The Tennessee Titans have already made some massive changes this offseason by hiring coaches like Robert Saleh, Brian Daboll, and Gus Bradley, and looking ahead to free agency, they could be in line to add a 10-TD, wide receiver who Daboll coached during his time with the New York Giants.
Wan’Dale Robinson Could Be Headed to the Titans
As of March 2, 2026, the Titans have the following wide receivers on their depth chart: Elic Ayomanor, Calvin Ridley, Chimere Dike, Van Jefferson, Bryce Oliver, James Proche II, and Mason Kinsey.
Of those, Jefferson, Proche, and Oliver are set to become free agents (Oliver will be an exclusive rights free agent).
Furthermore, Ridley broke his fibula in Week 11 of this past season, so his status for Week 1 is certainly up in the air.
Dike and Ayomanor did great for a pair of rookie wide receivers, combining for 89 catches, 938 yards, and eight touchdowns, but there needs to be more options for quarterback Cam Ward, who’s headed into his second season, coming off a PFSN QB Impact grade of 59.8 (45th in the NFL).
According to Connor Hughes, an NFL insider for “SNY,” the Titans have “significant interest” in Wan’Dale Robinson.
“Robinson could be the most difficult to retain. His market is expected to be strong, and the Titans have significant interest. Tennessee needs weapons for quarterback Cam Ward, and former Giants head coach Brian Daboll is on staff there. Sources SNY spoke with believed Robinson is more likely to play elsewhere than return to New York,” Hughes wrote after listing other notable Giants free agents like cornerback Cor’Dale Flott, offensive tackle Jermaine Eluemunor, and linebacker Micah McFadden.
As he mentioned, Robinson was coached by Daboll, who’s now the Titans’ offensive coordinator.
Last season, Robinson started a career-high 15 games and caught 92 passes on 140 targets for 1,014 yards and four touchdowns.
Interestingly, in 2024, he had nearly the same number of receptions (93) and targets (140) as in 2025, but significantly fewer yards with just 699.
His yards per reception took a massive step forward from 7.5 yards in 2024 to 11 in 2025. Not only that, but his yards per route run saw a noticeable increase, going from 1.21 to 1.87.
Of all receivers to see at least 80 targets, his 1.87 yards per route run was 19th in the NFL.
Robinson has progressed as a receiver, and the Titans, who have over $90 million in cap space, could certainly afford his contract, which Spotrac estimates could reach $17.6 million per season.

