Tennessee Titans | |||||
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Established Baronial 3, 1959 (Baronial 3, 1959) [one] First season: 1960 Play in Nissan Stadium Nashville, Tennessee Headquartered in Saint Thomas Sports Park, Nashville, Tennessee |
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League/conference affiliations | |||||
American Football game League
National Football League (1970–nowadays)
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Current compatible |
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Team colors | Navy, Titans blue, cherry, argent, white[2] [3] [iv] |
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Mascot | T-Rac | ||||
Personnel | |||||
Owner(s) | Amy Adams Strunk[5] | ||||
Chairman | Susie Adams Smith Amy Adams Strunk |
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CEO | Burke Nihill | ||||
President | Shush Nihill | ||||
Head motorcoach | Mike Vrabel | ||||
General manager | Jon Robinson | ||||
Squad history | |||||
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Championships | |||||
League championships (two)
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Conference championships (1)
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Division championships (11)
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Playoff appearances (25) | |||||
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Home fields | |||||
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The
Tennessee Titans
are a professional person American football team based in Nashville, Tennessee. The Titans compete in the National Football League (NFL) equally a fellow member club of the American Football game Conference (AFC) South division, and play their home games at Nissan Stadium.
Originally known equally the
Houston Oilers, the team was founded in 1959 by Bud Adams (who remained the owner until his death in 2013), and began play in 1960 in Houston, Texas, as a charter member of the American Football League (AFL). The Oilers won the start ii AFL championships forth with iv partition titles, and joined the NFL as part of the AFL–NFL merger in 1970. The Oilers made consecutive playoff appearances from 1978 to 1980 and from 1987 to 1993, with Hall of Famers Earl Campbell and Warren Moon, respectively.
In 1997, the Oilers relocated to Nashville, Tennessee, just played at the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis for ane season while waiting for a new stadium to be constructed. Due to depression attendance, the team moved to Nashville’s Vanderbilt Stadium in 1998. For those 2 seasons, the team was known as the
Tennessee Oilers, but changed their name to the Titans for the 1999 flavour, moving into Adelphia Coliseum (now known as Nissan Stadium). The Titans’ training facility is located in Saint Thomas Sports Park, a 31-acre (13 ha) site at the MetroCenter complex in Nashville.[six]
Throughout their history, the Titans have played in the Super Bowl once (XXXIV), when they lost 23–16 to the St. Louis Rams. Led past Steve McNair and Eddie George, the Titans fabricated the playoffs in all but one flavor from 1999 to 2003, but only made the playoffs twice in the next thirteen years. Since 2016, the Titans take had half dozen consecutive winning seasons, the most since they were the Houston Oilers, and made four playoff appearances in that time. The Titans are the only squad in the NFL to have two players rush for 2,000 yards in a flavour–in this case, Chris Johnson (2009) and Derrick Henry (2020).
History
[edit]
Logos and uniforms
[edit]
The Tennessee Titans uniforms used from 1999 to 2017
When the squad debuted as the Houston Oilers in 1960, their logo was an oil rig derrick. Except for modest color changes throughout the years, this logo remained the aforementioned until the squad was renamed the Titans in 1999. The logo was originally called “Ol’ Riggy”, simply this name was dropped before the start of the 1974 season.
The Oilers’ uniforms consisted of blue or white jerseys, cherry trim, and white pants. From 1966 to 1971, the pants with both the blue and white jerseys were silver to match the color of the helmets. The team usually wore light blue pants on the road with the white jerseys from 1972 to 1994, with the exception of the 1980 flavor, and selected games in the mid-1980s, when the squad wore an all-white road combination. For selected games in 1973 and 1974, and once again from 1981 through 1984, the Oilers wore their white jerseys at abode. The light blue pants were discarded by coach Jeff Fisher in 1995. From 1960 to about 1965 and from 1972 to 1974, the Oilers wore blue helmets; from 1966 to 1971, the helmets were silver; and they were white from 1975 to 1998.
From 1997 to 1998, when they were known equally the Tennessee Oilers, the team had an alternate logo that combined elements of the flag of Tennessee with the derrick logo. The team also wore their white uniforms during home games every bit opposed to their time in Houston, when their blue uniforms were worn at home. In their two years as the Tennessee Oilers, the team merely wore their colored jerseys twice: for road games confronting the Miami Dolphins and a Thanksgiving Twenty-four hour period game against the Dallas Cowboys. They wore all-white exclusively in their last year under the Tennessee Oilers proper name.
