Offseason report card: Tennessee Titans

New Titans coach Ken Whisenhunt (right) will depend on Jake Locker for early success. (Mark Humphrey/AP) With the flurry of NFL offseason action nearly in the
Offseason report card: Tennessee Titans
Offseason report card: Tennessee Titans /

New Titans coach Ken Whisenhunt (right) will depend on Jake Locker for early success. (Mark Humphrey/AP)

New Titans head coach Ken Whisenhunt (r.) will depend on Jake Locker for early success. (Mark Humphrey/AP)

With the flurry of NFL offseason action nearly in the books, Chris Burke and Doug Farrar take stock of every team’s offseason. Find all our Offseason Report Cards here.

The Titans are in a pretty interesting place for a team that hasn't made the playoffs since 2008 and has a 36-44 record over the last five seasons. Head coach Mike Munchak was fired in January after refusing to accept a long-term extension that included the dismissal of several assistants, and Ken Whisenhunt was called upon to replace him. Whisenhunt's long history with quarterback development in Pittsburgh, San Diego and Arizona couldn't come at a better time, because the Titans are still trying to figure out what they have in Jake Locker, the team's first-round pick in 2011. Last season, Locker started strong but was lost for the season due to hip, knee and foot injuries. He's started just 18 games in his three-year career, and the team's recent decision to decline his fifth-year option means that this is the time to fish or cut bait. He's got one year left to prove that he's the guy, or Whisenhunt will go forward with his own preferred quarterback.

Just as important is the addition of new defensive coordinator Ray Horton, one of the most creative minds in the game. Horton and Whisenhunt worked together in Pittsburgh and Arizona, and Horton has a lot to work with. Still, the Titans will go as far as their quarterback takes them. That's encouraging, as Locker started 2013 well ... but it's also troubling that he's never been able to put up consistent stretches of above-average play, for a number of reasons.

Offseason grade: B-

Best acquisition:Wesley Woodyard, LB

The former Broncos linebacker will be an intriguing chess piece in Horton's defense; he can play and cover from the outside and rush from the inside with equal skill. In the Titans' base 3-4 defense, he'll most likely take one of the inside linebacker spots, but when Horton schemes out of base and sets variable fronts against opposing offenses (which he'll do quite often), Woodyard has the talent to play nickel 'backer from just about anywhere on the field. With Derrick Morgan and Shaun Phillips as the outside rushers and Woodyard and Zach Brown as the projected starting inside guys, Horton has some major weapons at his disposal.

Biggest loss: Alterraun Verner, CB.

That said, while the Titans have a lot of talent on the defensive side of the ball, the loss of Verner in free agency could be a blow. In 2013, Verner allowed an opposing passer rating of 55.8, third best in the league among qualifying cornerbacks behind Seattle's Richard Sherman and New England's Logan Ryan. There had been some questions as to how he would fit in a more aggressive scheme, and the cap-strapped Titans were not in the game when the Buccaneers gave him a four-year, $26.5 million deal with $14 million guaranteed. Tennessee will endeavor to replace Verner with a committee of Blidi Wreh-Wilson (who allowed an 89.6 passer rating in 2013) and Coty Sensabaugh (94.6), and that could be good news for quarterbacks around the AFC South.

MORE COVERAGE: Offseason Report Cards | NFL Power Rankings | 2015 NFL Mock Draft 

Underrated draft pick: DT DaQuan Jones, Penn State (Fourth round, 112th overall pick)

While Horton's base defense is a base 3-4, you can expect a lot of four-man nickel schemes, and that's where the 6-foot-4, 322-pound Jones comes in -- as a disruptive tackle and big end in different packages, who could be especially effective alongside the hilariously underrated Jurrell Casey. Jones dropped about 25 pounds before the 2013 season, which was a wise move -- he set career marks with 56 tackles, three sacks and 11.5 tackles for loss and led all Big Ten defensive tackles in quarterback hits.

Looming question for training camp: Can Bishop Sankey be an every-down back in the NFL?

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Doug Farrar
DOUG FARRAR

SI.com contributing NFL writer and Seattle resident Doug Farrar started writing about football locally in 2002, and became Football Outsiders' West Coast NFL guy in 2006. He was fascinated by FO's idea to combine Bill James with Dr. Z, and wrote for the site for six years. He wrote a game-tape column called "Cover-2" for a number of years, and contributed to six editions of "Pro Football Prospectus" and the "Football Outsiders Almanac." In 2009,  Doug was invited to join Yahoo Sports' NFL team, and covered Senior Bowls, scouting combines, Super Bowls, and all sorts of other things for Yahoo Sports and the Shutdown Corner blog through June, 2013. Doug received the proverbial offer he couldn't refuse from SI.com in 2013, and that was that. Doug has also written for the Seattle Times, the Washington Post, the New York Sun, FOX Sports, ESPN.com, and ESPN The Magazine.  He also makes regular appearances on several local and national radio shows, and has hosted several podcasts over the years. He counts Dan Jenkins, Thomas Boswell, Frank Deford, Ralph Wiley, Peter King, and Bill Simmons as the writers who made him want to do this for a living. In his rare off-time, Doug can be found reading, hiking, working out, searching for new Hendrix, Who, and MC5 bootlegs, and wondering if the Mariners will ever be good again.