The Tennessee Titans have been busy evaluating players all offseason, and have already made some valuable signings ahead of the 2019 NFL Draft.

Another player who could join the Titans roster next season is former Oklahoma Sooners defensive end Amani Bledsoe.

“I’ve spoken with the D-line coach there,” Bledsoe told Titans Wire on Wednesday. “I actually went out to dinner before Pro Day with one of the scouts. The Titans are showing a lot of interest… they’re definitely top three.”

Bledsoe says he likes the defensive scheme Dean Pees is running in Tennessee, and feels that he provides a level of explosiveness and versatility that could be valuable to the team.

“I feel like they could use a player like me with as versatile as I am. I could play 3-4… really anything they ask of me,” he said. “I can play most of the positions on the line, whatever they need of me.”

Ahead of the draft, the 6-foot-5, 287-pounder has put a lot of time into perfecting the small details.

“There’s always little things you can work on. I’m working on getting extra pass rush work and working with my hands, staying more disciplined with my hands.”

While Bledsoe presents an intriguing and developmental prospect for an NFL team, some may be wary of the controversial case with the NCAA that surrounded him during his freshman year.

“Freshman year, I took a protein from a teammate,” Bledsoe said. “It was technically supposed to be legal, but there was something in it that wasn’t supposed to be in there.”

The supplement was tainted with clomiphene, an ingredient not listed on the container.

Many believe Bledsoe was simply got caught in a bad situation, but the NCAA still ruled against him and he was forced to sit out for a season.

“I wouldn’t have been at fault if I would have checked with my team doctor at first, since it’s technically supposed to be okay, but I didn’t, so I had to sit out and lose a year of eligibility.”

Sooners head coach Lincoln Riley couldn’t have been any more frustrated with circumstances.

“Yeah, it has been frustrating,” he said Tuesday on the Big 12 post-spring teleconference. “I mean, and it’s probably just more of the personal side. You know this kid. This is a kid that through his entire career was never on one [bad] list, never missed a class, never missed a workout, I mean, just as good as you could draw him up, just did everything right. And to see him get the strictest penalty in sports for something that was, the facts of the case—it’s questionable at best—yeah, it is frustrating.”

Bledsoe started all 14 games of his senior season, recording 37 tackles, four for loss, two sacks and seven pass breakups.

On his college career with the Sooners, Bledsoe totaled 59 tackles, 7.5 for loss, four sacks and eight pass breakups.

Bledsoe is projected to be selected by a team between the fourth and sixth rounds.