When the squad was renamed the Titans in 1999, they introduced a new logo: a circle with three stars representing the state’south Grand Divisions, similar to that plant on the flag of Tennessee, containing a big “T” with a trail of flames similar to a comet. The uniforms consisted of white helmets, red trim, and either navy or white jerseys. White pants were ordinarily worn with the navy jerseys, and navy pants were worn with the white jerseys. On both the navy and white jerseys, the outside shoulders and sleeves were light Titans blue. In a game against the Washington Redskins on October xv, 2006, the Titans wore their navy jerseys with navy pants for the kickoff time. Since 2000, the Titans have generally worn their dark uniforms at abode throughout the preseason and regular flavor. They have worn white at home during daytime contests on many occasions for September home games to proceeds an advantage with the rut, except in the 2005, 2006 and 2008 seasons.
In 2003, the Titans introduced an alternate bailiwick of jersey that was light Titans bluish with navy outside shoulders and sleeves, which was ordinarily worn with the road bluish pants. Until 2007, they wore the bailiwick of jersey twice in each regular-flavor game (and once in the preseason). They e’er wore the Titans blue jersey in their almanac divisional game against the Houston Texans and for other selected home games which came generally against a squad from the old AFL (American Football game League). Their selection in those games was representative of the organization’s ties to Houston and the sometime AFL. On November xix, 2006, the Titans introduced light Titans blue pants, reminiscent of the ones donned by the Oilers, in a game at the Philadelphia Eagles. In December 2006, they combined the Titans blue pants with the Titans blue jersey to create an all Titans blue uniform; Vince Young appeared in this uniform in the cover art for
Madden NFL 08.
During the 2006 flavor, the Titans wore vii dissimilar uniform combinations, pairing the white bailiwick of jersey with all three sets of pants (white, Titans blue, navy blue), the navy jersey with the white and navy pants, and the Titans blue jersey with navy and Titans bluish pants. In a game against the Atlanta Falcons on October 7, 2007, the Titans paired the navy blue jersey with the Titans bluish pants for the beginning time. They likewise wore the navy blue jerseys with the calorie-free blue pants against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The squad paired the Titans blue jerseys with the white pants for the first fourth dimension in a home game against the Indianapolis Colts on November 14, 2013. In 2008, the Titans blueish jerseys became the regular abode uniforms, with the navy blueish jerseys being relegated to alternate status[7]
just not worn until 2013.
In 2009, the NFL and the Hall of Fame committee announced that the Titans and the Buffalo Bills would brainstorm the 2009 NFL preseason in the Hall of Fame Game. The game, played at Canton’s Pro Football Hall of Fame Field at Fawcett Stadium on Baronial 9, 2009, was nationally televised on NBC. The Titans defeated the Bills past a score of 21–18.[8]
In honor of the AFL’s 50th anniversary, the Titans wore Oilers’ uniforms for this game. Besides in 2009, the team honored former quarterback Steve McNair past placing a modest, navy bluish disc on the back of their helmets with a white number 9 inside of it (nine was the number McNair wore during his time with the Oilers/Titans).
From 2009 to 2012, the Titans did not wear an alternating jersey during any regular flavour games. It was not until 2013 that the team wore the navy blue jerseys twice in honor of their 15th anniversary as the Titans.[nine]
The Titans wore white jerseys for all games in 2014, for the exceptions of ii preseason home games, in which the team wore their light Titans blue jerseys, and a game confronting the Houston Texans on October 26, 2014, in which the Titans wore their navy blue uniforms.[10]
Beginning in 2015, navy bluish became the team’southward master abode bailiwick of jersey color over again, marker the outset fourth dimension since 2007 that the Titans wore navy as their master dwelling house bailiwick of jersey, though the team plans to continue wearing white jerseys for early-flavour hot-conditions domicile games. The light Titans blue bailiwick of jersey, which was the team’southward primary jersey colour from 2008 to 2014, became the team’s alternate jersey for a 2nd time.[11]
[12]
On Apr 4, 2018, the Titans debuted new uniforms at an event attended by over 10,000 fans in downtown Nashville. The uniforms retain the color palette of navy blue, Titans blue and white, with new crimson and silverish elements being introduced. The new helmets are navy blue with one silvery sword-shaped stripe through the center and metal gray facemasks, a alter from the previous white helmets with 2 navy stripes and black facemasks.[2]
[13]
[14]
Rivals
[edit]
The Titans share rivalries with their three AFC South opponents (Jacksonville Jaguars, Houston Texans, and Indianapolis Colts). They also have historical rivalries with quondam divisional opponents such as the Pittsburgh Steelers, Baltimore Ravens (formerly the original Cleveland Browns) and Buffalo Bills, and during their time as the Houston Oilers, shared an in-state rivalry with the Dallas Cowboys.
