Michigan State (2017-20) and totaled 78 tackles, 12.5 tackles for loss, three sacks, three passes defensed, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery over his career

6-3, 297, 5th Year, Alabama

¾ As a senior (2020), Jones saw action in all seven games and made four starts. He recorded 24 tackles, a career-high five stops for loss, one pass defensed and one fumble recovery.

¾ In 2021, he appeared in 11 games with 10 starts. His totals included 16 tackles, three quarterback pressures and two tackles for loss, giving him career highs in each category.

¾ He played in 15 games with one start for the Lions during the previous three seasons (2019-21) and posted 16 tackles, a sack and a pass defensed.

¾ The Jacksonville, Fla., native entered the NFL as a second-round selection (51st overall) by the Broncos in the 2017 NFL Draft.

MORE TITANS DEFENSIVE LINEMEN

¾ The Titans initially signed free agent Kevin Strong to the practice squad on Nov. 23, 2021. He was promoted to the 53-man roster on Jan. 8, 2022.

¾ In 2021, he appeared in five games for the Titans during the regular season after playing one contest with the Detroit Lions. His combined season totals included six tackles. He also played in the Titans' divisional playoff game.

¾ The Titans initially signed defensive end Da’Shawn Hand to the team’s practice squad on Jan. 5, 2022.

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¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Walker played in a total of 49 games in five seasons with the Denver Broncos (2017-20) and Houston Texans (2021). His totals during that time included 52 tackles, 12.5 sacks, 23 quarterback hits and two forced fumbles.

¾ During his rookie campaign in 2018, he appeared in 13 games with eight starts and recorded career highs in tackles (27), sacks (three), tackles for loss (four) and forced fumbles (two).

¾ In four seasons at Florida State (2013-16), he played in 52 games with 40 starts, totaling 182 tackles, 28.5 sacks, 45 tackles for loss, seven passes defensed, one interception, eight forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries and two blocked kicks.

90 - DL NAQUAN JONES

¾ In 2021, he appeared in 13 games as a rookie and registered five starts. He totaled 29 tackles, 2.5 sacks, four quarterback pressures, four tackles for loss and two passes defensed. He also started the team's divisional playoff contest and totaled two tackles and a half sack.

6-4, 280, 6th Year, Florida State

53 Cole, Dylan 6-0 237 6 Missouri State

42 Jones, Joe 6-0 240 6 Northwestern

2022 Game Notes:

In 2020, he started all 16 games and led the NFL with 163 total tackles while also notching a single-season career high with three sacks. He tallied 14 tackles (nine solo) in Week 16 against Cincinnati. He also joined J.J. Watt as the only players in Texans history with at least 10 total tackles, one tackle for loss and one forced fumble in a single game in Week 17 vs. Tennessee.In2019, Cunningham started in all 16 regular season games and both postseason contests. He finished the season with 137 total tackles, seven tackles for loss, two sacks, three quarterback hits, two passes defensed and two fumble recoveries, while tallying five tackles on special teams. His 137 tackles led the AFC and ranked seventh in the NFL, and he was the only player in the NFL to record over 100 tackles on defense and at least five tackles on special teams.

2018 Hou 1 1 7 0.0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2019 Hou 2 2 16 0.0 1 2 0 2 0 0 2021 Ten 1 1 10 0.0 0 1 0 0 0 0

Inside linebacker Zach Cunningham is in his sixth NFL season and his second season with the Titans in 2022. He was claimed off waivers from the Houston Texans on Dec. 9, 2021.

2019 Hou 16 16 137 2.0 3 7 0 2 0 2

Cunningham's Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 10 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22) Passes Defensed - 1 (Three times, last at Kansas City 1/12/20)

Passes Defensed - 3 vs. Pittsburgh (12/25/17) Forced Fumble - 1 (Five times, last at Tennessee 11/21/21) Fumble Recovery - 1 (Three times, last at Jacksonville 11/3/19)

Cunningham joined the Titans after four-plus seasons (2017-21) in Houston, where he appeared in 72 games with 66 starts. During his time with the Texans, he tallied 570 tackles, 26 tackles for loss, 6.5 sacks, five forced fumbles, thee fumble recoveries and one interception.

#41 • ILB ZACH CUNNINGHAM

45 Campbell, Chance (IR) 6-2 232 R Mississippi

Cunningham's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 16 (Twice, last vs. Denver 12/8/19) Sacks - 1 (Five times, last at Jacksonville 11/8/20) Interceptions - 1 vs. Cleveland (12/2/18)

6-3, 238, 6th Year, Vanderbilt

Since the beginning of the 2019 season, Titans inside linebacker Zach Cunningham ranks among the top five tacklers in the NFL, according to press box tackle statistics. From 2019 through 2021, most of which was spent with the Houston Texans, Cunningham tallied 392 total stops, trailing only Seattle's Bobby Wagner (467) and Chicago's Roquan Smith (402). Most total tackles from 2019 to 2022 (press box statistics): Player Total Tackles 1. Bobby Wagner 474 2. Roquan Smith 411 3. Zach Cunningham 398 Jordan Hicks 398 5. Fred Warner 386 Joe Schobert 386 7. De'Vondre Campbell 384 8. Budda Baker 376 9. Shaquille Leonard 375 Foye Oluokun 375 TACKLES FROM 2019 TO 2021

Year Team GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

Totals 77 71 585 6.5 12 29 1 18 5 3

56 Rice, Monty (PUP) 6-0 233 2 Georgia

Cunningham's Career Postseason Statistics:

Year Team GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), posted six tackles.

Totals 4 4 33 0.0 2 3 0 3 0 0

TITANS INSIDE LINEBACKERS

2020 Hou 16 16 163 3.0 4 7 0 2 1 0

In 2018, he tied for the Texans team lead with a then-career-high 105 total tackles, five passes defensed, one interception returned for a touchdown, three tackles for loss, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery.Asa rookie in 2017, Cunningham finished second on the team with 82 total tackles to go along with six passes defensed, five tackles for loss, two quarterback hits, 1.5 sacks and one forced fumble in 16 games. He tied for second among all NFL rookies in total tackles and fourth in franchise history among Houston rookies. He was the first player in franchise history to record 80 total tackles and eight special teams tackles in a single season.

The Pinson, Ala., native played three seasons (2014-16) at Vanderbilt University after redshirting the 2013 campaign. He finished his Commodores career ranked third in program history with 39.5 tackles for loss and totaled 295 careerCunninghamtackles.was originally selected by the Texans in the second round (57th overall) of the 2017 NFL Draft.

2018 Hou 14 14 105 0.0 2 3 1 5 2 1

51 Long Jr., David 5-11 227 4 West Virginia

41 Cunningham, Zach 6-3 238 6 Vanderbilt

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2021 Hou/Ten 14 11 92 0.0 1 7 0 3 1 0

After joining the Titans, Cunningham started the final four games of the 2021 regular season and led the defense over that stretch with 25 tackles. His totals also included three tackles for loss and one stop on special teams. In the team's divisional playoff contest, he led the defense with 10 tackles.

2022 Ten 1 1 6 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Click for complete bio

Cunningham's Career Regular Season Statistics:

2017 Hou 16 13 82 1.5 2 5 0 6 1 0

a junior at West Virginia in 2018, he was selected Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year by the coaches and the Associated Press. He also received second-team All-America honors by the Associated Press and first-team All-Big 12 accolades by the Associated Press.

¾ Placed on reserve/physically unable to perform on Aug. 24.

Click for complete bio

MORE TITANS INSIDE LINEBACKERS

Long's Career Regular Season Statistics:

¾ The Titans selected Monty Rice in the third round (92nd overall) of the 2021 NFL Draft.

As a rookie in 2019, Long appeared in 14 games during the regular season. He also played in all three playoff contests with one start.

¾ In one season at Mississippi (2021), Campbell started all 13 games and led the team with 109 tackles. He added six sacks, 11 quarterback pressures, 12.5 tackles for loss, two passes defensed, three forced fumbles and led the SEC with three fumble recoveries while with the Rebels.

¾ In 2021, he appeared in 10 games with four starts before finishing the season on injured reserve. He registered 30 tackles and one pass defensed.

Long is a native of Cincinnati, Ohio.

¾ He has also spent time with the Dallas Cowboys (2017), Los Angeles Chargers (2017), Seattle Seahawks (2017) and Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2021).

6-0, 237, 6th Year, Missouri State

56 - LB MONTY RICE 6-0, 233, 2nd Year, Georgia

2019 14 0 15 0.0 0 2 0 1 1 0 2020 14 5 50 0.0 1 2 0 2 0 0 2021 10 9 75 0.0 6 4 2 6 0 0 2022 1 1 8 0.0 2 1 0 0 0 0

¾ The Titans selected Chance Campbell in the sixth round (219th overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft.

2022 Game Notes:

¾ He originally signed with the Cowboys as a rookie free agent on May 12, 2017.

2022 Game Notes:

¾ In 2021, he appeared in nine games and tied for third on the team with a career-high 10 special teams tackles. He added a forced fumble on special teams and also contributed six tackles, one quarterback pressure, one tackle for loss and one pass defense on defense.

¾ The Plano, Ill., native tallied 70 tackles, three sacks, two passes defensed and one fumble recovery in 27 games at Northwestern (2013-16).

¾ In his rookie season in 2017, he played in 12 games with one start, and tallied career highs in tackles (32), interceptions (two), sacks (one) and tackles for loss (four).

Tackle For Loss - 2 at Kansas City (1/19/20) ILB DAVID LONG JR.

During a three-year career at West Virginia, he played in 34 games with 31 starts and totaled 252 tackles, 14 sacks and 40 career tackles for loss which tied for third place on West Virginia’s all-time list. In his final campaign in 2018, tied for the single-season program record with 19 tackles for loss.As

¾ Dylan Cole was signed to the Titans practice squad on Oct. 13, 2021 and promoted to the 53-man roster on Nov. 16.

¾ A native of Ellicott City, Md., he transferred to Mississippi following three seasons (2018-20) the University of Maryland, where he amassed 107 tackles, 1.5 sacks, 10 tackles for loss, one interception, four passes defensed, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery in 25 games.

Long's Career Postseason Statistics:

¾ A native of Springfield, Mo., Cole earned All-American honors as a senior at Missouri State after he led all FCS players in total tackles per game (12.9) and was second nationally in solo tackles per game (7.7).

Linebacker David Long Jr. is in his fourth NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the sixth round (188th overall) of the 2019 NFL Draft.

Long's Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 8 (Twice, last vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22) Sacks - 1 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

Totals 5 3 29 1.0 2 3 0 0 0 0

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, he totaled 49 games of experience over four seasons (2017-20) with the Denver Broncos, recording 26 career special teams stops.

¾ In 2020, Rice was named a finalist for the Butkus Award, which recognizes the nation’s best linebacker, after amassing 49 tackles, four tackles for loss, one sack, one pass defensed, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery returned for a score.

5-11, 227, 4th Year, West Virginia

¾ Placed on injured reserve on Sept. 9.

Interceptions - 1 (Twice, last vs. Miami, 1/2/22)

Totals 39 15 148 0.0 9 9 2 9 1 0

¾ Cole played four years with the Houston Texans (2017-20) after originally signing as an undrafted free agent. He played in 37 games for the Texans and totaled 67 tackles, two interceptions, one fumble recovery and 19 special teams stops.

In 2021, Long was limited to 10 total games due to injuries but nevertheless set a career high with nine starts. He also established career bests in tackles (75), quarterback pressures (six), tackles for loss (four), interceptions (two) and passes defensed (six). His average of 7.5 tackles per game led the team.

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#51 •

¾ As a junior in 2019, Rice was Georgia’s leading tackler with 89 total stops.

Long's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 14 vs. Buffalo (10/18/21)

¾ In 2018, he played in nine games and made five starts. Finished as Georgia’s third-leading tackler with 59 stops. Also posted 1.5 tackles for loss, one sack, two quarterback pressures, one pass defensed and one forced fumble.

¾ As a junior in 2020, he saw action in five games and made four starts for the Terrapins, leading the squad with 43 tackles. He earned All-Big Ten honorable mention.

45 - LB CHANCE CAMPBELL 6-2, 232, Rookie, Mississippi

¾ Jones initially joined the Titans practice squad on Sept. 13, 2021 and was promoted to the 53-man roster later in the season.

2022 Game Notes:

53 - LB DYLAN COLE

6-0, 240, 6th Year, Northwestern

¾ In 2021, he appeared in nine games in his first season with the Titans and totaled five special teams tackles in addition to posting one tackle and two quarterback pressures in limited snaps on defense.

¾ In 2020, Cole saw action in six games and recorded six tackles.

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), totaled eight tackles, two quarterback pressures and one tackle for loss.

Forced Fumbles - 1 vs. Kansas City (11/10/19)

In 2020, Long appeared in 14 games with five starts at inside linebacker. He totaled 50 tackles, one quarterback pressure, two tackles for loss, two passes defensed and four stops on special teams. He recorded a start in the playoffs and tallied five tackles and one quarterback pressure.

Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

¾ The Huntsville, Ala., native played four seasons at Georgia (2017-20) where he appeared in 47 games with 28 starts and tallied 219 tackles, 10.5 tackles for loss, two sacks, 21 quarterback pressures, five passes defensed, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery returned for a touchdown for the Bulldogs.

42 - LB JOE JONES

Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2019 3 1 16 0.0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2020 1 1 5 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2021 1 1 8 1.0 1 1 0 0 0 0

Outside linebacker Bud Dupree is in his eighth NFL season and his second campaign with the Titans in 2022. He was signed by the Titans as an unrestricted free agent on March 19, 2021.

No. Name

2022 Game Notes:

A native of Irwinton, Ga., Dupree played in 47 games with 38 starts at the University of Kentucky (2011-14) and finished with 247 tackles, 23.5 sacks, 38.0 tackles for loss and four forced fumbles. At the time he left school for the NFL, he ranked second in Wildcat history in career sacks.

Dupree’s Career Postseason Statistics:

to

26.0 5. Cameron Jordan 23.0 6. Myles Garrett 22.0 7. Chandler Jones 20.0 8. Bud Dupree 19.5 9. Joey Bosa 19.0 Justin Houston 19.0 Out of

2021 Ten 11 6 17 3.0 15 2 0 1 1 0

Against New York Giants (9/11), recorded a six-yard sack in the first quarter. In the second quarter, he registered his fourth career fumble recovery, gaining control of the ball after it was fumbled by Daniel Jones on a sack by Jeffery Simmons. The takeaway led to a Titans field goal. He added six quarterback pressures to tie for the team lead.

Dupree’s Career Regular Season Statistics:

Player Sacks 1. T.J.

Dupree returned from a season-ending injury with the Steelers in 2020 to play in 11 games with six starts for the Titans in 2021. He totaled 17 tackles, three sacks, 15 quarterback pressures, two tackles for loss, one pass defensed and one forced fumble. In the team's divisional playoff game, he added two tackles, a sack and two quarterback pressures.

In 2019, Dupree posted a career-best 11.5 sacks, 68 tackles, 16 tackles for loss, 17 quarterback hits, four forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries and three passes defensed in a career-high 16 starts. His 16 tackles for loss ranked fourth in the NFL, while his sack total was the ninthbest in the league.

Sacks - 2.5 at Buffalo (12/11/16)

Forced Fumbles - 1 (Eight times, last at Baltimore, 11/1/20)

2. Shaquil

58 Landry III, Harold (IR) 6-2 252 5 Boston College

48 Dupree, Bud 6-4 269 8 Kentucky

Fumble Recovery - 1 (Three times, last at Cincinnati, 11/24/19)

2018 Pit 16 15 42 5.5 13 8 1 3 1 0

Passes Defensed - 2 at Cleveland (9/9/18)

period. Most strip-sacks in the NFL from 2019 to 2020: Player Strip-Sacks 1. Shaquil Barrett 8 2. Yannick Ngakoue 7 Chandler Jones 7 4. Bud Dupree 6 Jason Pierre-Paul 6 Myles Garrett 6 T.J. Watt 6 Khalil Mack 6 9. Aaron Donald 5 Benson Mayowa 5 Haason Reddick 5 SACKS FROM 2019 TO 2020

2020 Pit 11 11 31 8.0 15 8 0 2 2 0

Za’Darius

Dupree’s Playoff Single-Game Highs:

2022 Ten 1 1 1 1.0 6 1 0 0 0 1

2016 Pit 7 4 24 4.5 6 5 0 1 1 0

2017 Pit 1 1 4 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Tackles - 7 vs. Cleveland (1/1/17)

6-4, 269, 8th Year, Kentucky

3. Aaron

Dupree’s Regular Season Single-Game Highs:

Ht Wt Exp College

Year Team GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

2015 Pit 16 5 26 4.0 6 4 0 1 0 0

Tackles - 6 vs. Miami (1/8/17)

In Bud Dupree’s final two seasons in Pittsburgh, he ranked eighth in the NFL with 19.5 total sacks despite missing the final five games of the 2020 campaign. He posted 11.5 sacks in 2019 and eight sacks in 2020. Dupree also ranked ninth in the NFL from 2019 to 2020 with 24 tackles for loss. in the NFL from 2019 2020: Watt 29.5 Barrett 27.5 Donald 26.0 Smith Dupree’s that

2016 Pit 3 3 15 0.5 3 1 0 1 0 0

2019 Pit 16 16 68 11.5 17 16 0 3 4 2

92 Adeniyi, Ola 6-1 248 5 Toledo

In 2020, Dupree started the first 11 games but missed the final five contests due to injury. He totaled eight sacks, 15 quarterback hits, 31 tackles, eight tackles for loss, two forced fumbles and two passes defensed.

Year Team GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

Sacks - 1 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

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#48 • OLB BUD OUTSIDETITANSDUPREELINEBACKERS

2015 Pit 2 2 6 0.0 0 2 0 0 0 0

Click for complete bio

Dupree spent his first six NFL seasons in Pittsburgh after the Steelers chose him with the 22nd overall draft choice in the 2015 NFL Draft. His totals with the Steelers included 231 tackles, 39.5 sacks, 64 quarterback pressures, 53 tackles for loss, one interception, eight forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries in 81 games.

Interceptions - 1 at Tampa Bay (9/24/18)

2021 Ten 1 0 2 1.0 2 1 0 0 0 0

From 2019 to 2020, Dupree totaled 19.5 sacks, ranking eighth in the NFL despite missing five games. His six strip-sacks tied for fourth in the same period. In his final 17 games in Pittsburgh, he registered at least half a sack on 12 occasions.

19.5 sacks from 2019 to 2020, he forced a fumble on six of those plays. His six strip-sacks tied for fourth place in

2017 Pit 15 15 40 6.0 7 12 0 1 0 1

NFL Totals 93 73 249 43.5 85 56 1 12 9 4

¾

59 Tuszka, Derrek 6-4 251 3 North Dakota State

Passes Defensed - 1 at Kansas City (1/15/17)

99 Weaver, Rashad 6-4 259 2 Pittsburgh

Most sacks

Playoff Totals 7 6 27 1.5 5 4 0 1 0 0

Landry was placed on injured reserve on Sept. 2, 2022.From the start of his rookie season through 2021, Landry's 31 total sacks led the Titans. Other than Jevon Kearse (37), Landry produced the highest sack total by a Titans/Oilers player in his first four NFL seasons since individual sacks became an official NFL statistic in 1982.

Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2019 3 3 8 1.0 8 1 0 1 0 0 2020 1 1 10 2.0 4 1 0 0 0 0 2021 1 1 6 1.5 5 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 5 5 24 4.5 17 3 0 1 0 0

Click for complete bio

Landry's 12 sacks in 2021 led the Titans, ranked 10th in the NFL and established a career high. He became the first Titans player to record double-digit sacks in a season since Brian Orakpo (10.5) in 2016 and the first Titans player with 12 sacks in a season since Jason Babin (12.5) in 2010. Landry tied for second on the squad with 75 tackles, ranked second with a career-high 49 quarterback pressures, led the team with 14 tackles for loss, and added a forced fumble. He joined Micah Parsons, Aaron Donald and Heyward as the only NFL players in 2021 to post at least 75 tackles and 10 sacks.

2018 15 3 46 4.5 18 2 0 2 1 0 2019 16 16 81 9.0 28 4 1 1 1 2 2020 16 16 69 5.5 29 10 1 5 0 0 2021 17 17 75 12.0 49 14 0 0 1 0 2022 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 64 52 271 31.0 127 30 2 8 3 2

Landry started all 16 games in 2019 and led the Titans with nine sacks. His 28 quarterback pressures ranked second, and he added 81 tackles, four tackles for loss, one pass defensed, one forced fumble and two fumble recoveries. He also started all three postseason games and registered a sack and a team-high eight quarterback pressures.

From 2018 to 2021, Landry joined Pittsburgh's Cameron Heyward as the NFL's only players to be credited with at least 250 tackles (press box statistics), 30 sacks and two interceptions.

2022 Game Notes: ¾ Placed on injured reserve on Sept. 2.

Outside linebacker Harold Landry III is in his fifth NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the second round (41st overall) of the 2018 NFL Draft after the Titans traded up 16 spots in the second round (57 to 41) in order to take the former Boston College standout.

Then, in the team's 2021 divisional playoff contest, he recorded 1.5 sacks. He improved his postseason career total to 4.5 sacks, becoming the organization’s first player with at least four career postseason sacks since individual sacks became an official statistic in 1982.

As a rookie in 2018, he played in 15 games with three starts. His 4.5 sacks tied for third place on the team, and he also tied for second on the

Landry's Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 10 vs. Baltimore (1/10/21) Sacks - 2 vs. Baltimore (1/10/21) Quarterback Pressures - 5 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

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In 2020, Landry recorded 16 starts for the second consecutive season. He led the team with 5.5 sacks, a then-career-high 32 quarterback pressures and a then-career-high 10 tackles for loss. He totaled 69 tackles and added one interception and a career-high five passes defensed. In one playoff contest, he led the team with 10 tackles and two sacks.

in 2017, Landry played and started eight games before a season-ending ankle injury ended his year. He finished second on the team with five sacks and totaled 38 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss and two passes defensed.In2016,

6-2, 252, 5th Year, Boston College

In 46 career games playing defensive end for Boston College, Landry totaled 160 tackles, 26 sacks, 47.5 tackles for loss, seven passes defensed, 10 forced fumbles, one fumble recovery and one interception. His 26 career sacks were exceeded in school history by only Mathias Kiwanuka (37.5 from As2002-05).asenior

Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

With a career-high 12 sacks in 2021, Titans outside linebacker Harold Landry III ranked fifth in the AFC and 10th in the NFL. In the franchise’s “Titans era” (1999–present), his 12 sacks tied for the fourth-highest single-season total and were the most since Jason Babin produced 12.5 sacks in 2010. Most sacks in 2021: Player Team Sacks 1. T.J. Watt Pittsburgh Steelers 22.5 2. Robert Quinn Chicago Bears 18.5 3. Myles Garrett Cleveland Browns 16.0 4. Nick Bosa San Francisco 49ers 15.5 5. Trey Hendrickson Cincinnati Bengals 14.0 6. Micah Parsons Dallas Cowboys 13.0 7. Cameron Jordan New Orleans Saints 12.5 Matt Judon New England Patriots 12.5 Aaron Donald Los Angeles Rams 12.5 10. Harold Landry III Tennessee Titans 12.0 2021 NFL SACK LEADERS

Landry’s Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 8 (Three times, last vs. Buffalo, 10/18/21) Sacks - 2 (Three times, last vs. Buffalo, 10/18/21) Quarterback Pressures - 9 at N.Y. Giants (12/16/18) Interceptions - 1 (Twice, last vs. Jacksonville, 9/20/20) Forced Fumbles - 1 (Three times, last at Indianapolis, 10/31/21) Fumble Recovery - 1 (Twice, last vs. Tampa Bay, 10/27/19)

Landry set the school’s single-season record with 16.5 sacks, which led the nation. He added seven forced fumbles, which also led the country, while his 22 tackles for loss ranked fifth nationally and ranked second all-time for the Eagles. His numerous honors included Walter Camp second-team All-America, AP second-team All-America and second-team All-ACC by the Atlantic Coast Sports Media Association and the league's head Hecoaches.isanative of Spring Lake, N.C.

Landry's Career Postseason Statistics:

defense with 18 quarterback pressures.

Landry's Career Regular Season Statistics:

In 2021, Landry was named to his first Pro Bowl after starting all 17 games. He registered his third consecutive season to start every contest, extending his streaks to 64 consecutive games played and 52 consecutive starts. At the conclusion of 2021, his starting streak was the sixth-longest active streak in the NFL among all defensive players.

#58 • OLB HAROLD LANDRY III

¾ As a rookie in 2021, Weaver totaled two tackles in two games before being placed on injured reserve on Sept. 28.

When Harold Landry III registered a sack against the New Orleans Saints on Nov. 14, he joined Jevon Kearse as the only Titans/Oilers players since individual sacks became an official NFL statistic in 1982 to produce at least a half sack in eight consecutive games. Kearse had a half sack or more in each of the final 10 games of his 1999 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year campaign and in the first two games of his second season. In 2019, Landry recorded five consecutive games with at least a half sack.

5. Jurrell Casey 2011–2014 21.0

99 - OLB RASHAD WEAVER

¾ Adeniyi was born in Lagos, Nigeria, and raised in Fort Bend County, Texas.

* Individual sacks did not become an official NFL statistic until 1982.

8. Robert Brazile 1975–1984 48.0

59 - OLB DERREK TUSZKA

¾ Ola Adeniyi (pronounced "OH-la ah-DAY-nee") joined the Titans as a free agent in 2021 after spending his first three seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers organization.

1. Elvin Bethea 1968–1983 105.0

12. Harold Landry III 2018–2021 31.0 Curley Culp 1974–1980 31.0

1. Jevon Kearse 1999–2002 37.0

Franchise career sack leaders*:

Lee Williams Sept. 13, 1992–Oct. 18, 1992 5

6-5, 246, 3rd Year, North Dakota State

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), totaled four tackles, three quarterback pressures and his first two career sacks. In the first quarter, he recorded his first career sack, dropping Daniel Jones for a five-yard loss. In the third quarter, he notched a two-yard sack on third down to end a Giants drive.

3. Jesse Baker 1979–1987 66.0

2. Harold Landry III 2018–2021 31.0

Player Seasons Sacks

7. Jurrell Casey 2011–2019 51.0

6-1, 248, 5th Year, Toledo

¾ In 2020, Adeniyi appeared in 15 games for the Steelers and tallied career-highs with 16 tackles and eight special teams stops.

8. Gary Walker 1995–1998 16.0

¾ In 2021, he appeared in 16 games and set career highs with 2.5 sacks, 20 quarterback pressures, two tackles for loss and one pass defensed. He contributed 11 tackles on defense and tied for third on the team with a career-high 10 special teams tackles.

2. Harold Landry III Sept. 26, 2021–Nov. 14, 2021 8

10. Derrick Morgan 2010–2018 44.5

¾ During his career at the University of Toledo, he saw action in 34 games with 25 starts from 2015 to 2017. He totaled 118 tackles, 28 tackles for loss, 12.5 sacks, three forced fumbles, a fumble recovery and a pass defensed in his collegiate career.

3. Ray Childress 1985–1988 23.0

9. (two tied) 15.5

Player Dates Games

William Fuller Sept. 8, 1991–Oct. 20, 1991 6

9. Ted Washington 1973–1982 45.0

¾ The Warner, S.D., native was drafted by the Broncos in the seventh round (254th overall) of the 2020 NFL Draft.

6. Travis LaBoy 2004–2007 19.5

Brian Orakpo Sept. 18, 2016–Oct. 16, 2016 5

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6-4, 259, 2nd Year, Pittsburgh

¾ Rashad Weaver was selected by the Titans in the fourth round (135th overall) of the 2021 NFL Draft.

