Tennessee
As Tennessee Titans finally give Ran Carthon an honest chance, we all should, too | Estes
We’ve little idea what to expect from Ran Carthon as Tennessee Titans’ true GM, because we’ve not seen him to do it yet.
The Tennessee Titans confirmed their already well-documented coaching hire of Brian Callahan early Wednesday, but that wasn’t the morning’s real news.
They did what they’d spent the past year not doing.
They presented Ran Carthon as a bona fide NFL general manager.
While announcing Callahan’s hire, Titans owner Amy Adams Strunk revealed that she had promoted Carthon to executive vice president and given him control of all football-related matters: The roster, the draft, free agency, the coaching staff. All of it. Callahan will coach under Carthon.
Something that would be standard for most pro sports organizations felt like a watershed moment for the Titans and Adams Strunk, who spent all of 2023 declining to say publicly who had the final say about the team’s roster. Though she hired Carthon a year ago, she didn’t truly allow him the authority to do the job until now. And (gasp) she told everyone about the decision, too!
The Titans have had a rough time of it lately, but it has been encouraging to see them getting their house in order.
A solid coaching hire is made. (Callahan will be introduced formally on Thursday). A true GM is in place. Some transparency, too, about the inner workings of the team and Adams Strunk’s vision to modernize the Titans to where they’ll no longer scoff about things like charts and numbers and analytics as tools to help win.
“This is not my father’s NFL,” she said in Wednesday’s statement. “As our league continues to evolve in areas like analytics, sports science, and technology, football organizations have become more complex and multifaceted. I want our football operation to be at the forefront of the NFL as teams continue to find new competitive advantages.”
As for Carthon, Adams Strunk cited his “innovative approach to roster building” and “exceptional reputation around the league as a talent evaluator and culture builder” as reasons to hand him the same set of keys that Jon Robinson once held.
The Titans are finally giving Carthon an honest chance, and the rest of us should, too.
Truth is, we’ve little idea what to expect from him as the Titans’ GM.
We haven’t seen him do it yet.
Has any GM one year into a job been more of a mystery? Carthon spent the past year mostly in the background. In the rare instances in which he has spoken publicly, he has gone out of his way not to reveal much. We don’t know what he wants for the Titans — because he hasn’t told us.
He spoke initially of former coach Mike Vrabel’s preference as his own. Then after Vrabel’s firing, he deferred in the same way to Adams Strunk, declining to offer specifics about her vision or his own as the team’s GM.
Carthon’s obfuscation in media settings has been maddening, and I hope it improves for his sake. It has often come across as a GM who is in over his head, and I don’t believe that’s the case.
Adams Strunk has confidence in Carthon to do this job, or else she wouldn’t be giving it to him.
But you can’t blame anyone for being skeptical of her effusive praise for Carthon when she wouldn’t let him be the Titans’ true GM until now.
Estes: Whatever may come of Brian Callahan, he’s who Tennessee Titans truly wanted
The failure of this past season, more than any other shortcoming, was that no one could say who was really in charge. A tumultuous 2023 reflected poorly on both Vrabel and Carthon, but really, it was on Adams Strunk to fix her ill-fated attempt to blend old and new. In trying to placate both Vrabel and Carthon, she accomplished neither, and the franchise suffered for it.
Hindsight shows how difficult the circumstances have been thus far in Tennessee for Carthon. He had to figure out how to work alongside Vrabel after Adams Strunk went against her coach’s recommendation in hiring Carthon over Ryan Cowden, which multiple sources cited as a turning point in the relationship between the Titans’ former coach and owner.
Go Deeper: Why was Mike Vrabel fired? How the Tennessee Titans got to this point | Estes
And then after she fired Vrabel on Jan. 9, Adams Strunk’s refusal to field questions from independent media meant that Carthon was forced to muddle alone through an unsatisfactory news conference in which he was far more fixated on what he couldn’t say than what he could.
It was a shaky performance at an unfortunate time, inspiring zero confidence in the Titans’ direction and leadership on a pivotal day in their history.
For Carthon, yes, it was a tough spot. But it won’t be the last time. It was the type of thing that NFL general managers must confront, and there will be no more defending Carthon because of a lack of experience.
The training wheels are gone. He’s in charge now. He’s got the owner’s public backing. He’s got the coach he wanted in Callahan. He’ll have the optimism and fresh approach that a solid coaching hire will bring to a building that needs those things.
He’s got top deputy Chad Brinker settling into a nice promotion. He’s got a high first-round draft pick. He’s got a ton of salary-cap space.
And he’s got a Titans roster that’ll need a lot of help between now and the next game.
For a while, I’ve been told all these wonderful things about Ran Carthon, and I haven’t yet gotten to meet that person. I’m eager to get to know him and see what he can do for the Titans.
Reach Tennessean sports columnist Gentry Estes at gestes@tennessean.com and on the X platform (formerly known as Twitter) @Gentry_Estes.
