Jaguars Reacts Survey: How do you feel about Brian Thomas Jr. so far in 2025?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Jaguars fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Jaguars fans — are you confident the team is headed in the right direction?

And how do you feel about Brian Thomas Jr. having 60 yards through the first two games of 2025?

Among 149 NFL players with 5+ targets this season, Thomas ranks dead last with a 27.8% catch rate.

Even more disturbing than the numbers is the film. There were multiple instances during Jacksonville’s Week 2 loss in which Thomas seemingly shied away from contact.

“We’re going to have a conversation here shortly,” coach Liam Coen said Monday. “I think ultimately, I know he’s kind of got a, he’s got a couple things going on, had a wrist injury going into the game and did that play a part in some of this stuff? I’ve got to go talk to him, but I think he’s aware of it and needs to have a better week this week. I think he understands what’s at stake, he understands what’s going on and we got to go get to the root of it.”

Hopefully, this will just be a short span of poor performances that we can laugh about later.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...you-feel-about-brian-thomas-jr-so-far-in-2025
 
Jaguars dip in NFL power rankings entering Week 3

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The Jaguars 1-1 with fresh wounds. The first loss of Liam Coen’s head coaching was ugly, disappointing, and far too familiar — Jake Browning beat the Jags for the second time in 650 days.

Next up is a 0-2 Texans squad that will surely put up a fight in the divisional bout.

As Week 3 approaches, we rounded up the latest NFL power rankings to get a sense of how the Jaguars are viewed nationally.

CBS Sports: 19 (last week: 15)​


From Pete Prisco:

Losing to the Bengals the way they did will sting for a while. They had no business losing that game against a backup quarterback. They have to get Brian Thomas Jr. out of his funk.

USA Today: 19 (18)​


From Nate Davis:

The second week of the grand Travis Hunter Experiment included three catches and a killer pass interference infraction on defense that sustained Cincinnati’s game-winning drive. Not trying to pick on the rookie, but other teams clearly will in the time being.

The Athletic: 19 (19)​


From Josh Kendall and Chad Graff:

Maybe this is going too far, especially after a loss, but we are here today to overreact. While Johnson has yet to get the Bears going, Coen’s new team leads the league in rushing EPA (0.17 per carry), and Travis Etienne leads the league with 214 rushing yards. This is the same player who had 558 rushing yards in 15 games last season. Trevor Lawrence and Brian Thomas Jr. don’t seem to be getting along, but this team can run the ball.

Yahoo Sports: 22 (15)​


From Frank Schwab:

Trevor Lawrence’s awful interception in the end zone was something a rookie in his first game shouldn’t do. Head coach Liam Coen already seems frustrated with Lawrence’s inaccuracy. Sunday was a really bad loss, and not just because the Jaguars couldn’t close out the Joe Burrow-less Bengals.

NFL.com: 23 (22)​


From Eric Edholm:

Trevor Lawrence wasn’t perfect Sunday, missing some throws, but he battled all game, even with two interceptions. Liam Coen’s reaction to one Lawrence overthrow late in the game (and Lawrence waving Coen off) caught some social media fire, but both men tried to downplay it Monday morning. Coen’s decision to go for it, up three deep in Cincinnati territory, can be questioned, but I think he made the right call. Brian Thomas Jr., however, has been disappointing through two games, dropping Lawrence’s fourth-down pass and now has only five receptions this season on 19 targets. Coen said Monday that Thomas was dealing with a wrist injury, which might explain why he didn’t come down with plays he typically makes. Thomas and Lawrence still have work to do, ironing out their connection, as Coen and Lawrence might, as well. Both relationships are crucial to the team’s success, and the Jags suddenly have some issues after letting a 2-0 record slip through their fingers Sunday.

ESPN: 23 (22)​


From Mike DiRocco:

Lawrence has been far from perfect — he’s completing only 58.9% of his passes and has thrown three interceptions this season. But Coen has said after each game that Lawrence has run the offense efficiently, changed plays correctly when needed and made throws into tight windows. He has also been hurt by a league-high five drops from his receiving corps. Coen wants to see more consistency from his starting QB, but he also said, “We can win with [Lawrence] playing like that.”