2022 Game Notes:

7. Harold Landry III Oct. 27, 2019–Dec. 1, 2019 5

MORE TITANS OUTSIDE LINEBACKERS

¾ He is a native of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Most consecutive games with at least a half sack for the Titans/Oilers (1982–present):

¾ As a senior in 2020, he started nine games and totaled 35 tackles, 14.5 tackles for loss, 7.5 sacks, 12 quarterback pressures, two passes defensed, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. Weaver was also Awarded first team All-ACC honors and was a semifinalist for the Bednarik Award.

11. Kyle Vanden Bosch 2005–2009 38.5

Player Seasons Sacks

2. Ray Childress 1985–1995 75.5

At the conclusion of the 2021 season, his fourth NFL season, Harold Landry III had 31 career sacks, a total that tied for 12th in franchise history. In the franchise’s “Titans era” (1999–present), his sack total ranks behind only Jevon Kearse (52), Jurrell Casey (51), Derrick Morgan (44.5) and Kyle Vanden Bosch (38.5).

92 - OLB OLA ADENIYI

From the start of his rookie season in 2018 through 2021, Harold Landry III's 31 total sacks led the Titans. Other than Jevon Kearse (37.0 sacks from 1999 through 2001), Landry produced the highest sack total by a Titans/Oilers player in his first four NFL seasons since individual sacks became an official NFL statistic in 1982.

¾ Derrek Tuszka (last name pronounced "TUSKuh") was claimed off waivers from the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sept. 2, 2022.

Most sacks for the Titans/Oilers in a player's first three NFL seasons, 1982–2020:

CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A HALF SACK

¾ Adeniyi appeared in 32 games with one start and tallied 25 tackles and three forced fumbles during his three-year career with the Steelers.

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Tuszka played in 24 total games with the Denver Broncos (2020) and Pittsburgh Steelers (2021).

4. Kenny Holmes 1997–2000 22.5

3. Sean Jones Nov. 4, 1990–Dec. 23, 1990 7 Kevin Carter Dec. 16, 2002–Sept. 28, 2003 7

Consecutive

FRANCHISE SACK LEADERS

1. Jevon Kearse Oct. 31, 1999–Sept. 10, 2000 12

SACKS IN FIRST FOUR SEASONS

¾ In four seasons at the University of Pittsburgh (2017-20), Weaver appeared in 35 games with 28 starts. He tallied 110 tackles, 34.5 tackles for loss, 17.0 sacks, nine passes defensed, 28 quarterback pressures, five forced fumbles and four fumble recoveries.

4. William Fuller 1986–1993 59.0 5. Sean Jones 1988–1993 57.5 6. Jevon Kearse 1999–2003, 2008–2009 52.0

7. Derrick Morgan 2010–2013 16.5

¾ As a three-year starter at defensive end for North Dakota State, Tuszka earned first team All-America honors and Missouri Valley Conference Defensive Player of the Year honors as a senior and finished his college career with 29.5 sacks.

¾ In 2021, Tuszka played in 15 games for the Steelers and recorded 18 tackles, two sacks, one forced fumble and two special teams stops.

Sean Jones Nov. 1, 1992–Nov. 26, 1992 5

5. Jevon Kearse Sept. 28, 2003–Nov. 9, 2003 6

30 Avery, Tre 5-11 181 R Rutgers

26 Fulton, Kristian 5-11 197 3 Louisiana State

5-11, 197, 3rd Year, Louisiana State

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6-2, 197, 2nd Year, Virginia Tech

Click for complete bio

Farley played two seasons at Virginia Tech, appearing in 24 games with 23 starts. His career totals included six interceptions, 25 passes defensed, 56 tackles, one sack, two quarterback hits and seven kickoff returns for 152 yards (21.7 avg.).

#3 • CB CALEB FARLEY

32 Amadi, Ugo 5-9 201 4 Oregon

Fulton’s Career Regular Season Statistics: Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2020 6 2 16 1.0 1 1 1 1 0 0 2021 13 13 40 0.0 0 0 2 14 0 0 2022 1 1 6 0.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 20 16 62 1.0 1 1 3 15 1 0

¾

CORNERBACKSTITANS

Cornerback Caleb Farley is in his second NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the first round (22nd overall) of the 2021 NFL Draft.

Farley is a native of Maiden, N.C.

#26 • CB KRISTIAN FULTON

Fulton’s Career Postseason Statistics: Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2020 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2021 1 1 6 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 1 6 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

24 Molden, Elijah (IR) 5-10 192 2 Washington

In 2021, Fulton became a mainstay in the Titans lineup, starting all 13 games in which he played. He contributed two interceptions and tied for 11th in the NFL with a team-high 14 passes defensed. Among all players in their first two NFL seasons, his 14 passes defensed in 2021 tied for the league's fourth-highest total. He also contributed 40 tackles during the regular season and added six stops in the team's divisional playoff contest.

Prior to entering the NFL, the New Orleans, La., native was a twoyear starter at Louisiana State. He appeared in 28 games with 25 starts and finished his career with 65 tackles, 25 passes defensed and two interceptions.Asasenior in 2019, he started all 15 games and posted 38 tackles, one tackle for loss, 15 passes defensed and one interception. He was recognized with second-team All-SEC honors from the Associated Press. In his final collegiate game, Fulton helped LSU secure a National Championship victory over Clemson with a career-high six tackles and one pass defensed.

Farley appeared in three games with one start during his rookie season. He finished with four tackles and one pass defensed before his season came to a premature end due to a knee injury. He spent the remainder of the season on injured reserve.

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

21 McCreary, Roger 5-11 190 R Auburn

Farley redshirted as a wide receiver in 2017 and then began playing cornerback for the first time in his redshirt freshman campaign in 2018. He continued playing for the Hokies in 2019 and then opted out of the 2020 campaign due to COVID-19 concerns.

2022 Game Notes: Against New York Giants (9/11), set a career high and tied for third on the team with six total tackles. He was also credited with his first career forced fumble in the fourth quarter when he knocked the ball out of Saquon Barkley’s hands, but the ball went out of bounds.

In 2018, he earned honorable mention for the Mayo Clinic Comeback Player of the Year Award after registering 36 tackles, one tackle for loss, one sack, two interceptions and nine passes defensed. He also added seven kickoff returns for 152 total yards (21.7 avg.).

Farley's Career Regular Season Statistics: Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2021 3 1 4 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2022 1 0 1 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 1 5 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0

Click for complete bio

Fulton’s Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 6 vs. New York Giants (9/11/22) Sacks - 1 at Minnesota (9/27/20) Interceptions - 1 (Three times, last vs. Jacksonville, 12/12/21)

3 Farley, Caleb 6-2 197 2 Virginia Tech

Cornerback Kristian Fulton is in his third NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the second round (61st overall) of the 2020 NFL Draft.

Fulton’s Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 6 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

In 2020, Fulton appeared in six games with two starts as a rookie. He totaled 16 tackles, one interception, one pass defensed, one sack, one quarterback pressure and one tackle for loss. He also played in one postseason contest.

In 2019, he started all 11 games in which he appeared and was named first team All-ACC after leading the conference with 16 passes defensed. His four interceptions tied for second place in the conference. He also totaled 20 tackles and a quarterback hit.

Farley's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 2 (Twice, last vs. Buffalo, 10/18/21) Passes Defensed - 1 at Jacksonville (10/10/21)

Prior to arriving in Tennessee, Molden totaled 153 tackles, five interceptions, 25 passes defensed, four forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries in 44 games at the University of Washington. He earned first team All-Pac-12 honors on defense as a junior and senior and was named second team All-Pac-12 as an all-purpose/special teams player as a sophomore.In2020, Washington’s football season was limited to four games due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Molden started all four contests and finished third on the squad with 26 tackles to go with one interception and two passes defensed.

GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2021 1 1 2 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 1 1 2 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

#24 • CB ELIJAH MOLDEN

Most passes defensed in 2021:

In 2019, Molden set career highs with a team-high 79 tackles, four interceptions and three forced fumbles with the Huskies.

5-11, 190, Rookie, Auburn

Anthony Brown Dallas Cowboys 17

Xavien Howard Miami Dolphins 16

As a rookie in 2021, Molden appeared in 16 games with seven starts. He ranked fifth on the team and first among Titans rookies with 60 tackles and registered one interception for a touchdown. He was one of six rookie defensive backs with at least 60 tackles and one interception. Additionally, he contributed six quarterback pressures, three tackles for loss, four passes defensed, one forced fumble, one fumble recovery and two stops on special teams. In the team's divisional playoff contest, he started and registered two tackles.

He is a native of West Linn, Oregon.

Molden's Career Regular Season Statistics: Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2021 16 7 60 0.0 6 3 4 1 1 2022 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 16 7 60 0.0 6 3 1 4 1 1

A.J. Terrell * Atlanta Falcons 16

5-10, 192, 2nd Year, Washington Click for complete bio

Pat Surtain II * Denver Broncos 14 Eric Stokes * Green Bay Packers 14

Since head coach Mike Vrabel arrived in 2018, McCreary and Petit-Frere became the third and fourth rookies to start in Week 1, joining wide receiver A.J. Brown (2019) and defensive back Chris Jackson (2020).

McCreary's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 2 vs. New York Giants (9/11/22)

In his second NFL season, cornerback Kristian Fulton tied for 11th place in the NFL and led the Titans defense with 14 passes defensed. Among all players in their first two NFL seasons in 2021, he tied for the fourth-highest total behind only Trevon Diggs (21), A.J. Terrell (16) and Bryce Hall (16).

Molden's Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 2 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

6. Jalen Ramsey Los Angeles Rams 16

2022 Game Notes: ¾ Placed on injured reserve on Sept. 9, 2022.

McCreary is a native of Mobile, Ala.

2. Trevon Diggs * Dallas Cowboys 21

#21 • CB ROGER McCREARY

Click for complete bio

3. Marshon Lattimore New Orleans Saints 19

Chidobe Awuzie Cincinnati Bengals 14

11. Kristian Fulton * Tennessee Titans 14

* Rookie, first-year or second-year player in 2021

MOST PASSES DEFENSED IN 2021

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), recorded a start in his NFL debut and posted two tackles. He and right tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere became the 20th and 21st rookies for the Titans since 1999 to start a season opener.

DuringDraft.four seasons at Auburn (2018-21), McCreary appeared in 43 games with 23 starts and posted 135 tackles, five interceptions, 35 passes defensed, 10 stops for loss, a forced fumble and two fumbleAsrecoveries.aseniorin 2021, McCreary started 12 games at cornerback for the Tigers and collected a career-best 49 tackles, an interception, a sack, two stops for loss and a team-best 16 passes defensed. He was a first-team AllAmerica selection by The Athletic, Associated Press, ESPN and Reese’s SeniorAsBowl.ajunior in 2020, he established career highs with three interceptions and seven tackles for loss.

Bryce Hall * New York Jets 16

McCreary's College Statistics (Auburn): Year GP GS Tackle Sack TFL Int PD FF FR 2018 7 0 5 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 2019 13 1 36 0.0 1 1 12 0 1 2020 10 10 45 0.0 7 3 6 1 0 2021 12 12 49 1.0 2 2 16 0 1 Totals 42 23 135 1.0 10 6 35 1 2

4. James Bradberry New York Giants 17

1

Molden's Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 8 (Three times, last at L.A. Rams, 11/7/21) Interceptions - 1 at Indianapolis (10/31/21) Passes Defensed - 2 at Indianapolis (10/31/21) Forced Fumbles - 1 at Jacksonville (10/10/21) Fumble Recoveries - 1 vs. Miami (1/2/22)

McCreary's 2022/Career Regular Season Statistics: Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2022 1 1 2 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Cornerback Elijah Molden is in his second NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the third round (100th overall) of the 2021 NFL Draft.

1. J.C. Jackson New England Patriots 23

Molden's Career Postseason Statistics: Year

Kendall Fuller Washington Football Team 16

Cornerback Roger McCreary was selected by the Titans in the second round (35th overall) of the 2022 NFL

2022 Game Notes:

Player Team Passes Defensed

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Safety Kevin Byard is in his seventh NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the third round (64th overall) of the 2016 NFL Draft.

Over a five-year period from 2017 through 2021, Byard led all safeties with 23 interceptions. The only players with more interceptions in that time were cornerbacks Xavien Howard (27) and J.C. Jackson (25). His interception total was 11th on the franchise's all-time list and sixth among all Titans/Oilers safeties.

¾ At the University of Oregon, he played in 51 games and tallied nine interceptions, two defensive touchdowns and 165 tackles. As a senior in 2018, he became the first FBS player since 2015 (Minkah Fitzpatrick) to return two interceptions for touchdowns and a punt return for a touchdown in the same season.

Byard did not miss a game from 2016 through 2021, totaling 97 games in the regular season and seven postseason games. At the conclusion of 2021, his 88 consecutive starts in the regular season was the leading current streak among all Titans players, ranked first in the NFL among defenders, and was the sixth-longest active streak among all players.

¾ Raised in Nashville, Amadi attended Overton High School.

¾ The Titans acquired Ugo Amadi (pronounced "OO-go uh-MOD-ee") in a trade with the Philadelphia Eagles on Aug. 24, 2022. The Titans received Amadi and a 2024 seventh-round draft pick in exchange for a 2024 sixth-rounder.

30 - CB TRE AVERY

5-11, 181, Rookie, Rutgers

In 2021, Byard was announced as a starter to his second career Pro Bowl and earned first-team Associated Press All-Pro honors for the second time in his career. He joined Bruce Matthews (1999–2000) and Albert Haynesworth (2007–2008) as the franchise's only players in its "Titans era" (since 1999) to earn multiple first-team AP All-Pro honors.

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Amadi played three seasons with the Seattle Seahawks (2019-21) before being traded to Philadelphia on Aug. 15, 2022.

¾ After the Seahawks drafted him in the fourth round (132nd overall) of the 2019 NFL Draft, Amadi totaled 12 starts, 125 tackles, one interception, two forced fumbles, one fumble recovery and 18 special teams stops in 47 career games.

5-9, 201, 4th Year, Oregon

Byard led the Titans in 2021 with five interceptions and 88 tackles, becoming the franchise's first player to lead the team in tackles and interceptions in the same season since the team began tracking individual tackle statistics in 1974. It was his second consecutive season to lead the club in tackles and the fourth time in his career he was the interceptions leader. Additionally, his 13 passes defensed ranked second on the team and made up the highest total among NFL safeties. He also was credited with one sack, two quarterback pressures, one tackle for loss, two forced

¾ As a senior in 2021, he appeared in 12 games with nine starts and tallied a career-high-tying 37 tackles to go along with 1.5 tackles for loss, one interception and six passes defensed.

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 81 NOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME NOTESPLAYER ROSTERSSTATISTICSMEDIA #31 • S KEVIN SAFETIESTITANSBYARDNo. Name Ht Wt Exp College 31 Byard, Kevin 5-11 212 7 Middle Tennessee State 37 Hooker, Amani 5-11 210 4 Iowa 20 Johnson Jr., Lonnie 6-2 213 4 Kentucky 28 Kalu, Joshua 6-0 203 4 Nebraska 33 Moore Jr., A.J. 5-11 200 5 Mississippi 5-11, 212, 7th Year, Middle Tennessee State Click for complete bio

2022 Game Notes:

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), led the team with three total special teams tackles in his NFL debut.

¾ In 2021, he appeared in all 17 games for the Seahawks with a career-high seven starts and totaled 51 tackles, an interception, six passes defensed and a forced fumble.

Byard is one of the team's most accomplished defenders and is among the NFL's most successful safeties in recent years. He finished the 2021 campaign as a three-time team captain, two-time Pro Bowl selection and a two-time Associated Press first-team All-Pro. Since entering the league, he has been a part of six consecutive winning seasons and four playoff berths.

MORE TITANS CORNERBACKS

32 - DB UGO AMADI

¾ In four seasons at Rutgers (2018-21), Avery appeared in 35 games with 22 starts. He totaled 92 career tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss, one sack, four interceptions, 17 passes defensed and one forced fumble. He added eight kick returns for 169 yards.

¾ As a junior in 2020, he started all nine games and recorded career-bests with 37 tackles, two tackles for loss and a team-high-tying eight passes defensed. He also had an interception and was named third-team All-Big Ten by the league’s coaches and media.

¾ Amadi was the 2018 recipient of the Lombardi Award, given to an FBS player for “performance and leadership honed by character and resiliency.”

¾ Transferred to Rutgers in 2017 from Toledo, where he did not appear in a game.

¾ Tre Avery was signed by the Titans as a rookie free agent on May 13, 2022.

¾ He is a native of Baltimore, Md.

During a four-year career at Middle Tennessee State University, he appeared in 49 games and notched 46 starts at safety while becoming one of the most prolific defenders in school history. He set school records with 19 career interceptions, 377 interception return yards and four interception returns for touchdowns, and he finished sixth in MTSU history with 312 career tackles. In total, he had a hand in 25 turnovers (19 interceptions, five forced fumbles and one fumble recovery) during his career and added 17 career passes defensed and five tackles for loss. He was twice named first-team All-Conference USA.

In 2020, Byard was a defensive team captain for the second consecutive season and the team's Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year nominee. His 111 tackles led the team and established a career high. Additionally, he registered one interception, seven passes defensed, two quarterback pressures, one tackle for loss and one forced fumble. In one playoff game he produced five tackles, one pass defensed and a quarterback pressure.

Interceptions - 3 at Cleveland (10/22/17)

From 2017 through 2019, no NFL player had more interceptions than Byard, who had 17. His 2019 totals included a team-leading five interceptions, 10 passes defensed, 91 tackles, one quarterback pressure and two tackles for loss. In three postseason games, he added 20 tackles and one interception.

Xavier McKinney New York Giants 5

DT

2.

Player Position Total Solo Assist Kevin Byard S 88 57 31 Harold Landry III OLB 75 51 24 David Long Jr ILB 75 46 29 Hooker S 62 38 24 Elijah Molden CB 60 42 18 Rashaan Evans ILB 57 35 22 Brown ILB 55 35 20 Jenkins CB 54 38 Simmons 54 42 12 Fulton CB 40 30

Fumble Recoveries - 1 (Three times, last at Jacksonville, 10/10/21)

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10. Kristian

10

2022 Game Notes:

7. Jayon

As a senior in 2015, Byard appeared in 12 games with nine starts as a permanent team captain and was named first-team All-Conference USA for the second consecutive year. He ranked fourth on the team with 66 tackles and led the squad with four interceptions and six additional pass breakups.

1.

fumbles, one fumble recovery and his first two career touchdowns—one on a fumble return and one on an interception return. He was the first Titans player with two defensive touchdowns in the same season since linebacker Zach Brown in 2012.

Sacks - 1 (Four times, last at New England, 11/28/21) Tackles For Loss - 2 (Twice, last at Miami, 10/8/17)

Byard’s Regular Season Single-Game Highs: - 16 vs. Washington (12/22/18)

1. Xavien Howard 27 J.C. Jackson 25 Kevin Byard 23 Jordan Poyer 19 Quandre Diggs 19 Justin Simmons 19 Harrison Smith 18 Tyrann Mathieu 17 Marcus Peters 17 Darius Slay 17

2021 NFL INTERCEPTION LEADERS

Xavien Howard Miami Dolphins 5

4.

4. Amani

Interceptions - 1 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

0 Totals 7 7 44 0.0 1 0 1 2 0 0

Jordan Poyer Buffalo Bills 5

Rasul Douglas Green Bay Packers 5

1. Trevon Diggs Dallas Cowboys 11 J.C. Jackson New England Patriots 8 Amani Oruwariye Detroit Lions 6

In addition to leading the Titans with five interceptions in 2021, safety Kevin Byard also led the defense with 88 total tackles. It was the second conscutive season in which Byard led the Titans in tackles after totaling 111 stops in 2020.

As a rookie in 2016, Byard played in every game, starting the final seven contests at free safety. His 63 tackles were the most by a Titans rookie safety since Tank Williams' 69 tackles in 2002. He also ranked second on the squad with 10 special teams tackles.

The Lithonia, Ga., native set a career high in college with six interceptions as a junior and forced to fumbles the same season.

Byard’s Career Regular Season Statistics: Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2016 16 7 63 1.0 3 5 0 4 0 0 2017 16 16 87 0.0 3 4 8 18 0 2 2018 16 16 96 2.0 4 0 4 10 0 0 2019 16 16 91 0.0 1 2 5 10 0 0 2020 16 16 111 0.0 2 1 1 7 1 0 2021 17 17 88 1.0 2 1 5 13 2 1 2022 1 1 12 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 98 89 548 4.0 15 13 23 62 3 3

2017 2

Passes Defensed - 3 (Twice, last vs. Baltimore, 11/5/17)

3.

7.

In 2018, Byard finished with a team-leading four interceptions, 10 passes defensed, 96 tackles and two sacks. He also completed a touchdown pass on a memorable fake punt to help defeat the Houston Texans (Sept. 16).

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), led the team with 12 tackles.

Byard's Statistics: Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0

2021 TITANS TACKLE LEADERS

Career Postseason

8. Jackrabbit

Forced Fumbles - 1 (Twice, last vs. Kansas City, 10/24/21)

3.

16 Jeffery

Byard experienced a breakthrough second-year season in 2017. He was named to the Pro Bowl and earned first-team Associated Press AllPro honors after tying Detroit's Darius Slay for the NFL lead with eight interceptions. He added a pair of fumble recoveries to pace the league with 10 total takeaways.

2019 3 3 20

Tackles

Tackles - 11 at Baltimore (1/11/20)

Micah Hyde Buffalo Bills 5

Titans tackle leaders in 2021:

5.

Titans safety Kevin Byard led the Titans and tied for fourth place in the NFL in 2021 with five interceptions. Only Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs, Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson and Lions cornerback Amani Oruwariye had more.

2.

Quandre Diggs Seattle Seahawks 5

8.

Player

0 0 1 1 0 0 2020 1 1 5 0.0 1 0 0 1 0

2.

Since the beginning of the 2017 campaign, Titans safety Kevin Byard leads all safeties and ranks third in the NFL with 23 interceptions.

2021 1 1 3 0.0 0 0

4. Kevin Byard Tennessee Titans 5

6.

MOST INTERCEPTIONS FROM 2017–2022

Justin Simmons Denver Broncos 5

Byard’s Playoff Single-Game Highs:

Interceptions

16

Most interceptions from 2017–2022:

Most interceptions in 2021:

Player Team Interceptions

Year GP GS Tackle

in a season, franchise history: Player Season Position Interceptions 1. Mike Reinfeldt 1979 S 12 Fred Glick 1963 S 12 3. Miller Farr 1967 CB 10 4. Ken Houston 1971 S 9 W.K. Hicks 1965 CB 9 Jim Norton 1961 S 9 7. Kevin Byard 2017 S 8 Richard Johnson 1990 CB 8 Pete

Longest current starting streak among active NFL safeties (through 2021):

1. Kevin Byard (S) 2016-2021 23

3.

Byard not only has the longest starting streak among safeties, he now holds the longest starting streak among all NFL defensive players. The only offensive players in the NFL with a longer active starting streak at the conclusion of 2021 were offensive linemen Jake Matthews (127), Charles Leno (110), Alejandro Villanueva (107) and Jason Kelce (122) and quarterback Tom Brady (93).

Current Team Starting Streak

5 Janoris

5 Joe

3. Xavien Howard (CB) 2016–2021 27

4. Samari Rolle (CB) 1998 2003 22

9 10.

0

5. Michael Griffin (S) 2007 2012 21

5 J.C.

1. Marcus Peters (CB) 2015–2020 31

INTERCEPTIONS IN FIRST SIX SEASONS

3.

5.

11.

First Four

27

Titans safety Kevin Byard tied for fourth place in the NFL with five interceptions in 2019.

1. Kevin Byard Tennessee Titans 88 Adrian Amos Green Bay Packers 67 Justin Simmons Denver Broncos 65 Duron Harmon Atlanta Falcons 39 Quandre Diggs Seattle Seahawks 33

1961 CB 8 SEASON INTERCEPTIONS, TEAM HISTORY

Longest current starting streak among active NFL defensive players (through 2021):

Player

Most interceptions in 2019: Stephon Gilmore Harris White Byard Jackson McCourty Jenkins Peters Fitzpatrick Leonard King Haden

25

5 Darius

6 Anthony

4.

Samari Rolle (CB) 1998-04 23 349 15.2 81t 1 Marcus Robertson (S) 1991-00 22 428 19.5 69 0 Gregg Bingham (LB) 1973-84 21 279 13.3 54 0

1. Kevin Byard (S) Tennessee Titans 88 Adrian Amos (S) Green Bay Packers 67 Leonard Floyd (LB) Los Angeles Rams 65 Justin Simmons (S) Denver Broncos 65 DaQuan Jones (DT) Carolina Panthers

6 Tre'Davious

5. Kevin Byard (S) 2016–2021 23

Titans safety Kevin Byard is tied with Willie Alexander and Samari Rolle for 11th place on the franchise's all-time interceptions list. He is in sixth place among all Titans/Oilers safeties.

8.

27

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 83 NOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME NOTESPLAYER ROSTERSSTATISTICSMEDIA

Titans safety Kevin Byard has never missed a game in his NFL career and has started every game since the 10th game of his rookie season in 2016.Among all current safeties, Byard's active consecutive starting streak ranks first in the NFL.

5 Kevin

6 4. Kevin

5 Minkah

2.

65 FRANCHISE INTERCEPTION LEADERS

Most interceptions in a Titans/Oilers player’s first six seasons, 1970–2021:

Mike Reinfeldt (S) 1976 1981 23

Cris Dishman (CB) 1988 1993 23

2019 NFL INTERCEPTION LEADERS

Kevin Byard recorded a team-high eight interceptions in 2017. His to tal tied for seventh in franchise history and was the highest by any franchise player since Oilers cornerback Rishard Johnson picked off eight passes in 1990.

Most interceptions Jaquess Banfield

1964 CB 8 Jim Norton 1962 S 8 Tony

First Six Player (Position) Seasons

Active Consecutive

45 1 4.

Most career interceptions in franchise history: (Position) Years Int Yds Avg Lg Jim Norton (S) 1960-68 45 592 13.2 56 1 Cris Dishman (CB) 1988-96 31 348 11.2 43 1 Fred Glick (S) 1961-66 30 390 13.0 Tony Banfield (CB) 1960-65 224 8.3 58 W.K. Hicks (CB) 1964-69 457 16.9 62 0 Darryll Lewis (CB) 1991-98 540 20.0 98t 5 Mike Reinfeldt (S) 1976-83 26 375 14.4 39 0 Michael Griffin (S) 2007-15 328 13.1 83t 1 Ken Houston (S) 1967-72 25 650 26.0 78 Zeke Moore (CB) 1967-77 24 444 18.5 74 2 Kevin Byard (S) 2016-21 23 276 12.0 33 1

27

Active NFL players with the most interceptions their first six NFL seasons (through 2021):

5 Devin

Player Interceptions 1.

TD 1.

Active Consecutive Player

2. Richard Sherman (CB) 2011–2016 30

CONSECUTIVE STARTS, ACTIVE DEFENDERS

5 Marcus

5

2.

2.

Titans safety Kevin Byard totaled 23 interceptions from the time he entered the NFL in 2016 as a third-round draft pick through 2021. Since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger, his total tied for first among all franchise players in their first six seasons.

14.

7.

Willie Alexander (CB) 1971-79 23 379 16.5 95t 1

3.

Player (Position) Seasons Interceptions

Player (Position) Current Team Starting Streak

15.

Interceptions

Among all active NFL players in 2021, only four had more interceptions than Byard in their first six NFL seasons. No other safety had more than Byard's 23 interceptions in the first six seasons of his career.