Tennessee
Where Tennessee Baseball Players, Commits Land In Final MLB Mock Drafts, Rankings | Rocky Top Insider
The 2026 MLB Draft gets underway on Saturday afternoon to jump start MLB All-Star game festivities in Philadelphia. The two-day, 20-round draft is a highly important once for Tennessee baseball. While there are fewer current Vols projected to be selected, there will be no shortage of Tennessee prep signees and transfer commits who are draft risks.
We’ve compiled a number of both mock drafts and overall draft prospect rankings from a multitude of outlets that give us a look at where Tennessee players, transfers and commits could go. There’s a handful of Tennessee transfer commits who are not listed but are also draft risks including Wright State outfielder Andrew Duncan, Baylor shortstop Travis Sanders, FIU infielder Mario Trivella and Clemson right-handed pitcher Hayden Simmerson.
Taking a look at the mock drafts and draft rankings here.
More From RTI: Clemson Transfer Pitcher Commits To Tennessee Baseball
Current Tennessee player. Tennessee transfer commit. Tennessee high school signee
Mock Drafts
ESPN Two-Round Mock Draft
- LHP/OF Jared Grindlinger — No. 11 to Kansas City
- OF Trevor Condon — No. 14 to Miami
- RHP Tegan Kuhns — No. 34 to Pittsburgh
- RHP Kaiden McCarthy — No. 51 to Pittsburgh
The Athletic One-Round Mock Draft
- LHP/OF Jared Grindlinger — No. 11 to Baltimore
- RHP Tegan Kuhns — No. 24 to Seattle
CBS One-Round Mock Draft
- LHP/OF Jared Grindlinger — No. 18 to Cincinnati
Prospect Rankings
MLB Pipeline Top 250
- OF Trevor Condon — No. 13
- LHP/OF Jared Grindlinger — No. 16
- RHP Tegan Kuhns — No. 25
- RHP Kaiden McCarthy — No. 61
- RHP/SS Cole Koeninger — No. 99
- SS Jack Dugan — No. 106
- C Sean Dunlap — No. 124
- RHP Shawn Sullivan — No. 132
- RHP Tyler Putnam — No. 139
- RHP Gary Morse — No. 141
- 3B/OF Henry Ford — No. 148
- LHP Jake McCoy — No. 152
- C/OF Garrett Wright — No. 190
- RHP Cannon Grant — No. 212
- RHP Bo Rhudy — No. 219
- LHP Ricky Ojeda — No. 243
ESPN Top 250
- LHP/OF Jared Grindlinger — No. 11
- OF Trevor Condon — No. 16
- RHP Tegan Kuhns — No. 32
- C Sean Dunlap — No. 49
- RHP Kaiden McCarthy — No. 52
- RHP Gary Morse — No. 98
- RHP/SS Cole Koeninger — No. 107
- SS Jack Dugan — No. 109
- RHP Tyler Putnam — No. 112
- RHP Cannon Grant — No. 125
- 1B Cody Boshell — No. 142
- LHP Jake McCoy — No. 156
- C/OF Garrett Wright — No. 162
- 3B/OF Henry Ford — No. 183
- RHP Bo Rhudy — No. 201
Perfect Game Top 400
- LHP/OF Jared Grindlinger — No. 16
- OF Trevor Condon — No. 29
- RHP Tegan Kuhns — No. 50
- RHP Kaiden McCarthy — No. 51
- RHP/SS Cole Koeninger — No. 62
- C Sean Dunlap — No. 68
- 3B/OF Henry Ford — No. 134
- 1B/OF AJ Curry — No. 153
- RHP Cannon Grant — No. 176
- RHP Tyler Putnam — No. 190
- SS Jack Dugan — No. 201
- LHP Jake McCoy — No. 227
- RHP Shawn Sullivan — No. 231
- RHP Gary Morse — No. 241
- LHP Ricky Ojeda — No. 251
- RHP Bo Rhudy 255
- SS Jaxson Wood — No. 262
- C/OF Garrett Wright — No. 269
- LHP Brandon Arvidson — No. 274
- SS Manny Marin — No. 375
- OF Reese Chapman — No. 386
- LHP Drew Christine — No. 387
Tennessee
Rescue teams pull kayakers and dog from Red River in Tennessee
Sissy arrived at The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee in 2000, where caretakers began monitoring and managing her osteoarthritis. Sanctuary leaders said a recent progression of the disease caused what they described as “clear signs” of pain and swelling in her right wrist.
Tennessee
Tennessee Highway Patrol holds open house at Jackson district office
JACKSON, Tenn. (WBBJ) – The Tennessee Highway Patrol held an open house Thursday at the THP Jackson District Office in West Madison County for those interested in becoming a state trooper.
Attendees had the opportunity to learn about the various operations of the THP and the roles the department offers.
Trooper Tiffanie Williams said the career comes with competitive benefits and a sense of community responsibility.
“What makes us a good career choice is, one, base your retirement plan is pretty good, your benefits are pretty good. Also, just giving back to the community — we kind of hold ourselves to a higher standard,” Williams said.
For more information about the Tennessee Highway Patrol and how to get involved, click here.
Copyright 2026 WBBJ. All rights reserved.
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