Bounded rivalries
[edit]
Jacksonville Jaguars
[edit]
Since their founding, the Jaguars take been seen from time to time as the Titans’ master rival due to constantly competitive games betwixt the two franchises. The rivalry was heated in the late 1990s and early 2000s due to the success of both franchises at the time, including a season in which Jacksonville went 14-2 and Tennessee went xiii–iii. That season, all three of Jacksonville’s losses (including the playoffs) came confronting the Titans, who went on to play in Super Bowl XXXIV. The rivalry then cooled with both teams experiencing misfortune in the late 2000s to early 2010s, but both teams ended lengthy playoff droughts in 2017.
Houston Texans
[edit]
The Texans see the Titans as their primary rival due to the Titans’ previous history in Houston until their relocation to Tennessee. The Titans dominated the rivalry in the early 2000s, just the series has since evened out in the 2010s.
Indianapolis Colts
[edit]
The Colts have been very dominant in their rivalry with the Titans since the creation of the AFC South, with quarterbacks Peyton Manning and later Andrew Luck leading the Colts to consistent success against the Titans and the residual of the segmentation. Notwithstanding, the series has go more even as of late, with the Titans sweeping the Colts in 2017 afterward eleven straight losses.[fifteen]
In the recent years, the rivalry has picked up steam as both the Titans and the Colts take got playoff teams and compete for the AFC South title. In 2018, the Colts defeated the Titans in Nashville the last game of the regular flavour to clinch the final Wild Bill of fare spot, while eliminating Tennessee from playoff contention. In 2020, the Titans came out every bit the 2020 AFC South champions over the Colts due to tiebreaking measures as both finished 11–5.
Other rivalries
[edit]
Buffalo Bills
[edit]
Every bit the Houston Oilers, the squad was outset in the same division equally the Buffalo Bills in the days of the AFL, but were moved to the AFC Central division following the NFL-AFL merger. Fifty-fifty later the Bills and Oilers were placed in carve up divisions following the merger, their rivalry remained strong into the 1980s and 1990s with Warren Moon leading the Oilers up against Jim Kelly and the Bills. Two of the most iconic playoff moments in Oilers/Titans history have occurred against the Bills: the Comeback (known equally “the Choke” in Houston due to the team’s historic collapse against the Bills) and the Music City Miracle, which occurred afterward the squad moved to Nashville to get the Titans.[xvi]
The Bills and Titans were subsequently featured in an “AFL legacy” game in 2009, as role of festivities commemorating the 50th anniversary of the AFL’s foundation. Titans possessor Bud Adams was fined $250,000 by the league following the 41-17 Titans win in which he obscenely gestured towards the Bills sideline, equally he and Bills owner Ralph Wilson had maintained a friendly rivalry and were the last living original AFL owners at that time (Adams and Wilson would die in 2013 and 2014, respectively).[17]
Pittsburgh Steelers
[edit]
After the move to the AFC Fundamental partition, they adult a strong rivalry with the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Steelers were the Oilers’ main divisional rival and to this date, the Titans have played them more than whatsoever other NFL team.[xviii]
The Steelers and Oilers were competitive in the 1970s, facing off in back-to-back AFC championship games towards the finish of the decade. The teams both underwent hard times in the 1980s earlier re-emerging in the 1990s. After the Oilers’ motion to Tennessee and the re-alignment of the NFL’s divisions in 2002, the Steelers-Titans rivalry has cooled somewhat.