4. J.C. Jackson (CB) 2018–2021 25

2017 NFL LEADERS

PLAYERS WITH INTERCEPTION & TD PASS

Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR

Samari Rolle (CB) 12/26/99 Jac 3 66 22.0 0

In a victory over the Houston Texans on Sept. 16, 2018, Kevin Byard completed a 66-yard touchdown pass to defensive back Dane Cruikshank

3.

Interceptions - 1 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22) Passes Defensed - 2 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

Hooker’s Career Regular Season Statistics:

Kevin Byard 2016–2018 1 12

Ten 8 2 10 2. Darius Slay Det 8 1 9 3. Marcus Peters KC 5 2 7 Eric

Click for complete bio

In 2020, Hooker played 16 games with three starts. He tied Malcolm Butler for the team lead with four interceptions and ranked fourth on the team with seven special teams tackles. Additionally, he totaled one tackle for loss and eight passes defensed.

Miller Farr (CB) 10/15/67 NYJ 3 128 42.7 1

2019 16 0 13 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2020 16 3 44 0.0 0 1 4 8 0 0 2021 12 12 62 0.0 0 1 1 4 1 0 2022 1 1 4 0.0 0 0 1 1 0 0 Totals 45 16 123 0.0 0 2 6 13 1 0

Byard became the first NFL player in 2017 to record three interceptions in a game and the first NFL player to do so since Philadelphia Eagles safety Kurt Coleman at Washington on Oct. 16, 2011. He was the first Titans play er to record three interceptions in a game since linebacker Keith Bulluck accomplished the feat at New Orleans on Monday night, Sept. 24, 2007.

Bal 6 1 7 5.

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Tom Myers 1972–1981 1 36

Ken Houston (S) 10/24/71 Pit 3 28 9.3 0

*

Byard, who tied for the NFL lead in 2017 with eight interceptions, also became only the fifth player in the Super Bowl era to throw at least one touchdown pass and record at least one career interception.

Def. Fumble Total Player Team Interceptions Recoveries Takeaways 1. Kevin

Most interceptions in 2017:

1. Kevin Byard (S) 10/22/17 Cle 3 60 20.0 0

Jim Norton (S) 12/2/62 Den 3 22 7.3 0

As a rookie in 2019, Hooker played as a reserve safety in all 16 games and collected 13 tackles while ranking third on the team with eight special teams

Interceptions - 1 (Six times, last vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22) Passes Defensed - 2 (Twice, last at Baltimore, 11/22/20)

Player (Pos) Date Opp Int Yds Avg TD

Hooker’s Playoff Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 7 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

Paul Krause 1966*–1979 1 63 Meador played from 1959–1970; Krause played from 1964–1979

Hooker appeared in 12 games in 2021 with a career-high 12 starts. He totaled a career-best 62 tackles, one tackle for loss, one interception, four passes defensed and one forced fumble. He added seven tackles and an interception in the team's divisional playoff contest.

Additionally, Byard recorded two fumble recoveries on defense. His 10 total defensive takeaways were the most in the NFL.

5-11, 210, 4th Year, Iowa

Titans safety Kevin Byard tied for the NFL lead with eight interceptions in 2017, his second NFL season. He shared the top of the leaderboard with Detroit Lions cornerback Darius Slay

5.

With three interceptions at Cleveland on Oct. 22, 2017, safety Kevin Byard tied a franchise record and became the ninth player in franchise his tory to record three interceptions in a regular season game.

2022 Game Notes: ¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), notched an interception in the end zone in the fourth quarter. On a play from Tennessee’s eight-yard line, he stepped in front of Daniel Jones’ pass to Saquon Barkley to record his sixth career interception. He added four tackles in the contest.

Keith Bulluck (LB) 9/24/07 NO 3 51 17.0 0

Most interceptions in a game, franchise history:

Willie Alexander (CB) 11/14/71 Oak 3 40 13.3 0

Byard became the first defensive player in franchise history to record a touchdown pass. Additionally, Byard’s touchdown pass was the longest by a defensive player in the Super Bowl era. The previous long was held by Los Angeles Rams defensive back Ed Meador, who had an 18-yard touchdown pass at Atlanta on Nov. 19, 1967.

Safety Amani Hooker is in his fourth NFL season in 2022. He was selected by the Titans in the fourth round (116th overall) of the 2019 NFL Draft.

Career

Most total defensive takeaways in 2017: Byard Weddle (four tied)

Eddie Meador 1966*–1970 1 26

Marcus Robertson (S) 11/21/93 Cle 3 69 23.0 0

6

W.K. Hicks (CB) 10/31/65 Buf 3 50 16.7 0

1.

NFL players in the Super Bowl era with at least one career interception and one career touchdown pass (1966 through 2018):

Hooker’s Career Postseason Statistics: Year GP GS Tackle Sack QBP TFL Int PD FF FR 2019 3 0 3 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2020 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2021 1 1 7 0.0 0 0 1 2 0 0 Totals 5 1 10 0.0 0 0 1 2 0 0

Career Player NFL Seasons Pass TDs Interceptions

#37 • S AMANI HOOKER

A.J. Bouye Jacksonville CB 6 (five tied) 5

INTERCEPTIONS IN A GAME, TEAM HISTORY

Randy Moss 1998–2012 2 1

Slay ranked second with nine takeaways, while Kansas City cornerback Marcus Peters tied Baltimore safety Eric Weddle for third place with seven takeaways.

Duringtackles.a three-year career at Iowa, Hooker played in 36 games with 19 starts and totaled 125 tackles, six interceptions, a sack, 3.5 tackles for loss and nine passes defensed. He declared for the NFL Draft following his juniorHookercampaign.isa native of Minneapolis, Minn.

Hooker’s Regular Season Single-Game Highs: Tackles - 12 at L.A. Rams (11/7/21)

Player Team Position Interceptions Kevin Byard Tennessee S 8 Darius Slay Detroit CB 8 Eric Weddle Baltimore S 6

¾ He spent the entire 2021 season on injured reserve with the New York Giants after sustaining an injury during preseason.

MORE TITANS SAFETIES

PUNTERS

¾ In a two-year career at the University of Kentucky, Johnson appeared in 26 games and registered one interception and 12 passes defensed. Additionally, he played one season at Garden City (Kan.) Community College and one year at San Bernadino Valley Community College.

In 2021, Cox handled all of the team's long snapping duties in all 17 regular season games and one postseason game. He helped kicker Randy Bullock finish ninth in franchise history with 120 points in a single season, including three game-winning field goals (Sept. 19 at Seattle, Oct. 31 at Indianapolis and Dec. 23 against San Francisco). He also snapped for punter Brett Kern, who had the league's third-best ratio of punts inside the 20 to touchbacks (18:1).

¾ In 2018, he made his NFL debut and appeared in five games during his rookie season.

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Johnson appeared in 44 games with 19 starts for the Houston Texans from 2019 to 2021. He recorded 159 tackles, three interceptions, 13 passes defensed and 13 special teams stops before being traded from the Texans to the Chiefs on May 2, 2022.

20 - DB LONNIE JOHNSON JR. 6-2, 213, 4th Year, Kentucky

¾ The Gary, Ind., native was selected by the Texans in the second round (54th overall) of the 2019 NFL Draft.

¾ Joshua Kalu re-signed with the Titans as a free agent on July 23, 2022.

A native of Collierville, Tenn., Cox played 38 games in three seasons (2007-09) as the primary long snapper at the University of Tennessee.

¾ Kalu previously played three seasons with the Titans (2018-20) after signing as an undrafted college free agent in 2018. Over those three seasons, he played in 28 games and totaled 26 tackles, one passed defensed, 15 special teams stops and one blocked field goal.

11 Shudak, Caleb (PUP) 5-7 177 R Iowa

5-11, 200, 5th Year, Mississippi

In 2020, he earned his fourth career Pro Bowl selection. He helped kicker Justin Tucker record his fifth consecutive season with at least 130 points, tying the NFL record of consecutive seasons with 130-plus points. Tucker connected on 26 of 29 field goals (89.7 percent) and was 52 of 53 on extra points (98.1 percent). Cox also snapped on all 51 of Sam Koch’s 51 punts, as Koch was the NFL’s only punter to place at least 20 punts (22) inside in the 20-yard line and have no more than one touchback.

14 Bullock, Randy 5-9 210 11 Texas A&M

28 - DB JOSHUA KALU

6-0, 203, 4th Year, Nebraska

33 - S A.J. MOORE JR.

6-4, 233, 13th Year, Tennessee

46 Cox, Morgan 6-4 233 12 Tennessee

In his first 11 seasons, Cox appeared in 165 regular season games for the Baltimore Ravens, serving as the team’s primary long snapper after entering the NFL as an undrafted free agent in 2010. He was selected to four Pro Bowls and was a part of five playoff teams in Baltimore, totaling 10 postseason games played.

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

¾ A.J. Moore Jr. was signed by the Titans as an unrestricted free agent on March 21, 2022.

No. Name Ht Wt Exp College

LONG SNAPPERS

¾ The Houston, Texas, native played in 48 games with 37 starts at cornerback and safety over four seasons at the University of Nebraska. He totaled 215 tackles, two sacks, 27 passes defensed, seven interceptions for 78 yards and a score, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. At the conclusion of his career, his 27 passes defensed tied for seventh in Cornhusker history, and his 215 career tackles ranked fifth all-time among Nebraska defensive backs and among the top 30 overall tacklers in Cornhusker history.

Moore played four seasons (2014-17) at Mississippi and appeared in 37 career games over four seasons for the Rebels, recording 132 total tackles, two sacks, five passes defensed, three fumble recoveries and two forced fumbles.

SPECIALISTSTITANSCOX

Click for complete bio

¾

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Long snapper Morgan Cox is in his 13th NFL season and his second campaign with the Titans in 2022. He was signed by the Titans as an unrestricted free agent on March 19, 2021.

4 Stonehouse, Ryan 5-10 193 R Colorado State

KICKERS

¾ The Titans claimed Lonnie Johnson Jr. off waivers from the Kansas City Chiefs on Aug. 16, 2022.

¾ The Bassfield, Miss., native was originally signed by the New England Patriots as a rookie free agent in 2018. The Texans claimed him off waivers from the Patriots on Sept. 1, 2018.

#46 • LS MORGAN

¾ In 2021, he played in 12 games and posted two tackles with a forced fumble on defense to go along with seven special teams tackles. He missed the first three games of the season before being activated from injured reserve designated to return on Oct. 2.

Cox’s Career Regular Season Statistics: Year Team GP GS SpT Tackles 2010 Bal 15 0 1 2011 Bal 16 0 0 2012 Bal 16 0 2 2013 Bal 16 0 2 2014 Bal 7 0 0 2015 Bal 16 0 0 2016 Bal 16 0 2 2017 Bal 16 0 1 2018 Bal 16 0 1 2019 Bal 16 0 0 2020 Bal 15 0 2 2021 Ten 17 0 1 2022 Ten 1 0 0 NFL Totals 183 0 12

¾ In Week 10 of 2019 against Kansas City, Kalu secured a victory by coming off the edge and blocking Harrison Butker’s potential game-tying 52-yard field goal as time expired.

¾ Prior to arriving in Tennessee, Moore spent his first four NFL seasons (2018-21) with the Houston Texans, amassing 35 tackles, a sack, two stops for loss, two forced fumbles, a fumble recovery and 34 special teams tackles.

¾ In 2021, he played in 14 games for the Texans with seven starts, totaling 51 tackles and three interceptions.

Bullock appeared in 16 games during the 2021 regular season. He made 26 field goals on 31 attempts (83.9 percent) and added 42 extra points on 45 attempts (93.3 percent). His 120 points ranked ninth in franchise history and were the most by a Titans player since Ryan Succop scored 136 points in 2017. He totaled a career-high three game-winning field goals: Sept. 19 at Seattle, Oct. 31 at Indianapolis and Dec. 23 against San Francisco. Bullock's 42 extra points tied for seventh in franchise annals. Additionally, he made one field goal and one extra point in the team's divisional playoff contest.

2022 Ten 1 2 3 66.7 46 2 2 8

FRANCHISE SINGLE-SEASON SCORING

Cox’s Career Postseason Statistics:

In four seasons at Texas A&M (2008-11), he set school records for total points (365), field goals (63) and extra points (176). As a senior in 2011, he was named first-team All-American and won the Lou Groza Award for college football's best placekicker.

PATs Made - 6 vs. Tennessee (11/30/14)

Through his first nine seasons, he connected on 168 of 202 field goal attempts (83.2 percent) and 215 of 225 extra points (95.6 percent).

Field Goals Made - 6 vs. Baltimore (12/21/14)

2019

2013 Hou 16 26 35 74.3 51 26 26 104

7. Gary

5-10, 193, Rookie, Colorado State Click for complete bio

Al

Punter Ryan Stonehouse was signed by the Titans as a rookie free agent on May 13, 2022.

Year Team GP No Blk Yds Avg Lg TB In20

2017 Cin 15 18 20 90.0 51 31 33 85

2014 Hou 16 30 35 85.7 55 40 40 130

Playoff Totals 11 0 0

Field Goals Made - 1 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

4. Al

2016 NYG/Pit/Cin 5 8 9 88.9 44 9 10 33

3.

Longest Field Goal - 57 at Miami (12/22/19)

#14 • K RANDY BULLOCK

2011 Bal 2 0 0

Bullock's Playoff Single-Game Highs:

PATs Made - 1 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

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2022 Game Notes:

2021 Ten 16 26 31 83.9 51 42 45 120

¾ Against N.Y. Giants (9/11), made field goals in the second quarter of 46 yards and 23 yards and missed in the fourth quarter from 47 yards. He made each of his extra point attempts

NFL Totals 124 196 236 83.1 57 259 272 847

During his first season with the Titans, kicker Randy Bullock made 26 field goals on 31 attempts and added 42 extra points on 45 attempts. Bullock's total of 120 points ranked ninth in franchise history and was the highest number by a Titans player since Ryan Succop's franchise-recordtying 136 points in 2017.

6. Al

2022 Game Notes:

During his final college season in 2021, Stonehouse appeared in 12 games and averaged 50.9 yards per attempt on 58 punts, including a careerlong 81-yard punt. He placed 27 punts inside the 20-yard line and totaled 32 punts of 50-plus yards en route to being named a second-team All-Mountain West selection and a Ray Guy Award semifinalist.

5-9, 210, 11th Year, Texas A&M

Stonehouse appeared in 53 games over five seasons at Colorado State (2017-21) and set an NCAA career record with a 47.8-yard gross punting average. His career totals included 244 punts for 11,656 yards with 91 punts inside the 20. He totaled 106 punts of 50-plus yards and became the first player in Colorado State history to log 11,000 punting yards in a career.

5.

Bullock's Regular Season Single-Game Highs:

Bullock's Career Postseason Statistics:

¾ Against New York Giants (9/11), made his NFL debut and punted six times for a 57.0-yard gross average and a 46.7-yard net average. He placed three of his punts inside the 20. In franchise history, his 57.0-yard gross punting average ranked fifth for a single game (minimum four punts). In the fourth quarter, he posted a 66-yard punt, which was the longest punt for the Titans since Brett Kern booted a 66-yarder at Denver on Sept. 14, 2020. Stonehouse also registered a 54-yard punt on his first career attempt in the first quarter and launched a 62-yard punt in the third quarter to help pin the Giants on their 10-yard line.

2018 Bal 1 0 0 Bal 1 0 0 Bal 2 0 0 Ten 1 0 0

Points - 19 vs. Baltimore (12/21/14)

2020

Year Team GP GS SpT Tackles

Player Season TD XPM FGM 2PT Points

2018 Colo St 12 65 1 3,140 48.3 70 8 18 2019 Colo St 12 49 0 2,274 46.4 64 5 13 2020 Colo St 4 26 0 1,178 45.3 58 1 8 2021 Colo St 12 58 0 2,953 50.9 81 11 28 Totals 53 244 1 11,656 47.8 81 32 91

2012 Bal 4 0 0

Kicker Randy Bullock is in his 11th NFL season and his second campaign with the Titans in 2022. He was added to the practice squad on Sept. 11, 2021 and promoted to the 53-man roster four days later.

Most points in a season, franchise history:

2018 Cin 16 19 23 82.6 51 39 41 96

Bullock's Career Regular Season Statistics:

2015 Hou/NYJ 11 19 23 82.6 49 22 25 79

10.

Year Team GP No Blk Yds Avg Lg TB In20 Net 2022 Ten 1 6 0 342 57.0 66 0 3 46.7

2017 Colo St 13 46 0 2,111 45.9 65 7 24

Prior to joining the Titans, Bullock appeared in 107 games over nine seasons with the Houston Texans (2012-15), New York Jets (2015), New York Giants (2016), Pittsburgh Steelers (2016 and Cincinnati Bengals (201620). He also had a stint with the Detroit Lions during the 2021 offseason.

1. Ryan Succop 2017 0 31 35 0 136

Stonehouse's College Statistics:

Longest Field Goal - 34 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

2019 Cin 16 27 31 87.1 57 24 25 105

8. Rob

Click for complete bio

Al Del Greco 1998 0 28 36 0 136 Rob Bironas 2007 0 28 35 0 133 Del Greco 1996 0 35 32 0 131 Rob Bironas 2008 0 40 29 0 127 Del Greco 1993 0 39 29 0 126 Anderson 2003 0 42 27 0 123 Bironas 2011 0 34 29 0 121 Randy Bullock 2021 0 42 26 0 120 Rob Bironas 2009 0 37 27 0 118 Del Greco 2000 0 37 27 0 118

In 2020, he played in 12 games for the Bengals and made 21 of 26 field goal attempts and 24 of 25 extra point attempts.

Year Team GP FGM FGA Pct Lg XPM XPA Pts

2021

#4 • P RYAN STONEHOUSE

Field Goal Attempts - 6 vs. Baltimore (12/21/14)

PATs Attempted - 6 vs. Tennessee (11/30/14)

2020 Cin 12 21 26 80.8 55 24 25 87

Field Goal Attempts - 1 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

Stonehouse's 2022/Career Regular Season Statistics:

Year Team GP FGM FGA Pct Lg XPM XPA Pts 2021 Ten 1 1 1 100.0 34 1 1 4

PATs Attempted - 1 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

In 2017, he registered a career-best rate of 90 percent on field goals (18 of 20) and also was 31 of 33 on extra point chances.

He is a native of La Verne, Calif.

9.

Points - 4 vs. Cincinnati (1/22/22)

86 Rader, Kevin TE 6-4 250 2 Youngstown State

¾ In five seasons at Tennessee (2017-21), Jackson appeared in 56 games with 24 starts and amassed 190 tackles, 1.5 sacks, 12 tackles for loss, 20 quarterback hits, three interceptions with one returned for a touchdown, 20 passes defensed, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery. He saw playing time at STAR, safety, nickel and corner while at Tennessee.

91 Murchison, Larrell DL 6-2 297 3 North Carolina State

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67 Newman, Xavier C/G 6-2 297 R Baylor

¾ As a senior in 2020, he appeared in all eight games with seven starts and totaled 4.5 sacks.

5-10, 193, 3rd Year, Marshall

¾ He earned All-Pro and Pro Bowl honors in 2013, when he tallied 87 receptions for a league-leading 1,646 yards and nine touchdowns for the Browns. During the 2013 season, he became the only receiver in NFL history to post consecutive 200-yard performances.

¾ A native of Farmington Hills, Mich., he played four seasons at Louisville (2017-20) and recorded 154 receptions for 2,589 yards with 21 touchdowns during his career. His 154 receptions ranked ninth in Louisville annals, and his 2,589 receiving yards ranked sixth in Cardinals history.

12 Kinsey, Mason WR 5-10 202 1 Berry College

29 - S THEO JACKSON

6-3, 224, 6th Year, Baylor

NFL International Allocation:

¾ In five seasons at the University of Houston (2017-21), he appeared in 56 games with 29 starts and tallied 99 career tackles, 32 tackles for loss, 20.5 sacks, seven passes defensed, four forced fumbles and one fumble recovery.

¾ In 2020, he appeared in 11 games with nine starts and finished the season with 43 catches for 833 yards and three touchdowns.

¾ During a four-year career at Marshall, he started 48 games and posted 189 tackles, 6.5 tackles for loss, two sacks, seven interceptions with one returned for a touchdown, 45 passes defensed and two fumble recoveries with one returned for a score for the Thundering Herd. His 45 passes defensed ranked first in Marshall history, and he earned all-conference recognition in all four of his collegiate seasons.

¾ He tied for fifth in program history with 21 career touchdown catches and tied for 10th in team annals with eight 100-yard receiving games.

50 - LB JACK GIBBENS

¾ Chris Jackson was selected by the Titans in the seventh round (243rd overall) of the 2020 NFL Draft.

¾ Jackson started and registered a tackle in his NFL debut on Monday Night Football at Denver on Sept. 14, 2020. He became the franchise’s first rookie drafted in the seventh round or later to start a Week 1 game since Sept. 10, 1989, when Oilers ninth-round rookie tight end Bob Mrosko started at Minnesota.

¾ Prior to reaching the NFL, he appeared in 13 games with 13 starts in one season at Minnesota (2021), totaling 92 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss, three passes defensed and one forced fumble.

70 Roos, Jordan G 6-3 302 3 Purdue

19 - WR JOSH GORDON

¾ Transferred to Minnesota after playing four seasons at Abilene Christian (2017-20) where he saw action in 39 games and recorded 257 tackles, 22 tackles for loss, seven sacks, five interceptions, 11 passes defensed, one forced fumble, three fumble recoveries and one blocked kick.

¾ He was selected by the Browns in the second round of the 2012 Supplemental NFL Draft.

6-1, 198, Rookie, Tennessee

19 Gordon, Josh WR 6-3 224 6 Baylor

¾ The Titans signed Josh Gordon to the practice squad on Sept. 1, 2022.

¾ He is a native of Tallahassee, Fla.

PRACTICETITANSSQUAD

10 - WR DEZ FITZPATRICK

6-2, 245, Rookie, Houston

29 Jackson, Theo S 6-1 198 R Tennessee

54 Anenih, David OLB 6-2 245 R Houston

35 - DB CHRIS JACKSON

¾ In 2021, Jackson participated in 12 games with three starts. He finished with 33 tackles, two quarterback pressures, one tackle for loss, four passes defensed and one stop on special teams. He also played in the team's divisional playoff contest.

¾ As a redshirt senior in 2021, he started 12 games at the STAR position and recorded career-high marks in tackles (78), sacks (1.5), tackles for loss (nine) and quarterback hits (12), notched his first career interception return for a touchdown, and posted 12 passes defensed. He earned second-team All-SEC recognition.

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Gordon totaled 252 career receptions for 4,284 yards and 21 touchdowns over seven NFL seasons with Cleveland (2012-14, 2017-18), New England (2018-19), Seattle (2019) and Kansas City (2021).

¾ David Anenih (pronounced "uh-NINN-ee") was signed by the Titans as an undrafted free agent on May 13, 2022.

No. Name Pos Ht Wt Exp College

76 Rupcich, Andrew T 6-6 318 R Culver-Stockton

¾ The Titans selected Dez Fitzpatrick in the fourth round (109th overall) of the 2021 NFL Draft.

¾ Jack Gibbens was originally signed by the Titans as an undrafted free agent on May 13, 2022. He rejoined the team on the practice squad on Sept. 12 after being waived in the final roster cutdown.

50 Gibbens, Jack LB 6-3 242 R Minnesota

35 Jackson, Chris DB 5-10 193 3 Marshall

¾ A Nashville native, Jackson attended Overton High School.

6-2, 208, 2nd Year, Louisville

10 Fitzpatrick, Dez WR 6-2 208 2 Louisville

6-3, 242, Rookie, Minnesota

¾ Gordon played two college seasons at Baylor (2009-10), totaling 43 receptions for 721 yards and seven touchdowns.

TITANS PRACTICE SQUAD CAPSULES

54 - OLB DAVID ANENIH

¾ In 2021, Fitzpatrick spent the first nine games of his rookie season on the practice squad before being signed to the 53-man roster on Nov. 13, 2021. He appeared in four games as a rookie and caught five passes for 49 yards and one touchdown.

¾ In 2020, he appeared in 11 games with three starts as a rookie. He totaled 21 tackles, one tackle for loss, one pass defensed and three special teams stops.

5 Woodside, Logan QB 6-1 213 3 Toledo

¾ He is a native of Arlington, Texas.

¾ As a redshirt senior in 2021, Anenih started 14 games and set careerhigh marks with 30 tackles and 10 tackles for loss, earning first-team allconference honors. He added five sacks, two passes defensed, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery.

49 Odukoya, Thomas TE 6-6 253 R Eastern Michigan

¾ In 2021, Gordon played in 12 games with the Chiefs and registered five receptions for 32 yards and one touchdown.

¾ Theo Jackson was selected by the Titans in the sixth round (204th overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft.

¾ Gibbens is a native of Bulverde, Texas.

72 Peevy, Jayden DE 6-5 308 R Texas A&M

68 Okuayinonu, Sam DT 6-1 269 R Maryland

6-1, 269, Rookie, Maryland

¾ After originally entering the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Green Bay Packers in 2018, Rader spent the majority of 2019 and 2020 on the Steelers practice squad.

6-6, 318, Rookie, Culver-Stockton

¾ Okuayinonu transferred to Maryland from Mesabi Range Community College (Minn.), where he played one season (2018) and tallied 62 tackles, 21.5 tackles for loss, 17.5 sacks, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery.

76 - T ANDREW RUPCICH

¾ During his college career, Rupcich appeared in 48 games, registering 48 consecutive starts at left tackle. He became the first three-time All-American at the same position in the NAIA.

¾ As a senior (2019), he started all 11 games and caught 65 passes for 1,221 yards and 16 touchdowns. Returned 13 kicks for 375 yards and one touchdown and returned 17 punts for 181 yards. Earned All-SAA first team recognition.

¾ During a two-year stint as a defensive tackle at North Carolina State, Murchison started in all 25 contests. He finished his Wolfpack career with 85 tackles, 11 sacks, 20 tackles for loss, five quarterback hits, an interception, three passes defensed and three fumble recoveries.

¾ Newman is a native of Desoto, Texas.

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Rader appeared in seven career NFL games, all with the Pittsburgh Steelers. His totals included two receptions for eight yards and three special teams tackles.

¾ As a redshirt senior in 2021, he started all 12 games at Maryland and posted 55 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss, and a team-leading six sacks. He earned third-team All-Big Ten recognition.

¾ He transferred to Mesabi Range in 2017 from Coahoma Community College (Miss.), where he did not appear in a game.

¾ Andrew Rupcich (last name pronounced "RUPP-sitch") was signed by the Titans as a rookie free agent on May 13, 2022.

¾ He is a native of Bellaire, Texas.

70 - G JORDAN ROOS

¾ A native of Demorest, Ga., he appeared in 43 games with 35 starts over four seasons at Berry College (2016-19). Totaled 203 receptions for 3,343 yards and 50 touchdowns, all of which rank first in program history. His career receiving yardage and touchdowns set Southern Athletic Association records.

¾ Sam Okuayinonu (last name pronounced "oh-KWAHN-new") was signed by the Titans as a rookie free agent on May 13, 2022.

6-6, 253, Rookie, Eastern Michigan

86 - TE KEVIN RADER

¾ A native of Pittsburgh, Pa., Rader played 42 games for Youngstown State University, totaling 44 receptions for 601 yards and four touchdowns during his college career.

¾ As a redshirt senior in 2021, he started all 11 games and posted a career-high 43 tackles and six tackles for loss. He added two sacks, one interception, a career-best four passes defensed and one forced fumble.