Bleacher Report: 23 (23)​


From Kris Knox:

The Jacksonville Jaguars’ Week 1 win over the Carolina Panthers looks like a total mirage—or, merely a referendum on the Panthers—after Sunday’s meltdown against the Cincinnati Bengals.

It doesn’t look like we’re going to see a quick turnaround in Jacksonville.

Playoff-caliber teams don’t knock Joe Burrow out of the game, watch backup Jake Browning throw a trio of interceptions and lose. This wasn’t just a failure by Jacksonville’s defense either.

Trevor Lawrence continues to play below expectations, and Liam Coen didn’t seem thrilled with his quarterback’s performance in Cincinnati. If the Jags can’t lead with their offense, they’re going to have a hard time even contending in their own division.

Sports Illustrated: 24 (16)​


From Conor Orr:

It’s hard for me to not make a big deal out of plays that Tavis Hunter looks misaligned, or Brian Thomas Jr. looks like he’s not running into contact, or Trevor Lawrence looks like he doesn’t care what his head coach is telling him on the sidelines. While no one is expecting a finished product, this would be the story in the NFL in terms of social-emotional matters had we not already seen a Dolphins players-only team meeting.

The Ringer: 24 (21)​


From Diante Lee:

If you came away from Sunday’s loss frustrated with receiver Brian Thomas Jr. and his lack of production in key situations, I can’t blame you. His drop on fourth-and-5 gave the Bengals an opportunity to take the lead, and it seemed like Thomas was uninterested in trying to make any contested catch over the middle. But there are two sides to the coin, and quarterback Trevor Lawrence was erratic as a passer, especially when he was pressured or flushed out of the pocket. Head coach Liam Coen’s job isn’t just to build an effective offensive system (on that front, it’s so far, so good) but he needs to hold Lawrence accountable after performances that belie his talent level.

Pro Football Talk: 24 (25)​


From Mike Florio:

Liam Coen is already learning how to act like a seasoned coach — blame the media for noticing the dysfunction coming from his own team.

Where would you rank the team, Jaguars fans? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ars-dip-in-nfl-power-rankings-entering-week-3
 
5 Questions with Red Battle Blog: What we learned about the Texans

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As the Jacksonville Jaguars prepare to host the Houston Texans in Week 3, we sat down with Scott Barzilla of Battle Red Blog to learn more about the opposing side.

The Texans have lost two close games to two good teams. Is that a fair synopsis of Houston’s 0-2 start, or are there serious lingering issues?

I think more than one thing can be true at the same time. I think the Texans did lose to two playoff teams, so it isn’t time to go running off the cliff yet, but there are some serious lingering issues. I think this team is overly reliant on the defense being great and it hasn’t been great in the first two weeks. They have been legitimately good so far, but great defenses get off the field. Great defenses force turnovers. They haven’t done that yet this year and have not consistently gotten off the field. There is a path to victory for those kinds of teams, but the fact that we can list them on one hand probably is not confidence-inspiring. This team will eventually need the offense to show up consistently. At least six of their points could be attributed to great special teams plays, so the offense will need to generate more than 13 points on its own to win consistently.

What were expectations for new offensive coordinator Nick Caley entering the season, and how has that side of the ball looked so far?

I think the expectations may have been unrealistic if hindsight is 20/20. I think there was a lot of wishful and magical thinking. Essentially, the problems in 2024 were laid at Bobby Slowik’s feet and the expectation was that Caley would clean up those issues. That obviously hasn’t happened yet. Shockingly, cutting the offensive line budget nearly in half has not created better blocking. New offensive coordinators take time to learn and grow into the job. Realistically, that wasn’t going to happen in week one. There are familiar issues we have seen throughout the last few seasons. The team does not sustain a running game consistently and that puts more pressure on Stroud. Stroud is probably more like most quarterbacks than the elite quarterbacks of the sport. When he has time to throw and a credible running game he can look very good. When he doesn’t have those things then he doesn’t look as good.

The Texans are absolutely loaded on defense. Is there an Achilles’ heel for that unit, or do they seem championship-ready?

