The Tennessee Titans have a solid track record of great running backs coming through the organization—especially going back to their days as the Houston Oilers. However, several wide receivers get overlooked in the discussion of great players in Titans history.

Here's a look at the five best receivers in Titans history.

5. Haywood Jeffires (1987-95)

The first name to appear on the list is Haywood Jeffires, a former member of the Oilers.

Jeffires was the 20th overall selection of the 1987 NFL Draft by Houston and, after a few underutilized seasons in the pros, the North Carolina State product began to make an impact in the league.

In Jeffires' third year in the NFL, he caught 47 passes for 619 receiving yards, scoring just twice. The next season, though, Jeffires began turning into a great throwing weapon for star quarterback Warren Moon, putting up over 1,000 yards on 74 receptions, scoring eight times. The year after that, Jeffires became a first-time Pro Bowler along with an All-Pro First Team selection—kicking off a string of three consecutive Pro Bowl appearances.

Jeffires would lead the league in receptions (100) in 1991 and spent nine seasons with the Oilers before moving onto the New Orleans Saints. Jeffires is the franchise's fifth leader in receiving yards and is tied for second in touchdown receptions.

4. Ken Burrough (1971-81)

Next up on the list of the Titans' best receivers is Ken Burrough, who had the opposite career trajectory as Jeffires. Burrough was a 10th overall pick by the Saints in the 1971 draft but was sent over to Houston in a trade following his first NFL season.

Burrough then spent 11 years with the Oilers, twice earning Pro Bowl nods and leading the league in receiving yards once, in 1975, with 1,063, and leading the team in receiving eight times. The Florida native was also a part of an Oilers gang that reached three consecutive postseasons towards the end of his tenure, losing the conference title game two years in a row.

Burrough retired after the 1981 NFL season and became one of the last two players two wear No. 00 after a rule change and jersey restrictions. He sits with the third-most receiving yards and tied for second-most touchdown receptions in franchise history.

3. Charley Hennigan (1960-66)

Charley Hennigan spent his entire professional career competing for the then-AFL Houston Oilers. An undrafted free agent out of Northwestern State, the 6-foot-1 wide receiver joined the expansion Oilers in 1960, dazzling onlookers with 722 receiving yards on 44 catches for six touchdowns in his rookie season.

The next season, Hennigan followed up with one of the greatest seasons for a wideout in football history—not even just for his era. Hennigan caught 82 receptions for 1,746 yards, scoring 12 touchdowns and averaging an eyebrow-raising 124.7 yards per game in 14 appearances in 1961 en route to both Pro Bowl and first-team All-Pro appearances.

Hennigan was the team's leading receiver in the franchise's second-ever season—the same year they won a second straight AFL title.

Hennigan called it a career after seven seasons with the Oilers, recording the fourth-most receiving yards in franchise history along with the most touchdown receptions for the Oilers/Titans. He would truly be No. 1 if he stuck around a little longer.

2. Ernest Givins (1986-94)

The second-best receiver in Titans/Oilers history is Ernest Givins, another iconic pass-catcher tied to Warren Moon.

Givins is the franchise's leader in receiving yards (7,935) and has the third-most touchdown receptions (46). The Louisville product was selected in the second round of the 1986 draft by the Oilers, where he had an electric debut season, amassing 61 catches for over 1,000 receiving yards, scoring three touchdowns.

Strangely enough, Givins' first year in the pros was technically his best in terms of yardage, although he would eclipse his rookie receptions figure four times in his 10-year career.

Givins was also a two-time Pro Bowler, both selections coming in the early 1990s. After nine seasons with the franchise, Givins returned to his home state of Florida, where he spent a single season with the Jacksonville Jaguars before retiring.

1. Drew Hill (1985-91)

That leaves us with the best receiver in Titans/Oilers history: a teammate of Givins, Drew Hill.

Hill had a fascinating career, first entering the NFL as the 328th overall pick in the 1979 draft out of Georgia Tech by the Los Angeles Rams, where he spent five seasons along with one where he missed a campaign due to injury. A two-time Pro Bowl selection, he joined Moon, Givins, and Jeffires in 1985, spending seven seasons in Houston and recording more than 1,000 yards receiving five times. He also was the first player to score a touchdown in the three decades of the 1970s, '80s, and '90s.

After the Oilers, Hill went to home state's Atlanta Falcons for two seasons before retiring, where he possesses the Titans/Oilers' second-most receiving yards franchise record and tied for second-most receiving touchdowns. Hill, sadly, passed away in March 2011 at the age of 54 due to complications with a stroke.