¾ He also spent time in 2020 on the New England Patriots’ practice squad.

¾ Prior to joining the Titans, Roos saw action in 14 games with the Seattle Seahawks. He has also spent time with the Las Vegas Raiders and New England Patriots.

6-2, 297, Rookie, Baylor

¾ He earned a scholarship to Eastern Michigan after competing at Garden City (Kan.) and West Hills-Coalinga (Calif.) junior colleges.

72 - DE JAYDEN PEEVY

¾ In five seasons at Baylor (2017-21), Newman appeared in 47 games with 37 starts. His starts included 28 games at left guard, eight games at right guard and one contest at center.

¾ Jayden Peevy was signed by the Titans as a rookie free agent on May 13, 2022.

¾ Larrell Murchison was selected by the Titans in the fifth round (174th overall) of the 2020 NFL Draft.

¾ As a graduate in 2021, he started all 13 games and tallied career-best marks in receptions (13) and receiving yards (130) and tied his career-high mark with two touchdowns.

¾ A native of Almere, Netherlands, Odukoya played four seasons at Eastern Michigan University (2018-21), where he saw action in 40 games with 30 starts. His career totals included 21 catches for 194 yards and four touchdowns.

67 - C/G XAVIER NEWMAN

¾ The Elizabethtown, N.C., native started his collegiate career at Louisburg (N.C.) College and was named a NJCAA junior-college honorable mention All-American.

¾ Jordan Roos was signed by the Titans on Aug. 7, 2021 and spent the entire 2021 season on the Titans practice squad.

¾ In 2021, Rader registered six games played, one start and two receptions for eight yards with the Steelers.

¾ In 2021, he spent the entire season on the Titans practice squad. He saw action in one contest (Oct. 24 against Kansas City).

49 - TE THOMAS ODUKOYA

6-3, 302, 3rd Year, Purdue

91 - DL LARRELL MURCHISON

68 - DT SAM OKUAYINONU

¾ As a graduate in 2021, he started all 14 games at left guard and helped pave the way for Baylor to average 219.3 rushing yards per game, ranking 10th nationally. He earned All-Big 12 honorable mention.

6-5, 308, Rookie, Texas A&M

¾ He appeared in seven contests with the Seahawks during each of the 2017 and 2019 campaigns.

¾ Xavier Newman was signed by the Titans as a rookie free agent on May 13, 2022.

¾ In 2020, he appeared in 10 games as a rookie and totaled five tackles. He added a tackle in one postseason contest.

6-4, 250, 2nd Year, Youngstown State

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¾ In three seasons at Maryland (2019-21), he appeared in 28 games with 17 starts over totaled 103 tackles, 14.5 tackles for loss and 7.5 sacks.

12 - WR MASON KINSEY

¾ In 2021, he appeared in 11 games with five starts. His totals included eight tackles, one quarterback pressure and one tackle for loss.

¾ In five seasons at Texas A&M (2017-21), he appeared in 58 games with 24 starts and totaled 137 career tackles, 19 tackles for loss, 7.5 sacks, one interception, eight passes defensed, one forced fumble, one fumble recovery and four blocked kicks.

¾ Mason Kinsey rejoined the Titans during the 2021 offseason after previously signing with the team as a rookie free agent following the 2020 NFL Draft.

5-10, 198, 1st Year, Berry College

6-2, 297, 3rd year, North Carolina State

¾ Kevin Rader was signed by the Titans to the practice squad on Sept. 1, 2022.

¾ The Celina, Texas, native appeared in 47 games and registered 24 consecutive starts his final two years at Purdue University.

¾ Born in Monrovia, Liberia, he moved to the United States at age 12 and attended Lowell (Mass.) High School.

¾ Thomas Odukoya joined the Titans on May 13, 2022 as part of the NFL’s International Player Pathway program, which allows participating teams a practice squad roster exemption.

¾ In 2019, Murchison was named second-team All-ACC after leading the Wolfpack with a 12 tackles for loss and seven sacks as a senior.

Airs throughout the season in Nashville on Wednesday nights at 6:30 p.m. on MyTV 30 and Friday nights at 10:35 p.m. on FOX 17.

¾ Prior to rejoining the Titans during the 2019 offseason, he had a stint with the Alliance of American Football League’s San Antonio Commanders. In seven AAF games, he completed 116-of-201 passes for 1,385 yards and seven touchdowns.

Titans All Access

It also airs Saturdays in Nashville on MyTV 30 at 10:30 a.m. and on CW 58 at 3:00 p.m. Titans All Access also has affiliates in Chattanooga, Knoxville, Memphis, Jackson, Huntsville, Ala., and Paducah, Ky.

¾ Logan Woodside rejoined the Titans as a free agent during the 2019 offseason after spending three weeks on the Titans practice squad during the 2018 campaign.

5 - QB LOGAN WOODSIDE

¾ Woodside attended Franklin County High School in Frankfort, Ky.

¾ As a senior for the Rockets in 2017, he led the MAC in completion percentage (64.2), passing efficiency (162.2), touchdowns (28), passing yards (3,882), yards per completion (14.7), and yards per attempt (9.45). He was named the MAC Offensive Player of the Year.

¾ Woodside was originally selected by the Cincinnati Bengals in the seventh round (249th overall) of the 2018 NFL Draft.

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TITANS TV PROGRAMMING

Airs throughout the season on Tuesday nights at 6:30 p.m. CT on WKRN Channel 2.

Titans Blitz

Airs locally throughout the season on Nashville's FOX 17 on Friday nights at 11:05 p.m.

¾ He is a native of Wonder Lake, Ill.

¾ As a fifth-year senior in 2021, he started all 11 games at left tackle and earned first-team All-American honors from the Associated Press, NAIA, and the American Football Coaches Association.

6-1, 213, 3rd Year, Toledo

¾ In 2020, he spent the entire year on the 53-man roster as the Titans’ backup quarterback behind Ryan Tannehill. He appeared in six games during the regular season, attempting three passes with one completion for seven yards. He added seven rushing attempts for 10 yards.

¾ A native of Frankfort, Ky., he established program records at Toledo in passing yards (10,514), touchdowns (93), passing efficiency (162.87) and 300-yard games (17) during a four-year career. His 93 touchdown passes ranks fifth all-time in MAC history.

The Mike Vrabel Show

¾ In 2021, he appeared in five games as a backup to Ryan Tannehill but did not attempt a pass.

¾ He spent the entire 2019 season on the Titans’ practice squad/injured list.

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Rating/ HH Date/Opp Day/Time Network Share (000) Rank 9/11 vs NYG Sun. 3:25 p.m. FOX TBA TBA TBA 2022 Regular Season Average - -

Season Rtg/Shr 2005 21.8/42 2004 26.5/48 2003 33.4/57 2002 26.8/49 2001 24.5/42 2000 29.1/50 1999 19.8/35

Season Rtg/Shr

TV RATINGS

Amie Wells and Dave McGinnis talk all things football, with a perspective and roster of special guests only Coach Mac can bring following 30+ years of coaching in the NFL. New episodes every Friday.

Previous yearly Titans television ratings in the Nashville market (regular season only):

Hosted by Mike Keith and Amie Wells, The OTP features contributions from TennesseeTitans.com senior writer/editor Jim Wyatt, Titans Radio analyst Dave McGinnis and various Titans players and guests each week.

Titans Amie and Coach Mac Podcast

in

Out of Bounds with Jaimie and Abby is a guest-based podcast heavy on lifestyle and light on football. The podcast is hosted by Jaimie Robinson (the wife of the Titans' General Manager, JRob) and Abby Flittner (cofounder of Nashville Guru, a popular resource for Music City). New episodes on the 1st of each month.

Season Rtg/Shr 2013 25.0/41 2012 23.5/39 2011 27.7/46 2010 30.2/50 2009 30.9/50 2008 32.4/55 2007 28.6/49 2006 23.0/42

"Hey Kids… Titans Talk with Cason" originally began in 2019 as "Sports Talk with Cason," when then 11-year old die-hard Titans fan, Cason Romero, began his own podcast, with the help of his mom, Carrie. In 2021, Cason's podcast became a member of the Official Titans Podcast Network. New episodes every Wednesday.

Titans Talk with Cason

TITANS PODCASTS

2021 27.1/50 2020 25.8/47 2019 24.1/44 2018 22.7/39 2017 19.9/35 2016 22.0/38 2015 21.3/37 2014 20.7/36

The OTP: Official Titans Podcast

2022

television

Out of Bounds with Jaimie and Abby

TITANS ON YOUTUBE Titans ratings the Nashville market:

Jackson WZDQ FM 102.3

Dickson WDKN AM 1260

Titans Radio

“Titans Tonight" with Keith Bulluck | 6-7 p.m. | Titans Radio/104.5 The Zone

Alabama

Tuesday:

TITANS RADIO AFFILIATES

Birmingham WJOX FM 94.5

Kentucky

Bowling Green WPTQ FM 105.3

Huntsville WVNN AM 770 FM 92.5

Greeneville WIKQ FM 103.1

Lewisburg WJJM FM 94.3

Manchester WMSR FM 107.9 AM 1320

Cadiz WKDZ FM 106.5

“Countdown to Kickoff” | 10-11 a.m. | 104.5 The Zone

Morristown WCRK FM 105.7

Wednesday:

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 91 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME MEDIA ROSTERSSTATISTICS

“Mac Talk” with Dave McGinnis & Rhett Bryan | 6-7 p.m. | 104.5 The Zone

Clarksville WKFN AM 540 FM 104.1

Shelbyville WZNG FM 100.9 AM 1400

Tri-Cities WXSM AM 640 Union City WQAK FM 105.7

Chattanooga WGOW FM 102.3 AM 1150

Tennessee

Nashville WGFX FM 104.5

Titans Radio brings football to fans across the Mid-South in one of the NFL’s largest radio networks, including Nashville flagship 104.5 The Zone. Play-by-play announcer Mike Keith connection with pro football across the Mid-South dates back to 1996, a year before the Oilers arrived in Tennessee, and he became the “Voice of the Titans” in 1999. Former Titans assistant coach and NFL head coach Dave McGinnis began serving as Titans Ra dio’s color analyst in 2017, while Titans Radio gameday host Rhett Bryan’s involvement with the broadcast dates back to 1997. Amie Wells has been reporting on the sidelines since 2018.

Benton WCBL AM 1290

Franklin WAKM AM 950

“Titans Talkback” | 3-5 p.m. | 104.5 The Zone

Bridgeport WJTW AM 1480 Florence WQLT FM 107.3

Knoxville WOKI FM 98.7

“The Mike Vrabel Show” | 6-7 p.m. | Titans Radio/104.5 The Zone

Monday:

Columbia WMCP AM 1280

WFWL AM 1220

Nashville WGFX FM 104.5

Huntsville WUMP AM 730 FM 103.9

Tennessee

Cleveland WCLE FM 104.1

“Titans Countdown” | 11 a.m.-12 p.m. | Titans Radio/104.5 The Zone

Flagship

TITANS RADIO WEEKLY PROGRAMMING

Scottsboro WWIC AM 1050

Paducah WPAD FM 99.5 AM 1560

Memphis WKIM FM 98.9

CONTACT INFORMATION Titans Practice Facility/Training Camp Site: Ascension Saint Thomas Sports Park 460 Great Circle Road Nashville, TN 37228 Nissan Stadium: One Titans Way Nashville, TN 37213 Media Resources: www.TennesseeTitans.com/media Phone: (615) 565-4000 (main) (615) 565-4100 (media relations) (615) 565-4200 (ticket office) Titans Football Communications: Robbie Bohren | V.P. of Football Communications rbohren@titans.nfl.com Jim Wyatt | Senior jwyatt@titans.nfl.comWriter/Editor Dwight Spradlin | Director of Media Relations dspradlin@titans.nfl.com Jared Puffer | Media Relations Manager jpuffer@titans.nfl.com Kim Smith | Media Relations Coordinator ksmith@titans.nfl.com Micah Banks | Media Relations Seasonal Assistant mbanks@titans.nfl.com

Cookeville WKXD FM 106.9

Fayetteville WYTM FM 105.5

Waverly WQMV FM 93.5 AM 1060 Winchester WCDT AM 1340

Henderson WSON AM 860 FM 96.5

Columbia WAIN FM 101.9 AM 1270

Sunday (Noon Kickoff):

Madisonville WWKY FM 97.7 Owensboro WVJS FM 92.9 AM 1420

Camden WRJB FM 95.9

Lebanon WCOR AM 1490

Lebanon WANT FM 98.9

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 92 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAME MEDIA ROSTERSSTATISTICS

Dwight Spradlin, Director of Media Relations

Quotes from each team’s head coach and key players will be transcribed and distributed throughout the Nissan Stadium press box following the game. The quotes also will be available at www.TennesseeTitans.com/media

Micah Banks, Media Relations Seasonal Assistant (Media Will Call)

Visiting Team Media Relations (Press Box Seats 29-32): (615) 565-4452

NISSAN STADIUM PRESS BOX INTERNET ACCESS

DIRECTIONS TO NISSAN STADIUM FROM AIRPORT TO NISSAN STADIUM (APPROXIMATELY 15 MINUTES): Take I-40 West toward Nashville/Memphis to I-24 West (before downtown). Exit at James Robertson Parkway (Exit 48). Turn left at first light (Interstate Drive). Turn right on Woodland Street. Nissan Stadium will be on the left. Follow signs to parking lot (“M” lot on northwest corner/river side of stadium).

Wireless internet access is available free of charge in the Nissan Stadium press box. The login information will be available upon arrival in the press box. A limited number of ethernet lines also are available. Accessing the wireless network works the same in the Nissan Stadium press box as it does in most areas with free connectivity. Titans staff may be able to assist in a limited manner, but you should first contact your company’s I.T. department with any questions.

FROM NISSAN STADIUM PRESS BOX TO INTERVIEW ROOMS

Kim Smith, Media Relations Coordinator

NISSAN STADIUM MEDIA WILL CALL/MEDIA ENTRANCE

Titans Media Relations (Press Box Seats 1-7): (615) 565-4450

EXITING NISSAN STADIUM

Take the press box elevator (Level 3) to field level (Level 1). The Titans interview room is immediately on the right. Turn left and continue straight along the concourse to reach the visiting team’s interview room (white line).

FIELD MEDIA VESTS

The media will call window and media entrance are located in the northwest corner of Nissan Stadium near Gate 6. The media will call window opens three hours prior to kickoff.

POOL REPORTS

NISSAN STADIUM PARKING AND MEDIA ENTRANCE

All members of the media with field access during the game must wear a media vest. Still and video photographers will be issued tan vests, while team-affiliated video photographers (coaches’ shows, etc.) will be issued gray vests. Additionally, media with in-game field access will be issued an armband. All vests and armbands must be obtained prior to each game at the check-in table. All vests must be returned at the conclusion of the game to Titans personnel or a designated vest receptacle.

FROM NISSAN STADIUM TO AIRPORT (APPROXIMATELY 15 MINUTES): Take I-24 East toward Chattanooga to I-40 East toward Knoxville. The airport is at Exit 216A.

POSTGAME QUOTES

The media will call window and media entrance are located in the northwest corner of Nissan Stadium near Gate 6. The media will call window opens three hours prior to kickoff.

NISSAN STADIUM GAMEDAY MEDIA INFORMATION

Jared Puffer, Media Relations Manager (Field Contact)

POSTGAME POLICIES

FROM NISSAN STADIUM PRESS BOX TO STADIUM EXIT: Cross the press box catwalk to the third floor lobby. Take the stairs or elevator one floor down to Level 2. Exit through the doors and walk right to get to the “M” lot.

MEDIA RELATIONS CONTACTS

Pool reporters are assigned by the Pro Football Writers of America. Requests for pool reports with game officials must be made in advance through the home team's media relations. Interviews will be conducted virtually. Pool reports will be recorded, transcribed and then distributed in the press box.

Reporters with press box credentials will not be allowed on the field during pre-game activities or during the game itself. Press box credentials do NOT provide access to the field at the two-minute warning in the fourth quarter. Media will be allowed to gather in the Titans interview room to watch the end of the game or remain in the press box to make the short walk down to the field level at the conclusion of the game. Interviews with Titans players are not permitted on the field following the game. The press conference will begin approximately 10 minutes following the conclusion of the game and will be held in the interview room across from the Titans locker room. Key players also will be brought to the interview room. Simultaneously, the locker room will open to credentialed media members with a working function. The press conference audio will be played live over the press box speakers.

Robbie Bohren, Vice President, Football Communications

Titans in 2017 13 4 25 5 1 12

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Titans in 1999 17 10 25 12 6 15

Titans in 2010 27 17 25 15 10 13

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

Las Vegas Raiders

Kansas City Chiefs

1 0 0 1.000 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 New York Giants

Titans in 2009 28 11T 31 14 5T 16

Titans in 2019 12 3 21 5 2 9

Denver Broncos

AFC West W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

1 NYG 23 30 4 13 15 1

Titans in 2002 10 2 25 5 2 13

Tennessee Titans

Final regular season offensive rankings:

Titans in 2003 12 1 30 9 1 15

Minnesota Vikings

2022 Season NFL DEFENSE

Titans in 2014 29 26 22 14 14 11

0 0 0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Washington Commanders

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0

0 0 0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Arizona Cardinals

0 0 1 .500 0-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-1 0-0-1

Titans in 2000 14 7 16 8 6 8

Titans in 2008 21 7 27 10 3 12

Titans in 2009 12 2 23 6 2 10

NFC South W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

Titans in 2014 27 31 15 16 15 9

Week Opp. Tot Rush Pass Tot Rush Pass

Los Angeles Rams

AFC South W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

Titans in 2012 27 24 26 15 11 14

1 0 0 1.000 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0

Titans in 2007 5 5 10 4 3 9

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Titans in 2002 17 11 20 9 7 11

Titans in 2011 17 31 12 8 16 5

Titans in 1999 13 13 13T 6 9 5T

Cincinnati Bengals

Titans in 2012 26 21 22 12 10 11

AFC East

AFC DEFENSE

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Atlanta Falcons

Titans in 2010 26 20 29 13 10 14

NFC West W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

Titans in 2001 25 5 31 15 3 16

2022 NFL DIVISIONAL STANDINGS

NFC East W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

New England Patriots

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

0 1 0 .000 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

Titans in 2013 22 14 21 11 7 11

Titans in 2008 7 6 9 3 3 4

Titans in 2000 1 3 1 1 2 1

Titans in 2020 28 19 29 14 9 16

Titans in 2018 25 7 29 11 3 14

Pittsburgh Steelers

Philadelphia Eagles

17 Dal 18 at Jax

1 0 0 1.000 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0

Week Opp. Tot Rush Pass Tot Rush Pass

Houston Texans 0 0 1 .500 0-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-1

Baltimore Ravens

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

1 0 0 1.000 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 Chicago Bears

Titans in 2003 8 26 5 4 14 3

Titans in 2018 8 18 6 5 8 4

New York Jets

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0

Los Angeles Chargers

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 Tampa Bay Buccaneers

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Dallas Cowboys

Titans in 2021 12 2 25 5 2 12

16 Hou

Final regular season defensive rankings:

Titans in 2006 27 5 30 12 3 15

Cleveland Browns

NFC North W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

Titans in 2016 20 2 30 11 1 16

Titans in 2004 27 18 26 13 11 12

TITANS OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE RANKINGS BY THE WEEK AND BY THE SEASON

1 NYG 14 18 9 7 7 7

Titans in 2020 2T 2 23 2T 2 10

Titans in 2017 23 15 23 9 8 11

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

Jacksonville Jaguars

Titans in 2004 11 14 10 6 10 5

4 at Ind 5 at Was 6 Bye 7 Ind 8 at Hou 9 at KC 10 Den 11 at GB 12 Cin 13 at Phi 14 Jax 15 at LAC

Titans in 2006 32 30 27 16 15 15

Indianapolis Colts

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 93 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 San Francisco 49ers 0 1 0 .000 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

2022 Season NFL OFFENSE AFC OFFENSE

Titans in 2005 19 22 17 10 11 7

Buffalo Bills

Titans in 2001 8 12 8T 5 8 4

Titans in 2007 21 5 27 10 3 14

1 0 0 1.000 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Detroit Lions 0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 Green Bay Packers

1 0 0 1.000 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Carolina Panthers

2 at Buf 3 LV

Titans in 2016 11 3 25 5 2 11

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

New Orleans Saints

Titans in 2005 17 23 9 10 12 5

AFC North W L T Pct Home Road Conf Div

Seattle Seahawks

0 1 0 .000 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

Titans in 2015 30 25 25T 16 10 14

Titans in 2015 12 18 7 8 12 3

Titans in 2019 21 12 24 11 7 13

Titans in 2021 17 5 24 9 4 13

0 1 0 .000 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

Titans in 2011 18T 24 14 11 11 10

Titans in 2013 14 20 11 8 8 6

Miami Dolphins

0 1 0 .000 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

0 1 0 .000 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

2 at Buf 3 LV 4 at Ind 5 at Was 6 Bye 7 Ind 8 at Hou 9 at KC 10 Den 11 at GB 12 Cin 13 at Phi 14 Jax 15 at LAC 16 Hou 17 Dal 18 at Jax

POINTS SCORED 419 491 402 310 334 381 299 254 362 330 325 356 354 375 301 324 299 344 435 367 336 346 392 TURNOVER DIFF. -3 +11 +6 -1 -4 0 -14 -10 0 -4 +1 -4 -4 +14 0 +2 -6 -1 +13 +4 -4 0 +19 1999–2021 TITANS - DEFENSE DEFENSE 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 POINTS ALLOWED 354 439 331 303 356 378 423 438 381 471 317 339 402 234 297 400 421 439 324 324 388 191 324 OPP FIRST DOWNS 331 391 335 298 323 324 317 357 329 358 324 356 323 276 268 329 294 318 275 297 300 215 300 Rushing 90 113 95 98 68 70 101 119 108 122 111 107 89 81 80 121 89 99 79 75 79 62 81 Passing 204 247 213 182 231 227 192 211 191 210 187 214 210 166 165 181 180 189 167 197 192 134 193 Penalty 37 31 27 18 24 27 24 27 30 26 26 35 24 29 23 27 25 30 29 25 29 19 26 OPP YARDS GAINED 5,607 6,372 5,752 5,334 5,248 5,720 5,475 5,968 5,407 5,999 5,682 5,883 5,850 4,698 4,665 5,915 5,110 5,724 4,901 4,964 5,515 3,814 5,245 Avg per Game 329.8 398.3 359.5 333.4 328.0 357.5 342.2 373.0 337.9 374.9 355.1 367.7 365.6 293.6 291.6 369.7 319.4 357.8 306.3 310.3 344.7 238.4 327.8 OPP RUSHING(net) 1,438 1,933 1,672 1,863 1,420 1,413 1,797 2,195 1,795 2,035 2,053 1,851 1,711 1,502 1,478 2,313 1,894 1,917 1,295 1,424 1,431 1,390 1,550 Avg per Game 84.6 120.8 104.5 116.4 88.8 88.3 112.3 137.2 112.2 127.2 128.3 115.7 106.9 93.9 92.4 144.6 118.4 119.8 80.9 89.0 89.4 86.9 96.9 Rushes 368 427 415 429 398 356 462 515 446 483 461 474 402 403 369 506 449 421 342 372 405 387 383 Yards per Rush 3.9 4.5 4.0 4.3 3.6 4.0 3.9 4.3 4.0 4.2 4.5 3.9 4.3 3.7 4.0 4.6 4.2 4.6 3.8 3.8 3.5 3.6 4.0 OPP PASSING(net) 4,169 4,439 4,080 3,471 3,828 4,307 3,678 3,773 3,612 3,964 3,629 4,032 4,139 3,196 3,187 3,602 3,216 3,807 3,606 3,540 4,084 2,424 3,695 Avg per Game 245.2 277.4 255.0 216.9 239.3 269.2 229.9 235.8 225.8 247.8 226.8 252.0 258.7 199.8 199.2 225.1 201.0 237.9 225.4 221.3 255.3 151.5 230.9 Passes Att. 628 630 598 533 605 635 502 545 545 564 591 625 604 575 569 530 470 524 546 562 559 466 557 Completed 395 423 386 337 369 388 319 347 344 374 369 410 404 342 349 335 296 333 332 339 328 242 312 Pct Completed 62.9 67.1 64.5 63.2 61.0 61.1 63.5 63.7 63.1 66.3 62.4 65.6 66.9 59.5 61.3 63.2 63.0 63.5 60.8 60.3 58.7 51.9 56.0 Sacked 43 19 43 39 43 40 39 39 36 39 28 40 32 44 40 26 41 32 38 40 32 55 54 Yards Lost 316 154 276 248 272 278 271 222 227 241 180 272 224 262 241 148 246 220 223 213 175 337 305 INTERCEPTED BY 16 15 14 11 12 12 11 12 13 19 11 17 20 20 22 17 9 18 21 18 13 17 16 Yards Returned 128 189 158 120 154 68 164 122 113 358 179 198 433 351 358 282 129 285 312 198 78 285 257 Returned for TD 2 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 4 1 1 4 3 2 2 2 1 3 3 0 4 1 OPP PUNT RETURNS 22 20 30 33 41 36 47 43 35 39 36 35 29 32 31 33 32 31 30 28 36 28 45 Avg return 10.1 8.6 9.0 9.0 7.0 9.6 12.9 8.1 6.0 10.4 6.1 6.1 7.2 9.1 8.8 8.4 4.5 6.3 9.2 13.9 7.3 5.7 7.4 OPP KICKOFF RET 40 37 37 25 32 21 22 31 45 33 30 56 71 61 58 58 57 69 81 74 57 76 76 Avg return 20.3 22.2 23.7 27.8 23.4 22.0 27.2 27.6 24.4 26.1 22.7 24.8 24.1 25.0 24.2 21.8 22.6 20.1 18.8 20.0 24.9 20.9 21.0 OPP TOUCHDOWNS 38 55 39 32 36 43 51 48 40 55 34 32 48 25 35 46 51 52 35 40 46 20 39 Rushing 14 18 14 9 5 10 11 17 21 16 10 7 16 12 11 20 12 18 10 7 17 7 8 Passing 24 36 25 21 27 25 34 28 15 31 21 23 31 12 21 24 33 29 20 27 27 10 26 Returns 0 1 0 2 4 8 6 3 4 8 3 2 1 1 3 2 6 5 5 6 2 3 5 TENNESSEE TITANS OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE STATS, 1999–2021 (REGULAR SEASON)

YDS GAINED (tot) 5,822 6,343 5,805 4,998 5,024 5,728 4,988 4,859 5,390 5,010 5,361 4,834 5,623 5,018 4,987 4,810 5,122 5,487 5,501 5,272 5,352 5,350 5,296 per Game 342.5 396.4 362.8 312.4 314.0 358.0 311.8 303.7 336.9 313.1 335.1 302.1 351.4 313.6 311.7 300.6 320.1 342.9 343.8 329.5 334.5 334.4 331.0

Fumbles Lost 11 5 9 6 8 7 16 10 9 12 8 14 16 8 17 7 12 12 12 10 11 14 9 Opp Fumbles 21 21 16 14 23 12 16 7 24 15 20 25 20 28 26 19 20 22 21 22 21 39 39 Opp Fum Lost 6 8 9 6 9 6 8 4 12 5 12 8 7 11 12 11 11 12 13 11 11 13 24

Rushes 551 521 445 454 443 476 371 356 462 378 376 406 499 508 543 469 397 420 486 511 468 546 459

FIELD GOALS/FGA 26/32 20/28 8/18 26/30 35/42 22/24 14/16 19/22 25/29 25/31 29/32 24/26 27/32 29/33 35/39 22/28 23/29 19/27 32/37 25/31 20/28 27/33 21/25

