Robert Saleh’s first year in Tennessee won’t be judged against a Super Bowl standard. It will be measured against something far more grounded: can the Titans finally start moving the right way again?
That’s the reality hanging over Saleh as he takes over a team that has stumbled through the last two seasons, going 6-28 in that stretch. Tennessee may have found its franchise quarterback in Cam Ward, and there’s already buzz about what Ward can do in his second season.
But that optimism comes with a catch. He’ll be asked to take another step forward while working under a new head coach.
Saleh arrives with his own pressure attached. This is his second chance as a head coach, and it gives him the opportunity to clean up the mistakes from his time with the New York Jets.
He’s not walking into a blank slate, either. The Titans have built a strong coaching staff and added help on both sides of the ball, giving him more than enough pieces to work with.
Carter Bahns of CBS Sports laid out what success should look like for the Titans’ new coach in 2026, writing that Saleh should “Approach .500 with improvement on both sides of the ball”.
" He [Saleh} inherited a roster with a solid core of young offensive skill-position players so the first priority is to help them take the next step and, in turn, aid Ward in making a sophomore leap." said Bahns.
" Saleh already put in a great deal of work on the defensive side of the ball with a number of head-turning acquisitions, including the free agent signing of defensive lineman John Franklin-Myers. He is one of many newcomers who has experience in Saleh's system." Bahns added.
That’s the shape of the challenge in Nashville. The offseason work looks promising, but none of that means much until the games start. Saleh has to prove the Titans can be competitive again, even if the process includes some growing pains along the way.
Playoff contention isn’t the bar in the same way it would be for a team with championship expectations. For Saleh, the first real test is simpler than that: show that Tennessee is headed somewhere. If he can do that in year one, it’s a strong start.
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 🡒]
