
#73 G · Tennessee Titans
Height
6'5"
Weight
310 lbs
Age
30
College
Northwestern
Draft
Undrafted
Experience
5 yrs
G Rank
#155 / 172
Grade Blake Hance
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Blake Hance grades out as a poor G for Tennessee Titans (F Performance). That places him 155th 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 negative (D- Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score.
Length
1 year
Total Value
$1.3M
Guaranteed
$525K
AAV
$1.3M/yr
The Titans landed a solid depth piece at a bargain price, with Blake Hance's one-year, $1.3M deal earning a C+ CVI that reflects steady value for a backup guard. At just over $1M annually, this contract sits comfortably in the range where teams can afford to take flyers on linemen who've shown they can step in when needed, and Hance has proven capable of filling that role across multiple stops. The minimal guaranteed money ($500K) gives Tennessee maximum flexibility while the short-term commitment allows both sides to reassess after the season. For a team that's been rebuilding its offensive line infrastructure, adding a reliable swing guard who won't break the bank makes practical sense, even if he's not moving the needle as a long-term starter. This is exactly the type of low-risk, modest-reward signing that competent front offices make to round out their depth chart without hampering future cap flexibility.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the C band — a quick read on where Blake's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Blake Hance is a 30-year-old interior offensive lineman entering his fifth NFL season, a journeyman guard who has carved out a professional career through perseverance rather than pedigree, never having been selected in the NFL Draft. His 63 career games played speak to a legitimate durability that coaches value in reserve and rotational linemen — placing him comfortably in the established starter tier of availability, even if his snaps have come in a variety of circumstances across multiple rosters. That said, Hance's overall performance grades out at the bottom of the spectrum this past season, raising real questions about whether his physical tools and technical execution are keeping pace with the demands of an NFL interior line at this stage of his career. For the Tennessee Titans, he represents the kind of depth piece that a team hopes never to rely on heavily, but whose availability in an emergency is not nothing — a 63-game veteran brings situational awareness and familiarity with NFL systems that undrafted developmental players simply cannot offer. At 30, the window for Hance to reinvent himself as a reliable starter is effectively closed, and the more realistic conversation centers on whether he can tighten his technique and assignment recognition enough to remain a viable depth option. The Titans will need to see marked improvement in his functional consistency to justify a continued roster spot as younger, cheaper linemen push for opportunities. Hance's 2024 trajectory hinges less on a breakout and more on the quiet, professional refinement that keeps a veteran on the right side of a final roster cut.
Blake Hance ranks 155th of 172 graded gs by performance. That slots Blake between Kion Smith (F) just ahead and Cody Mauch (F) just behind.
Graded higher
Kion SmithMiami DolphinsFSaahdiq CharlesCarolina PanthersFJalen RiversCincinnati BengalsFGraded lower
Cody MauchTampa Bay BuccaneersFBlake Hance's public profile sits firmly in D- territory — not because the discourse around him is actively hostile, but because it is almost entirely absent, which for a veteran offensive lineman fighting for roster relevance, amounts to the same thing. The dominant narrative driving that perception is a pair of simultaneous transactions: the Titans placing Hance on injured reserve while claiming Drew Moss off waivers, a back-to-back move that multiple credible outlets covered as straightforward roster housekeeping rather than any meaningful loss for the organization. That transactional indifference aligns directly with his on-field track record — he appeared in just four games in the 2025 season, and a performance grade of F reflects a player who never carved out a reliable starting role across five NFL seasons, leaving him with no statistical or reputational foundation to push back against being replaced. The broader roster activity in Tennessee — including guard Fernando Carmona Jr. being signed in the same late-April wave of moves — reinforces the picture of a front office actively restocking the offensive line without Hance factoring into those plans. At $1.3M annually on a minimum-tier salary, he has no contract leverage and no media constituency advocating for his return, and unless his recovery timeline opens a door elsewhere in the league, the narrative around him has effectively flatlined.
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Blake Hance is a player in his 5th NFL season 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 Blake Hance, 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 F, Sentiment D-.
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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