FUMBLES BY 25 15 21 18 10 17 25 23 27 21 17 22 27 18 32 29 27 33 24 20 18 24 17

4.4 5.2 5.0 4.5 4.1 4.6 4.0 4.1 4.1 4.5 3.8 4.3 5.2 4.3

TOUCHDOWNS 49 62 54 34 33 46 37 28 41 36 34 40 39 41 28 36 33 41 48 42 39 38 46 Rushing 23 26 21 15 18 16 10 6 16 10 8 13 19 24 17 15 8 12 11 16 12 14 19 Passing 22 33 29 16 14 29 25 20 22 17 22 24 16 13 9 13 20 27 30 22 23 18 23 Returns 4 3 4 3 1 1 2 2 3 9 4 3 4 4 2 8 5 2 7 4 4 6 4

2-PT CONVERSIONS 2/2 4/7 1/2 0/1 0/0 0/5 3/5 0/1 0/0 1/1 0/0 1/2 1/2 1/1 0/0 3/3 0/1 1/2 3/4 2/6 3/4 0/0 1/3

RUSHING (net) 2,404 2,690 2,223 2,023 1,833 2,187 1,485 1,447 1,894 1,687 1,438 1,727 2,592 2,199 2,109 2,214 1,525 1,871 1,623 1,952 1,794 2,085 1,811

Yards per Rush 3.9 4.7 3.8 4.5 3.3 3.8 3.8 3.8 3.9

PASSING (net) 3,418 3,653 3,582 2,975 3,191 3,541 3,503 3,412 887 891 1,025 870 1,069

3,496 3,323 3,923 3,107 3,031 2,819 2,878 2,596 3,597 3,616 3,878 3,320 3,558 3,265 3,485 Avg per Game 201.1 228.3 223.9 185.9 199.4 221.3 218.9 213.3 218.5 207.7 245.2 194.2 189.4 176.2 179.9 162.3 224.8 226.0 242.4 207.5 222.4 204.1 217.8 Passes Att. 535 485 448 437 496 504 551 513 533 540 584 474 476 453 464 447 594 589 502 500 515 462 527 Completed 359 316 297 293 306 307 342 299 328 318 353 273 271 265 288 226 358 356 315 306 307 286 304 Pct Completed 67.1 65.2 66.3 67.0 61.7 60.9 62.1 58.3 61.5 58.9 60.4 57.6 56.9 58.5 62.1 50.6 60.3 60.4 62.7 61.2 59.6 61.9 57.7 Yards Gained 3745 3826 3956 3,255 3,394 3,720 3,893 3,738 3,710 3,577 4,113 3,278 3,104 2,902 3,077 2,748 3,797 3,933 4,031 3,441 3,867 3,430 3,622 Sacked 47 25 56 47 35 28 54 50 37 39 24 27 15 12 30 29 31 44 25 21 43 28 25 Yards Lost 327 173 374 280 203 179 390 326 214 254 190 171 73 83 199 152 200 317 153 121 309 165 137 Had intercepted 14 7 8 12 17 11 17 16 16 16 14 15 15 9 17 19 14 19 9 15 17 16 13 Yards Opp Ret 252 81 204 219 262 203 263 214 132 260 167 120 121 88 116 250 293 306 264 179 163 236 227 Opp TDs on Int 0 0 0 1 2 3 3 1 1 4 3 1 0 0 0 2 4 2 3 2 2 3 2 PUNTS 58 50 78 75 75 77 88 89 79 83 86 77 69 87 73 88 78 79 71 66 85 76 90 Avg Yards 44.3 45.1 47.1 46.4 49.7 44.2 47.4 46.3 42.9 46.4 43.6 42.9 43.4 42.8 41.9 42.7 43.2 42.9 43.9 41.3 42.0 40.8 42.5 PUNT RETURNS 30 23 22 27 36 30 38 30 31 31 47 27 33 34 42 37 45 40 37 28 36 53 40 Avg Return 9.8 9.0 7.7 8.8 8.5 7.9 8.1 6.9 7.7 15.3 10.4 12.2 6.7 9.7 8.7 12.6 9.3 4.3 11.6 7.8 7.8 12.7 9.0 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 KICKOFF RETURNS 40 38 30 23 28 33 33 48 44 63 32 64 69 52 52 79 70 79 68 50 71 47 56 Avg Return 19.5 20.2 21.3 32.0 22.1 19.1 20.6 23.4 24.9 23.6 26.0 24.3 20.5 25.4 21.1 23.2 24.2 19.7 19.1 19.6 19.9 26.1 18.6 Returned for TD 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 PENALTIES 103 86 99 82 85 110 93 111 101 106 104 128 98 108 101 94 125 110 110 112 119 107 114 Yards Penalized 973 783 932 727 785 1,012 779 961 900 847 960 1,040 821 855 773 803 1,002 923

Avg per Game 141.4 168.1 138.9 126.4 114.6 136.7 92.8 90.4 118.4 105.4 89.9 107.9 162.0 137.4 131.8 138.4 95.3 116.9 101.4 122.0 112.1 130.3 113.2

POSS. TIME (avg) 32:40 28:28 28:31 29:28 29:51 30:32 29:25 27:31 30:00 27:18 27:52 25:54 28:27 29:09 31:38 27:17 31:13 31:40 32:52 32:47 31:29 33:48 31:30

EXTRA-PT KICKS 43/47 51/53 50/52 28/31 31/33 39/41 29/31 27/27 41/41 35/35 34/34 38/38 37/37 40/40 28/28 32/32 30/32 39/39 43/44 36/36 34/35 37/38 43/43

Avg

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 94 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS 1999–2021 TITANS - OFFENSE OFFENSE 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 GAMES (Won-Lost) 12-5 11-5 9-7 9-7 9-7 9-7 3-13 2-14 7-9 6-10 9-7 6-10 8-8 13-3 10-6 8-8 4-12 5-11 12-4 11-5 7-9 13-3 13-3 FIRST DOWNS 362 381 317 289 290 322 298 258 311 260 281 252 288 268 306 261 279 308 310 312 288 299 294 Rushing 134 142 104 106 97 115 66 75 103 70 71 73 115 108 118 105 72 85 84 112 87 107 109 Passing 194 203 177 156 157 175 195 159 172 166 185 155 154 143 171 133 191 200 211 182 179 167 167 Penalty 34 36 36 27 36 32 37 24 36 24 25 24 19 17 17 23 16 23 15 18 22 25 18

0 0 13 8 0

Statistic Tenn. Opp.

11/13 Denver

TD Rush Rec Ret K-PAT FG S PTS

09/25 Las Vegas

Conv: TM 0-0, OPP 1-2

Rushing 2 11 Passing 13 7

Sacks:

Fumbles/Ball Lost 2/1 2/1 Touchdowns 2 3 Rushing 0 1 Passing 2 2 Returns 0 0

Won 0, Lost 1

11/27 Cincinnati

Passing Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost Rating

0 0 0 0 2/2 2/3 0 8

Simmons 2, Weaver 2, Dupree 1, TM 5, OPP 1 FUM/Lost: Henry 1/0, Philips 1/1

Total Rushes 26 32

Punt Returns Ret FC Yds Avg Long TD Philips 4 2 62 15.5 46 0 Team 4 2 62 15.5 46 0 Opponents 5 1 62 12.4 22 0

09/11 L 20-21 N.Y. Giants 67,805

4th Down: Made/Att 0/0 1/1

Penalties/Yards 7/50 8/45

Possession Avg. 31:06 28:54

2022 TENNESSEE TITANS REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS

Net Yards Passing 266 156 Avg. Per Game 266.0 156.0

Field Goals 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Bullock 0/0 1/1 0/0 1/2 0/0 Team 0/0 1/1 0/0 1/2 0/0 Opponents 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0

3rd Down Pct. 27.3 20.0

Interceptions No. Yds Avg Long TD Hooker 1 0 0.0 0 0 Team 1 0 0.0 0 0 Opponents 0 0 0

2-Pt

Total Net Yards 359 394 Avg. Per Game 359.0 394.0

12/04 at Philadelphia

4th Down Pct. 0.0 100.0

Punting No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B Stonehouse 6 342 57.0 46.7 0 3 66 0 Team 6 342 57.0 46.7 0 3 66 0 Opponents 6 309 51.5 41.2 0 5 69 0

Kickoff Returns No. Yds Avg Long TD Cannon 2 33 16.5 19 0 Team 2 33 16.5 19 0 Opponents 2 41 20.5 24 0

10/02 at Indianapolis 10/09 at Washington

Date W-L Score OT Opponent Attendance

Att./Completions 33/20 21/17 Completion Pct. 60.6 81.0 Had Intercepted 0 1 Punts/Average 6/57.0 6/51.5 Net Punting Avg. 6/46.7 6/41.2

2 0 2 0 0 12

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 95 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

2 0 2 0 2/2 2/3 0 20 Opponents 3 1 2 0 1/1 0/0 0 21

11/17 at Green Bay

Total First Downs 19 19

Tannehill 33 20 266 60.6 8.06 2 6.1 0 0.0 31 1/0 106.4 Team 33 20 266 60.6 8.06 2 6.1 0 0.0 31 1/0 106.4 Opponents 21 17 188 81.0 8.95 2 9.5 1 4.8 65t 5/32 115.9

Total Plays 60 58 Avg. Per Play 6.0 6.8

Net Yards Rushing 93 238 Avg. Per Game 93.0 238.0

12/11 Jacksonville 12/18 at L.A. Chargers

Bullock: (46G,23G,47N)

Sacked/Yards Lost 1/0 5/32 Gross Yards 266 188

Scoring Hilliard Bullock Team

12/24 Houston 12/29 Dallas 01/08 at Jacksonville

10/23 Indianapolis 10/30 at Houston

09/19 at Buffalo

Rushing No. Yds Avg Long TD Henry 21 82 3.9 18 0 Hilliard 2 8 4.0 5 0 Tannehill 2 7 3.5 9 0 Okonkwo 1 -4 -4.0 -4 0 Team 26 93 3.6 18 0 Opponents 32 238 7.4 68 1

Receiving No. Yds Avg Long TD Philips 6 66 11.0 21 0 Hilliard 3 61 20.3 31 2 Burks 3 55 18.3 27 0 Swaim 3 19 6.3 9 0 Hollister 1 22 22.0 22 0 Westbrook-Ikhine 1 13 13.0 13 0 Woods 1 13 13.0 13 0 Okonkwo 1 11 11.0 11 0 Hooper 1 6 6.0 6 0 Team 20 266 13.3 31 2 Opponents 17 188 11.1 65t 2

Penalty 4 1

11/06 at Kansas City

3rd Down: Made/Att 3/11 2/10

Score Team Opponents 21

By Periods Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS

7 6 7 0 0 20

1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

Yds Yards Lost on Sack

3 0 3 0 0 0 0 0

1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

11 4 7 0 0 0 0 0

FR

FR Fumble Recoveries

Cunningham, Zach 6 5 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fulton, Kristian 6 5 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Simmons, Jeffery 6 4 2 2.0 19.0 6 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Amadi, Ugo 5 4 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hooker, Amani 4 3 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Weaver, Rashad 4 3 1 2.0 7.0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Autry, Denico 4 2 2 0.0 0.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0

0 0 1

Asst Assisted Tackles Sk Quarterback Sacks

FUMBLES

FF Forced Fumble

Tot Solo Asst FF FR PAT FG PUNT

TITANS SPECIAL TEAMS STATISTICS

PLAYER Tot Solo Asst Sk Yds QBP TFL No Yds Lg TD PD FF FR Yds

TACKLES FUMBLES BLOCKS

0

Legend:

Byard, Kevin 12 8 4 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Long Jr., David 8 5 3 0.0 0.0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

Yds Yards on Fumble Returns

2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0

Tot Solo

1

Yds Interception Return Yards

TACKLES FUMBLES

Int Interceptions

PD Passes Defensed

TACKLES SACKS

INTERCEPTIONS

PLAYER Asst FF Henry, Derrick 0 0 TEAM TOTALS: 0

0 0 0 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total 66 47 19 5.0 32.0 26 6 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 0

2022 TENNESSEE TITANS REGULAR SEASON DEFENSIVE STATISTICS

2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0

Solo Unassisted Tackles

Tot Total Tackles

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 96 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

Strong, Kevin 3 2 1 0.0 0.0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 McCreary, Roger 2 1 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tart, Teair 2 1 1 0.0 0.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dupree, Bud 1 1 0 1.0 6.0 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Farley, Caleb 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kalu, Joshua 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Walker, DeMarcus 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Adeniyi, Ola 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 1 Da’Shawn

QBP Quarterback Pressure TFL Tackle for Loss

PLAYER Avery, Tre Hilliard, Dontrell Cannon, Trenton Cole, Dylan Cunningham, Zach Hollister, Cody Jones, Joe TEAM TOTALS:

MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hand,

TD Interceptions Return Touchdowns

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 23 19 Poyer 1 6 6.0 6 0

12/24 at Chicago TEAM 26 297 11.4 53t 3

Passing 15 14 TEAM 3 29 9.7 21 0

TEAM 31 26 297 83.9 9.58 3

* RUSHING No. Yds Avg Long TD

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 97 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

12/11 N.Y. Jets Singletary 2 14 7.0 8 0

11/20 Cleveland Davis 4 88 22.0 47 1

Total Plays 58 66 OPPONENTS 4 67 16.8 21 0 Avg. Per Play 7.1 3.7 * FIELD GOALS 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+

TOTAL NET YARDS 413 243 TEAM 1 3 21 21.0 21 0 Avg. Per Game 413.0 243.0

OPPONENTS 41 29 240 70.7 5.85 1 2.4 3 7.3

01/02 at Cincinnati OPPONENTS 29 240 8.3 28 1

01/08 New England

NET YARDS RUSHING 121 52 Bass 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 1/ 1 0/ 0 Avg. Per Game 121.0 52.0 TEAM 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 1/ 1 0/ 0 Total Rushes 25 18 OPPONENTS 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 1/ 1

12/18 Miami Knox 1 5 5.0 5 0

2022 BUFFALO BILLS REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS

11/13 Minnesota Moss 6 21 3.5 8 0

12/01 at New England McKenzie 2 19 9.5 12 1

NET YARDS PASSING 292 191 Bass: (41G) Avg. Per Game 292.0 191.0 OPP: (57G) Sacked/Yards Lost 2/5 7/49 Gross Yards 297 240 Att./Completions 31/26 41/29 Completion Pct. 83.9 70.7 Had Intercepted 2 3 PUNTS/AVERAGE 0/0.0 4/45.3 NET PUNTING AVG. 0/0.0 4/40.0 PENALTIES/YARDS 5/35 4/30 FUMBLES/BALL LOST 2/2 1/0 TOUCHDOWNS 4 1 Rushing 1 6.5 53t 2/ 5 112.0 9.7 6.5 53t 2/ 5 112.0 28 7/ 49 63.1

3rd Down Pct. 90.0 46.2 TEAM 0 0 --- --- 0 0--- 0

* KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds Avg Long TD

11/24 at Detroit Crowder 3 28 9.3 11 0

Penalty 1 2 OPPONENTS 2 5 2.5 5 0

10/02 at Baltimore Cook 1 2 2.0 2 0

10/16 at Kansas City OPPONENTS 18 52 2.9 18 0

* INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds Avg Long TD Buff. Opp. Basham Jr. 1 21 21.0 21 0

2

4th Down Pct. 0.0 66.7 * PUNT RETURNS Ret FC Yds Avg Long TD

10/09 Pittsburgh TEAM 25 121 4.8 13 1

09/08 W 31-10 at L.A. Rams 73,846 Allen 10 56 5.6 13 1

09/25 at Miami Moss 6 15 2.5 8 0

WON 1, LOST 0

3rd Down: Made/Att 9/10 6/13

10/30 Green Bay

4th Down: Made/Att 0/0 2/3 OPPONENTS 4 181 45.3 40.0 0 2 58 0

Rushing 7 3 Jackson 1 2 2.0 2 0

11/06 at N.Y. Jets Diggs 8 122 15.3 53t 1

09/19 Tennessee Singletary 8 48 6.0 13 0

* RECEIVING No. Yds Avg Long TD

POSSESSION AVG. 31:14 28:46 Crowder 1 3 21 21.0 21 0

0 Passing 3 1 Returns 0 0 * SCORE BY PERIODS Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS TEAM 7 3 7 14 0 31 OPPONENTS 0 10 0 0 0 10 * SCORING TD-Ru-Pa-Rt K-PAT FG S PTS Bass 0 0 0 0 4/ 4 1/ 1 0 7 Allen 1 1 0 0 0 6 Davis 1 0 1 0 0 6 Diggs 1 0 1 0 0 6 McKenzie 1 0 1 0 0 6 TEAM 4 1 3 0 4/ 4 1/ 1 0 31 OPPONENTS 1 0 1 0 1/ 1 1/ 1 0 10 2-Pt Conv: TM 0-0, OPP 0-0 SACKS: V. Miller 2, Epenesa 1.5, Phillips 1.5, Basham Jr. 1, Rousseau 1, TM 7, OPP FUM/LOST:2 Cook 1/1, Moss 1/1 * PASSING Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost Rating Allen 31 26 297 83.9 9.58 3 9.7 2

* PUNTING No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B

By Opponents—at Pittsburgh (1 interception, 3 fumbles), 12/19/21 (L)

By Titans—at Tennessee 20, Jacksonville 0, 12/12/21 (W)

FIVE OR MORE SACKS BY TEAM

SCORED 30 POINTS IN A HALF

HELD OPPONENT TO 100 OR FEWER NET YARDS PASSING

By Titans—vs. Jacksonville (4 interceptions, 0 fumbles), 12/12/21 (W)

By Opponents—Jakeem Grant (102 yards) at Miami, 9/9/18 (L)

By Oilers—Houston 58, vs. Cleveland 14, 12/9/90 (W)

By Opponents—Josh Huff (107 yards) at Philadelphia, 11/23/14 (L)

By Opponents—38 points in first half, vs. Cleveland, 12/6/20 (L)

TEAM YARDAGE TOTALS

By Titans—Tye Smith (63 yards) at Indianapolis (Adam Vinatieri's FG blocked by Dane Cruikshank), 12/1/19 (W)

By Opponents—at Denver (39 yards), 10/13/19 (L)

FORCED FOUR OR MORE OPPONENT TURNOVERS

By Opponents—Rob Morris (68 yards) at Indianapolis (Gary Anderson’s FG blocked by Montae Reagor), 12/5/04 (L)

By Titans—Stephen Gostkowski (6) at Minnesota, 9/27/20 (W)

By Titans—vs. N.Y. Giants (5 sacks), 9/11/22 (L)

By Titans—at Miami (78 net yards), 10/8/17 (L)

By Opponents—Nick Folk (5), at New England, 11/28/21 (L)

By Titans—Denico Autry vs. Miami (Jason Sanders), 1/2/22 (W)

THREE FIELD GOALS

WON OVERTIME GAME

By Opponents—at New England (85 net yards), 11/28/21 (L)

FORCED FIVE OR MORE OPPONENT TURNOVERS

By Opponents—at N.Y. Jets 27, Tennessee 24, 10/3/21 (L)

TEAM SCORING

400 TOTAL NET YARDS

HELD OPPONENT TO 200 OR FEWER NET YARDS OF OFFENSE

WON BY SHUTOUT

By Opponents—Chris Boswell, at Pittsburgh, 12/19/21 (L)

FIELD GOAL BLOCKED

SCORED 20 POINTS IN A QUARTER

SCORED 40 POINTS

—Dontrell Hilliard 7-yard reception, vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

SCORED A TOUCHDOWN ON FIRST OFFENSIVE POSSESSIONByTitans

By Titans—Tim Shaw vs. Pittsburgh (Drew Butler), 10/11/12 (W)

By Opponents—at N.Y. Jets (7 sacks), 10/3/21 (L)

—Randy Bullock 44-yard FG (0:04 remaining) vs. San Francisco, 12/23/21 (W)

By Titans—35 points in first half, at Indianapolis, 11/29/20 (W)

By Opponents—at N.Y. Jets (7 sacks), 10/3/21 (L)

By Opponents—at Denver 16, Tennessee 0, 10/13/19 (L)

By Titans—at Houston (405 yards), 1/9/22 (W)

By Opponents—Tennessee 14, at Green Bay 40, 12/27/20 (L)

GAMES WON

SIX OR MORE SACKS BY TEAM

HELD OPPONENT WITHOUT A TOUCHDOWN

SPECIAL TEAMS

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Opponents—Four passing, one interception return, two punt returns, at Oakland, 9/29/02 (L)

PUNT RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

By Opponents—Jeff Wilson Jr. 1-yard run, vs. San Francisco, 12/23/21 (W)

By Titans—Tennessee 34, at Indianapolis 31, 10/31/21 (W)

By Opponents—vs. Buffalo (417 yards), 10/18/21 (W)

By Opponents—Chris Boswell (4), at Pittsburgh, 12/19/21 (L)

REGULAR SEASON: THE LAST TIME THE TENNESSEE TITANS ...

By Opponents—at L.A. Rams (194 net yards), 11/7/21 (W)

FIVE FIELD GOALS

By Opponents—vs. Kansas City (530 yards), 11/10/19 (W)

By Opponents—21 points in second quarter, at Seattle, 9/19/21 (W)

By Titans—Randy Bullock (3) vs. New Orleans, 11/14/21 (W)

PUNT BLOCKED AND RETURNED FOR TD

By Opponents—vs. Houston (4 interceptions, 1 fumble), 11/21/21 (L)

By Titans—21 points in second quarter, at Houston, 1/9/22 (W)

By Titans—at Pittsburgh (168 yards), 12/19/21 (L)

By Titans—Randy Bullock at Seattle, 9/19/21 (W)

By Titans—Jason McCourty vs. Indianapolis (Pat McAfee’s punt blocked by Patrick Bailey and recovered in end zone by McCourty), 10/30/11 (W)

By Opponents—Chris Myarick 1-yard TD reception and Saquon Barkley 2-point conversion (1:06 remaining), vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

WON BY 20 OR MORE POINTS

By Titans—A.J. Brown (42 yards) at Indianapolis, 11/29/20 (W)

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 98 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

By Titans—at Seattle (532 yards), 9/19/21 (W)

HELD OPPONENT TO 50 OR FEWER YARDS RUSHINGByTitans—at Pittsburgh (35 yards), 12/19/21 (L)

By Titans—Darius Reynaud (twice—69 yards and 81 yards) vs. Jacksonville, 12/30/12 (W)

FIELD GOAL BLOCKED, RETURNED FOR TD

PUNT BLOCKED

By Opponents—at Houston 57, Tennessee 14, 10/1/17 (L)

By Titans—at Arizona (8 sacks), 12/10/17 (L)

By Opponents—Jakeem Grant (74 yards) at Miami, 10/9/16 (W)

By Opponents—Justin Reid, vs. Houston (Stephen Gostkowski), 10/18/20 (W)

SEVEN OR MORE SACKS BY TEAM

500 TOTAL NET YARDS

TEAM DEFENSE

By Opponents—E.J. Speed, vs. Indianapolis (Trevor Daniel), 11/12/20 (L)

By Opponents—at Denver 16, Tennessee 0, 10/13/19 (L)

By Titans—at Tennessee 34, Miami 3, 1/2/22 (W)

WON BY SCORING IN THE LAST TWO MINUTES OF ByREGULATIONTitans

By Titans—Derrick Mason (101 yards) at Cincinnati, 11/18/01 (W)

SCORED TOUCHDOWNS ON OFFENSE, DEFENSE AND SPECIAL TEAMS

FOUR FIELD GOALS

By Opponents—Tennessee 13, at New England 36, 11/28/21 (L)

By Titans—at Arizona (8 sacks), 12/10/17 (L)

By Titans—vs. N.Y. Jets (4 interceptions, 1 fumble), 12/17/12 (W)

SCORED 50 POINTS

By Titans—at Houston 38, Tennessee 41, 1/3/21 (W)

KICKOFF RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

OPENING KICKOFF RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

By Opponents—T.J. Carrie (6 yards), vs. Indianapolis (Trevor Daniel's punt blocked by E.J. Speed), 11/12/20 (L)

By Titans—at Tennessee 34, Miami 3, 1/2/22 (W)

By Titans—One rushing, two interception returns, two punt returns, vs. Jacksonville, 12/30/12 (W)

By Opponents—at N.Y. Jets (7 sacks), 10/3/21 (L)

By Opponents—Todd Gurley (276 yards), vs. Los Angeles Rams, 12/24/17 (L)

By Titans—A.J. Brown vs. Kansas City (133 yards), 10/24/21 (W), at Indianapolis (155 yards), 10/31/21 (W)

INDIVIDUAL WITH 200 SCRIMMAGE YARDS

—Derrick Henry (1 rushing, 1 receiving) at Carolina, 11/3/19 (L)

TWO TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING

RUSHING PLAY OF 50 OR MORE YARDS

By Opponents—Blake Bortles vs. Jacksonville, 12/6/15 (W)

150 YARDS RECEIVING

By Titans—vs. Cleveland (run failed), 12/6/20 (L)

40 OR MORE PASS ATTEMPTS

By Titans—Derrick Henry (3) vs. Buffalo, 10/18/21 (W)

TWO-POINT CONVERSIONS

By Titans—Derrick Henry (94 yards) vs. Houston, 10/18/20 (W)

CONSECUTIVE 300-YARD PASSING GAMES

10 OR MORE RECEPTIONS

30 OR MORE CARRIES

100 YARDS RUSHING

COMPLETION OF 80 OR MORE YARDS

By Opponents—Saquon Barkley (164 yards), vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD RUSHING GAMES

By Opponents—Daniel Jones (65 yards), vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

By Titans—Ryan Tannehill (52 att) vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

INDIVIDUAL OFFENSIVE PERFORMANCES

By Titans—Randy Bullock, at New England, 11/28/21 (L)

INDIVIDUAL RUSHING

By Titans—Matt Hasselbeck vs. Baltimore (358 yards), 9/18/11 (W), vs. Denver (311 yards), 9/25/11 (W)

By Titans—Ryan Tannehill (50 yards) vs. New Orleans, 11/14/21 (W)

By Opponents—Kyler Murray, vs. Arizona, 9/12/21 (L)

150 YARDS RUSHING

By Titans—Ryan Tannehill (35 comp) vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

200 YARDS RECEIVING

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 99 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

200 YARDS RUSHING

THREE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING

By Titans—Derrick Henry (250 yards) at Houston, 1/3/21 (W)

By Titans—Derrick Henry (237 yards) at Seattle, 9/19/21 (W)

By Titans—Ryan Tannehill (91 yards) at Oakland, 12/8/19 (W)

By Opponents—Deebo Samuel (159 yards), vs. San Francisco, 12/23/21 (W)

By Titans—Ryan Tannehill (52 att) vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

By Titans—A.J. Brown (155 yards) at Indianapolis, 10/31/21 (W)

TWO-POINT CONVERSION FAILED

100 YARDS RECEIVING

INDIVIDUAL PASSING

By Titans—A.J. Brown (11 rec.) vs. San Francisco, 12/23/21 (W)

By Titans—Derrick Henry (157 yards) at N.Y. Jets, 10/3/21 (L)

RUSHING PLAY OF 80 OR MORE YARDS

By Titans—Dontrell Hilliard (68 yards) at New England, 11/28/21 (L)

FOUR TOUCHDOWN PASSES

By Titans—vs. Buffalo, 10/18/21 (W)

By Opponents—Nyheim Hines (1 rushing, 1 receiving), vs. Indianapolis, 11/12/20 (L)

By Titans—D'Onta Foreman (132), vs. Miami, 1/2/22 (W)

RUSHING TOUCHDOWN AND RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNByTitans

By Titans—Derrick Henry (33 att) at N.Y. Jets, 10/3/21 (L)

—Ryan Tannehill (1 passing, 1 rushing) vs. New Orleans, 11/14/21 (W)

By Opponents—Patrick Mahomes (446 yards), vs. Kansas City, 11/10/19 (W)

By Titans—Ryan Tannehill (323 yards) vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

REGULAR SEASON: THE LAST TIME THE TENNESSEE TITANS ...