Baltimore Ravens
[edit]
In the late 1990s and early 2000s after becoming the Titans, they had a briefly intense rivalry with the Baltimore Ravens, which flared up once again when former Titans quarterback Steve McNair went to the Ravens. Following the realignment of the NFL’southward divisions in 2002, the rivalry with the Ravens cooled off somewhat,[19]
though the Titans take faced off confronting Baltimore v times in the postseason,[20]
most recently in the 2020–21 NFL playoffs, in which they lost to the 5th seeded Ravens 20–13.
Civilization
[edit]
Flameheads
[edit]
During the Titans’ first season in their new stadium, the finish zone sections became known as the Flame Pit and fans began wearing headwear resembling flames.[21]
Called “Flameheads,” the costumes became very prevalent during the Titans’ successful years of the early 2000s. Flames in general are heavily tied to the system because in Greek Mythology, the Titan Prometheus stole burn and gave information technology to humanity.
Cheerleaders and mascot
[edit]
Tennessee’s cheerleading squad is called the Tennessee Titans Cheerleaders and stand for the team in the NFL. They perform at every home game in Nissan Stadium and regularly practice acts with the team’s mascot T-Rac. They currently accept 28 members, including nine men, with iv captains.[22]
They perform a variety of trip the light fantastic toe moves and include high-risk stunts. They besides attend several customs events in Heart Tennessee. While the franchise was the Houston Oilers, the team was chosen the Derrick Dolls.
T-Rac is the racoon mascot of the Titans, debuting in the team’s inaugural preseason dwelling house game in Baronial 1999 confronting the Atlanta Falcons. The racoon is the land animal of Tennessee. T-Rac also appears at every game in Nissan Stadium and does community events all throughout Tennessee. He has also zip-lined from the acme of the stadium and rappelled from buildings in downtown Nashville.
Stadium traditions
[edit]
During every home game’s 4th quarter, the stadium plays a video of “office linebacker” Terry Tate, performed by Lester Speight, shouting his catchphrase, “the pain train’s coming!” This is immediately followed past the playing of “Folsom Prison house Dejection” by Johnny Cash, a favorite vocaliser of Nashville.[23]
Subsequently every Titans outset down at Nissan Stadium, the jumbotrons play a scene from the movie
300
where the Spartans chant subsequently King Leonidas asks, “What is your profession?” Titans fans simultaneously perform the chant three times, “HA-OOH! HA-OOH! HA-OOH!” The chant debuted in video game form in
Madden NFL 22.
Season-by-season records
[edit]
Histrion data
[edit]
Current roster
[edit]
Quarterbacks
Running backs
Broad receivers
Tight ends
|
Offensive linemen
Defensive linemen
|
Linebackers
Defensive backs
Special teams
|
Reserve lists
Unrestricted FAs
Restricted FAs
Exclusive-Rights FAs
Rookies in italics Roster updated January 29, 2022
37 active, 16 inactive, 31 free agent(south) → AFC rosters → NFC rosters |
Retired numbers
[edit]
Houston / Tennessee Oilers / Titans retired numbers | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Thespian | Position | Years played | Retired |
ane | Warren Moon | QB | 1984–93 | October i, 2006 |
9 | Steve McNair | QB | 1995-2005 | September xv, 2019 |
27 | Eddie George | RB | 1996-2003 | September 15, 2019 |
34 | Earl Campbell | RB | 1978–84 | August xiii, 1987 |
43 | Jim Norton | South/P | 1960–68 | 1968 |