Anyone who saw Monday night’s game saw the Achilles heel. The Texans have studs at nearly every level of the defense except the interior of the defensive line. Those guys make plays and are actually adept pass rushers but they are not stout against the run. That means that DeMeco Ryans has to cheat and play more guys in the box in order to stop the run. Fortunately, he has some great cover corners and some solid safeties, but if you can gash the Texans for 4-6 yards per rush then you can neutralize that pass rush at least some. Like any good defense, they are going to get you sometimes, but you can win the game by avoiding the horrible turnovers that often change the complexion of games.

Who’s an under-the-radar player or two that Jaguars fans should watch for on Sunday?

There is probably very little that is a surprise in the division, so I will focus on new faces. Woody Marks made some nice plays on Monday which included a huge catch and run out of the backfield. Nick Chubb did the same. The dynamic pass/run option with those two is intriguing. We did not see Jaylin Noel in the passing game, but he showed us some things in the return game. I imagine there will be a few plays dialed up to get him the football in the passing game. On defense, the primary newcomer is C.J. Gardner-Johnson. He was a ball hawk in Philadelphia, so I imagine we will see that at some point this season.

Do you expect the Texans to cover as 1.5-point underdogs, and do you have a specific player prediction for the game?

I don’t want to touch this spread. It is too early in the season for me to determine if this is a trend or if history will take over. The Texans usually win in Jacksonville, but the first two weeks bring no confidence. FanDuel set the over/under at 43.5 and that is an easy under considering what we have seen the first two weeks. The Texans have produced 23 and 39 total points in their first two games. And while the Jags produced much more than that this week, that was against one of the worst defenses in football. I expect a low-scoring game with plenty of defensive plays on both sides. I like Will Anderson for at least one sack if anyone wants to play an individual bet.

Thanks to Scott for taking the time to answer our questions!

What are your thoughts on Week 3’s matchup, Jaguars fans? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...-battle-blog-what-we-learned-about-the-texans
 
Jaguars vs Texans Key Matchups: LSU duo set to battle it out

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The Jacksonville Jaguars welcome the Houston Texans to EverBank Stadium on Sunday as they look to bounce back from a painful loss. Here are three matchups to keep an eye on:

Brian Thomas Jr. vs Derek Stingley Jr.​

Derek Stingley covered Mike Evans on 29 of Evans' 39 routes, resulting in:

🛑 9 targets
🛑 3 receptions
🛑 36 yards
🛑 46.53 passer rating

H/T @NextGenStats pic.twitter.com/G0yUUBu9N8

— The 33rd Team (@The33rdTeamFB) September 16, 2025

It’s been a rough start to 2025 for Brian Thomas.

Fresh off the back of a 1,300 yard rookie season, Thomas has not looked like his usual Pro Bowl self during the early going of the season. After catching just four of twelve targets against the Carolina Panthers in Week 1, Thomas followed that up with just one reception against the Cincinnati Bengals – not to mention the painful 4th down drop at the goalline which ultimately cost the Jags the game. Two games does not eradicate the tape from last year nor diminish the talent Jacksonville’s star receiver possesses. But they will be hopeful that he can find his feet quickly; especially facing a divisional rival for the first time this season on Sunday.

The Texans haven’t had the most encouraging of starts to 2025 either, already enduring losses to the Los Angeles Rams and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In both cases however their defense looked fairly stout – and nobody on that side of the ball has been more impressive than Derek Stingley. The All-Pro cornerback suffered a hip injury in Week 1 shadowing Davante Adams, briefly leaving the game and entering the blue tent. He was able to return, and was even more dominant against the Bucs – erasing the usually formidable Mike Evans from the game. No doubt Stingley will be tasked with doing a similar job against Thomas on Sunday; if the Jaguars receiver can make an impact, it bodes well for the entire offense.

Travis Hunter vs Jayden Higgins​

I’ve been as hard on Travis Hunter as anyone but this is not PI and a good play by him. pic.twitter.com/ghbvzgzIxQ

— Hunter Lemley (@hunterlemley) September 15, 2025

How about some rookie on rookie action?

This is a matchup that may not have been as important had both teams not been suffering from some key injuries. The Texans have issues at receiver, with both Christian Kirk and Braxton Berrios limited all week with hamstring ailments. Neither are looking likely to feature on Sunday, meaning Kirk will not be able to go up against his former employers. Meanwhile, Jarrian Jones’ continued absence in the Jags secondary also means the Jags will be moving things around at corner too.

