The Titans didn’t make a loud splash when they signed Tony Adams, but the move is starting to look a lot more important than it first appeared.
Tennessee enters the season with Amani Hooker and Kevin Winston Jr. lined up as the starting safeties, and new head coach Robert Saleh already knows both of them. The one safety Saleh specifically brought in himself was Adams, who signed in free agency and now looks like the clearest candidate for the third safety job. Everyone else in the mix for the fourth and final spot is described as more of a core special teamer than a true defensive depth option, which puts Adams in position to be the main backup behind Hooker and Winston.
The contract was modest - one year, $2.1 million - but the early returns from minicamp and OTAs suggest the Titans think they may have gotten more than just depth. Adams, the former Illinois standout, has quietly moved from a forgotten addition to someone who could matter on defense.
His path to this point has already included a climb once before. Adams first landed with the Jets as an undrafted free agent after the 2022 NFL Draft, which came during Saleh’s second year in New York. He made the initial 53-man roster and played in 11 games as a rookie.
Then came the real jump. As a sophomore, Adams was on the field for nearly 80 percent of the Jets’ defensive snaps, finishing with 83 tackles and a career-high three interceptions. Even after Saleh was fired midway through the Jets’ 2024 season, Adams kept producing, posting 84 tackles in another strong year.
An injury cut him down to 12 games this past season, and it was his first year without Saleh coaching him. So when he hit free agency, the reunion in Tennessee made sense. The Titans have been targeting players who already know Saleh’s system, and Adams fit that plan.
Inside the building, he’s already drawing notice. Saleh, along with defensive backs coaches Marquand Manuel and Dalton Hilliard, has praised Adams unprompted during offseason workouts.
He’s been valuable not just because he knows the defense, but because he’s helping others pick it up too. He’s vocal, he’s engaged, and he’s been making an impression.
What looked like a quiet signing could turn into a much bigger role than Titans fans expected.
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