NFL: Titans hire Ran Carthon as general manager

Date:

Share post:


The Tennessee Titans are hiring San Francisco 49ers director of player personnel Ran Carthon to be their next general manager, multiple reports said Tuesday.

Carthon, who turns 42 next month, is a former NFL running back who has also served as a scout for the Atlanta Falcons and director of player personnel for the St. Louis/Los Angeles Rams.

Carthon had been with San Francisco since May 2017. He started as the director of pro personnel before being promoted to director of player personnel ahead of the 2021 season.

The Titans began the 2022 season 7-3 before losing their final seven games to bottom out at 7-10 and miss the playoffs. During that slide, they fired general manager Jon Robinson on Dec. 6, 10 months after giving him a contract extension.

Another candidate for Tennessee was its own director of player personnel, Monti Ossenfort, but Ossenfort was hired as the Arizona Cardinals’ general manager on Monday.

Carthon appeared in nine NFL games across 2005 and 2006 for the Indianapolis Colts. He scored two touchdowns among his 16 carries in those games. He played collegiately at Florida.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: No. 24 UNLV aims to stay in conference title picture vs. San Jose State

No. 24 UNLV doesn't control its destiny in terms of a Mountain West Conference championship game berth, but...

NCAAF: Georgia Tech edges NC State on Aaron Philo’s late TD run

Aaron Philo scrambled for a go-ahead 18-yard touchdown with 22 seconds left, helping Georgia Tech beat North Carolina...

NCAAF: No. 1 prospect Bryce Underwood flips from LSU to Michigan

Five-star quarterback Bryce Underwood, the No. 1 overall prospect in the 2025 class, reneged on his commitment to...

NCAAF: Rivals UCLA, USC to clash, this time as Big Ten squads

Crosstown rivals Southern California and UCLA meet for the 94th time and the first as Big Ten Conference...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.