The Titans aren’t ready to stamp a fixed label on Tony Pollard and Tyjae Spears just yet, but Robert Saleh made one thing clear: both backs are going to matter.
Saleh said the team will sort out exactly how it wants to deploy them over time, but he pointed to the way their skill sets fit together. Pollard brings the kind of protection and receiving ability that can keep an offense on schedule, while Spears adds another layer as a route runner.
“We’ll decide that as time goes, but those two complement each other very, very well,” Saleh said, via the team’s website. “They’re both really, really good third down backs.
I remember studying last year, you’re not beating Tony one-on-one in a protection system. The guy’s an elite blocker, and he’s also really good out of the backfield.
And then Tyj, from a route-running ability, he’s really good in that regard. They do a really nice job complementing one another.
So, like I said, we’ll figure all that out as time goes, but both are really good. “
In Jacksonville, Trevor Lawrence is looking at a different kind of personnel puzzle, and he likes the options the Jaguars have built at tight end. The team added two rookies in the draft - second-rounder Nate Boerkircher and fifth-rounder Tanner Koziol - to go with Brenton Strange, and Lawrence believes that kind of depth can shape how defenses line up.
“I think having a well-rounded tight end room is super important, because you talk about all the different personnel groupings when you’re trying to get a certain defensive personnel on the field, and you have the ability to still throw the ball, whether it’s 12 or 13 (personnel), you still have a real threat in the pass game,” Lawrence said, via the team’s social media. “And that’s important because then you can dictate what happens with the defense a little bit more.
And when you don’t, it’s a little bit harder; you get a little bit more easier to track what you’re doing, as far as running the ball, tendencies, and all that, so I think that’s going to help us with our tendencies. Going to be able to do a lot of different things run game and pass game with the versatile tight ends we have.”
In Houston, Jaylen Reed is approaching Year 2 with a bigger opportunity in front of him and a clear mindset about how to seize it. The Texans defensive back said the first season helped him settle in, and now he’s being pushed to grow into a larger job.
“Going into year two, after having a year under my belt, definitely helped,” Reed said, via the team’s website. “The coaches I have and the staff, they’re helping me develop into a young man that’s going to take on bigger roles this season.
I’m excited for it. I’m prepared for it.
I’m up for the challenge.”
Reed also leaned into the chip on his shoulder that comes with being a sixth-round pick.
“I definitely feel like I was never supposed to go to the sixth round,” he said. “But I feel like God has plans for me. And I’m just going to continue to thrive in that aspect.”
And if Reed is going to carve out a bigger role early, he knows special teams could be the fastest way to get there. He said he wants to be the kind of player coaches can plug in anywhere.
“DeMeco always says he wants football players,” Reed said. “And I believe I’m a football player.
It’s not just being a safety. It’s being a football player all around the field.
Special teams, defense, whatever the package is, nickel. I know I can do it all.”
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Titans Receiver Battle Could Force An Early Saleh Daboll Decision
The Titans receiver room has already taken shape in a hurry, with Wan'Dale Robinson, Carnell Tate and Calvin Ridley giving the offense a clear core as Robert Saleh and Brian Daboll settle into their first camp together. What remains is the kind of depth-chart squeeze that can define the back half of August, when a handful of receivers are left fighting for a place in a group that suddenly looks much closer to finished than fluid.
Bryce Oliver, Xavier Restrepo and K.J. Osborn are among the names still in the mix, and each brings a different case to the table as the Titans sort through the final decisions. Restrepo, in particular, has already shown how quickly a promising camp can turn into a lost opportunity, which only adds to the pressure on this battle as the 2026 season nears and the margin for error keeps shrinking. [Read more 🡒]
A Shocking Number Of Titans Fans Still Miss This Team Detail
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T-Rac has also built a rsum that goes well beyond simply entertaining the crowd, with multiple Pro Bowl trips on the NFL mascot circuit. In a league where some teams still operate without an official mascot at all, Tennessee has had one of its own for a long time, and the fact that some fans still seem to miss that detail says plenty about how easily the little things can fade into the background. [Read more 🡒]
Titans Camp Is About To Decide A Line Question Fans Hate
With veterans set to report to training camp on July 28, the Titans are about to get a real look at one of the more uncomfortable questions on their roster. The spot drawing the most attention is on the right side of the line, where Cordell Volson and Jackson Slater are set to spend camp trying to separate themselves in a competition that could shape how the offense settles in early.
Volson arrives after missing last season because of injury, while Slater is still early in his career and has yet to log a start. The coaching staff plans to evaluate both throughout camp before making a call, which means this is the kind of job that may not be decided quickly, or cleanly, and one that could linger deep into the summer. [Read more 🡒]
