Making a successful comeback after an ACL tear kept him off the field in 2022, Harold Landry is suddenly at a career crossroads. The quality edge rusher has resumed his career as a dependable pass rusher, doing so while on back-to-back struggling Titans teams.
With two years remaining on what was viewed as a team-friendly contract at the time of signing (2022), Landry has joined Cooper Kupp, Deebo Samuel and Jonathan Allen in being given permission to shop around. The Titans are granting Landry permission to find a trade partner, ESPN.com’s Adam Schefter reports.
The Titans finished 3-14 last season, down from 6-11 in Mike Vrabel‘s finale. They have squandered some quality Landry efforts, as he has racked up 19.5 sacks since returning from ACL rehab. Landry has not missed a game over that span, putting to rest much of the concern about being recovered from the injury.
Two seasons remain on Landry’s four-year, $87.5MM extension — one signed just before free agency in 2022. He is due a $17.5MM base salary in 2025. The Titans have paid out the guarantees on their top edge rusher’s contract. Tennessee has relied on Landry to anchor its edge-rushing corps throughout his career, having been unsuccessful in landing a complementary piece for much of that period. Additions like Bud Dupree and Jadeveon Clowney did not pan out. Arden Key is currently in that spot; one season remains on his three-year contract.
Going into his eighth season, Landry is 28. He would stand to generate trade interest for a Titans team squarely in rebuild mode after firing a GM (Ran Carthon) for the second time since December 2022. Both the HC and GM who drafted Landry and were in place when he signed his extension are gone. As Josh Sweat leads the way in terms of free agent edges available (all due respect to 34-year-old Khalil Mack), teams seeking help at this premium position can now target Landry in a swap. The Landry news also comes as the Chargers face an uncertain future with Joey Bosa.
Edge rusher fireworks continue this offseason, one that has already included Myles Garrett requesting a trade out of Cleveland. (The Browns are not planning to honor that request.) Joe Burrow also continues to push the Bengals to extend Trey Hendrickson, who joins T.J. Watt and Micah Parsons in a contract year. While Landry has not proven to be in that class, he is not too far off. The 2018 second-round pick produced a career-high 12 sacks in 2021 — before adding 1.5 in a Titans divisional-round loss to the Super Bowl-bound Bengals.
The Boston College product has also proven reliable, even as the Titans have crumbled around him. As Tennessee has struggled to keep key players healthy and to find a post-Ryan Tannehill QB solution, Landry has maintained his form. A team acquiring Landry would have two years of control left as well, though the prospect of an updated contract will undoubtedly come up. Landry is now the NFL’s 16th-highest-paid edge defender.
If the Titans and Landry can find a trade partner, connections to Penn State edge rusher Abdul Carter stand to heat up. Carter will be a player the Titans consider at No. 1 overall, despite the organization not seeing Will Levis fill its QB need. While Travis Hunter will be in that mix as well, Tennessee has also been closely tied to trading down. Teams have reached out about the top pick already. Landry would add notable draft capital if moved, as the Titans attempt a rebuild under new GM Mike Borgonzi.