football

Carnell Tate, who was willing to "give up the bank" for 17, settled on 14 with Titans

Yahoo Sports

Titans receiver Carnell Tate, one of my personal favorite 2026 prospects because of his Lego habit, said in the hours before he was drafted that he would "give up the bank" to get his preferred number, 17, at the next level.

Titans receiver Carnell Tate, one of my personal favorite 2026 prospects because of his Lego habit , said in the hours before he was drafted that he would " give up the bank " to get his preferred number, 17, at the next level. Ultimately, Tate didn't even make teammate Chimere Dike an offer. At rookie minicamp, Tate told reporters that he didn't want to " bother " Dike with it.

Instead, Tate picked No. 14 for his "new team, new journey. " Tate said 14 was the "best number available.

" He also said it made sense because his mother was born on November 14, and because he was taken by the Titans in round 1, pick 4. Dike, for his part, may have been ready to start the bidding. Tate said he was willing to pay in the " upper hundred thousands " for 17.

On one hand, a player's number doesn't mean anything. On another hand, it means everything. For a player who has become identified with a given number, or who has made that number part of his own personal identity, it's an adjustment to change it.