By Opponents—Cooper Kupp (11 rec.), at L.A. Rams, 11/7/21 (W)

30 OR MORE COMPLETIONS

SUCCESSFUL ONSIDE KICK

By Opponents— Ka'imi Fairbairn, vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

MISSED PAT

By Opponents—Lamar Miller (97 yards), at Houston, 11/26/18 (L)

By Opponents—Saquon Barkley (68 yards), vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

By Opponents—Corey Dillon (4) at Cincinnati, 12/4/97 (L)

INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING

By Opponents—vs. N.Y. Giants (run failed), 9/11/22 (L)

By Titans—Steve McNair vs. Jacksonville, 12/26/99 (W)

By Opponents—Carson Wentz (51 att), at Indianapolis, 10/31/21 (W)

By Titans— Derrick Henry at Seattle (182 yards), 9/19/21 (W); vs. Indianapolis, 9/26/21 (W); at N.Y. Jets, 10/3/21 (L); at Jacksonville, 10/10/21 (W); vs. Buffalo, 10/18/21 (W)

NO SACKS ALLOWED

RUSHING TOUCHDOWN AND PASSING TOUCHDOWNByTitans

CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES

By Opponents—Jared Goff (80 yards), vs. Los Angeles Rams, 12/24/17 (L)

COMPLETION OF 50 OR MORE YARDS

By Opponents—Saquon Barkley (164 yards), vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

By Opponents—Saquon Barkley (pass from Daniel Jones), vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

By Opponents—Matthew Stafford (31 comp), at L.A. Rams, 11/7/21 (W)

By Opponents—Melvin Gordon (32 carries) at San Diego, 11/6/16 (L)

By Titans—Kenny Britt (225 yards) vs. Philadelphia, 10/24/10 (W)

By Opponents—DeAndre Hopkins (238 yards) at Houston, 11/30/14 (L)

By Opponents—Trevor Lawrence (40 att), vs. Jacksonville, 12/12/21 (W)

By Titans—Rob Bironas kicks and Daimion Stafford recovers, vs. Arizona, 12/15/13 (L)

By Titans—Ryan Tannehill at Houston, 1/9/22 (W)

By Opponents—Connar Barth kicks and Adrian Amos recovers, at Chicago, 11/27/16 (W)

By Opponents—Trevor Lawrence (1 passing, 1 rushing), at Jacksonville, 10/10/21 (W)

FIVE TOUCHDOWN PASSES

By Titans—Derrick Henry (3) vs. Buffalo, 10/18/21 (W)

By Opponents—Le’Veon Bell (204 yards) vs. Pittsburgh, 11/17/14 (L)

By Titans—MyCole Pruitt (pass from Ryan Tannehill) at N.Y. Jets, 10/3/21 (L)

50 OR MORE PASS ATTEMPTS

TWO-POINT CONVERSION MADE

By Opponents—Davis Mills (301 yards), at Houston, 1/9/22 (W)

By Opponents—vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

By Titans—A.J. Brown (145 yards) vs. San Francisco, 12/23/21 (W)

400 YARDS PASSING

By Titans—Ryan Fitzpatrick (402 yards) vs. Arizona, 12/15/13 (L)

300 YARDS PASSING

By Opponents—Danny Amendola (113 yards), at Houston, 1/9/22 (W)

By Opponents—Tyrod Taylor (2), vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

400 TOTAL NET YARDS

By Opponents—Zach Ertz (112 rec.) and Alshon Jeffery (105 rec.), vs. Philadelphia, 9/30/18 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

TWO TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS

By Titans—Marcus Johnson (50 yards) vs. New Orleans, 11/14/21 (W)

By Titans—Kenny Britt vs. Philadelphia, 10/24/10 (W)

THREE SACKS

By Opponents—Evan McPherson 52-yard field goal with 0:00 remaining, vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

—Anthony Firkser 12-yard pass from Ryan Tannehill, at New England, 1/4/20 (W)

By Opponents—at Buffalo 41, Houston 38, 1/3/93 (L)

By Opponents—Sterling Shepard (65 yards), vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—Tennessee 34, vs. Pittsburgh 31, 1/11/03 (W)

POSTSEASON: THE LAST TIME THE TENNESSEE TITANS ...

By Opponents—Arian Foster (115 yards) and Ben Tate (104 yards) vs. Houston, 10/23/11 (L)

By Titans— Kevin Byard (24 yards) at L.A. Rams, 11/7/21 (W)

WON BY SCORING IN THE LAST TWO MINUTES OF ByREGULATIONTitans

WON BY 20 OR MORE POINTS

By Opponents—at Oakland 56, Houston 7, 12/21/69 (L)

SCORED TOUCHDOWNS ON OFFENSE, DEFENSE AND SPECIAL TEAMS

SCORED A TOUCHDOWN ON FIRST OFFENSIVE POSSESSIONByTitans

By Opponents—Glover Quin (3) at Houston, 11/28/10 (L)

WON BY SHUTOUT

SCORED 40 POINTS

By Opponents—Ryan Tannehill sacked in end zone by Romeo Okwara vs. Detroit, 12/20/20 (W)

By Opponents— Gardner Minshew II (339 pass.) and James Robinson (102 rush.), vs. Jacksonville, 9/20/20 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

COMBINEDPERFORMANCESOFFENSIVEBY TEAMMATES

RECEPTION OF 50 OR MORE YARDS

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 100 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

By Opponents—Davante Adams, at Green Bay, 12/27/20 (L)

By Opponents—Davis Mills (301 pass.), Danny Amendola (113 rec.), at Houston, 1/9/22 (W)

300-YARD PASSER AND 100-YARD RECEIVER IN A GAMEByTitans— Ryan Tannehill (323 pass.) and Nick Westbrook-Ikhine (107 rec.) vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

THREE TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS

—Derrick Henry (182 rush.) and Ryan Tannehill (347 pass.) at Seattle, 9/19/21 (W)

SAFETY SCORED

100-YARD RUSHER AND 300-YARD PASSER IN A GAMEByTitans

By One Player (Opponent)—Todd Gurley (118 rush. and 158 receiving), vs. Los Angeles Rams, 12/24/17 (L)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Opponents—vs Baltimore (401 yards), 1/10/21 (L)

500 TOTAL NET YARDS

TEAM SCORING (PLAYOFFS)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—vs. Pittsburgh (430 yards), 1/11/03 (W)

—Malcolm Butler (2) vs. Buffalo, 10/13/20 (W)

By Titans—Derrick Henry (182 rush.), Julio Jones (128 rec.) and Ryan Tannehill (347 pass.) at Seattle, 9/19/21 (W)

INTERCEPTION RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

TWO 100-YARD RECEIVERS IN A GAME

By Opponents—Yannick Ngakoue (67 yards) vs. Jacksonville, 12/31/17 (W)

THREE INTERCEPTIONS

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Titans—Justin Hunter (109 yards) and Kendall Wright (103 yards) at Oakland, 11/24/13 (W)

By Titans—Kevin Byard (30 yards) at Jacksonville, 10/10/21 (W)

By Opponents—Bethel Johnson 41-yard pass from Tom Brady, at New England, 1/10/04 (L)

By Opponents—AJ Dillon (124 rush.) and Davante Adams (142 rec.), at Green Bay, 12/27/20 (L)

By Opponents—Trumaine Johnson (31 yards), vs. New York Jets, 12/2/18 (W)

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Opponents—Desmond King (2), vs. Houston, 11/21/21 (L)

100-YARD RUSHER AND 100-YARD RECEIVER IN AByGAMETitans

By Titans—Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield sacked in end zone by Cameron Wake, at Cleveland, 9/8/19 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

REGULAR SEASON: THE LAST TIME THE TENNESSEE TITANS ...

By Titans—Dontrell Hilliard (131 yards) and D'Onta Foreman (109), at New England, 11/28/21 (L)

By Titans—Dontrell Hilliard vs. N.Y. Giants, 9/11/22 (L)

100-YARD RUSHER, 100-YARD RECEIVER AND 300-YARD PASSER IN A GAME

—Derrick Henry (182 rush.) and Julio Jones (128 rec.) at Seattle, 9/19/21 (W)

By Opponents—Todd Gurley (118 rush. and 158 rec.) and Jared Goff (301 pass.), vs. Los Angeles Rams, 12/24/17 (L)

By Opponents—at Baltimore (530 yards), 1/11/20 (W)

By Opponents—Chandler Jones (5.0), vs. Arizona, 9/12/21 (L)

By Titans—A.J. Brown (91 yards) at Oakland, 12/8/19 (W)

FUMBLE RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

WON OVERTIME GAME

By Titans—Jeffery Simmons (3.0) at L.A. Rams, 11/7/21 (W)

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Opponents—35 points in second half, at Buffalo, 1/3/93 (L)

RECEPTION OF 80 OR MORE YARDS

By Opponents—Danny Amendola, at Houston, 1/9/22 (W)

SCORED 50 POINTS

GAMES WON (PLAYOFFS)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

—Gary Anderson 46-yard field goal with 0:29 remaining, at Baltimore, 1/3/04 (W)

By Titans—Kevin Byard (3) at Cleveland, 10/22/17 (W)

SCORED 20 POINTS IN A QUARTER

By Opponents—21 points in second quarter, at New England, 1/13/18 (L)

By Opponents—at Oakland 41, Tennessee 24, 1/19/03 (L)

INDIVIDUAL DEFENSE

By Oilers—21 points in second quarter, at Buffalo, 1/3/93 (L)

TWOByINTERCEPTIONSTitans

By Opponents—at New England 35, Tennessee 14, 1/13/18 (L)

By Opponents—Todd Gurley (80 yards), vs. Los Angeles Rams, 12/24/17 (L)

TWO 100-YARD RUSHERS IN A GAME

SCORED 30 POINTS IN A HALF

TEAM YARDAGE(PLAYOFFS)TOTALS

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 101 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

HELD OPPONENT WITHOUT A TOUCHDOWN

By Opponents—Never Happened

SEVEN OR MORE SACKS BY TEAM

RETURNED OPENING KICKOFF FOR TOUCHDOWN

By Titans—Derrick Henry (30) at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

By Opponents—Paul Lowe (165 yards) vs. Los Angeles Chargers, 1/1/61 (W)

TWO-POINT CONVERSION FAILED

RUSHING PLAY OF 50 OR MORE YARDS

By Opponents—vs. Buffalo (194 net yards), 1/8/00 (W)

By Opponents—David Treadwell (Wide Left) at Denver, 1/4/92 (L)

By Opponents—Patrick Mahomes at Kansas City, 1/19/20 (L)

By Opponents—at Baltimore (pass failed), 1/11/20 (W)

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Opponents—Joe Burrow (348 yards), vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

By Titans—vs. Cincinnati (run failed), 1/22/22 (L)

By Titans—Derrick Henry at New England (182 yards), 1/4/20 (W), at Baltimore (195 yards), 1/11/20 (W)

INDIVIDUAL WITH 200 SCRIMMAGE YARDS

By Opponents—vs. Kansas City (39 yards), 1/16/94 (L)

By Opponents—Jerry Olsavsky vs. Pittsburgh (Greg Montgomery), 12/31/89 (L)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Opponents—Evan McPherson, vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

SPECIAL TEAMS (PLAYOFFS)

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Titans—vs. Baltimore (134 net yards), 1/7/01 (L)

RUSHINGByTitans—vs. Baltimore (50 yards), 1/10/09 (L)

HELD OPPONENT TO 100 OR FEWER NET YARDS PASSING

By Titans—Derrick Henry (195 yards) at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD RUSHING GAMES

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

MISSED PAT (KICK)

30 OR MORE CARRIES

By Opponents—Plaxico Burress (pass from Hines Ward) vs. Pittsburgh, 1/11/03 (W)

RUSHING PLAY OF 80 OR MORE YARDS

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—Derrick Henry (195 yards) at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

INDIVIDUAL OFFENSIVE PERFORMANCES (PLAYOFFS)

FOUR FIELD GOALS

By Titans—Chris Coleman vs. Baltimore (Kyle Richardson, twice), 1/7/01 (L)

By Titans/Oilers—vs. Cincinnati (9 sacks), 1/22/22 (L)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

INDIVIDUAL(PLAYOFFS)PASSING

By Opponents—Kurt Warner (414 yards) vs. St. Louis, 1/30/00 (L)

CONSECUTIVE 300-YARD PASSING GAMES

By Opponents—James White at New England, 1/13/18 (L)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Never Happened

PUNT RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

By Oilers—Houston 10, at San Diego 3, 12/24/61 (W)

By Opponents—Lamar Jackson (136 yards), vs. Baltimore, 1/10/21 (L)

By Titans—Al Del Greco (4) at Indianapolis, 1/16/00 (W)

100 YARDS RUSHING

RUSHING TOUCHDOWN AND RECEIVING TOUCHDOWN

200 YARDS RUSHING

By Opponents—at Baltimore (83 net yards), 1/11/20 (W)

PUNT BLOCKED

By Opponents—Antowain Smith vs. Buffalo, 1/8/00 (W)

HELD OPPONENT TO 200 OR FEWER NET YARDS OF OFFENSE

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

THREE TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING

By Opponents—Evan McPherson (4), vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

TEAM DEFENSE (PLAYOFFS)

By Titans—Derrick Mason (80 yards) at Jacksonville, 1/23/00 (W)

FIELD GOAL BLOCKED, RETURNED FOR TD

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Oilers—Allen Pinkett at Cleveland, 12/24/88 (W)

By Titans—Steve McNair at Oakland, 1/19/03 (L)

400 YARDS PASSING

300 YARDS PASSING

By Titans—Steve McNair (338 yards) vs. Pittsburgh, 1/11/03 (W)

By Titans—Derrick Henry (202 yards) at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

KICKOFF RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

TWO TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING

Playoffs:

By Opponents—Richard Seymour at New England (Gary Anderson), 1/10/04 (L)

HELD OPPONENT TO 50 OR FEWER YARDS

TWO-POINT CONVERSION MADE

RUSHING TOUCHDOWN AND PASSING TOUCHDOWNByTitans—Ryan Tannehill at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

By Opponents—Never Happened

TWO-POINT(PLAYOFFS)CONVERSIONS

By Opponents—Never Happened

THREE FIELD GOALS

By Opponents—Anthony Mitchell (90 yards) vs. Baltimore (Al Del Greco’s FG blocked by Keith Washington), 1/7/01 (L)

By Titans—Al Del Greco at Indianapolis, 1/16/00 (W)

POSTSEASON: THE LAST TIME THE TENNESSEE TITANS ...

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—vs. Buffalo (97 net yards), 1/8/00 (W)

FIELD GOAL BLOCKED

By Opponents—at San Diego 17, Tennessee 6, 1/6/08 (L)

PUNT BLOCKED AND RETURNED FOR TD By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Never Happened

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Never Happened

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

FIVE FIELD GOALS

INDIVIDUAL(PLAYOFFS)RUSHING

150 YARDS RUSHING

By Titans—Derrick Henry (66 yards) at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Never Happened

By Opponents—at New England (8 sacks), 1/13/18 (L)

By Opponents—Joe Burrow (348 pass.) and Ja'Marr Chase (109 rec.), vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

By Opponents—Frank Reich at Buffalo, 1/3/93 (L)

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Opponents—Daryle Lamonica (6) at Oakland, 12/21/69 (L)

INDIVIDUAL(PLAYOFFS)RECEIVING

By Titans—at Baltimore, 1/3/04 (W)

By Oilers—Ken Burrough (71 yards) at New England, 12/31/78 (L)

FUMBLE RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

SAFETY SCORED

300-YARD PASSER AND 100-YARD RECEIVER IN A GAMEByTitans—Steve McNair (338 pass.) and Frank Wycheck (123 rec.) vs. Pittsburgh, 1/11/03 (W)

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

FIVE TOUCHDOWN PASSES

100-YARD RUSHER, 100-YARD RECEIVER AND 300-YARD PASSER IN A GAME

NO SACKS ALLOWED

By Titans—Josh Evans and Jason Fisk (sacked Mark Brunell), at Jacksonville, 1/23/00 (W)

By Titans Logan Ryan (9 yards) at New England, 1/4/20 (W)

By Oilers—Warren Moon at Buffalo, 1/3/93 (L)

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Opponents—Willie McGinest at New England, 1/10/04 (L)

FOUR TOUCHDOWN PASSES

By Opponents—Lamar Jackson (136 rush.) and Marquise Brown (109 rec.), vs. Baltimore, 1/10/21 (L)

POSTSEASON: THE LAST TIME THE TENNESSEE TITANS ...

THREE TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS

By Opponents—Tyreek Hill, at Kansas City, 1/19/20 (L)

By Oilers—Ernest Givins at Denver (111 yards), 1/4/92 (L), at Buffalo (117 yards), 1/3/93 (L)

INDIVIDUAL(PLAYOFFS)DEFENSE

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

50 OR MORE PASS ATTEMPTS

COMBINED 100-YARDTEAMMATESPERFORMANCESOFFENSIVEBY(PLAYOFFS)RUSHERAND100-YARDRECEIVER

By Oilers—Bubba McDowell vs. N.Y. Jets, 12/29/91 (W)

40 OR MORE PASS ATTEMPTS

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Opponents—Will Demps (56 yards), at Baltimore, 1/3/04 (W)

By Opponents— Dan Pastorini ran out of the End Zone, at Miami, 12/24/78 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Never Happened

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Opponents—at New England, 1/4/20 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Lamar Jackson (143 rush.), Lamar Jackson (365 pass.) and Marquis Brown (126 rec.), at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—Jeffery Simmons vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

10 OR MORE RECEPTIONS

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Never Happened

100-YARD RUSHER AND 300-YARD PASSER IN A GAMEByTitans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 102 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

200 YARDS RECEIVING

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Opponents—Isaac Bruce (162 yards) vs. St. Louis, 1/30/00 (L)

By Titans/Oilers—Corey Davis at New England, 1/13/18 (L)

COMPLETION OF 50 OR MORE YARDS

By Oilers— Warren Moon (32 comp) vs. Kansas City, 1/16/94 (L)

By Opponents—Ja'Marr Chase (109 yards), vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

TWO TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS

By Opponents—Johnny Robinson vs. Dallas Texans, 12/23/62 (L)

COMPLETION OF 80 OR MORE YARDS

RECEPTION OF 80 OR MORE YARDS

CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES

By Opponents—Lamar Jackson (59 att), at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

By Opponents—Joe Burrow (57 yards), vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

IN AByGAMETitans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—A.J. Brown (142 yards) vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

TWO 100-YARD RUSHERS IN A GAME

By Oilers—Mike Barber (112 yards) and Ken Burrough (103 yards) at Miami, 12/24/78 (W)

By Opponents—Chris Chambers (121 yards) and Vincent Jackson (114 yards) at San Diego, 1/6/08 (L)

100 YARDS RECEIVING

By Opponents—Lamar Jackson (143 rush. and 365 pass.), at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

150 YARDS RECEIVING

By Opponents—Danny Amendola (11 rec.) at New England, 1/13/18 (L)

TWO 100-YARD RECEIVERS IN A GAME

THREE INTERCEPTIONS

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened

By Titans—Kerry Collins (42 att) vs. Baltimore, 1/10/09 (L)

30 OR MORE COMPLETIONS

By Oilers—Vernon Perry (4*) at San Diego, 12/29/79 (W)

By Titans/Oilers—Never Happened By Opponents—Hewritt Dixon (144 yards) and Pete Banaszak (116 yards) at Oakland, 12/31/67 (L)

TWO INTERCEPTIONS

By Opponents—Lamar Jackson (31 comp), at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

By Oilers— Dan Pastorini (71 yards) at New England, 12/31/78 (L)

RECEPTION OF 50 OR MORE YARDS

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

By Titans—Never in Titans era (since 1999)

INTERCEPTION RETURNED FOR TOUCHDOWN

By Opponents—Never Happened

By Opponents—Lamar Jackson (59 att), at Baltimore, 1/11/20 (W)

By Oilers—Warren Moon (50 att) at Buffalo, 1/3/93 (L)

By Opponents—Ja'Marr Chase (57 yards), vs. Cincinnati, 1/22/22 (L)

THREE SACKS

By Titans—Justin Gage (11 rec.) vs. Baltimore, 1/10/09 (L)

By Opponents—Andre Reed at Buffalo, 1/3/93 (L)

Rushing Yards (Season) — 2,027 by Derrick Henry, 2020

12 Sacks — Harold Landry III (12), 2021

10 Interceptions — Mike Reinfeldt (12), 1979

200

PASSING

Passer Rating (Season) — 117.5 by Ryan Tannehill, 2019

15 Touchdowns — Bill Groman (17), 1961

Receiving Yards (Game) — 272 by Charlie Hennigan at Bos., 10/13/61

Points (Season) — 136 by Al Del Greco, 1998; by Ryan Succop, 2017

Sacks (Game) — 4 (five times, last by William Fuller vs. Pit., 11/28/93)

ADVANCED IN PLAYOFFS

Passing Yards (Game) — 527 by Warren Moon at K.C., 12/16/90

1,500 Yards — Charlie Hennigan (1,546), 1964

30 Touchdowns — Ryan Tannehill (33), 2020

Passer Rating (Game) — 158.3 by Chris Chandler at Cin., 9/24/95

Wild Card Round — 2021

4,000 Yards — Warren Moon (4,690), 1991

Receptions (Season) — 101 by Charlie Hennigan, 1964

Touchdowns (Season) — 19 by Earl Campbell, 1979

8 Interceptions —

10 Touchdowns — Derrick Henry (10), 2021

KICKOFF RETURNS

7 Kevin Byard (8), 2017 Kevin Byard (8), 2017 — Mike Reinfeldt (12), 1979

100.0 Passer Rating — Ryan Tannehill (106.5), 2020

RECEIVING

1,500 Yards — Derrick Henry (2,027), 2020

10 Sacks — Harold Landry III (12), 2021

Rushing Touchdowns (Season) — 19 by Earl Campbell, 1979

Team record holders in major statistical categories

Field Goals (Season) — 36 by Al Del Greco, 1998

Receiving Touchdowns (Season) — 17 by Bill Groman, 1961 Receiving Touchdowns (Career) — 51 by Charlie Hennigan, 1960-66

TEAM OFFENSE

Passing Yards (Career) — 33,685 by Warren Moon, 1984-93

Overall Defense — 2000

10 Wins — 2021 (12-5)

110 Points — Randy Bullock (120), 2021

Passing Touchdowns (Career) — 196 by Warren Moon, 1984-93

Points (Career) — 1,060 by Al Del Greco, 1991-00

30 Field Goals — Ryan Succop (35), 2017

SCORING100Points — Randy Bullock (120), 2021

Interceptions (Season) — 12 by Freddy Glick, 1963; by Mike Reinfeldt, 1979

120 Points — Randy Bullock (120), 2021

Passing Yards (Season) — 4,690 by Warren Moon, 1991

Interceptions (Game) — 3 (nine times, last by Kevin Byard at Cle., 10/22/17)

3,500 Yards — Ryan Tannehill (3,734), 2021

3,000 Yards — Ryan Tannehill (3,734), 2021

LAST TIME IN A SEASON THE TITANS ...

