NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Looking at the recent history of the AFC South makes it easy to envision the Titans winning the division, if only because they have Brian Callahan as their new coach.
Doug Pederson capped his first season coaching the Jaguars watching the team grab the AFC South title away from the Titans by returning a fumble for a touchdown in the final minutes of the 2022 season.
Then DeMeco Ryans, the Texans’ fifth head coach in four seasons, teamed up with C.J. Stroud in 2023 to win the division by a game over the Jags and Colts. The Titans went from two-time division champs to losers of 18 of 24, costing coach Mike Vrabel his job.
At least one NFL team with a first-year coach has reached the playoffs every year since the 2006 season, and the Titans are the AFC South’s only team with a new coach.
“I think that we have a chance to be a pretty good team,” Callahan said.
Callahan knows his Titans are nowhere close to a finished product. His roster was shaped by one of the NFL’s biggest free agent spending sprees after they led the NFL in players used because of injuries for a third straight season in 2023. Callahan also has Will Levis — one of three quarterbacks going into their second season in this division.
The Texans are looking for their first back-to-back titles since 2018-2019 behind Ryans and C.J. Stroud, the No. 2 pick in the 2023 draft.
Bulking up
The Texans spent their share of money to add talent around both the AP Offensive Rookie of the Year, Stroud, and the AP Defensive Rookie of the Year, Will Anderson Jr.
They signed tight end Dalton Schultz to a three-year deal. Nico Collins got his own three-year, $72 million extension after a 1,297-yard receiving season with eight TD catches.
The Texans also traded for four-time Pro Bowl receiver Stefon Diggs, who’s just 5 yards shy of 10,000 for his career and who had 1,183 yards receiving last year for the Bulls. The Texans also traded for running back Joe Mixon.
Defensive end Danielle Hunter was signed to a two-year, $49 million contract after he posted 16 1/2 sacks for the Vikings, along with defensive lineman Denico Autry, who had a career-best 11 1/2 sacks last year for the Titans. Autry will miss the first six games for violating the league’s policy on performance-enhancing drugs.
Big spenders
General manager Ran Carthon had to spend big to cover up the draft whiffs and other mistakes by his predecessor, Jon Robinson.
He brought in receivers Calvin Ridley and Tyler Boyd, running back Tony Pollard, center Lloyd Cushenberry, cornerback Chidobe Awuzie, and safeties Jamal Adams and Quandre Diggs. Carthon also traded for cornerback L’Jarius Sneed to remake the Titans’ secondary. The Titans still have four-time Pro Bowl receiver DeAndre Hopkins, who may return from a knee injury in time for the season opener on Sept. 8 against the Bears.
Recovery mode
The Jaguars won the division two years ago after taking advantage of a season-ending skid by the Titans. Then the Jags mimicked that downfall by losing five of their final six to miss out on winning consecutive division titles for the first time since 1998-99.
Owner Shad Khan opened up his checkbook as well, committing nearly half a billion dollars to keep the team’s draft picks in pass rusher Josh Hines-Allen, QB Trevor Lawrence and Tyson Campbell for the priciest spending in franchise history. Safety Tashaun Gipson will miss the first six games suspended for violating the NFL’s performance-enhancing drug policy even as the Jaguars now hope he provides a boost down the stretch.
Pederson fired defensive coordinator Mike Caldwell and seven defensive assistants a day after the season ended. Ryan Nielsen gets to shore up a unit led by some well-compensated draft picks.
Lawrence, 24, the No. 1 pick overall in 2021, now is the oldest starting QB in the AFC South. He also has a five-year, $275 million extension with $142 million guaranteed.
Next one?
The franchise that used to dominate this division goes into a second straight season hoping Anthony Richardson can be its new Peyton Manning or Andrew Luck.
First, the fourth overall pick of 2023 has to finish more than one game after injuries limited him to four starts before season-ending shoulder surgery. Richardson’s biggest task is getting the Colts into the playoffs for the first time since 2020. He has the same offensive line in front of him and a healthy Jonathan Taylor behind him. Last season, the duo took only one snap in a game together.
The Colts will be without defensive end Samson Ebukam after he tore an Achilles tendon during practice.