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Free agent safety Quandre Diggs is fully healthy and cleared to play in 2025, Ian Rapoport of NFL Media reports.

Diggs had his 2024 season cut short with a Lisfranc injury on Nov. 3, which required surgery on his foot to repair.

He spent last season in Tennessee, signing with the Titans last August, five months after the Seahawks released him. Diggs started the first eight games of the season, totaling 42 tackles.

The Lions made Diggs a sixth-round pick in 2015, and he has appeared in 145 games with 120 starts. He has recorded 24 interceptions with 56 passes defensed and five forced fumbles.

The three-time Pro Bowler had started every possible game the four previous seasons before his injury last season.


The Titans have placed cornerback L’Jarius Sneed and center Lloyd Cushenberry on the physically unable to perform list to open training camp, the team announced on Tuesday.

Sneed is working his way back from a quad injury, but also had a clean-up procedure on his knee, General Manager Mike Borgonzi said during his Tuesday press conference.

Sneed was able to play just five games last season — his first with Tennessee — finishing with 23 total tackles.

Cushenberry is recovering from a torn Achilles suffered midway through last season. He said earlier in the offseason that he was “very optimistic” about playing in Tennessee’s season opener on Sept. 7.

Both Sneed and Cushenberry can return to the practice field at any point before teams reduce their roster to 53 players.


The Titans have agreed to terms with their second-round pick.

Via Tom Pelissero of NFL Media, edge rusher Oluwafemi Oladejo has agreed to his rookie four-year deal.

The No. 52 overall pick in this year’s draft, Oladejo’s contract is worth $8,415,106 with its first three years fully guaranteed. He also received a signing bonus of $2.76 million.

That means there are now just three 2025 draftees who have not agreed to terms: Bengals defensive end Shemar Stewart, Browns running back Quinshon Judkins, and Cardinals cornerback Will Johnson. Judkins and Johnson were second-round picks while Stewart was the No. 17 overall selection.

The Titans’ rookies and veterans report to camp on Tuesday.


We’re two days away from all 32 NFL teams having their training camps open, and five 2025 draft picks have not yet signed their rookie contracts.

In the first round, Bengals defensive end Shemar Stewart remains at an impasse with the team about contract language potentially voiding future guarantees. It’s unclear which side will blink first, but for months it has been apparent that the Bengals and Stewart strongly disagree, and there’s no sign that either side plans to cave soon.

The other four unsigned draft picks are all in the second round, where the pace of signings was slow after the first two picks of the round both got fully guaranteed rookie contracts. Those first two contracts led other second-round picks to seek more guarantees for themselves, and as a result teams were slow to get their second-round picks signed. In recent days those signings have picked up, however, and now 28 of the 32 second-round picks are signed.

The highest-drafted second-round pick who remains unsigned is Browns running back Quinshon Judkins, who might not sign any time soon because he is currently dealing with a criminal investigation into an accusation that he punched a woman. That accusation could also lead to NFL discipline against Judkins.

The other three unsigned second-round picks are Cardinals cornerback Will Johnson, Titans edge rusher Oluwafemi Oladejo and Eagles safety Andrew Mukuba. All three teams’ rookies are due to report to training camp on Tuesday.


Titans quarterback Will Levis will miss the entire 2025 season with a shoulder injury.

Levis, who was the Titans’ primary starter the last two seasons, was expected to back up first overall pick Cam Ward this year. Instead, he’ll miss the year.

“After consulting with doctors and his representatives, Will Levis has decided to undergo shoulder surgery that will sideline him for the entire 2025 season,” the Titans said in a statement. “We support his decision to focus on his long-term health. He approached the offseason with professionalism and showed clear growth as a leader. We remain confident in his full recovery.”

Levis dealt with a shoulder injury last season. It’s unclear what has happened this offseason to lead him to conclude he needs to get the shoulder surgically repaired now.

The only other quarterbacks on the Titans’ roster are Brandon Allen and Tim Boyle. The Titans will likely look for a quarterback with more experience to back Ward up.

A second-round pick in 2023, Levis’s salary is guaranteed for 2026. But while he’ll get paid the next two years, the jury is still out about whether he’ll ever play for the Titans again.