The Tennessee Titans had a season to forget in 2025, finishing 3-14 and managing just one win at home. Even in a year full of losses, though, a few young players flashed enough to hint at what could come next.
One of the quieter breakout names was edge rusher Jaylen Harrell, who somehow still feels like he’s being overlooked as training camp approaches. The Michigan product finished the year strong, and that late surge is hard to ignore.
Harrell closed the 2025 season with five sacks over the final five games, doing most of his damage in a rotational role on Tennessee’s defensive line. He was around the ball constantly, living in the backfield and making life uncomfortable for opposing offenses.
He also carved out real value on special teams. The 24-year-old logged 228 snaps across multiple special teams units, giving the Titans something extra while he waited for his defensive opportunities.
Now the challenge shifts to 2026 training camp, where Harrell is battling for a roster spot. Jermaine Johnson, Keldric Faulk, and Femi Oladejo are expected to headline Tennessee’s edge group, with Faulk also projected to see work inside.
That leaves Harrell fighting for one of the final spots, depending on how many edge defenders Tennessee keeps on the initial 53-man roster. And if he misses out, it would be a tough result after what he showed a year ago.
Harrell proved in 2025 that he can handle a rotational pass-rushing role, and his age gives him an edge over Jacob Martin in terms of upside. Martin can fill a similar job, but Harrell offers more room to grow.
The Titans could still keep both players, and head coach Robert Saleh has enough flexibility in his pass-rushing packages to make that work. A group featuring Johnson, Faulk, Oladejo, Harrell, and Martin would give Tennessee a mix of speed, power, and run defense while helping keep everyone fresh.
Harrell may not be ready to step into a starting job yet, but the 2024 seventh-round pick has done enough to earn a real chance. His 2025 finish should buy him a role on Tennessee’s defensive line if he can carry that momentum into this season.
In Other News...
Titans Suddenly Have A Worrying Femi Oladejo Problem Again
Femi Oladejos first spring with the Titans was supposed to be about getting a head start on a major position change, but a hamstring injury kept him out of those practices and slowed the process before it really got rolling. The second-round pick is being asked to move from 3-4 outside linebacker to a 3-4 defensive end role, which makes every rep valuable as Tennessee tries to see how quickly his game can translate.
Robert Saleh said the real development for Oladejo will come once training camp opens on July 29 and the pads go on, which is where the Titans will finally get a better read on the rookies fit. For a player already trying to learn a new spot, the missed spring work only adds to the pressure to make up ground fast when camp begins. [Read more 🡒]
Titans Finally Enter Camp Without Their Biggest Cornerback Burden
Training camp arrives with the Titans no longer carrying the same cornerback uncertainty that has shadowed them since L'Jarius Sneed came aboard. The expectation was that he would stabilize the secondary, but recurring knee and lower-body injuries kept him from becoming the dependable presence Tennessee had envisioned, and the team spent too much of the last two seasons trying to work around his availability.
Sneeds limited time on the field forced the Titans to think differently about how they build the position, and the result is a roster that looks better equipped to absorb setbacks. Even if the cornerback room still has plenty to prove, Tennessee enters camp with more depth and a little less pressure to have one player carry the entire burden. [Read more 🡒]
