Cedric Gray put together the kind of season that should have forced his way onto any serious linebacker list.
The Tennessee Titans had a rough 2025 campaign, finishing 3-14, but Gray was one of the few real bright spots on that side of the ball. The young linebacker led the team with 164 total tackles and added seven tackles for loss, four pass deflections and three quarterback hits. That kind of production made him look like a foundational piece for a defense that badly needed one.
Still, when ESPN rolled out its top 10 linebacker rankings, Gray was nowhere to be found. The list, compiled from votes by NFL executives, coaches and scouts, went in this order: Fred Warner, Roquan Smith, Carson Schwesinger, Zack Baun, Jack Campbell, Azeez Al-Shaair, Jordyn Brooks, Nick Bolton, Edgerrin Cooper and Devin Lloyd.
Gray didn’t just miss the top 10. He also failed to show up in the honorable mentions or the “also receiving votes” group. For a player who graded out as one of the league’s best off-ball linebackers, that absence stands out.
Pro Football Focus gave Gray a 78.9 grade in 2025, which ranked seventh among 88 qualified linebackers. His run defense was even more impressive: a 92.7 grade that ranked second among all linebackers. PFF also credited him with 117 tackles, the third-most at the position.
There are still areas where Gray can grow, especially in pass coverage and as a pass rusher, but his value against the run was elite. And at just 23, he’s still early in the climb.
The idea that he was overlooked because of limited sample size doesn’t really hold up either. Carson Schwesinger is already slotted in at No. 3 after just a rookie season, so that explanation doesn’t fit.
So yes, this feels a lot like the familiar “Titan Tax” at work. Titans players often have to be louder, bigger and even more dominant than everyone else just to get the same attention. Gray’s next job is simple: stack another elite season in 2026 and leave no room for anyone to look past him again.
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Harrells development gives him a chance to stay in the mix, but the numbers game is tighter than it was a year ago, and Tennessee is expected to keep only five pass rushers. Malik Herring is part of that competition, which puts extra pressure on Harrell to keep separating himself during camp and prove he belongs in the Titans long-term plans. [Read more 🡒]
