The Tennessee Titans invested heavily in their offensive line this offseason. New GM Mike Borgonzi signed Dan Moore Jr. to a lucrative four-year contract worth more than $80 million to play left tackle. Veteran guard Kevin Zeitler was also acquired to help upgrade the protection in front of rookie quarterback Cam Ward.
Pro Football Focus recently released an article outlining way-too-early 2026 NFL Draft needs for all 32 franchises. Oddly enough, PFF decided the Titans should focus their attention on the offensive line, one which has two new veteran starters and recent first-round picks JC Latham and Peter Skoronski.
"The Titans handsomely paid Dan Moore Jr. in free agency, even though he has never earned a single-season PFF pass-blocking grade above 68.0 in his four-year career," Trevor Sikkema wrote. "The addition also allowed them to move J.C. Latham back to right tackle. Does that move work? Does Latham look better than the 61.8 PFF overall grade he recorded as a rookie at left tackle? "
Since the Titans don't have a proven, dominant tackle, Sikkema's stance isn't totally wrong. It would be great if an elite talent fell into their lap, but even by PFFs metrics, Moore graded as the 44th best tackle (out of 85) and Latham was the 58th. While that isn't great, having two average NFL tackles would be the best tackle play the Titans have received for the better part of a decade. That is assuming the duo won't get better despite playing next to two very good guards and playing under one of the best offensive line coaches in NFL history.
Latham and Moore have a long leash based on the investments made in them and there's no reason to believe either one of them will need replacing next offseason. The Titans would be better served investing at EDGE or wide receiver.
You could argue the Titans have one of the worst EDGE groups in the NFL, and they need an injection of talent at the position. Considering that the Titans are committed to getting bigger at outside linebacker, prospects like Clemson's T.J. Parker, Oregon's Matayo Uiagalelei, Miami's Rueben Bain, and Florida's Tyreak Sapp all fit that mold. (All four were first-round picks in Dane Brugler's 2026 mock draft.)
Even if EDGE isn't the direction they go, there are other positions you'd expect the Titans to target instead of making another big investment in the offensive line.