Titans 2026 Season Opener Revealed: How NFL set up the Robert Saleh era for the most dramatic possible start vs Jets who fired him

The Titans vs. Jets matchup was always going to have a ton of narrative juice attached to it. But the NFL just made this revenge game even juicier with their 2026 schedule release announcement.

Easton Freeze Tennessee Titans Beat Writer
Add as preferred source on Google
Tennessee Titans coach Robert Saleh speaks with the media before the Titans Rookie Camp Day 1 at Vanderbilt Health Football Center in Nashville, Tenn., Friday, May 1, 2026.

It’s NFL Schedule release day, and the Titans opener is already out.

Bleacher Report’s Jordan Schultz reported the Titans will have a Week 1 home opener against the New York Jets, setting up a bevy of fascinating narratives. There’s revenge, there’s overly-emotional stakes, there’s a big change from the way 2025 began, and there’s nowhere to hide for Saleh’s new team. Let’s dive into the drama.

Titans get high-risk home opener revenge game

The top headline for this game was always going to be the revenge angle. Robert Saleh, who was fired and essentially left behind overseas by the Jets in 2024, is being given an immediate opportunity to stick it to his old employers now that he’s back in the driver’s seat. But he isn’t alone…

GM Mike Borgonzi traded CB Jarvis Brownlee Jr. to the Jets before the Titans had even played a full month of football last season. That divorce had ugly undertones of character concerns and “a bad locker room fit”. I’d bet there isn’t a more motivated player on either sideline in this game than Brownlee.

But his former-turned-current teammate DT T’Vondre Sweat might challenge him for that title. Sweat finished out his second season with Tennessee, but was traded in a player-for-player trade during the NFL Scouting Combine this season. EDGE Jermaine Johnson was the player New York sent back in that trade, so you can bet he’ll have this one circled as well. The revenge motivation in this game is just fantastic.

The Jets are one of the league’s worst teams of the past decade plus, but are still one of it’s largest markets. So the NFL is always looking for ways to inject juice into their schedule, as demonstrated by their long track record of Week 1 revenge spots. From Darrelle Revis, to Sam Darnold, to Aaron Rodgers, to this year’s royal rumble match headlined by Saleh, the NFL loves doing this.

Now let’s get to the obvious crash-out potential that this game has gifted us with. The artificial stakes are glorious.

Let’s get one thing clear: there is no such thing as a must-win Week 1 game. The season is long, Week 1 is a liar, and the only thing that turns an opener into a must-win is when fans delude themselves into making it so.

And that’s exactly what fans of both teams are liable to do with this game.

There are just too many personal storylines tangled up here for somebody’s pride not to take a massive hit with a loss. Close your eyes for a moment and imagine: how viral will a Jarvis Brownlee interception be? Or what if Wan’Dale Robinson breaks his ankles on a big route? How about Jermaine Johnson making a big play against his former team? Or even juicier yet, what happens when T’Vondre Sweat bowls through the Titans’ perilously uncertain interior offensive line to sack Cam Ward?

The bottom line reality for both of these teams is that they each are fighting to return to the big boy table this season, and that requires steady improvement. They’re each likely to lose plenty of games this season, some probably in embarrassing fashion. Returning to competency involves growing pains, especially when there’s been so much turnover organizationally. So a loss here shouldn’t be the end of the world, but it’s currently May and the internet masses have already made up their minds:

This is the blessing and the curse of getting the opposite of what the Titans had to open with last season. 2025’s opening gauntlet was a trial designed to break them. They played the conference championship-bound Broncos on the road in Week 1. Then they hosted the conference championship-bound Rams in Week 2. Then they faced the juggernaut version of the Colts. And their ‘easiest’ matchup of September was a get-right game for the defensively suffocating Texans.

This opener is the exact opposite setup. You’re being gifted a home matchup against the QB who had the worst 2025 season in the league relative to expectations, and the head coach who everybody on the planet expects to see fired at some point during the season. It feels like a gimme! And yet, if you actually look at the Jets’ offensive roster, this isn’t a barren team!

The NFL found a way to set the Titans, a team who should have very conservative expectations of their own, up for a must-win narrative in Week 1. If they triumph, overreaction Monday will be a day of shouts declaring the Titans are back thanks to saviors Saleh and Ward. If they lose, I fear nobody will care how the team actually looked; the city of Nashville will be consumed by panic. Either way, I cannot wait for Titans football that actually means something to be back again.