Tennessee Titans

Tennessee Titans
Current season
Established 1960
Play in LP Field
Nashville, Tennessee
Headquartered in Baptist Sports Park, Nashville, Tennessee
Tennessee Titans helmet
Tennessee Titans logo
Helmet Logo
League/conference affiliations

American Football League

  • Eastern Division (1960–1969)

National Football League (1970–present)

Current uniform
AFCS-Uniform-TEN.PNG
Team colors Navy, Titans Blue, White, Red, and Silver

                        

Mascot T-Rac
Personnel
Owner(s) Bud Adams
Chairman Bud Adams
CEO Bud Adams
President Bud Adams
General manager Mike Reinfeldt
Head coach Jeff Fisher
Team history
  • Houston Oilers (1960–1996)
  • Tennessee Oilers (1997–1998)
  • Tennessee Titans (1999–present)
Championships
League championships (2)
Conference championships (1)
  • AFC: 1999
Division championships (9)
  • AFL East: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1967
  • AFC Central: 1991, 1993, 2000
  • AFC South: 2002, 2008
Playoff appearances (21)
  • AFL: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1967, 1969
  • NFL: 1978, 1979, 1980, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2008
Home fields
  • Jeppesen Stadium (1960–1964)
  • Rice Stadium (1965–67)
  • Houston Astrodome (1968–96)
  • Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium (1997)
  • Vanderbilt Stadium (1998)
  • LP Field (1999–present)
    • a.k.a. Adelphia Coliseum (1999–2002)
    • a.k.a. The Coliseum (2002–06)

The Tennessee Titans are a U.S. professional American football team based in Nashville. The team plays at LP Field in Nashville. The team's training facility is at Baptist Sports Park, a 31-acre (13 ha) site at the MetroCenter complex, located just north of downtown Nashville about 5 miles (8.0 km) from LP Field. They are members of the South Division of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the National Football League (NFL). Previously known as the Houston Oilers, the team began play in 1960 as a charter member of the American Football League. The Oilers won the first two AFL championships, before joining the NFL as part of the AFL-NFL Merger.

The team relocated from Houston, Texas to the state of Tennessee in 1997, first playing temporarily in Memphis for one season before moving to Nashville. For two seasons, the team was known as the Tennessee Oilers before changing its name to Titans in 1999.

Contents

Franchise history

Logos and uniforms

Tennessee Oilers uniform: 1997-98.
Tennessee Titans uniform combination

When the team debuted as the Oilers in 1960, the club's logo was an oil rig derrick. Except for minor color changes throughout the years, this logo remained the same until the team was renamed the Titans in 1999. The logo was originally called "Ol' Riggy" but this was dropped before the start of the 1974 season.

The Oilers uniforms consisted of blue or white jerseys, red trim, and white pants. From 1966 through 1971, the pants with both the blue and white jerseys were silver, to match the color of the helmets. The team commonly wore light blue pants on the road with the white jerseys from 1972 through 1994, with the exception of the 1980 season, and selected games in the mid 80s, when the team wore an all-white road combination. For selected games in 1973 and 1974, and again from 1981 through 1984, the Oilers wore their white jerseys at home. The light blue pants were discarded by coach Jeff Fisher in 1995.

From 1960 to about 1965, and from 1972 to 1974, they wore blue helmets; from 1966 to 1971, the helmets were silver; and they were white from 1975 to 1998.

During the 1997–98 period when they were known as 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 in home games, as opposed to their time in Houston, when their blue uniforms were worn at home.

When the team was renamed the Titans, the club introduced a new logo: A circle with three stars, similar to that found on the flag of Tennessee containing a large "T" with a trail of flames similar to a comet. The uniforms consist of white helmets, red trim, and either navy or white jerseys. White pants are normally worn with the navy jerseys, and navy pants are worn with the white jerseys. On both the navy and white jerseys, the outside shoulders and sleeves are light "Titans Blue". In a game vs. the Washington Redskins in 2006, the Titans wore their navy jerseys with navy pants for the first time.