What all this should mean is us getting to see Jayden Higgins compete with Travis Hunter. Higgins, a second round selection for Houston in this year’s draft, has yet to really announce himself to the league with just three catches and no touchdowns this year so far. He’s a talented perimeter receiver though, and the Jaguars will need to make sure they are wary of him as the defense inevitably gives increased focus to WR1 Nico Collins. Hunter, who has seen more reps in practice on defense since Jones went down, will likely be the man tasked with covering him. We saw this increased usage last weekend, and Hunter was certainly not a liability – even including the bogus pass interference call on the final drive that tipped the scales in the Bengals’ favor. Keeping Higgins quiet will be a big win for the defense in a game that is almost always a close affair.

Liam Coen vs DeMeco Ryans​

Liam Coen calling plays ❤️#DUUUVAL

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— Andrew Gibson (@1010XLAG) September 7, 2025

Sunday should be a battle of astute offensive and defensive minds. True, the Jaguars offensive coordinator is Grant Udinski and the Texans defensive coordinator is Matt Burke. But, when it comes to gameday at least, we know these two units are led by their head coaches. Burke has been in situ since DeMeco Ryans took over in Houston in early 2023, and whilst he actually holds play calling duties for the Texans, Ryans has final oversight. Meanwhile for Jacksonville, this is undoubtedly Liam Coen’s offense and he’s the one in Trevor Lawrence’s ear each play.

Ryans has tenure on his side, and his defense looks a well-oiled machine, shipping just 34 points so far this season against pretty good offenses. It’s been a difficult unit to get the better of his two years in charge, ranking near the top of the league for turnovers, pressure and points allowed. Coen’s effect on Lawrence and co. is a work in progress, and you can’t expect to see a transformation after just two games. But it will be interesting to see how he goes about attacking the Texans on Sunday. I’m looking forward to seeing halftime adjustments in particular as these two units feel each other out. No doubt Coen will want to establish the run with Travis Etienne getting off to a hot start in 2025. Will that be possible against a seven man front that includes Will Anderson, Sheldon Rankins, Danielle Hunter et al? It’s an intriguing matchup; we’ll know a hell of a lot more about this year’s version of the Jags and their divisional hopes come Sunday evening.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ans-key-matchups-lsu-duo-set-to-battle-it-out
 
Reacts Survey Results: Jaguars fans share thoughts on Brian Thomas Jr.

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Dec 29, 2024; Jacksonville, Florida, USA; Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. (7) greets a young fan after the game against the Tennessee Titans at EverBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images

This week, we asked Jacksonville Jaguars fans how they feel about Brian Thomas Jr. having 60 yards through the first two games of 2025.

86% of fans are either “very concerned” or “a little concerned.”

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“I think [Thomas] had a better week in terms of the way we were trying to connect,” coach Liam Coen said Friday. “So, excited about his op this weekend.”

Thomas does not carry an injury designation for the game after being limited in Thursday’s practice with a wrist injury.

As for the confidence survey, 77% of fans are confident in the direction of the team — down from 94% last week.

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It’ll be fun (fingers crossed) to watch Coen’s first big test on Sunday in what will be an emotional divisional game against Houston’s fearsome defense.

“We have to be very conscientious with the edge rushers for sure,” he said, “in terms of when we want to end up pushing the ball down the field, how are we helping those guys or whatever it is. It’s just an emphasis for the quarterback, receivers, tight ends, like the timing and rhythm of the pass game needs to be sharp.

“They play a lot of zone, but they’ll also play some man, and when we get those opportunities that we have to be able to say, well, this ball has got to get out on a hitch or a hitch or two here, we don’t have much more than that, just play in and play out.”

“I have a lot of faith. I mean, in watching the tapes from last year and how some the O-line played, the guys that are back this week for us have done some nice things against those guys as well. So, it’s going to be a good battle.”

Top comments from Wednesday’s post:

JaxCommenterGuy
The knock on him coming out of college was that he would basically sit on the outside and get open on deep routes because Nabers had the attention of the defense, or would take short passes and get YAC. His route tree was either undeveloped or largely unknown.

