Tyjae Spears didn’t exactly tiptoe into the Tennessee Titans’ new era. He came right out and said what plenty around the team have been waiting to hear: the losing has gone on long enough.
The Titans have spent the last two seasons in the ditch, piling up just six wins combined. Spears has lived through most of that stretch himself, arriving in 2023 and being part of only 12 wins since then. For a player who’s been around that much losing this early in his career, his latest comments carried some real weight.
“Eventually something has to change, and this is the year, ” Spears said. “We have a new logo, and a lot of new things around here. So we're going to have a winning record this year.”
That’s a strong declaration, but it also fits the mood shift that seems to be taking hold in Tennessee. Spears has already been identified by new head coach Robert Saleh as a player who will have a major role in 2026, and the running back’s words suggest he’s buying into the reset in a big way.
Since entering the league, Spears has given the Titans a useful change-of-pace element out of the backfield. His best season came as a rookie, when he ran for 453 yards and added 52 catches for 385 yards. That kind of versatility has made him part of the conversation as the Titans try to rebuild something sturdier.
The bigger point is the tone. For a while, Tennessee didn’t sound like a team expecting much of anything.
Now, with Saleh’s staff in place and a wave of new players around the building, the energy sounds different. Spears talking about a winning record is the kind of statement that usually comes when a locker room starts to believe its own message.
And while that may sound ambitious after a three-win season last year, the path isn’t completely out of reach. The Titans could be favored in two of their first three games, against the New York Jets and New York Giants. They also have matchups that should be winnable against the Cleveland Browns, Washington Commanders, and Las Vegas Raiders.
If Tennessee takes those five, splits its division games, and steals one more it isn’t supposed to win, that adds up to a winning record. It would take some breaks along the way, but it’s not some fantasy scenario.
The Washington Commanders are the clearest example in the source material. They went 4-13 in 2023, then turned it around with a new quarterback and coaching staff, won 12 games in 2024, and reached the NFC Championship Game.
That’s the kind of leap the Titans are chasing, and Spears’ comments show he’s not shy about saying it out loud. If Saleh proves to be the right coach, if the young roster delivers, if the defense lives up to its potential, and if Cam Ward plays to his ceiling, Spears’ bold prediction could look a lot less like talk and a lot more like a warning.
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For Titans fans, that matters more than it might seem, because not every NFL franchise has an official mascot at all. In a league where some teams lean on tradition alone, Tennessee has had a visible, family-friendly figure attached to its identity for years, and that helps explain why the character remains part of the conversation whenever the franchises branding comes up. The surprising part is not just that the mascot exists, but how many fans still seem to forget how long it has been there. [Read more 🡒]
Titans Camp Is About To Decide A Line Question Fans Hate
When veterans report to training camp on July 28, one of the more important jobs on the Titans offensive line will be up for grabs. Tennessee signed Cordell Volson in free agency after he missed the previous season because of an injury, and he will be competing with Jackson Slater, a second-year player who has yet to make a start, for a spot that could shape how the line settles in front of the offense.
The coaching staff plans to spend camp sorting out the competition before naming a starter, which means this is not the kind of question that gets answered quickly. Volson brings experience and a fresh start, while Slater offers the appeal of a younger option still trying to establish himself, and the Titans will spend much of camp figuring out which one gives them the better fit on the right side. [Read more 🡒]
