
EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsFree agent wide receiver Wan'Dale Robinson reached agreement Monday with the Tennessee Titans, reuniting him with offensive coordinator Brian Daboll, his former coach with the New York Giants.Robinson will sign a four-year, $78 million deal that invoices $38 million guaranteed, agents Adisa Bakari and Jeff Whitney told ESPN's Adam Schefter.The Titans also made major addition to their defensive line, agreeing to a three-year, $63 million contract with John Franklin-Myers that includes $42 million guaranteed, a source told ESPN's Jeremy Fowler. They also bolstered their secondary by adding cornerbacks Cor'Dale Flott and Alontae Taylor.Flott received a three-year, $45 million deal that includes $32 million guaranteed, according to NFL Network. Taylor received a three-year, $60 million contract, a source told Schefter.The move reunites Franklin-Myers with Titans coach Robert Saleh, who coached the defensive lineman with the New York Jets before he was traded to the Denver Broncos.The Titans also added a new quarterback to back up Cam Ward, reaching agreement on a two-year deal with Mitchell Trubisky, his agents told NFL Network.Robinson, 25, is coming off his most productive professional season, finishing with 92 catches for 1,014 yards and four touchdowns for the New York Giants.He also led all wide receivers with 622 yards out of the slot. That just outpaced Amon-Ra St. Brown and Puka Nacua. His production out of the slot had Robinson looking squarely at the deal the Buffalo Bills gave Khalil Shakir last year. Shakir received a four-year, $53 million deal that could be worth up to $60 million, even though he never had a 1,000-yard season on his rsum.This past season was a prove-it year for Robinson, and he showed throughout that he could also make plays on the outside and ran a more complete route tree, something he strongly petitioned for after the 2024 season when his 93 receptions resulted in 699 yards (7.5 yards per catch). Robinson averaged 11.0 yards per catch this past season and saw his air yards per target skyrocket from 4.86 to a more respectable 8.76. It led to better results, especially as Jaxson Dart's No. 1 target with Malik Nabers sidelined most of the season with a knee injury.The Giants selected the 5-foot-8 Robinson in the second round of the 2022 NFL draft out of Kentucky. He suffered a torn ACL his rookie season but has played in at least 15 games each of the past three years. Robinson has accumulated 268 catches for 2,465 yards and nine touchdowns in his first four seasons in New York.The Broncos acquired Franklin-Myers in a trade with the Jets in 2024 (for a sixth-round pick in '26) and quickly restructured his contract into a two-year, $15 million deal that expired after the 2025 season.Franklin-Myers' under-the-radar production in the Broncos' pass rush is his biggest value. His consistent inside pressure -- he was fourth on the team with 15 quarterback hits this past season -- often creates sacks for others. Zach Allen, for one, has consistently said that Franklin-Myers was one of the reasons he was the league leader in quarterback hits this past season (47).Still, Franklin-Myers had 7.5 sacks last season and 7 in 2024 to help the Broncos set franchise records for sacks in each of the last two seasons. The Broncos' 68 sacks in 2025 were just four away from the NFL's single-season record.Flott, after several years of bouncing between the slot and outside corner with the New York Giants, found a home on the outside and flourished. He's coming off his best professional season in 2025 by a wide margin.Flott, 24, started 14 games and had 11 passes defended, an interception and a forced fumble. He had a targeted EPA against him of -12.7, according to NextGen Stats. That was eighth among all outside corners with at least 200 coverage snaps and placed him directly ahead of two-time All-Pro Derek Stingley Jr. and standout corner A.J. Terrell.Taylor, 27, was a four-year starter for the New Orleans Saints as both an outside corner and a nickel corner. He started 53 of 64 games and has four career interceptions.He primarily played in the slot during the 2025 season, playing 492 inside snaps and 366 outside snaps according to ESPN's TruMedia. He began his career as an outside corner but was moved to the nickel role in 2023, although he took more snaps outside in the 2024 season.Trubisky, 31, spent the last two seasons backing up Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen, playing only when games were out of hand, coming in for kneel-downs at the end of wins and playing almost all of both Week 18 games with the team's playoff fate largely decided in each season.He also was with the Bills in 2021 as Allen's backup. Trubisky's three years in Buffalo are the only seasons of his career without a start as Allen has not missed a start since his rookie season in 2018.The No. 2 overall pick by the Bears in 2017 spent four years in Chicago, starting 50 games and throwing 64 touchdowns and 37 interceptions, while completing 64% of his passes.After his first backup year in Buffalo, Trubisky signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers, spending two seasons (2022-23) with the team. He initially earned the starting job coming out of training camp but eventually became the backup. As a Steeler, Trubisky appeared in 12 games, starting seven of them. He completed 64.1% of his pass attempts and threw eight touchdowns to 10 interceptions.ESPN's Jordan Raanan, Jeff Legwold, Katherine Terrell and Alaina Getzenberg contributed to this report.