10 Touchdowns — Derrick Henry (10), 2021

Ranked 1st in Rushing Defense — 2003 Ranked 1st in Passing Defense — 2000

Field Goals (Career) — 246 by Al Del Greco, 1991-00

Sacks (Career) — 105 by Elvin Bethea, 1968-83

12 Wins — 2021 (12-5)

35 Field Goals — Ryan Succop (35), 2017

Punt Return Yards (Game) — 160 by Darius Reynaud vs. Jax., 12/30/12

Divisional Round — 2021 Conference Championship 2019 Super Bowl — 1999

Passer Rating (Career) — 90.5 by Marcus Mariota, 2015-19

175

PUNTING

Receptions (Career) — 542 by Ernest Givins, 1986-94

80 Receptions — Delanie Walker (94), 2015

Punts (Game) — 11 (twice by Rich Camarillo, last at Pit., 12/3/95)

SCORING

400 Attempts — Ryan Tannehill (531), 2021

300 Attempts — Derrick Henry (378), 2020

Touchdowns (Game) — 5 by Billy Cannon at N.Y. Titans, 12/10/61

Field Goals (Game) — 8 by Rob Bironas at Hou., 10/21/07

Punts (Season) — 96 by Rich Camarillo, 1994

10 Touchdowns — A.J. Brown (11), 2020

Rushing Yards (Career) — 10,009 by Eddie George, 1996-03

Receiving Yards (Career) — 7,935 by Ernest Givins, 1986-94

Rushing Touchdowns (Career) — 73 by Earl Campbell, 1978-84

600 Attempts — Warren Moon (655), 1991

1,000 Yards Derrick Henry (2,027), 2020

Points (Game) — 30 by Billy Cannon (5 TDs) at N.Y. Titans, 12/10/61

Sacks (Season) — 17 by Elvin Bethea, 1973

PUNT RETURNS

90.0 Passer Rating — Ryan Tannehill (106.5), 2020

Passing Touchdowns (Game) — 7 by George Blanda vs. N.Y. Titans, 11/19/61

DEFENSE

TEAMRankedDEFENSE1stin

150 Tackles — Wesley Woodyard (172), 2017 Tackles — Keith Bulluck (180), 2002 Tackles — Gregg Bingham (212), 1980

Rushing Yards (Game) — 250 by Derrick Henry at Hou., 1/3/21

400 Attempts — Eddie George (403), 2000

Punts (Career) — 923 by Brett Kern, 2009-21

9 Interceptions

Passing Touchdowns (Season) — 36 by George Blanda, 1961

Punt Return Average (Season) — 15.4 by Billy Johnson, 1977

15 Touchdowns — Derrick Henry (17), 2020

Touchdowns (Career) — 74 by Eddie George, 1996-03

RECEIVINGReceptions

GAMES WON (REGULAR SEASON)

Receiving Touchdowns (Game) — 3 (17 times, last by Kenny Britt vs. Phi., 10/24/10)

Kickoff Return Average (Season) — 31.7 by Darius Jennings, 2018

Interceptions (Career) — 45 by Jim Norton, 1960-68

15 Touchdowns — Derrick Henry (17), 2020

2,000 Yards — Derrick Henry (2,027), 2020

130 Points Ryan Succop (136), 2017

Rushing Touchdowns (Game) — 4 by Earl Campbell vs. Mia., 11/20/78; Lorenzo White vs. Cle., 12/9/90; Derrick Henry vs. Jax, 12/6/18

INTERCEPTIONS

TITANS RECORDS AT A GLANCE

Kickoff Return Average (Career) — 26.5 by Bobby Jancik, 1962-67

SACKS

Receiving Yards (Season) — 1,746 by Charlie Hennigan, 1961

20 Touchdowns — Ryan Tannehill (21), 2021

100 Receptions — Haywood Jeffires (100), 1991

1,000 Yards — A.J. Brown (1,075), 2020

13 Wins — 2008 (13-3)

RUSHING

11 Wins — 2021 (12-5)

(Game) — 13 (three times, last by Drew Bennett at Oak., (12/19/04)

Punt Return Average (Career) — 13.2 by Billy Johnson, 1974-80

90 Receptions — Delanie Walker (94), 2015

PASSING

Ranked 1st in Rushing Offense — 1967 (AFL) Ranked 1st in Passing Offense — 1992

14 Sacks — Jevon Kearse (14.5), 1999

Kickoff Return Yards (Game) — 240 by Bobby Jancik at Oak., 12/22/63

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 103 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS

Ranked 1st in Overall Offense — 1990

500 Attempts — Ryan Tannehill (531), 2021

Interceptions —

RUSHING

Cunningham, Zach LB 1 1 0 0 Daley, Dennis P 1 0 0 0 Davis, Nate RG 1 1 0 0 Dupree, Bud OLB 1 1 0 0 Farley, Caleb P 1 0 0 0 Fitzpatrick, Dez PS 0 0 0 0 Fulton, Kristian CB 1 1 0 0 Gordon, Josh PS 0 0 0 0 Hand, Da'Shawn P 1 0 0 0 Haskins, Hassan P 1 0 0 0 Henry, Derrick RB 1 1 0 0 Hilliard, Dontrell P 1 0 0 0 Hollister, Cody P 1 0 0 0 Hooker, Amani S 1 1 0 0 Hooper, Austin P 1 0 0 0 Hudson, Tommy IR 0 0 0 0 Jackson, Chris PS 0 0 0 0 Jackson, Theo PS 0 0 0 0 Johnson Jr., Lonnie IA 0 0 0 1 Jones, Ben C 1 1 0 0 Jones, Jamarco IA 0 0 0 1 Jones, Joe P 1 0 0 0 Jones, Naquan IA 0 0 0 1 Kalu, Joshua P 1 0 0 0 Kinsey, Mason PS 0 0 0 0 Landry III, Harold IR 0 0 0 0 Levin, Corey P 1 0 0 0 Lewan, Taylor LT 1 1 0 0 Long Jr., David LB 1 1 0 0 McCreary, Roger CB 1 1 0 0 McMath, Racey IR 0 0 0 0 Molden, Elijah IR 0 0 0 0 Moore Jr., A.J. P 1 0 0 0 Murchison, Larrell PS 0 0 0 0 Newman, Xavier PS 0 0 0 0 Odukoya, Thomas PS 0 0 0 0 Okonkwo, Chig P 1 0 0 0 Okuayinonu, Sam PS 0 0 0 0 Peevy, Jayden PS 0 0 0 0 Petit-Frere, Nicholas RT 1 1 0 0 Philips, Kyle P 1 0 0 0 Rader, Kevin PS 0 0 0 0 Radunz, Dillon P 1 0 0 0 Rice, Monty PUP 0 0 0 0 Roos, Jordan PS 0 0 0 0 Rupcich, Andrew PS 0 0 0 0 Shudak, Caleb PUP 0 0 0 0 Simmons, Jeffery DT 1 1 0 0 Stonehouse, Ryan P 1 0 0 0 Strong, Kevin P 1 0 0 0 Swaim, Geoff TE 1 1 0 0

Adeniyi, Ola OLB 1 1 0 0

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 104 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA STATISTICS ROSTERS 9/11 9/19 9/25 10/2 10/9 10/23 10/30 11/6 11/13 11/17 11/27 12/4 12/11 12/18 12/24 12/29 1/7-8 Season Totals Player NYG @Buf LV @Ind @Was Ind @Hou @KC Den @GB Cin @Phi Jax @LAC Hou Dal @Jax GP GS DNP IA

Byard, Kevin S 1 1 0 0 Campbell, Chance IR 0 0 0 0 Cannon, Trenton P 1 0 0 0 Carter, Tory FB 1 1 0 0 Chestnut, Julius IA 0 0 0 1 Cole, Dylan P 1 0 0 0 Cox, Morgan P 1 0 0 0

Amadi, Ugo P 1 0 0 0

Tuszka, Derrek IA 0 0 0 1 Walker, DeMarcus DE 1 1 0 0 Weaver, Rashad P 1 0 0 0 Westbrook-Ikhine, Nick WR 1 1 0 0 Willis, Malik DNP 0 0 1 0 Woods, Robert WR 1 1 0 0 Woodside, Logan PS 0 0 0 0

Starters indicated by position (QB, RB, ILB, etc.); P = played but did not start; DNP = active but did not play; IA = inactive for game; PS = practice squad; PS-I = practice squad injured; P/SUS = practice squad/suspended; X = not on roster; IR = injured reserve; SUS = reserve/suspended; NFI = non-football illness; PUP = physically unable to perform

Tannehill, Ryan QB 1 1 0 0 Tart, Teair NT 1 1 0 0

Anenih, David PS 0 0 0 0

Autry, Denico P 1 0 0 0 Avery, Tre P 1 0 0 0 Brewer, Aaron LG 1 1 0 0 Bullock, Randy P 1 0 0 0 Burks, Treylon P 1 0 0 0

TENNESSEE TITANS 2022 PARTICIPATION CHART

April 28

Elevated to offensive assistant - KYLAN BUTLER

Signed as free agent - WR JOSH MALONE

Hired as passing game coordinator - TIM KELLY

Terminated vested veterans - T KENDALL LAMM, RODGER SAFFOLD III

Signed to future contracts - LB KOBE JONES, DB CHRIS WILLIAMSON

January 25

March 10

Signed as free agent - TE AUSTIN HOOPER

Terminated vested veteran - QB KEVIN HOGAN

Signed to the practice squad - DE Da’SHAWN HAND

Terminated vested veteran - CB JACKRABBIT JENKINS March 16

Signed as free agent - CB GREG MABIN

February 22

Waived - RB DARRYNTON EVANS March 15

February 14

Signed as unrestricted free agents - RB TRENTON CANNON, C BEN JONES, TE GEOFF SWAIM, RB JORDAN WILKINS March 21

Signed as unrestricted free agent - LB DYLAN COLE March 25

Signed to the practice squad - CB CHRIS JONES, LB JOE JONES

Activated from reserve/COVID-19 - LB JAYON BROWN, WR JULIO JONES, T KENDALL LAMM

January 19

Signed from the Seattle Seahawks practice squad - TE RYAN IZZO

Activated from practice squad reserve/COVID-19 - CB BRIEAN BODDYCALHOUN

January 4

Activated from reserve/COVID-19 - CB GREG MABIN

January 1

Designated to return to practice - RB DERRICK HENRY

Released from the practice squad - WR CALEB SCOTT

Signed to future contracts - S JAMAL CARTER, T CHRISTIAN DiLAURO, TE AUSTIN FORT, OL DERWIN GRAY, QB KEVIN HOGAN, WR CODY HOLLISTER, LB JOE JONES, WR MASON KINSEY, C DANIEL MUNYER, G JORDAN ROOS, OLB TUZAR SKIPPER

February 23

Drafted - WR TREYLON BURKS (first round, 18th overall)

Activated from reserve/injured, designated for return - RB DERRICK HENRY

Traded - a sixth-round pick in the 2023 NFL Draft to the Los Angeles Rams for WR ROBERT WOODS

Activated from practice squad reserve/COVID-19 - RB JORDAN WILKINS

Hired as assistant special teams coach - CHASE BLACKBURN

Traded - a 2022 third-round pick (90th overall) and a 2022 fifth-round pick (169th overall) to the Las Vegas Raiders for their 2022 third-round pick (86th overall)

Drafted - QB MALIK WILLIS (third round, 86th overall)

Placed on reserve/COVID-19 - LB MONTY RICE

January 17

Traded - a 2022 first-round pick (26th overall) and a 2022 third-round pick (101st overall) to the N.Y. Jets for their 2022 second-round pick (35th overall), their 2022 third-round pick (69th overall) and their fifth-round pick (163rd overall)

Drafted - RB HASSAN HASKINS (fourth round, 131st overall), TE CHIG OKONKWO (fourth round, 143rd overall), WR KYLE PHILIPS (fifth round, 163rd overall), S THEO JACKSON (sixth round, 204th overall), LB CHANCE CAMPBELL (sixth round, 219th overall)

February 8

Terminated vested veteran with Post-June 1 designation - WR JULIO JONES March 17

Drafted - CB ROGER McCREARY (second round, 35th overall), OL NICHOLAS PETIT-FRERE (third round, 69th overall)

Placed on practice squad reserve/COVID-19 - T PAUL ADAMS

LB NATE HALL

Signed as free agent - DE Da’SHAWN HAND

Traded - WR A.J. BROWN to the Philadelphia Eagles for their 2022 first-round pick (18th overall) and their 2022 third-round pick (101st overall)

Released from the practice squad - DB SHYHEIM CARTER, DB RODNEY CLEMONS, WR GOLDEN TATE

April 30

Activated from Reserve/COVID-19 - DE DENICO AUTRY, OLB BUD DUPREE, CB BUSTER SKRINE

Placed on injured reserve - TE MYCOLE PRUITT

January 6

Signed as unrestricted free agent - OLB OLA ADENIYI April 7

May 12

Placed on reserve/COVID-19 - CB GREG MABIN

January 5

January 10

Activated from practice squad reserve/COVID-19 - WR CODY HOLLISTER

Designated to return to practice - FB TORY CARTER

Activated from the practice squad to the active roster standard elevation - CB CHRIS

Signed as free agent - C COREY LEVIN March 23

Waived - RB JEREMY McNICHOLS

Signed from the practice squad to the active roster - DE KEVIN STRONG

Placed on practice squad reserve/COVID-19 - RB JORDAN WILKINS

Terminated vested veteran - C COREY LEVIN March 22

April 27

January 11

Activated from reserve/COVID-19 - LB MONTY RICE

Signed to the practice squad - RB JEREMY McNICHOLS

May 9

Signed as free agent - OLB JUSTIN LAWLER

January 3

Signed to future contracts - DB SHYHEIM CARTER, S RODNEY CLEMONS,

April 29

Elevated to defensive line assistant - CLINTON McMILLAN March 30

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 105 STATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA ROSTERS

Released from the practice squad - T PAUL ADAMS

Activated from practice squad reserve/COVID-19 - T PAUL ADAMS

JanuaryJONES24

May 2

Signed as unrestricted free agent - OL JAMARCO JONES March 18

Signed as unrestricted free agent - K RANDY BULLOCK April 4

Waived - T BRANDON KEMP

January 21

Exercised the fifth-year option - DT JEFFERY SIMMONS

Waived - TE AUSTIN FORT, LB NATE HALL, LB KOBE JONES, OLB TUZAR SKIPPER

Waived - CB CHRIS JONES, LB JOE JONES

2022 TENNESSEE TITANS TRANSACTIONS

Activated from the practice squad to the active roster standard elevation - DE Da’SHAWN HAND, RB JORDAN WILKINS

January 8

Hired as inside linebackers coach - BOBBY KING

Signed as unrestricted free agent - S A.J. MOORE JR

Signed as unrestricted free agent - CB BUSTER SKRINE

Signed as unrestricted free agent - RB DONTRELL HILLIARD

Waived - OL DERWIN GRAY

Signed – second-round choice CB ROGER McCREARY

Waived – WR JUWAN GREEN

Declared physically unable to perform – TE TOMMY HUDSON, LB MONTY RICE, K CALEB SHUDAK

2022 TENNESSEE TITANS TRANSACTIONS

Waived – OLB DAVID ANENIH, T CHRISTIAN DiLAURO, WR DEZ FITZPATRICK, LB JACK GIBBENS, S TYREE GILLESPIE, G HAYDEN HOWERTON, CB CHRIS JACKSON, S THEO JACKSON, WR MASON KINSEY, T JALEN McKENZIE, DT LARRELL MURCHISON, C/G XAVIER NEWMAN, TE THOMAS ODUKOYA, DT SAM OKUAYINONU, DE JAYDEN PEEVY, WR REGGIE ROBERSON JR., G JORDAN ROOS, T ANDREW RUPCICH, CB TRE SWILLING, TE DAVID WELLS, QB LOGAN WOODSIDE, C/G WILLIE WRIGHT

Activated from the practice squad to the active roster standard elevation – RB TRENTON CANNON and LB JOE JONES

June 6

Terminated vested veterans – RB TRENTON CANNON, S ADRIAN COLBERT, WR CODY HOLLISTER, LB JOE JONES, P BRETT KERN, CB GREG MABIN

Signed as free agent – WR CODY HOLLISTER September 1

Waived – CB TERRELL BONDS, WR BRANDON LEWIS

Claimed - OL CARSON GREEN off waivers from the Houston Texans

Waived from reserve/injured with an injury settlement – DB CHRIS

Waived injured – S MICHAEL GRIFFIN II

July 27

AugustWILLIAMSON9

Waived – TE BRILEY MOORE

August 5

Waived – CB KENNETH GEORGE JR.

Waived injured – CB SHAKUR BROWN, DB SHYHEIM CARTER

Placed on reserve/retired - CB BUSTER SKRINE

Released from the practice squad – WR REGGIE ROBERSON JR., TE DAVID WELLS

Waived – S ELIJAH BENTON, DT HASKELL GARRETT, OL CARSON GREEN

Placed on injured reserve – LB CHANCE CAMPBELL, CB ELIJAH MOLDEN September 10

Signed - third-round choice OL NICHOLAS PETIT-FRERE May 24

Signed - fourth-round choice TE CHIG OKONKWO

May 20

Signed as a free agent – DB JOSHUA KALU

Signed as free agents – CB DEANTE BURTON, TE DAVID WELLS August 15

August 1

AugustHUDSON3

Traded – a conditional 2024 seventh-round pick to the Las Vegas Raiders for S TYREE GILLESPIE August 22

Signed to the practice squad – WR JOSH GORDON, TE KEVIN RADER September 2

Terminated vested veteran – OLB JUSTIN LAWLER

Terminated vested veterans – CB DEANTE BURTON, WR JOSH MALONE, RB JORDAN WILKINS

Signed – third-round choice QB MALIK WILLIS

Claimed – OLB DERREK TUSZKA off waivers from the Pittsburgh Steelers September 9

Signed - first-round choice WR TREYLON BURKS

Placed on injured reserve – OLB HAROLD LANDRY III

July 23

Signed undrafted free agents - OLB DAVID ANENIH, CB TRE AVERY, RB JULIUS CHESTNUT, DT HASKELL GARRETT, LB JACK GIBBENS, S MICHAEL GRIFFIN II, G HAYDEN HOWERTON, WR BRANDON LEWIS, T JALEN McKENZIE, C/G XAVIER NEWMAN, TE THOMAS ODUKOYA, DT SAM OKUAYINONU, DE JAYDEN PEEVY, WR REGGIE ROBERSON JR., T ANDREW RUPCICH, K CALEB SHUDAK, P RYAN STONEHOUSE, CB TRE SWILLING

Traded – a 2024 sixth-round pick to the Philadelphia Eagles for DB UGO AMADI and a 2024 seventh-round pick August 30

Placed on injured reserve – WR RACEY McMATH

August 13

Signed as a free agent – CB SHAKUR BROWN

Traded – a 2024 fifth-round pick to the Carolina Panthers for OL DENNIS DALEY and a 2024 seventh-round pick August 31

Waived injured – TE TOMMY HUDSON

August 12

Signed as free agents - CB KENNETH GEORGE JR., DL DeMARCUS

MayWALKER18

Terminated vested veteran from injured reserve - S JAMAL CARTER

Signed as a free agent – WR TERRY GODWIN

Signed as free agents – S ELIJAH BENTON, S ADRIAN COLBERT

May 16

Waived – WR TERRY GODWIN

Terminated vested veteran - TE RYAN IZZO

Claimed – CB LONNIE JOHNSON JR. off waivers from the Kansas City Chiefs August 17

July 28

Signed - fourth-round choice RB HASSAN HASKINS, fifth-round choice KYLE PHILIPS, sixth-round choice THEO JACKSON and sixth-round choice CHANCE CAMPBELL

Placed on injured reserve – C DANIEL MUNYER

Terminated vested veteran from reserve/injured with an injury settlement – C DANIEL MUNYER

June 1

Signed as free agent - WR JUWAN GREEN

Signed to the practice squad – OLB DAVID ANENIH, RB TRENTON CANNON, WR DEZ FITZPATRICK, CB CHRIS JACKSON, S THEO JACKSON, LB JOE JONES, WR MASON KINSEY, DT LARRELL MURCHISON, C/G XAVIER NEWMAN, TE THOMAS ODUKOYA, DT SAM OKUAYINONU, DE JAYDEN PEEVY, WR REGGIE ROBERSON JR., G JORDAN ROOS, T ANDREW RUPCICH, TE DAVID WELLS and QB LOGAN WOODSIDE

July 29

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 106 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIASTATISTICS ROSTERS

June 13

Waived from reserve/injured with an injury settlement – S MICHAEL GRIFFIN II August 16

Waived from reserve/injured with an injury settlement – DB SHYHEIM

Signed as free agents – CB TERRELL BONDS, C/G WILLIE WRIGHT

Waived – DB RODNEY CLEMONS

Placed on reserve/physically unable to perform – K CALEB SHUDAK August 24

Waived from reserve/injured with an injury settlement – CB SHAKUR BROWN Placed on reserve/physically unable to perform – LB MONTY RICE

Placed on injured reserve - S JAMAL CARTER

Moved from physically unable to perform to the active roster – TE TOMMY

Waived injured – DB CHRIS WILLIAMSON

May 13

AugustCARTER23

July 22

DE 95 DeMarcus Walker 94 Da'Shawn Hand

WR 15 Nick Westbrook-Ikhine 16 Treylon Burks 8 Cody Hollister

DEFENSE

PR 18 Kyle Philips 37 Amani Hooker

K 14 Randy Bullock 4 Ryan Stonehouse

NT 93 Teair Tart 90 Naquan Jones

WR 2 Robert Woods 18 Kyle Philips

ILB 51 David Long Jr 42 Joe Jones

Rookies are underlined As of Sept. 12, 2022

OLB 48 Bud Dupree 99 Rashad Weaver 59 Derrek Tuszka

QB 17 Ryan Tannehill 7 Malik Willis

RB 22 Derrick Henry 40 Dontrell Hilliard 25 Hassan Haskins 23 Trenton Cannon 36 Julius Chestnut

CB 21 Roger McCreary 3 Caleb Farley 32 Ugo Amadi

LT 77 Taylor Lewan 71 Dennis Daley

DT 98 Jeffery Simmons 97 Kevin Strong

S 31 Kevin Byard 28 Joshua Kalu

S 37 Amani Hooker 20 Lonnie Johnson Jr 33 A.J. Moore

TE 87 Geoff Swaim 44 Tory Carter (FB)

KO 14 Randy Bullock 4 Ryan Stonehouse

TENNESSEE TITANS UNOFFICIAL DEPTH CHART

OFFENSE

C 60 Ben Jones 62 Corey Levin

H 4 Ryan Stonehouse 17 Ryan Tannehill

RG 64 Nate Davis 75 Dillon Radunz

CB 26 Kristian Fulton 30 Tre Avery

SPECIAL TEAMS

KOR 40 Dontrell Hilliard 36 Julius Chestnut

RT 78 Nicholas Petit-Frere 71 Dennis Daley

OLB 96 Denico Autry 92 Ola Adeniyi

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 107 STATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA ROSTERS

P 4 Ryan Stonehouse 14 Randy Bullock

OLA ADENIYI (OH-la ah-DAY-nee); UGO AMADI (OO-go uh-MOD-ee); Randy BULLOCK (BULL-luck); TREYLON Burks (TRAY-lin); Kevin BYARD (BY-urd); HASSAN Haskins (huh-SAAN); Joshua KALU (kuh-LOO); Taylor LEWAN (leh-WAHN); Chig OKONKWO (oh-KAHN-kwoh); Nicholas PETIT-FRERE (puh-TEET FRAIR); Dillon RADUNZ (RAY-dinz); Ryan TANNEHILL (TAN-uh-hill); TEAIR Tart (tee-AIR); Derrek TUSZKA (TUSK-uh); Nick Westbrook-IKHINE (uh-KEEN-ay)

TE 81 Austin Hooper 85 Chig Okonkwo

LG 55 Aaron Brewer 73 Jamarco Jones

ILB 41 Zach Cunningham 53 Dylan Cole

TITANS PRONUNCIATION GUIDE

LS 46 Morgan Cox 60 Ben Jones

UNDRAFTED

Teair Tart DT 2020

Kristian Fulton CB

Chig Okonkwo TE 2022

Tommy Hudson (IR) TE

Player Pos. Year

Geoff Swaim TE 2015 (Dal)

6TH YEAR

Ryan Stonehouse P 2022

Jamarco Jones OL Harold Landry III (IR) OLB A.J. Moore Jr. S

Treylon Burks WR 2022

As of Sept. 12, 2022

Tre Avery CB 2022

Kevin Byard S

Player Pos. Year

Hassan Haskins RB 2022

Lonnie Johnson Jr. DB

Player

Robert Woods WR

10TH YEAR

Caleb Farley CB 2021

Kristian Fulton CB 2020

Bud Dupree OLB 2015 (Pit) Taylor Lewan T 2014 Ryan Tannehill QB 2012 (Mia)

ROUND 2

ROUND 5

ROUND 6

Kyle Philips WR 2022 Jamarco Jones OL 2018 (Sea) Randy Bullock K 2012 (Hou)

Elijah Molden (IR) CB 2021

Tre Avery CB Julius Chestnut RB Caleb Shudak (PUP) K Ryan Stonehouse P

Geoff Swaim TE

David Long Jr. LB

4TH YEAR

Pos. Year

Naquan Jones DT 2021

Morgan Cox LS

Ola Adeniyi OLB 2018 (Pit)

Malik Willis QB 2022

Derrek Tuszka OLB 2020 (Den)

Denico Autry DL 2014 (Oak)

Ola Adeniyi OLB

Chance Campbell (IR) LB 2022

Player Pos. Year

Amani Hooker S 2019 Da'Shawn Hand DE 2018 (Det) Ben Jones C 2012 (Hou)

Derrick Henry RB

Joshua Kalu DB

Rashad Weaver OLB 2021

Racey McMath (IR) WR 2021

Trenton Cannon RB

Bud Dupree OLB

8TH YEAR

Corey Levin C/G

TENNESSEE TITANS ROSTER BY DRAFT ROUND

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 108 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIASTATISTICS ROSTERS

Zach Cunningham ILB 2017 (Hou)

A.J. Moore Jr. S 2018 (NE)

Denico Autry DL Taylor Lewan T

Pos. Year

Trenton Cannon RB 2018 (NYJ) Corey Levin C/G 2017

Dontrell Hilliard RB 2018 (Cle)

5TH YEAR

Kevin Byard S 2016

Dillon Radunz T 2021

Monty Rice (PUP) ILB 2021

Dennis Daley OL 2019 (Car)

Roger McCreary CB 2022

Nick Westbrook-Ikhine WR 2020

Tory Carter FB

TENNESSEE TITANS ROSTER BY EXPERIENCE

Tory Carter FB 2021

Teair Tart DT

Aaron Brewer G/C

Austin Hooper TE

Racey McMath (IR) WR Elijah Molden (IR) CB Dillon Radunz OL Monty Rice (PUP) LB Rashad Weaver OLB

Dennis Daley OL Nate Davis G

Lonnie Johnson Jr. DB 2019 (Hou)

Dylan Cole LB Zach Cunningham LB Joe Jones LB DeMarcus Walker DL

Ryan Tannehill QB

Jeffery Simmons DT 2019

Harold Landry III (IR) OLB 2018

Aaron Brewer G/C 2020

David Long Jr. LB 2019

DeMarcus Walker DL 2017 (Den)

Nicholas Petit-Frere OL 2022

Joshua Kalu DB 2018

Ugo Amadi DB

Austin Hooper TE 2016 (Atl)

Tommy Hudson (IR) TE 2020

Naquan Jones DT

Derrek Tuszka OLB Nick Westbrook-Ikhine WR

Kevin Strong DE 2019 (Det)

Amani Hooker S

ROOKIE DRAFT PICKS

ROUND 7 Player

2ND YEAR

ROUND 1

Player Pos. Year

Caleb Farley CB

Treylon Burks WR Chance Campbell (IR) LB Hassan Haskins RB Roger McCreary CB Chig Okonkwo TE Nicholas Petit-Frere OL Kyle Philips WR Malik Willis QB

Player Pos. Year

Cody Hollister WR 2017 (NE)

Morgan Cox LS 2010 (Bal)

Nate Davis OL 2019

13TH YEAR

9TH YEAR

Randy Bullock K Ben Jones C

ROUND 3

Cody Hollister WR

Caleb Shudak (PUP) K 2022

Joe Jones LB 2017 (Dal)

7TH YEAR

ROUND 4

Dylan Cole ILB 2017 (Hou)

Player Pos. Year

Jeffery Simmons DT Kevin Strong DE

ROOKIE FREE AGENTS

Da'Shawn Hand DE Dontrell Hilliard RB

Ugo Amadi DB 2019 (Sea)

Julius Chestnut RB 2022

3RD YEAR

11TH YEAR

As of Sept. 12, 2022

Derrick Henry RB 2016 Robert Woods WR 2013 (Buf)

As of Sept. 12, 2022

FB Tory Carter (FA)

CB Roger McCreary (2)

OLB Rashad Weaver (4b)

TE Geoff Swaim (FA)

RB Hassan Haskins (4a)

DL DeMarcus Walker (FA)

DT Teair Tart (FA)

DL Denico Autry (UFA-IND)

YEAR DRAFTEES (18)

DE Kevin Strong (FA)

QB Ryan Tannehill (T-MIA)

RB Dontrell Hilliard (FA)

2021 CB Caleb Farley (1)

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 109 STATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA ROSTERS

2014 T Taylor Lewan (1)

OLB Bud Dupree (UFA-PIT)

G/C Aaron Brewer (FA)

S A.J. Moore Jr. (UFA-HOU)

OLB Ola Adeniyi (FA)

LB Joe Jones (FA)

OL Dillon Radunz (2)

DB Lonnie Johnson Jr. (W-KC)

DE Da'Shawn Hand (FA)

DT Naquan Jones (FA)

LB Dylan Cole (FA)

TRADES/WAIVERS (8)

CB Tre Avery (FA)

RB Trenton Cannon (UFA-SF)

2016 RB Derrick Henry (2c)

WR Robert Woods (T-LAR)

OLB Derrek Tuszka (W-PIT)

LS Morgan Cox (UFA-BAL)

LB David Long Jr. (6)

S Kevin Byard (3)

2022 WR Treylon Burks (1)

RB Julius Chestnut (FA)

G Nate Davis (3)

P Ryan Stonehouse (FA)

QB Malik Willis (3b)

OL Jamarco Jones (UFA-SEA)

WR Kyle Philips (5)

LB Zach Cunningham (W-HOU)

WR Cody Hollister (FA)

TE Austin Hooper (FA)

TE Chig Okonkwo (4b)

2020 CB Kristian Fulton (2)

WR Nick Westbrook-Ikhine (FA)

FREE AGENTS (27)

K Randy Bullock (FA)

C/G Corey Levin (W-NYJ)

OL Dennis Daley (T-CAR)

HOW THE TENNESSEE TITANS WERE BUILT

OL Nicholas Petit-Frere (3a)

C Ben Jones (UFA-HOU)

DB Joshua Kalu (FA)

DB Ugo Amadi (T-PHI)

2019 DT Jeffery Simmons (1)

S Amani Hooker (4)

81 Hooper, Austin TE 6-4 254 10/29/94 7 Stanford

PLACEKICKERS (1)

55 Brewer, Aaron G/C 6-1 295 10/28/97 3 Texas State Dallas, Texas FA-'20

As of Sept. 12, 2022

46 Cox, Morgan LS 6-4 233 4/26/86 13 Tennessee Collierville, Tenn. UFA (BAL)-'21

RUNNING BACKS (6)

TIGHT ENDS (3)

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 110 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIASTATISTICS ROSTERS

