Duval! Oh, let’s be real, the Jacksonville Jaguars do not have any expectations this season. They might have a decent future with new general manager James Gladstone and head coach Liam Coen, but Trevor Lawrence is the epitome of a low-ceiling quarterback. I will never know why Trent Baalke gave him a desperate contract extension to make him one of the highest paid players in the league, but it is never a good thing when you still do not know if he can be the face of your franchise. He is okay, but until he finally maximizes his potential, he is an average quarterback at best. 


It should not be the case because the offense around him is decent. They have a talented running back tandem of Travis Etienne and Tank Bigsby, their number one option Brian Thomas Jr. has become the focal point of their passing attack, and even Brenton Strange put in good production down the stretch of last year. Unfortunately, there was a lot of turnover on that side of the ball in the offseason. They released Christian Kirk, Evan Engram, and Gabe Davis; three guys that Jacksonville hoped would improve the offense. That is why they traded up with the Browns for the second overall pick to select Travis Hunter. The Heisman winner is expected to play both sides of the ball, but if he can become the security blanket for Lawrence that he was for Shadeur Sanders in Colorado, the investment will be a gold mine. The Jaguars also kept around Parker Washington and signed Dyami Brown to make sure they still have decent depth options. In regards to the offensive line, it was probably the only silver lining from last season, giving up the ninth fewest sacks in football, and I think it got stronger with the signing of Patrick Mekari as a free agency. Trevor Lawrence will be this offense’s X factor because if he still does not show that he has what it takes to be a top ten quarterback in this league, then the new regime will not be afraid to look for his replacement pretty fast.


 However, I do not think that their offense is the biggest issue with this football team. I thought Ryan Nielsen could at least clean up a few things with their defense, but it looked like it got worse when he arrived. They quickly sent him out the door and replaced him with Anthony Campanile, but this is the first time he has been an NFL defensive coordinator in his coaching career, so he has a lot to prove. Over the last two years, the Jaguars defense has literally been two guys: Josh Hines-Allen and Travon Walker. They thought Arik Armstead would help things out but he was a no-show. I think that Emmanuel Ogbah and Dennis Gardeck can slightly improve things, but that is not even my biggest concern. It is not the run defense either, although that needs to make a drastic turnaround as well. Devin Lloyd has not panned out the way everybody hoped and Foyesade Oluokun did not have that great of a 2024 season either, so maybe the scheme Campanile installs could fix that immediately. According to him, it is a 4-3 with some 3-4 spacing, but who knows if that approach is going to work. But the biggest weak link is their secondary. As I said, Hunter is a two-way player, so you know that he is going to be thrown into the fire right away and is expected to be their top shutdown corner. That should take the pressure off of Montaric Brown and Jourdan Lewis, but who else is there? Darnell Savage? Tyson Campbell? Eric Murray? That is really the biggest reason why I am so low on the Jaguars. It is a defense that has been a mess over the last seven years and the head coach is not a guy that prides himself on that side of the ball.


Travis Hunter might be a generational talent, but this is not the Big Twelve. What I mean by that is he is going to experience a lot more strife and adversity than success at least for this upcoming season. I hope that I am wrong about this because I hate it when this team is a laughing stock, but this is their reality right now.