Risk Flags
6- Depth Chart
Mullings is firmly buried behind Tony Pollard (1,079 rushing yards in 2024) and Tyjae Spears on the depth chart with minimal rookie-season involvement (only 3 carries for 7 yards in 2025). He's competing for a backup role that offers no clear path to touches.
- Receiving Deficit
Mullings was a nonfactor as a receiver at Michigan (8-67-0 on 14 targets). He is raw and could struggle as a receiver, and to take on a bigger workload he must refine his pass-catching skills and route-running.
- Draft Capital
The 2026 R5P25 selection of Nicholas Singleton out of Penn State directly threatens Mullings' developmental-back path; Singleton carries materially higher draft pedigree (value 2830 vs Mullings' 309) and is the youth piece Tennessee is grooming as Pollard/Spears age out.
- Draft Threat
The Titans hold the No. 4 overall pick in the April 23 draft and are strongly linked to Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love (unanimous All-American, 4.36 speed). If Love lands in Tennessee, Mullings becomes RB4 with a near-zero path to carries.
- Roster Security
With Pollard, Spears, Singleton (R5P25), and Michael Carter all ahead on the depth chart, Mullings is the fifth or sixth RB on Tennessee's roster. He faces a serious cut risk heading into 2026 training camp with virtually zero NFL production to argue his case.
- Draft Capital Threat
The Titans' R5P25 selection of Nicholas Singleton is a direct competitive threat — unlike a pure goal-line specialist, Singleton has three-down upside with legitimate pass-catching ability, making him redundant with every role Mullings could theoretically fill including the receiving back and change-of-pace niche.