NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The most popular question over the next month regarding the Tennessee Titans will be who they select with the No. 1 pick in the April 28 first-round.

The second-most popular question will be what the pick can bring in a trade.

Every team has its own version of the trade value chart that first became popular publicly when Jimmy Johnson was running the Dallas Cowboys.

2016 NFL DRAFT Round 1: April 28, 8 p.m. ET

Rds. 2-3: April 29, 7 p.m. ET

Rds. 4-7: April 30, noon ET

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Johnson's chart puts an incredible premium on the highest picks. Chase Stuart of Football Perspective has a Jimmy Johnson draft chart trade-value calculator, as well as its own calculator that puts what seems to be a more reasonable value on the top choices.

Let’s run through what the No. 1 pick could fetch using both calculators in a trade with three quarterback-needy teams.

TRADE WITH BROWNS

Titans give up No. 1.

Browns give up No. 2 and No. 32 (second round).

JJ calculator: 106 percent for Titans. (100 is even, anything over 100 is a “win.”)

Titans give up No. 1.

Browns give up No. 2 and No. 99 (third round).

FP calculator: 103 percent for the Titans.

I don’t see this as likely. Cleveland will get a quarterback at No. 2, probably the one it likes best. Giving up picks to move up one spot and ensure it gets its guy when there is no apparent threat to move ahead of them isn’t a Moneyball type of move, and the Browns are now operating with a Moneyball style.

If the Titans could make either of those swaps, I’d see it as a major win. The Browns take a quarterback and the Titans still get to choose the best non-quarterback on their draft board.

TRADE WITH 49ERS

Titans give up No. 1.

49ers give up No. 7, No. 37, No. 68 and next year’s first-round pick. (I valued it right in the middle, at No. 16).

JJ calculator: 109 percent for the Titans.

Titans give up No. 1.

49ers give up No. 7, No. 37, No. 68.

FP calculator: 120 percent for the Titans.

That’s a monstrous disparity, where Football Perspective sees it as a significant Titans’ win if they swap the top pick for San Francisco’s top three picks, while Johnson’s chart requires a first-rounder next year to get even close to the same “value” result.

TRADE WITH RAMS

Titans give up No. 1.

Rams give up No. 15, No. 43 (second round), No. 45 (second round) and next year’s first-round pick. (I valued it right in the middle, at No. 16.)

JJ calculator: 99 percent for the Titans.

Titans give up No. 1.

Rams give up No. 15, No. 43, No. 45.

FP calculator: 111 percent for the Titans.

Again, a big disparity between old-school and new-school thinking on value. The drop from first to 15th is significant, but even the lesser return could bring two additional starting-caliber players and would have to make one think. GM Jon Robinson’s recent comment about needing a “king’s ransom” for a big drop would certainly apply to move this far back.