The goal for every team in the NFL should be to win a Super Bowl. Unfortunately, only one team can do so each season, but every team in the league can get themselves closer to that goal after every season. Every team reinforces their roster in the offseason during free agency and/or the NFL Draft.

But sometimes, a team is good enough that they push their chips to the center and look to make more moves to bolster their roster during the season. An example of this just happened when the Philadelphia Eagles agreed to a trade with the Tennessee Titans to acquire All-Pro safety Kevin Byard with the NFL deadline approaching.

Teams like the Eagles, who are competitive and have a roster ready to win, can afford to part ways with draft capital. But for other teams, the quickest way to get into Super Bowl contention is to trade ready-made contributors for extra draft ammunition and to clean up their salary cap sheet. That's what the Titans did with their trade of Byard. They are a team that should continue to add draft picks and look to make more trades at the trade deadline. There are a few others who should do the same.

Tennessee Titans

The Titans likely aren't going far this season. They have a -13 point differential on the year. The Jacksonville Jaguars are three games ahead of them in the win column as well. To make matters worse, Ryan Tannehill suffered a high ankle sprain in Tennessee's Week 6 loss to the Baltimore Ravens and is projected to miss even more time after Tennessee's Week 7 bye. It does seem like they see the writing on the wall with this trade of Kevin Byard, however.

Byard was entering the final season of his contract in 2023. They could've gotten out of his contract next offseason for nothing, but instead they at least managed to get some draft capital in return. Derrick Henry, a running back who is about to turn 30-years-old, is also on the last year of his contract. Ryan Tannehill is in the same boat as well. It would make a lot of sense for the Titans to get some extra picks for Henry while they can too.

They drafted Will Levis in the second round of the 2023 NFL Draft a year after drafting Malik Willis in the third round of the 2022 NFL Draft with the hopes of either establishing themselves as their franchise quarterback. They could dish Ryan Tannehill to a team like the New York Jets, or another team that loses their starting quarterback to injury. They aren't going anywhere.

Another component to factor in is the fact the Titans have a new general manager running the show. Ran Carthon was hired from the 49ers' front office after the Titans let former GM Jon Robinson go. Carthon isn't as invested in this iteration of the Titans as Robinson was; most new GMs are when they inherit a team. That should make the front office more willing to take on a tear down. The Titans aren't going anywhere. At least they recognize it and are doing something about it.

Denver Broncos

Another team that recognizes it isn't going anywhere is the Denver Broncos. The Broncos have already begun a fire sale; they traded Randy Gregory to the San Francisco 49ers for a late-round pick swap and straight-up waived Frank Clark. They likely aren't done either. Wide receivers Jerry Jeudy and Courtland Sutton have been the subject of trade rumors ever since the Broncos hired Sean Payton to be their new head coach. And with a defense that has struggled mightily for the majority of the season, players like Justin Simmons and even Patrick Surtain II have seen their names thrown in trade talks.

The Broncos shouldn't entertain trading Surtain II, but it would make sense to move on from those other players with their current situation. Denver is 2-4 and already four games behind the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC West. A loss to them again in Week 8 would make it five games. 12 teams in the AFC already have more wins than the Broncos right now. They have all the incentive in the world to recoup some of the draft capital they lost in the Russell Wilson trade fiasco. They already have begun that process and should continue to do so even more before the trade deadline.