Sad News For Titans As QB Announced A Departure After He Make A Big Promises To….

Sad News For Titans As QB Announced A Departure After He Make A Big Promises To….

NASHVILLE— Boomer Esiason was asked about the Titans at Super Bowl LVIII, and he immediately began talking about the rest of the AFC South.

“They’re in a division now that has Anthony Richardson, C.J. Stroud, and, of course, Trevor Lawrence,” Esiason, an analyst for CBS, said of the division’s signal callers. “And (the Titans) are still wondering about whether they have their quarterback on the roster.

“That’s the first thing they have to figure out, if Will Levis is their guy. And, if he is, that’s going to be a very, very competitive division for years to come.”

Esiason, who played quarterback 14 seasons in the NFL, including from 1984-92 with the Bengals, is familiar with Levis, and new Titans coach Brian Callahan, who spent the past five seasons in Cincinnati as offensive coordinator with the Bengals.

Esiason gave his opinion on how he thinks things will work out with the two in Tennessee.

“There’s some good and some bad,” Esiason said of Levis, a second-round pick of the Titans in the 2023 NFL Draft. “I see a little Josh Allen in there. Remember when Josh first started (with the Bills), he was running all over the place and diving over people? And, he’s that big, he’s that strong.”

In 2023, after being inactive the first six games of the season, Levis ended up starting nine games in 2023, and he completed 149-of-255 passes (58.4%) for 1,808 yards with eight touchdowns and four interceptions, with a passer rating of 84.2.

“(Levis) has the arm to make all the throws, but it all comes down to here,” Esiason said while pointing to his head. “How do you handle the pressure? Brock Purdy? Seamless. Patrick Mahomes? Seamless. Joe Burrow? Seamless. (Levis) is not seamless just yet, and we have to be able to see if he can grow in this new offense as well.

“Because you are asking a second-year player to learn a new offense, which is not going to be easy.”

Esiason said he’s friendly with Bengals coach Zac Taylor, and Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow. Esiason thinks the Bengals will miss Callahan, while saying it could prove to be a nice hire by Tennessee.

“I think Brian is going to be fine,” Esiason said. “It’s an under-the-radar high, for sure, by an under-the-radar franchise which has to rebuild now. And you want a young coach who has a history, and a history of success. I think they have the right guy and hopefully it works out for them.”

 

 

NASHVILLE – In NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah first mock draft, he has seven offensive tackles going in the first round of April’s NFL Draft.

And, Jeremiah has the Titans taking one of them.

Jeremiah’s pick for the Titans at No.7: Penn State’s Olumuyiwa Fashanu.

Jeremiah on the pick: “The Titans have a lot of needs on their roster, but landing a massive upgrade at tackle is the right way for them to go with this top-10 pick.”

On a conference call on Thursday, Jeremiah said he thinks Notre Dame’s Joe Alt is the “cleanest of the bunch” when discussing the tackles, and he tabbed Alt going to the Chargers at No.5, two picks ahead of the Titans.

Jeremiah loves the tackle class as a whole.

“It’s a loaded tackle class,” Jeremiah said on Thursday’s call. “A bunch of day 1 starters.”

When discussing Fashanu, Jeremiah said he’s “massive, with ideal frame and length.”

Jeremiah said Fashanu’s overall tape is solid while describing him as a plug-and-play player on either the left side or right side of the line.

On his list of top 50 players on NFL.com, Jeremiah listed Fashanu as the draft’s 12th overall prospect, and gave this evaluation:

Fashanu has ideal size, length and strength for the left tackle position. In pass pro, he explodes out of his stance, redirects easily and has strong hands to stab and steer defenders. He can bend his knees and anchor when his eyes are in the right place. However, there are times (SEE: Ohio State tape) where his eyes get him in trouble and he gets uprooted by power rushers. In the run game, he is effective shielding and staying attached, but he could improve his consistency to finish. He is very quick in getting up to the second level. There is a little ankle tightness when he has to adjust in space. Overall, Fashanu is still very young and developing. He has all the tools to be a solid starting left tackle once he cleans up some small areas of his game.

 

 

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