Tennessee Titans don't renew GM Ruston Webster

ByPAUL KUHARSKY
January 4, 2016, 1:18 PM

— -- NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The Tennessee Titans announced Monday they will not renew the contract of executive vice president and general manager Ruston Webster, who's held the post since 2012.

"I would like to thank Ruston Webster for all of his efforts with our franchise, as he is a man of great character and integrity and someone for whom we I have tremendous respect," Titans controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk said in a statement. "Our mission is to become one of the elite franchises in the National Football League, and we have fallen short of this goal in recent years."

She said the Titans have begun their search to fill both the general manager and coaching positions this week. The team said interim coach Mike Mularkey is a candidate to remain coach and will be interviewed as part of the search process.

"We share our fans' frustration about the team's recent performance, and we are committed to doing everything we can to return our team to a perennial postseason contender," Adams Strunk said.

Tennessee's 18-46 record during Webster's tenure is tied for the second worst in the NFL.

Webster joined the Titans in 2010 as vice president of player personnel and was elevated to the GM job two season later.

While he worked under three different owners and with three different head coaches with a major defensive change halfway through his term, the Titans' draft record with Webster as GM was poor.

He drafted Marcus Mariota second overall last season and picked the team's defensive signal caller, inside linebacker Avery Williamson, in the fifth round in 2014.

But the team's No. 10 pick in 2013, Chance Warmack, has not played like a high-level guard, and the team's second-round picks from 2012-14 (linebacker  Zach Brown, receiver Justin Hunter and running back Bishop Sankey) were virtual non-contributors in 2015.

Webster's free-agent successes include tight end Delanie Walker and outside linebacker Brian Orakpo, but the team missed on picks far more frequently.

The Titans' highest-ranking football executive is now Vin Marino, the team's vice president of football administration, who manages the team's cap and negotiates contracts.

Steve Underwood was retained as CEO and president on a permanent basis, the team announced Monday.

"I feel his leadership is vital in order to move us forward," Adams Strunk said. "He has brought much-needed stability to our organization, and I look forward to progress that will be made under his leadership.