63 | Mike Munchak | OG | 1982–93 | November six, 1994 |
65 | Elvin Bethea | DE | 1968–83 | August 4, 1983 |
74 | Bruce Matthews | OT | 1983–2001 | Dec 8, 2002 |
[24]
Pro Football Hall of Fame members
[edit]
Houston Oilers / Tennessee Oilers/Titans Hall of Famers | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Players | ||||
No. | Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons |
65 |
Elvin Bethea |
2003 | DE | 1968–83 |
xvi |
George Blanda |
1981 | QB/Thousand | 1960–66 |
52 |
Robert Brazile |
2018 | LB | 1975-84 |
34 |
Earl Campbell |
1991 | RB | 1978–84 |
87 |
Dave Casper |
2002 | TE | 1980–83 |
78 |
Curley Culp |
2013 | DT | 1974–80 |
29 |
Ken Houston |
1986 | Southward | 1967–72 |
73 | Steve Hutchinson | 2020 | OG | 2012 |
35 |
John Henry Johnson |
1987 | FB | 1966 |
18/40 |
Charlie Joiner |
1996 | WR | 1969–72 |
74 |
Matthews, Bruce Bruce Matthews |
2007 | OT | 1983–2001 |
68 | Kevin Mawae | 2019 | C | 2006–09 |
1 |
Warren Moon |
2006 | QB | 1984–93 |
84 |
Randy Moss |
2018 | WR | 2010 |
63 |
Mike Munchak |
2001 | OG | 1982–93 |
12 |
Ken Stabler |
2016 | QB | 1980–81 |
Coaches and Executives | ||||
Inductee | Grade | Position | Seasons | |
Sammy Baugh |
1963 | Coach | 1964 | |
Sid Gillman |
1983 | Jitney | 1973–74 | |
Dick LeBeau |
2010 | Ass. Motorcoach | 2015-17 |
Texas Sports Hall of Fame
[edit]
Titans Ring of Honor
[edit]
In 1999, possessor Bud Adams established a Titans/Oilers Hall of Fame afterwards the 40th flavor of the franchise to laurels past players and management. It was then inverse to Titans Band of Award in the 2010s. Bum Phillips, Jeff Fisher, and Floyd Reese are the virtually recent inductees, each in 2021 (September 26 for Phillips, November 21 for the latter ii).[25]
[26]
[24]
Houston / Tennessee Oilers / Titans Ring of Honor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Proper noun | Position | Years | Inducted |
65 | Elvin Bethea | DE | 1968–83 | December 9, 1999 |
xvi | George Blanda | QB/K | 1960–66 | |
52 | Robert Brazile | LB | 1975-1984 | October fourteen, 2018 |
34 | Earl Campbell | RB | 1978–84 | December 9, 1999 |
— | Mike Holovak | GM | 1989–93 | |
29 | Ken Houston | S | 1967–72 | |
63 | Mike Munchak | K | 1982–93 | |
43 | Jim Norton | P | 1960–68 | |
74 | Bruce Matthews | OL | 1983–2001 | December eight, 2002 |
1 | Warren Moon | QB | 1984–93 | Oct 1, 2007 |
— | Bud Adams | Owner/founder | 1959–2013 | September 7, 2008 |
27 | Eddie George | RB | 1996–2003 | October 27, 2008 |
9 | Steve McNair | QB | 1995–2005 | |
41/89 | Frank Wycheck | TE | 1995–2003 | |
— | Bum Phillips | Passenger vehicle | 1975-1980 | September 26, 2021 |
— | Jeff Fisher | Coach | 1994-2010 | November 21, 2021 |
— | Floyd Reese | Motorbus/GM | 1986-2006 | November 21, 2021 |
Franchise leaders
[edit]
Bold
denotes nevertheless active with team
Italics
denote however active simply not with team
Passing yards (regular season)
(equally of end of 2021 flavor)[27]
- ane. Warren Moon (33,685)
- 2. Steve McNair (27,141)
- three. George Blanda (19,149)
- 4. Dan Pastorini (16,864)
- v.
Marcus Mariota
(13,207) - vi.
Ryan Tannehill
(10,295) - seven. Vince Immature (8,098)
- eight. Kerry Collins (six,804)
- 9. Ken Stabler (5,190)
- x. Pete Beathard (v,128)
- 11. Jake Locker (4,967)
- 12. Matt Hasselbeck (iv,938)
- thirteen. Chris Chandler (4,559)
- 14. Cody Carlson (4,469)
- fifteen. Don Trull (3,538)
- 16. Billy Volek (iii,505)
- 17. Jacky Lee (3,291)
- 18. Gifford Nielsen (3,255)
- nineteen. Neil O’Donnell (2,664)
- 20. Oliver Luck (2,544)
- 21.