Since 2000, the Titans have generally worn their dark uniforms at home throughout the preseason and regular season. The Titans have worn white at home in daytime contests for a few occasions in September home games to gain an advantage with the heat. The Titans wore white at home twice in 2000 and 2002. The Titans wore white once at home in 2001 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, in 2004 and 2007 against the Indianapolis Colts, and once in 2009 against the Houston Texans.

The Titans introduced an alternate jersey in 2003 that is light "Titans Blue" with navy outside shoulders and sleeves. That jersey is usually worn with the road blue pants. When it was the alternate jersey from 2003 to 2007 the Titans wore the jersey twice in each regular season game (and also once in each preseason game). They would always wear the "Titans Blue" jersey in their divisional game against the Houston Texans and for another selected home game in each regular season (one additional selected home game in each preseason). In November 2006, the Titans introduced light "Titans Blue" pants in a game at Philadelphia. The pants were reminiscent of the ones donned by the Oilers. In December 2006, they combined the "Titans Blue" pants with the "Titans Blue" jersey to create an all "Titans Blue" uniform.

During the 2006 season, the Titans wore seven different uniform combinations, pairing the white 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 blue pants. In 2007 against the Atlanta Falcons, the Titans paired the navy blue jersey with the Titans blue pants for the only time, a game of which they won.They also did the navy blue jerseys with the light blue pants against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers but they lost that game. The team has yet to pair the Titans blue jersey with white pants.

In 2008, it was announced that the "Titans Blue" jerseys would become the regular home uniforms, with the navy being relegated to alternate status.[1]

In 2009, The NFL and Hall of Fame committee announced that the Tennessee Titans and Buffalo Bills would kick-off the 2009 National Football League preseason in the Hall of Fame Game. The game, played on Sunday, August 9, 2009 at Canton’s Pro Football Hall of Fame Field at Fawcett Stadium, was nationally televised on NBC. The Titans defeated the Bills by a score of 21-18.[2] This was the first time, since Tennessee changed its name, the Titans wore their Oilers uniform, in honor of the AFL's 50th anniversary. Also in 2009, the team honored former Quarterback Steve McNair, by placing a small black disc on the back of their helmets, inside of the black disk, a white number 9 (9 was the number McNair wore during his time with the Titans).

Season-by-season records

Players

Current roster

Quarterbacks
  •  5 Kerry Collins
  •  7 Chris Simms
  • 11 Rusty Smith

Running Backs

  • 45 Ahmard Hall FB
  • 28 Chris Johnson
  • 21 Javon Ringer

Wide Receivers

  • 18 Kenny Britt
  • 12 Justin Gage
  • 87 Lavelle Hawkins
  • 83 Marc Mariani RS
  • 84 Randy Moss
  • 85 Nate Washington
  • 17 Damian Williams

Tight Ends

  • 89 Jared Cook
  • 80 Bo Scaife
  • 88 Craig Stevens
Offensive Linemen
  • 64 Leroy Harris G
  • 70 Troy Kropog T
  • 66 Mike Otto T
  • 71 Michael Roos T
  • 73 Jake Scott G
  • 76 David Stewart T
  • 61 Fernando Velasco C/G

Defensive Linemen

  • 93 Jason Babin DE
  • 98 Dave Ball DE
  • 97 Tony Brown DT
  • 99 Marques Douglas DT
  • 78 Jacob Ford DE
  • 75 Jovan Haye DT
  • 95 William Hayes DE
  • 91 Jason Jones DT
  • 94 Sen'Derrick Marks DT
  • 96 Malcolm Sheppard DT
Linebackers
  • 96 Patrick Bailey OLB
  • 53 Rennie Curran OLB
  • 51 Gerald McRath OLB
  • 59 Tim Shaw OLB
  • 50 David Thornton OLB
  • 55 Stephen Tulloch ILB
  • 92 Will Witherspoon OLB/ILB

