The Tennessee Titans host the Seattle Seahawks at Nissan Stadium on Sunday at 12:00 pm local time. The riverfront starts buzzing early on a home date like this. You hear bands warming up along Broadway. You see navy jerseys mixing with a few traveling fans in lime and blue. The stakes feel simple. Protect your house, keep pace in the standings, and make the stadium feel like a wall. Nashville knows how to do all three. The walk across the bridge turns into a moving pep rally. People talk about the run game, third down defense, and the quarterback’s command at the line. They point across the water and say that is where the noise will build.
Fans will reach the gates early. They also want a place to meet, eat, sing, and talk football before and after the game. That is where Tin Roof Broadway keeps coming up.
Tin Roof Broadway is the bridge for Titans fans
Tin Roof Broadway sits right in the heart of downtown, a straight walk to the pedestrian bridge and over to Nissan Stadium. It is about a 10 to 12 minute walk when you leave with the first wave. Inside, the screens carry every early game. The staff knows Sundays. They move plates fast and keep the sound up so fans can track inactives and fantasy notes while the live band plays between breaks. Titans fans crowd the front room and the bar rail. Groups meet here, run through ride share plans, and lock in a time to step off toward the bridge.
The vibe on a home Sunday is a mix of football and music. You get a guitar solo in one corner and a table arguing red zone play calls in the other. It feels like Nashville in one room. That is the draw. It is easy to gather, it is easy to walk. It is easy to come back after the game to cool down, eat, and catch the late slate. Visitors stop in too, but the room leans navy. Locals lead the singing, locals lead the chants, and then the whole place moves toward the stadium at once.
“You hear team talk at every table here.” – said the manager.

What to order and the gameday routine
Don’t get confused in that diverse menu, start with wings or loaded nachos. Add queso, a basket of tenders, and a round of cold beer. If you want to lean into the city, grab hot chicken and a sweet tea. The move is simple. Eat early, watch the first quarter of the noon games, settle the tab, and roll out with a crowd that is walking the same direction. After the final whistle, the walk back is quick. People retell big stops, share clips, and stack plates for a second round. The band plays, the screens flip to late games, and the room turns into a postgame living room.