Ryan Fitzpatrick
(ii,454) - 22. Zach Mettenberger (2,347)
- 23. Charley Johnson (two,244)
- 24. Lynn Dickey (1,953)
- 25. Archie Manning (1,632)
- 26. Charlie Whitehurst (1,326)
- 27. Billy Joe Tolliver (one,287)
- 28. Bucky Richardson (i,257)
- 29. Jerry Rhome (1,031)
- 30. Brent Pease (792)
Rushing yards (regular season)
(as of stop of 2021 season)[27]
- ane. Eddie George (10,009)
- two. Earl Campbell (8,574)
- 3. Chris Johnson (7,965)
- 4.
Derrick Henry
(6,797) - 5. Lorenzo White (4,079)
- 6. Hoyle Granger (3,514)
- seven. Steve McNair (iii,439)
- 8. Mike Rozier (3,426)
- 9. Charley Tolar (three,277)
- 10. Ronnie Coleman (ii,769)
- 11. Chris Brown (2,757)
- 12. LenDale White (2,349)
- 13. Allen Pinkett (ii,324)
- 14. Gary Brown (2,115)
- 15. Fred Willis (two,114)
- 16. Billy Cannon (two,111)
- 17. DeMarco Murray (one,946)
- eighteen. Rodney Thomas (one,847)
- 19. Rob Carpenter (1,788)
- 20. Larry Moriarty (1,624)
- 21. Travis Henry (1,546)
- 22. Warren Moon (1,541)
- 23. Woody Campbell (1,493)
- 24.
Marcus Mariota
(one,399) - 25. Tim Wilson (1,385)
- 26. Vince Immature (one,380)
- 27. Dave Smith (1,368)
- 28. Sid Blanks (one,366)
- 29. Alonzo Highsmith (1,103)
- 30. Ode Burrell (ane,088)
Receiving yards (regular season)
(as of end of 2021 season)[27]
- 1. Ernest Givens (vii,935)
- 2. Drew Hill (vii,477)
- 3. Ken Burrough (six,906)
- 4. Charley Hennigan (vi,823)
- 5. Haywood Jeffires (half dozen,119)
- 6. Derrick Mason (6,114)
- seven. Frank Wycheck (4,958)
- 8. Nate Washington (four,591)
- ix.
Delanie Walker
(iv,423) - 10. Drew Bennett (4,033)
- eleven. Curtis Duncan (3,935)
- 12. Chris Sanders (three,285)
- xiii.
Kendall Wright
(3,244) - xiv. Tim Smith (3,107)
- fifteen. Charley Frazier (3,060)
- 16.
A. J. Brown
(2,995) - 17. Bill Groman (two,976)
- xviii.
Corey Davis
(ii,851) - 19. Alvin Reed (2,818)
- xx. Kenny Britt (two,450)
- 21. Bo Scaife (2,383)
- 22. Kevin Dyson (2,310)
- 23. Webster Slaughter (ii,236)
- 24. Mike Renfro (two,183)
- 25. Baton Johnson (2,149)
- 26. Eddie George (2,144)
- 27. Willard Dewveall (2,080)
- 28. Justin Gage (2,050)
- 29. Chris Johnson (ii,003)
- 30. Bob McLeod (1,926)
Coaching staff
[edit]
Head coaches
[edit]
Current staff
[edit]
|
→ |
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|
Radio and tv set
[edit]
The flagship radio station of the Titans Radio Network for several years was WKDF 103.3-FM. However WGFX 104.v-FM, the original Tennessee Oilers/Titans Radio flagship station, again serves as the Titans Radio flagship station since the 2010 season. Mike Keith is the team’s play-by-play announcer, and former Titans double-decker Dave McGinnis provides color commentary during games. Previous to McGinnis, former Titans tight end Frank Wycheck provided the color commentary. Larry Stone is also a part of the team, providing injury and scoring updates. The Titans Radio Network is broadcast on some 70 other stations.[28]
The team had long resisted placing any of its games on Sirius XM Radio.[29]
According to the Titans Radio Network, this was because the Titans’ contract with Citadel Dissemination (parent of both WKDF and WGFX) predated the arrival of satellite radio, thus there was no provision for the NFL to reserve satellite-radio rights.[30]
In 2011, the Titans were able to extend their agreement with existing radio partners while creating a provision allowing dwelling games to be broadcast on SiriusXM. They were the terminal team in the NFL to reach such a deal.[31]
Virtually preseason games are televised on Nexstar station WKRN-Television set, the ABC affiliate in Nashville, along with a weekly Tuesday night motorbus’s show,
The Mike Vrabel Show, formerly known as
Titans on 2. The preseason games are distributed through a network made upward of other Nexstar stations throughout the state and several affiliates where Nexstar has no stations.