Defensive Backs

  • 31 Cortland Finnegan CB
  • 22 Vincent Fuller FS
  • 33 Michael Griffin FS
  • 24 Chris Hope SS
  • 32 Robert Johnson FS
  • 30 Jason McCourty CB
  • 29 Ryan Mouton CB
  • 23 Donnie Nickey SS
  • 39 Nick Schommer SS
  • 20 Alterraun Verner CB

Special Teams

  • 58 Ken Amato LS/ILB
  •  2 Rob Bironas K
  •  6 Brett Kern P
Reserve Lists
  • 56 Colin Allred ILB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 54 Eugene Amano C (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 79 Kareem Brown DE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 37 Rod Hood CB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 90 Marcus Howard DE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 13 Stafon Johnson RB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • -- Dominique Lindsay RB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 90 Derrick Morgan DE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 52 Jamie Winborn OLB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 10 Vince Young QB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg

Practice Squad

  • 72 Hall Davis DE
  • 36 Herb Donaldson RB
  • 77 Ryan Durand G
  • 48 Riar Geer TE
  • 38 Pete Ittersagen CB
  • 60 Kevin Matthews C
  • 25 Myron Rolle SS
  • 49 Patrick Trahan OLB

Rookies in italics
Roster updated December 14, 2010
Depth ChartTransactions

53 Active, 10 Inactive, 8 Practice Squad

→ More rosters

Pro Football Hall of Famers

Retired numbers

Coaches of note

Head coaches

Current staff

Front Office
  • Founder/Owner/Chairman/President/CEO – Bud Adams
  • Senior Executive Vice President/General Counsel – Steve Underwood
  • Executive Vice President/General Manager – Mike Reinfeldt
  • Vice President of Player Personnel – Ruston Webster
  • Senior Director of Football Administration – Vincent Marino
  • Director of Pro Scouting – Lake Dawson
  • National Supervisor of College Scouting – C. O. Brocato

Head Coaches

  • Executive Vice President/Head Coach – Jeff Fisher
  • Assistant Head Coach/Running Backs – Craig Johnson
  • Assistant Head Coach/Linebackers – Dave McGinnis
  • Assistant Head Coach/Strength and Conditioning – Steve Watterson

Offensive Coaches

  • Offensive Coordinator – Mike Heimerdinger
  • Quarterbacks/Passing Game – Dowell Loggains
  • Wide Receivers – Fred Graves
  • Tight Ends – John Zernhelt
  • Offensive Line – Mike Munchak
  • Quality Control/Offense – Richie Wessman
 

Defensive Coaches

  • Defensive Coordinator – Chuck Cecil
  • Defensive Line – Jim Washburn
  • Secondary – Marcus Robertson
  • Assistant Secondary – Tim Hauck
  • Defensive Assistant/Quality Control – Rayna Stewart

Special Teams Coaches

  • Special Teams – Alan Lowry
  • Assistant Special Teams – Marty Galbraith

Coaching Staff
Management
→ More NFL staffs

Radio and television

The Titans' flagship radio station for several years has been WKDF 103.3-FM. However WGFX 104.5-FM, the original Tennessee Oilers/Titans Radio flagship station, will again serve as the Titans Radio flagship station beginning the 2010 season. Mike Keith is the team's play-by-play announcer, and former Titans tight end Frank Wycheck provides color commentary during games. Previous to Wycheck, Pat Ryan 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.[4]

The team has long resisted placing any of its game on Sirius XM Radio.[5]

Most preseason games are televised on WKRN, the ABC affiliate in Nashville. WKRN has also aired a weekly show, which in the past, has been broadcast on Tuesday nights but will be recorded on Tuesday nights and broadcast on Wednesday nights for the 2010 season. The show is called 'Titans on 2', and is hosted by Fisher and WKRN anchor John Dwyer.

See also

References

External links