Titans start road to No. 1 Picking with the brim; GM calls Travis Hunter ‘Special Player’

November 29, 2024; Boulder, Colorado, USA; Colorado Buffaloes Cornerback Travis Hunter (12) after an interception during the first quarter against Oklahoma State Cowboys at Folsom Field. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn images

Indianapolis-Titan’s General Manager Mike Borgonzi worked a NO-day light schedule for most of February to arrive at the NFL Scouting Combine with its draft board set.

“Phase 1,” said Borgonzi Tuesday morning at the Indianapolis Convention Center for the first step in a long way to decide how – and if – using the total election no. 1 in 2025 NFL draft.

Still open to business, Titans first focuses on free agency – that the board of available players also completed – and many needs before the official start of the 2025 league next month.

“The offensive line will be a priority for us,” said Borgonzi, who was hired in January to replace Ran Carthon and get on the same page with returning coach Brian Callahan.

The new Titans’ Braintrust has met during lunch hours to go over “profiles” for each position described by Borgonzi as the athletic, physical and mental makeup of a player. He said that the Titans will not forward a special player because he does not fit their preferred prototype. On the question directly about an acquaintance talent in this draft pool, Colorado grinned wide receiver/defensive back Travis Hunter, Borgonzi.

“He’s special,” said Borgonzi. “I don’t know if we have seen in modern football a player who could (play) both at a high level.”

A self -page of the list he inherits is largely complete, Borgonzi said, noting that he really likes the inner defensive line in place and that he spent time with coaches to find out more about who players can be in meetings and on The training field. He mentioned the broad recipient Calvin Ridley, the big ticket signed in March last year on a four-year, 92 million dollar agreement, and defensive tackles Jeffery Simmons and T’vondrre sweat as returning veterans who can help drive the team’s turn from 3- 14.

Discipline was a surral of the 20-minute session, and when he repeated the titans is very early in his evaluation process, Borgonzi said that the third year’s quarterback will Levis remain on the guard list to compete but acknowledged that the position is one that the Titans must “get it right. “This week will not play an important role in moving the first phase’s draft board in Nashville and only” small changes “would be necessary based on speed results and other tests.

Despite this, all indications from his second session with national media since joining the Titans from the Kansas City Chiefs’ Front Office are that the Titans are open to handling number 1 for further drafts of capital.

“We will always try to gather as many choices in the top 100 as we can,” Borgonzi said.

-Jeff Reynolds, Field Level Media

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