For regular season games, WTVF, the CBS chapter for Nashville, airs the nearly games due to its AFC-centric rights. Pull a fast one on affiliate WZTV carries domicile games against NFC opponents (forth with select flexed games and
Th Night Football), NBC affiliate WSMV-Idiot box has
Lord’s day Night Football game
broadcasts, and WKRN carries the team’due south
Mon Night Football
matchups locally.
Radio affiliates
[edit]
See besides
[edit]
- List of American Football League players
- NFL Cheerleading
References
[edit]
-
^
“Tennessee Titans Team Facts”.
ProFootballHOF.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. Archived from the original on Baronial eight, 2020. Retrieved
May 18,
2020.
-
^
a
b
Wyatt, Jim (April iv, 2018). “The Story Behind Titans New Uniforms, and Helmet”.
TitansOnline.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved
April five,
2018.
The color palette navy, Titan blue, red, silver and white remains unchanged.
-
^
“Titans Fingertip Information”.
2021 Tennessee Titans Media Guide. NFL Enterprises, LLC. July 27, 2021. Retrieved
September 16,
2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
-
^
“Tennessee Titans Team Capsule”
(PDF).
2021 Official National Football League Tape and Fact Volume. NFL Enterprises, LLC. August 11, 2021. Retrieved
September 16,
2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
-
^
“Titans Forepart Role”.
TennesseeTitans.com. NFL Enterprises. Archived from the original on September sixteen, 2020. Retrieved
September 15,
2020.
-
^
“Titans Practice Facility Renamed “Saint Thomas Sports Park”“.
TitansOnline.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. July 11, 2013. Archived from the original on June 30, 2019. Retrieved
June 30,
2019.
-
^
Samuel, Michael (July 6, 2008). “Titans Decide To Change Their Abode Uniform”.
Bleacher Report. Archived from the original on July 22, 2010. Retrieved
Dec 27,
2015.
-
^
“Bills vs. Titans in 2009 Hall of Fame Game” (Press release). Pro Football Hall of Fame. January 31, 2009. Archived from the original on January 1, 2016. Retrieved
December 27,
2015.
-
^
Wyatt, Jim (July 27, 2013). “Titans to bring dorsum navy blueish”.
The Tennessean. Archived from the original on August 12, 2013. Retrieved
July 27,
2013.
-
^
Kuharsky, Paul (November 21, 2014). “RTC: It’s white the residual of the way for Titans”. ESPN. Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved
November 21,
2014.
-
^
Wyatt, Jim (November 20, 2014). “Titans will stick with white jerseys”.
The Tennessean. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved
Nov 21,
2014.
-
^
Wyatt, Jim (August 25, 2015). “Ask Jim: Questions on O-Line, Mettenberger and More than”.
TitansOnline.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. Archived from the original on June thirty, 2019. Retrieved
June xxx,
2019.
-
^
Hagemann, Andie (April 4, 2018). “Titans unveil new uniforms ahead of 2018 flavor”.
National Football game League. NFL Enterprises, LLC. Archived from the original on July 10, 2018. Retrieved
July 10,
2018.
-
^
Wolfe, Cameron (Apr five, 2018). “Titans’ 20th flavour in Tennessee features new-look uniforms, helmets”.
ESPN. ESPN Cyberspace Ventures, LLC. Archived from the original on Apr 5, 2018. Retrieved
April 5,
2018.
-
^
“Tennessee Titans vs. Indianapolis Colts Results”. The Football game Database. Archived from the original on May 25, 2018. Retrieved
May 24,
2018.
-
^
Gray, Nicklaus (Oct six, 2019). “Is Titans-Bills a rivalry? Let’s evaluate”.
The Tennessean. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved
January 2,
2020.
-
^
“Adams draws $250K fine from NFL” Archived December 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, ESPN News service, November 16, 2009, accessed November 21, 2009 -
^
Titans-Steelers matchup zippo new, then or now Archived October 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
Nashville Post
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External links
[edit]
-
Official website
- Tennessee Titans at the National Football League official website
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tennessee_Titans