George Kittle Sent Titans Fans A Clear Message On Robert Saleh

George Kittle urges patience for Titans fans, as he predicts a promising future under head coach Robert Saleh's expert guidance and visionary leadership.

George Kittle didn’t sound like a guest offering polite coachspeak when he talked about Robert Saleh and the Tennessee Titans. He sounded like someone who knows exactly what Saleh brings, because he spent years around him in San Francisco.

A clip from Kittle’s appearance on Bussin’ With The Boys made the rounds on social media, and the 49ers tight end gave the Titans’ new head coach a strong endorsement. Saleh, who was the 49ers’ defensive coordinator before taking the Titans job this past January, clearly left an impression.

What Kittle emphasized most was the person, not just the play-caller.

"I talked to Saleh more this year than I did in the four years that I was with him," Kittle said. "I'm talking like twice a week I would just go sit in his office from anywhere from 5 to 30 minutes and we would just talk.

He knows how to inspire. He has great, great messaging."

Kittle also pointed to what Saleh helped build on defense in San Francisco, even with injuries piling up around that unit.

"He's part of the invention of that defense that he coaches," Kittle said. "Our defense was mauled by injuries.

He was part of us winning 13 games. Just give him some time, and I think he's going to really put some good games out there."

That patience message was the real through line. Kittle made it clear he thinks the Titans are going to need a little runway before the results fully show up.

"Just give him a couple of years. Because becoming a good team in the NFL is incredibly difficult.

Unless you already have a stacked roster. He's going to turn it around.

He's going to drive the bus in the right direction."

Kittle also had strong words for Cam Ward, Tennessee’s young quarterback.

"Cam Ward's going to be a hell of a football player," Kittle said. "He's special. The Titans are going to be good."

He even kept things light while talking about Saleh, laughing about the coach being into conspiracy theories and saying he has handed him smelling salts on the sideline. "So he's one of the boys for sure," he said.

The bigger takeaway from Kittle’s comments is simple: he sees a long build, not an instant fix. Tennessee has pieces to work with, including Ward, Jeffery Simmons and John Franklin-Myers up front, plus a group of younger players who still have to prove they can become part of the core over the next two to three years.

The roster is not stacked right now, and that matters. The path forward depends on how the Titans keep adding through the draft and a few key free-agency moves.

There’s also a lot riding on the 2026 offensive line as it currently stands. That group has a wide range of possible outcomes, and how it performs will shape wins, losses and Ward’s development.

That’s the part that leaves some doubt. But if Kittle’s read on Saleh is accurate, Tennessee’s direction is headed up.

In Other News...

Titans New Look Comes With One Downside Fans Will Hate

The Titans new home and away uniforms, along with fresh primary and secondary logos, marked a pretty clear reset as the franchise leaned into its new Titans Blue identity. It is the kind of update teams usually hope will clean up the brand and sharpen the look on Sundays, and for Tennessee it also brings plenty of conversation about how the new design fits alongside the older era fans still remember.

There is still a lingering wrinkle in the aesthetic overhaul, though, because the clubs new direction may leave some of its most beloved throwback possibilities in doubt. Sports Illustrateds Mike Kadlick slotted Tennessee 19th in his 2026 uniform rankings, and while the new set is getting a mixed reception, the bigger debate might be whether the Titans should shift that nostalgia toward their own original throwbacks instead of looking back to another chapter of franchise history. [Read more 🡒]

Titans Fans Finally Got A Real Read On Tony Pollard

Tony Pollard finally got a clearer picture of where he fits in Tennessee, and it comes with the kind of role the Titans have been building around all offseason. Robert Saleh has made it plain that Pollard and Tyjae Spears are the backs he plans to lean on in 2026, a vote of confidence that matches Pollards track record as a steady producer and veteran presence. He has topped 1,000 rushing yards in each of the past four seasons, and Tennessee is clearly expecting that blend of reliability and leadership to matter in a backfield that still has some moving parts.

The bigger question now is how long that arrangement lasts, because this feels like the sort of setup that can define a final chapter as much as a fresh start. Fans have already spent plenty of time looking toward the next wave of help at running back, and the Titans have a rookie in the mix who could eventually change the conversation. For now, though, Pollard appears positioned to keep handling the heavy lift, even if the runway in Nashville may not stretch much farther beyond this season. [Read more 🡒]

Titans Fans Can Feel The Offensive Buzz Building Before Camp

Training camp is getting close, and Tennessees offense already has the kind of early buzz that usually comes with a young roster and a staff that knows how to teach it. The Titans are set up with plenty of fresh faces, but also with experience on the sideline, and offensive coordinator Brian Daboll gives the group a clear place to start as the team begins sorting out who fits where.

There are a few intriguing pieces to keep an eye on before the pads come on, from rookie Carnell Tate to WanDale Robinson following Daboll from New York, plus Elic Ayomanor after a strong spring and Cam Ward heading into Year 2. Dabolls history with young quarterbacks has helped shape the conversation around this group, and the next few weeks should go a long way toward showing whether that early optimism is real. [Read more 🡒]