
#67 G · Tennessee Titans
Height
6'3"
Weight
303 lbs
Age
23
College
Colorado State
Draft
Undrafted
Experience
0 yrs
G Rank
#88 / 172
Grade Drew Moss
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Drew Moss grades out as a shaky G for Tennessee Titans (D+ Performance). That places him 88th of 172 graded gs. Against that production, his deal reads as fairly priced on the Contract Value Index (C+) — the team is paying below what the play would command. The public read is mixed (C+ Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score. As a prospect, expect these grades to move quickly as a real sample builds.
Total Value
$3.0M
Guaranteed
$145K
AAV
$995K/yr
Earning a C+ Contract Value Index, Drew Moss's deal reflects how Tennessee valued the position market for depth interior linemen on minimal guarantees. At $995K annually, this is effectively a replacement-level wage for a 23-year-old in his rookie season, which aligns squarely with the Titans' evaluation of him as a serviceable depth piece rather than a building block—a perception reinforced by his D+ performance grade and the circumstances of his arrival via waiver claim following Blake Hance's injury designation. The guard occupies the classic NFL depth-chart tier where positional salary floors are steep and opportunity cost is low; the Titans can cycle roster bodies through this slot without meaningful cap consequence, making the contract functionally risk-free. As a developmental-stage player still establishing himself in the league, Moss carries upside potential if he wins reps during training camp and the regular season, though the organization's recent activity targeting multiple roster spots (evidenced by recent signings across the defensive line and linebacker room) suggests Tennessee is operating in an evaluation mindset rather than projecting him as a long-term starter. The C+ CVI grade captures this duality—a contract that poses no financial penalty to the team yet offers minimal security or earning power to the player, making it an entirely typical depth arrangement for an anonymous but roster-relevant guard navigating the bottom of a 3-14 team's rebuild.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the C band — a quick read on where Drew's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Drew Moss is a 22-year-old rookie guard attempting to carve out a roster spot with the Tennessee Titans, arriving with essentially no professional experience and an enormous amount to prove at the next level. For an offensive lineman, availability and continuity are the foundational currencies of value, and Moss has yet to establish any track record of durability or reliability at the NFL level — a reality that shapes every conversation about his current standing. His grade checks in at a D+, which is reflective less of a ceiling judgment and more of the inherent uncertainty that surrounds any young interior lineman who has not yet logged meaningful professional snaps. The Titans will be watching closely to see whether Moss can absorb the complexity of an NFL blocking scheme, hold up physically against veteran pass rushers, and demonstrate the kind of week-to-week dependability that separates developmental prospects from genuine contributors. Tennessee's offensive line has been a position group in transition, which creates a realistic pathway for a young guard to see the field sooner than expected — but that opportunity will only materialize if Moss can stay healthy and show enough in camp and preseason reps to earn trust. The next six to twelve months represent a critical developmental window, and the primary question surrounding Moss isn't talent — it's whether he can build the foundation of experience necessary to become a reliable starter in this league.
Drew Moss ranks 88th of 172 graded gs by performance. That slots Drew between Caleb Rogers (D+) just ahead and Nash Jones (D) just behind.
Graded higher
Caleb RogersLas Vegas RaidersD+Sidy SowHouston TexansD+Dillon RadunzNew Orleans SaintsD+Graded lower
Nash JonesDenver BroncosDDrew Moss enters the 2026 season occupying the classic NFL depth chart limbo that earns him a **C+** sentiment grade — present on the roster but largely invisible to the broader football conversation. The Tennessee Titans guard's claim to relevance stems primarily from a waiver pickup following Blake Hance's injury, a transaction that signals the coaching staff sees functional value without suggesting he's viewed as anything more than a serviceable depth piece. Media coverage of Moss remains virtually non-existent beyond routine roster moves, which is standard territory for undrafted interior linemen trying to establish themselves in the league. The absence of negative sentiment works in his favor, as does the mild optimism inherent in Tennessee's decision to carry him on the active roster rather than stash him on the practice squad. For the Titans' offensive line room facing significant questions at multiple positions, Moss represents the type of anonymous but potentially useful depth that championship teams often rely on when injuries inevitably strike.
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Drew Moss is a player on a rookie-scale contract listed at G for the Tennessee Titans. FanVerdicts covers every NFL player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on Drew Moss, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Contract Value Index C+, Performance D+, Sentiment C+.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when NFL game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) behind the Contract Value Index read.
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