23 Cannon, Trenton RB 5-11 185 7/23/94 5 Virginia State Hampton, Va. UFA (SF)-'21

40 Hilliard, Dontrell RB 5-11 202 2/26/95 5 Tulane Baton Rouge, La. FA-'21

78 Petit-Frere, Nicholas OL 6-5 316 9/15/99 R Ohio State Tampa, Fla. D3a-'22

44 Carter, Tory FB 6-0 229 3/16/99 2 Louisiana State Valdosta, Ga. FA-'21

2 Woods, Robert WR 6-0 195 4/10/92 10 Southern California Gardena, Calif. T (LAR)-'22

QUARTERBACKS (2)

CENTERS (2)

TENNESSEE TITANS POSITIONAL ROSTER - OFFENSE

17 Tannehill, Ryan QB 6-4 217 7/27/88 11 Texas A&M Big Spring, Texas T (MIA)-'19

15 Westbrook-Ikhine, Nick WR 6-2 211 3/21/97 3 Indiana Lake Mary, Fla. FA-'20

62 Levin, Corey C/G 6-4 307 8/12/94 4 Chattanooga Dacula, Ga. FA-'21

71 Daley, Dennis OL 6-6 326 8/7/96 4 South Carolina Columbia, S.C. T (CAR)-'22

75 Radunz, Dillon OL 6-6 301 3/28/98 2 North Dakota State Becker, Minn. D2-'21

LONG SNAPPER (1)

16 Burks, Treylon WR 6-2 225 3/23/00 R Arkansas Warren, Ark. D1-'22

25 Haskins, Hassan RB 6-2 228 11/26/99 R Michigan St. Louis, Mo. D4a-'22

WIDE RECEIVERS (5)

85 Okonkwo, Chig TE 6-3 238 9/8/99 R Maryland Powder Springs, Ga. D4b-'22

60 Jones, Ben C 6-3 308 7/2/89 11 Georgia Brent, Ala. UFA (HOU)-'16

36 Chestnut, Julius RB 5-11 228 10/26/00 R Sacred Heart Bowie, Md. FA-'22

22 Henry, Derrick RB 6-3 247 1/4/94 7 Alabama Yulee, Fla. D2c-'16

8 Hollister, Cody WR 6-4 220 11/18/93 3 Arkansas Bend, Ore. FA-'19

San Mateo, Calif. FA-'22

87 Swaim, Geoff TE 6-4 260 9/16/93 8 Texas Chico, Calif. FA-'20

18 Philips, Kyle WR 5-11 189 6/17/99 R UCLA San Marcos, Calif. D5-'22

GUARDS (3)

64 Davis, Nate G 6-3 316 9/23/96 4 Charlotte Ashburn, Va. D3-'19

73 Jones, Jamarco OL 6-4 293 6/4/96 5 Ohio State Chicago, Ill. UFA (SEA)-'21

TACKLES (4)

77 Lewan, Taylor T 6-7 309 7/22/91 9 Michigan Cave Creek, Ariz. D1-'14

14 Bullock, Randy K 5-9 210 12/16/89 11 Texas A&M Klein, Texas FA-'21

7 Willis, Malik QB 6-1 219 5/25/99 R Liberty Atlanta, Ga. D3b-'22

TENNESSEE TITANS POSITIONAL ROSTER - DEFENSE

Mississippi State Albemarle, N.C. UFA (IND)-'21

92 Adeniyi, Ola OLB 6-1 248 9/12/97 5 Toledo Fort Bend County, Texas FA-'21

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 111 STATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA ROSTERS

98 Simmons, Jeffery DL 6-4 305 7/28/97 4

28 Kalu, Joshua DB 6-0 203 8/28/95 4 Nebraska Houston, Texas FA-'22

DEFENSIVE LINEMEN (7)

95 Walker, DeMarcus DL 6-4 280 9/30/94 6 Florida State Jacksonville, Fla. FA-'22

33 Moore Jr., A.J. S 5-11 200 12/15/95 5 Mississippi Bassfield, Miss. UFA (HOU)-'22

3 Farley, Caleb CB 6-2 197 11/2/98 2 Virginia Tech Maiden, N.C. D1-'21

90 Jones, Naquan DT 6-3 313 2/5/98 2

Mississippi State Macon, Miss. D1-'19

Michigan State Evanston, Ill. FA-'21

96 Autry, Denico DL 6-5 285 7/15/90 9

32 Amadi, Ugo DB 5-9 201 5/16/97 4 Oregon Nashville, Tenn. T (PHI)-'22

48 Dupree, Bud OLB 6-4 269 2/12/93 8 Kentucky Irwinton, Ga. UFA (PIT)-'21

As of Sept. 12, 2022

4 Stonehouse, Ryan P 5-10 193 5/11/99 R Colorado State La Verne, Calif. FA-'22

31 Byard, Kevin S 5-11 212 8/17/93 7 Middle Tennessee State Lithonia, Ga. D3-'16

PUNTERS (1)

LINEBACKERS (8)

SAFETIES (5)

Texas-San Antonio Cleveland, Texas FA-'21

42 Jones, Joe LB 6-0 240 2/21/94 6 Northwestern Plano, Ill. FA-'21

97 Strong, Kevin DE 6-4 295 8/5/96 4

59 Tuszka, Derrek OLB 6-5 246 8/17/97 3 North Dakota State Warner, S.D. W (PIT)-'22 99 Weaver, Rashad OLB 6-4 259 11/10/97 2 Pittsburgh Fort Lauderdale, Fla. D4b-'21

51 Long Jr., David LB 5-11 227 10/12/96 4 West Virginia Cincinnati, Ohio D6-'19

94 Hand, Da'Shawn DE 6-3 297 11/14/95 5 Alabama Woodbridge, Va. FA-'21

41 Cunningham, Zach LB 6-3 238 12/12/94 6 Vanderbilt Pinson, Ala. W (HOU)-'21

CORNERBACKS (5)

93 Tart, Teair DT 6-2 304 2/28/97 3 Florida International Philadelphia, Pa. FA-'20

37 Hooker, Amani S 5-11 210 6/14/98 4 Iowa Minneapolis, Minn. D4-'19 20 Johnson Jr., Lonnie DB 6-2 213 5/31/97 4 Kentucky Gary, Ind. W (KC)-'22

30 Avery, Tre CB 5-11 181 2/26/97 R Rutgers Baltimore, Md. FA-'22

53 Cole, Dylan LB 6-0 237 5/19/94 6 Missouri State Springfield, Mo. FA-'21

26 Fulton, Kristian CB 5-11 197 9/3/98 3 Louisiana State New Orleans, La. D2-'20 21 McCreary, Roger CB 5-11 190 2/10/00 R Auburn Mobile, Ala. D2-'22

Sacred Heart Bowie, Md. FA-'22

Missouri State Springfield, Mo. FA-'21

R

17 Tannehill, Ryan QB 6-4 217 7/27/88 11 Texas A&M

30 Avery, Tre CB 5-11 181 2/26/97 R

55 Brewer, Aaron G/C 6-1 295 10/28/97 3

(

16 Burks, Treylon WR 6-2 225 3/23/00 R

RESERVE/PHYSICALLY UNABLE TO PERFORM (2): 56

R

TE 6-6 253

98 Simmons, Jeffery DT 6-4 305 7/28/97 4 Mississippi State Macon, Miss. D1-'19

Arlington, Texas FA-'22 10 Fitzpatrick, Dez WR 6-2 208 12/17/97 2 Louisville Farmington Hills, Mich. D4a-'21 50 Gibbens, Jack LB 6-3 242 11/24/98 R Minnesota Bulverde, Texas FA-'22 19 Gordon, Josh WR 6-3 224 4/13/91 6 Baylor Houston, Texas FA-'22 35 Jackson, Chris DB 5-10 193 4/13/98 3 Marshall Tallahassee, Fla. D7b-'20 29 Jackson, Theo S 6-1 198 10/2/98 R Tennessee Nashville, Tenn. D6a-'22 12 Kinsey, Mason WR 5-10 202 8/29/98 1 Berry College Demorest, Ga. FA-'21 91 Murchison, Larrell DL 6-2 297 4/24/97 3 North Carolina State Elizabethtown, N.C. D5-'20 67 Newman, Xavier C/G 6-2 297 8/4/99 R Baylor

3

ASSISTANT COACHES: SHANE BOWEN (defensive coordinator), TODD DOWNING (offensive coordinator), CRAIG AUKERMAN (special teams), BRIAN BELL (sports performance coordinator), CHASE BLACKBURN (assistant special teams), SCOTT BOOKER (safeties), KYLAN BUTLER (offensive assistant); KEITH CARTER (offensive line), RYAN CROW (outside linebackers), TONY DEWS (running backs), ERIK FRAZIER (offensive skill assistant), JASON HOUGHTALING (offensive line assistant), TIM KELLY (passing game coordinator), BOBBY KING (inside linebackers), ZAK KUHR (inside linebackers assistant), CLINTON McMILLAN (defensive line assistant); ANTHONY MIDGET (secondary), ROB MOORE (wide receivers), PAT O'HARA (quarterbacks), FRANK PIRAINO (director of sports performance), TYLER ROUSE (sports performance assistant), JIM SCHWARTZ (senior defensive assistant), LUKE STECKEL (tight ends), JOHN STREICHER (coordinator of football development), MIKE SULLIVAN (assistant offensive line), TERRELL WILLIAMS (defensive line)

33 Moore Jr., A.J. S 5-11 200 12/15/95 5 Mississippi Bassfield, Miss. UFA (HOU)-'22 85 Okonkwo, Chig TE 6-3 238 9/8/99 R Maryland Powder Springs, Ga. D4b-'22

NO. NAME POS. HT WT BIRTHDATE EXP COLLEGE

Cave Creek, Ariz. D1-'14

76

QB 6-1 213

44 Carter, Tory FB 6-0 229 3/16/99 2

Mississippi State Albemarle, N.C. UFA (IND)-'21

Arkansas Warren, Ark. D1-'22

Oregon Nashville, Tenn. T (PHI)-'22

14 Bullock, Randy K 5-9 210 12/16/89 11

41 Cunningham, Zach LB 6-3 238 12/12/94 6

Virginia Tech Maiden, N.C. D1-'21 26 Fulton, Kristian CB 5-11 197 9/3/98 3 Louisiana State New Orleans, La. D2-'20 94 Hand, Da'Shawn DE 6-3 297 11/14/95 5 Alabama

3

Ellicott City, Md. D6b-'22 Arizona State San Jose, Calif. FA-'20 Boston College Spring Lake, N.C. D2-'18 Louisiana State New Orleans, La. D6a-'21 Washington West Linn, Ore. D3b-'21 Rice, Georgia

HOMETOWN ACQUIRED

TENNESSEE TITANS ALPHABETICAL ROSTER

96 Autry, Denico DL 6-5 285 7/15/90 9

51 Long Jr., David LB 5-11 227 10/12/96 4 West Virginia Cincinnati, Ohio D6-'19

25 Haskins, Hassan RB 6-2 228 11/26/99 R Michigan

250

Vanderbilt Pinson, Ala. W (HOU)-'21

31 Byard, Kevin S 5-11 212 8/17/93 7

21 McCreary, Roger CB 5-11 190 2/10/00 R Auburn Mobile, Ala. D2-'22

32 Amadi, Ugo DB 5-9 201 5/16/97 4

53 Cole, Dylan LB 6-0 237 5/19/94 6

77 Lewan, Taylor T 6-7 309 7/22/91 9 Michigan

78 Petit-Frere, Nicholas OL 6-5 316 9/15/99 R Ohio State Tampa, Fla. D3a-'22

Desoto, Texas FA-'22 68 Okuayinonu, Sam DT 6-1 269 5/1/98 R Maryland Lowell, Mass. FA-'22 72 Peevy, Jayden DE 6-5 308 9/3/99 R Texas A&M Bellaire, Texas FA-'22 86 Rader, Kevin 6-4 4/26/95 Youngstown State Pittsburgh, Pa. FA-'22 Roos, Jordan 6-3 7/6/93 Purdue Celina, Texas FA-'21 Rupcich, Andrew 6-6 4/1/99 Culver-Stockton Wonder Lake, Ill. FA-'22 Woodside, Logan 1/27/95 Toledo Frankfort, Ky FA-'19 Odukoya, Thomas 5/5/97 Eastern Michigan Almere, Netherlands FA-'22 Mississippi

5

NFL INTERNATIONAL ALLOCATION (1): 49

11 Shudak, Caleb K 5-7 177 11/19/97 R

Toledo

Woodbridge, Va. FA-'21

89 Hudson, Tommy (8/30) TE 6-3 255 2/22/97 2

71 Daley, Dennis OL 6-6 326 8/7/96 4

Virginia State Hampton, Va. UFA (SF)-'21

San Mateo, Calif. FA-'22 20 Johnson Jr., Lonnie DB 6-2 213 11/4/95 4 Kentucky

Rutgers Baltimore, Md. FA-'22

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 112 NOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIASTATISTICS ROSTERS

T

3 Farley, Caleb CB 6-2 197 11/2/98 2

Gary, Ind. W (KC)-'22 60 Jones, Ben C 6-3 308 7/2/89 11 Georgia Brent, Ala. UFA (HOU)-'16 73 Jones, Jamarco OL 6-4 293 6/4/96 5 Ohio State Chicago, Ill. UFA (SEA)-'21

Charlotte Ashburn, Va. D3-'19

42 Jones, Joe LB 6-0 240 2/21/94 6 Northwestern Plano, Ill. FA-'21 90 Jones, Naquan DT 6-3 313 2/5/98 2 Michigan State Evanston, Ill. FA-'21 28 Kalu, Joshua DB 6-0 203 8/28/95 4 Nebraska Houston, Texas FA-'22 62 Levin, Corey C/G 6-4 307 8/12/94 4 Chattanooga Dacula, Ga. FA-'21

48 Dupree, Bud OLB 6-4 269 2/12/93 8 Kentucky Irwinton, Ga. UFA (PIT)-'21

Louisiana State Valdosta, Ga. FA-'21

San Marcos, Calif. D5-'22

24 Molden, Elijah * (9/9) CB 5-10 192 1/30/99 2

Texas State Dallas, Texas FA-'20

2

RESERVE/INJURED (5): 45 Campbell, Chance * (9/9) LB 6-2 232 10/8/99 R

Fort Bend County, Texas FA-'21

PRACTICE SQUAD (15): 54 Anenih, David OLB 6-2 245 8/15/99 R Houston

18 Philips, Kyle WR 5-11 189 6/17/99 R UCLA

36 Chestnut, Julius RB 5-11 228 10/26/00 R

23 Cannon, Trenton RB 5-11 185 7/23/94 5

92 Adeniyi, Ola OLB 6-1 248 9/12/97 5

70

Middle Tennessee State Lithonia, Ga. D3-'16

302

22 Henry, Derrick RB 6-3 247 1/4/94 7 Alabama Yulee, Fla. D2c-'16 40 Hilliard, Dontrell RB 5-11 202 2/26/95 5 Tulane Baton Rouge, La. FA-'21 8 Hollister, Cody WR 6-4 220 11/18/93 3 Arkansas Bend, Ore. FA-'19 37 Hooker, Amani S 5-11 210 6/14/98 4 Iowa Minneapolis, Minn. D4-'19 81 Hooper, Austin TE 6-4 254 10/29/94 7 Stanford

46 Cox, Morgan LS 6-4 233 4/26/86 13

4 Stonehouse, Ryan P 5-10 193 5/11/99 R Colorado State La Verne, Calif. FA-'22

TE

97 Strong, Kevin DE 6-4 295 8/5/96 4 Texas-San Antonio Cleveland, Texas FA-'21 87 Swaim, Geoff TE 6-4 260 9/16/93 8 Texas Chico, Calif. FA-'20

St. Louis, Mo. D4a-'22

318

Tennessee Collierville, Tenn. UFA (BAL)-'21

Huntsville, Ala. D3a-'21 Iowa Council Bluffs, Iowa FA-'22 Reserve/Injured; ) - date placed

13 McMath, Racey * (8/31) WR 6-3 217 6/14/99 2

Big Spring, Texas T (MIA)-'19 93 Tart, Teair DT 6-2 304 2/28/97 3 Florida International Philadelphia, Pa. FA-'20 59 Tuszka, Derrek OLB 6-5 246 8/17/97 3 North Dakota State Warner, S.D. W (PIT)-'22 95 Walker, DeMarcus DL 6-4 280 9/30/94 6 Florida State Jacksonville, Fla. FA-'22 99 Weaver, Rashad OLB 6-4 259 11/10/97 2 Pittsburgh Fort Lauderdale, Fla. D4b-'21 15 Westbrook-Ikhine, Nick WR 6-2 211 3/21/97 3 Indiana Lake Mary, Fla. FA-'20 7 Willis, Malik QB 6-1 219 5/25/99 R Liberty Atlanta, Ga. D3b-'22 2 Woods, Robert WR 6-0 195 4/10/92 10 Southern California Gardena, Calif. T (LAR)-'22

G

58 Landry III, Harold * (9/2) OLB 6-2 252 6/5/96 5

South Carolina Columbia, S.C. T (CAR)-'22 64 Davis, Nate G 6-3 316 9/23/96 4

Active Roster Count: 53 As of Sept. 12, 2022 * - Eligible to Return From

Texas A&M Klein, Texas FA-'21

on IR

Monty LB 6-0 233 1/8/99 2

75 Radunz, Dillon OL 6-6 301 3/28/98 2 North Dakota State Becker, Minn. D2-'21

HEAD COACH: MIKE VRABEL

7

3 Caleb Farley CB 6-2 197 23 2 Virginia Tech Maiden, N.C. D1-'21

233 36 13

11 Texas A&M Klein, Texas FA-'21

48

31

67

19

DT 6-1 269 24 R Maryland

HOMETOWN ACQUIRED

R Arkansas Warren, Ark. D1-'22

53

18 Kyle Philips WR 5-11 189 23

29 7

41

25 4

85 Chig Okonkwo TE 6-3 238 23 R Maryland Powder Springs, Ga. D4b-'22

FA-'22 91 Larrell Murchison DL 6-2 297 25 3 North Carolina State

EXP COLLEGE

3

coordinator), TODD

coordinator), CHASE BLACKBURN (assistant special teams), SCOTT

3

26 Kristian Fulton CB 5-11 197 24 3 Louisiana State New Orleans, La. D2-'20 28 Joshua Kalu DB 6-0 203 27 4 Nebraska Houston, Texas FA-'22 30 Tre Avery CB 5-11 181 25 Rutgers Baltimore, Md. FA-'22 Kevin Byard S 5-11 212 Middle Tennessee State Lithonia, Ga. D3-'16 Ugo Amadi DB 5-9 201 Oregon Nashville, Tenn. T (PHI)-'22

240 28 6

29 8

15 Nick Westbrook-Ikhine WR 6-2 211 25 3 Indiana Lake Mary, Fla. FA-'20

HOW

86 Kevin Rader TE 6-4 250 27 2 Youngstown State

32

7 Malik Willis QB 6-1 219 23 Liberty Atlanta, Ga. D3b-'22

36

21 Roger McCreary CB 5-11 190 22 R Auburn Mobile, Ala. D2-'22 22 Derrick Henry RB 6-3 247 28 Alabama Yulee, Fla. D2c-'16

PRACTICE SQUAD (15):

KYLAN

R Colorado State La Verne, Calif. FA-'22

60

55

R

40

25 4

17 Ryan Tannehill QB 6-4 217 34

5 Virginia State Hampton, Va. UFA (SF)-'21

26 5

TennesseeTitans.com/Media Regular Season Week 2: Titans at Bills Page 113 STATISTICSNOTESPLAYERNOTESTEAMPREVIEWGAMEMEDIA ROSTERS

24 4

NO. NAME POS. HT WT AGE

51

27 6

23 Trenton Cannon RB 5-11 185 28

6

87 Geoff Swaim TE 6-4 260 28 8 Texas Chico, Calif. FA-'20 90 Naquan Jones DT 6-3 313 24 2 Michigan State Evanston, Ill. FA-'21 92 Ola Adeniyi OLB 6-1 248 24 5 Toledo Fort Bend County, Texas FA-'21 93 Teair Tart DT 6-2 304 25 3 Florida International Philadelphia, Pa. FA-'20 94 Da'Shawn Hand DE 6-3 297 26 5 Alabama Woodbridge, Va. FA-'21 95 DeMarcus Walker DL 6-4 280 27 6 Florida State Jacksonville, Fla. FA-'22 96 Denico Autry DL 6-5 285 32 9 Mississippi State Albemarle, N.C. UFA (IND)-'21 97 Kevin Strong DE 6-4 295 26 4 Texas-San Antonio Cleveland, Texas FA-'21 98 Jeffery Simmons DT 6-4 305 25 4 Mississippi State Macon, Miss. D1-'19 99 Rashad Weaver OLB 6-4 259 24 2 Pittsburgh Fort Lauderdale, Fla. D4b-'21

N.C. D5-'20 NFL INTERNATIONAL ALLOCATION (1): 49 Thomas Odukoya TE 6-6 253 25 R Eastern Michigan Almere, Netherlands FA-'22 RESERVE/INJURED (5): 13 Racey McMath * (8/31) WR 6-3 217 23 2 Louisiana State New Orleans, La. D6a-'21 24 Elijah Molden * (9/9) CB 5-10 192 23 2 Washington West Linn, Ore. D3b-'21 45 Chance Campbell * (9/9) LB 6-2 232 22 R Mississippi Ellicott City, Md. D6b-'22 58 Harold Landry III * (9/2) OLB 6-2 252 26 5 Boston College Spring Lake, N.C. D2-'18 89 Tommy Hudson (8/30) TE 6-3 255 25 2 Arizona State San Jose, Calif. FA-'20 RESERVE/PHYSICALLY UNABLE TO PERFORM (2): 11 Caleb Shudak K 5-7 177 24 R Iowa Council Bluffs, Iowa FA-'22 56 Monty Rice LB 6-0 233 23 2 Georgia Huntsville, Ala. D3a-'21 Active Roster Count: 53 As of Sept. 12, 2022 * - Eligible to Return From Reserve/Injured; ( ) - date placed on IR HEAD COACH: MIKE VRABEL ASSISTANT COACHES: SHANE BOWEN

42

72 Jayden Peevy DE 6-5 308 23 R Texas A&M

20 Lonnie Johnson Jr DB 6-2 213 26 4 Kentucky Gary, Ind. W (KC)-'22

8 Cody Hollister WR 6-4 220 28 Arkansas Bend, Ore. FA-'19

76 Andrew Rupcich T 6-6 318 23 R Culver-Stockton

TENNESSEE TITANS NUMERICAL ROSTER

16 Treylon Burks WR 6-2 225 22

21 R

3

10 Southern California Gardena, Calif. T (LAR)-'22

33

25 Hassan Haskins RB 6-2 228 22 R Michigan St. Louis, Mo. D4a-'22

R

Jamarco Jones OL 6-4 293 26 5 Ohio State Chicago, Ill. UFA (SEA)-'21

75 Dillon Radunz OL 6-6 301 24 2 North Dakota State Becker, Minn. D2-'21 77 Taylor Lewan T 6-7 309 31 9 Michigan Cave Creek, Ariz. D1-'14 78 Nicholas Petit-Frere OL 6-5 316 22 R Ohio State Tampa, Fla. D3a-'22 81 Austin Hooper TE 6-4 254 27 7 Stanford San Mateo, Calif. FA-'22

5 Logan Woodside QB 6-1 213 27 3 Toledo Frankfort, Ky FA-'19 10 Dez Fitzpatrick WR 6-2 208 24 2 Louisville Farmington Hills, Mich. D4a-'21 12 Mason Kinsey WR 5-10 202 24 1 Berry College Demorest, Ga. FA-'21 Josh Gordon WR 6-3 224 31 6 Baylor Houston, Texas FA-'22 29 Theo Jackson S 6-1 198 23 R Tennessee Nashville, Tenn. D6a-'22 35 Chris Jackson DB 5-10 193 24 3 Marshall Tallahassee, Fla. D7b-'20 Jack Gibbens LB 6-3 242 23 R Minnesota Bulverde, Texas FA-'22 54 David Anenih OLB 6-2 245 23 R Houston Arlington, Texas FA-'22 Xavier Newman C/G 6-2 297 23 R Baylor Desoto, Texas FA-'22 68 Sam Okuayinonu Lowell, Mass. FA-'22 Celina, Texas FA-'21 Bellaire, Texas FA-'22 Wonder Lake, Ill. FA-'22 Pittsburgh, Pa. Elizabethtown, (defensive DOWNING (offensive coordinator), CRAIG AUKERMAN (special teams), BRIAN BELL (sports performance BOOKER (safeties), BUTLER (offensive assistant); KEITH CARTER (offensive line), RYAN CROW (outside linebackers), TONY DEWS (running backs), ERIK FRAZIER (offensive skill assistant), JASON HOUGHTALING (offensive line assistant), TIM KELLY (passing game coordinator), BOBBY KING (inside linebackers), ZAK KUHR (inside linebackers assistant), CLINTON McMILLAN (defensive line assistant); ANTHONY MIDGET (secondary), ROB MOORE (wide receivers), PAT O'HARA (quarterbacks), FRANK PIRAINO (director of sports performance), TYLER ROUSE (sports performance assistant), JIM SCHWARTZ (senior defensive assistant), LUKE STECKEL (tight ends), JOHN STREICHER (coordinator of football development), MIKE SULLIVAN (assistant offensive line), TERRELL WILLIAMS (defensive line) ACQUIRED KEY: FA (free agent), UFA (unrestricted free agent), RFA (restricted free agent), D (draft pick), W (waivers), T (trade)

50

37

2 Robert Woods WR 6-0 195 30

R UCLA San Marcos, Calif. D5-'22

27 5

A.J. Moore Jr S 5-11 200 Mississippi Bassfield, Miss. UFA (HOU)-'22 Julius Chestnut RB 5-11 228 Sacred Heart Bowie, Md. FA-'22 Amani Hooker S 5-11 210 Iowa Minneapolis, Minn. D4-'19 Dontrell Hilliard RB 5-11 202 Tulane Baton Rouge, La. FA-'21 Zach Cunningham LB 6-3 238 Vanderbilt Pinson, Ala. W (HOU)-'21 Joe Jones LB 6-0 Northwestern Plano, Ill. FA-'21 Tory Carter FB 6-0 229 Louisiana State Valdosta, Ga. FA-'21 Morgan Cox LS 6-4 Tennessee Collierville, Tenn. UFA (BAL)-'21 Bud Dupree OLB 6-4 269 Kentucky Irwinton, Ga. UFA (PIT)-'21 David Long Jr LB 5-11 227 West Virginia Cincinnati, Ohio D6-'19 Dylan Cole LB 6-0 237 28 Missouri State Springfield, Mo. FA-'21 Aaron Brewer G/C 6-1 295 24 Texas State Dallas, Texas FA-'20 Derrek Tuszka OLB 6-5 246 25 North Dakota State Warner, S.D. W (PIT)-'22 Ben Jones C 6-3 308 33 11 Georgia Brent, Ala. UFA (HOU)-'16 62 Corey Levin C/G 6-4 307 28 4 Chattanooga Dacula, Ga. FA-'21 64 Nate Davis G 6-3 316 25 4 Charlotte Ashburn, Va. D3-'19

44

71 Dennis Daley OL 6-6 326 26 4 South Carolina Columbia, S.C. T (CAR)-'22

70 Jordan Roos G 6-3 302 29 3 Purdue

59

73

4 Ryan Stonehouse P 5-10 193 23

14 Randy Bullock K 5-9 210 32

46

23 2

11 Texas A&M Big Spring, Texas T (MIA)-'19

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