Yes, Trevor shouldn’t throw him into big hits, and yes Coen probably shouldn’t draw up plays for our WR1 to get crushed over the middle…but maybe BTJ could also develop his own skillset so that he has a bit more time and space to not get lit up.
MalabarJag
Buy him a Jugs machine. That worked for Donovin Darius.

I’m more disappointed in Hunter, who (based on what I saw of the camp highlights and preseason) I thought had really great hands and made every difficult catch. So far, he’s only made the routine catches.
cverbra814
I don’t think how you can be anything less than extremely alarmed about BTJ if you have watched the first two games in their entirety. It’s one thing if he doesn’t trust his QB to not lead him into danger over the middle of the field, not ideal but understandable, but he’s been diving to the ground in open space near the hashes. That’s not a player who’s afraid of taking a big hit, that’s a player who’s afraid of contact period.

Big initial test for Coen to alter his scheme to accommodate BTJ shrinking his route tree. It may be time for Parker Washington to start seeing more game action.
BrevardJag321
Pulling for BTJ to snap out of it. Those hits are terrifying and TLaw does sometimes put him in some bad spots. Just got to find the sweet spot
Jaguardian
I truly believe that we as a fan base needs to see more than a spoon sized sample of BTExpress before it’s decided that he should join Dorothy and the crew to ask the Wizard for courage. It’s also astonishing that the emphasis is him as opposed to the five-year veteran generational quarterback who still can’t get his footwork right, doesn’t go through his progressions, can’t throw the ball with accuracy, is akin to a Thanksgiving turkey in the Redzone, and now possibly a new nugget: throws concussion bombs to his skill position players. Very unusual to say the least.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/nfl-r...aguars-fans-share-thoughts-on-brian-thomas-jr
 
Jaguars vs Texans: Staff roundtable and game picks for Week 3

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JACKSONVILLE, FL – DECEMBER 01: Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. (7) runs with the ball /across/during the game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Houston Texans on December 1, 2024 at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fl. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Welcome to Big Cat Country’s staff roundtable!

Today, we’re previewing Week 3’s matchup between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Houston Texans at EverBank Stadium.

What’s your biggest question about the team after its Week 2 choke job?

Travis Holmes: My biggest looming question is when will the switch click in for Trevor Lawrence and the passing game? Entering the season, I expected defensive ups and downs as things settled. But the Jaguars are currently fourth in the league in total yards per game, 14th in passing yards, 1st in rushing yards, and 7th in points per game (26.5) while their top two receivers in Thomas Jr and Hunter have been nowhere close to their ceilings. That’s both interesting and encouraging, but the question remains – when will it all click?

Gus Logue: What the heck is going on with Brian Thomas Jr.? Now that we’ve had some time to let Week 2 marinate, I’m not overly concerned about his shying away from contact. It’s something to monitor as a potential trend, but until it does become a frequent pattern, I won’t get swept up by one or two bang-bang plays. With that said, Thomas has only caught 5 of 19 targets for 60 yards this season. He has to get going for this team to get to where they want.

Henry Zimmer: The biggest question with the Jaguars right now is how they will respond after last week. In interviews, the team seemed not to think this problem would persist. Let’s see if that is the case against a team they usually struggle with.

What’s a matchup you’re looking forward to watching?

Travis
: I’m extremely curious if this will be the week that Christian Kirk is finally able to make his season debut for Houston. If I’ve had career years with an organization and then I’d been traded from that team for a lower round draft pick, I’d probably have that game circled on my calendar for a very, very, very long time. The Texans didn’t place Kirk on IR, with an assumed eye on him being out for less than four weeks. With us officially into AFC South play, I’d expect Kirk to try and go, after missing the first two games, but practicing as a limited participant on Wednesday. If the shifty slot can suit up, the battle between him and Jourdan Lewis will be popcorn-worthy and could decide the matchup.

Gus: Jacksonville’s run offense against Houston’s run defense. The Texans have allowed the highest rushing success rate in the league this season (50%) because the spine of their defense isn’t as talented as the shell. Expect the Jaguars to want to take advantage of this matchup, especially after they got away from the run in Week 2.

Henry: Who is going to beat Derick Stingley Jr.? Stingley played extremely well in primetime against the Bucs. Someone from the Jags will have to beat him eventually. With Brian Thomas Jr.’s status in the air, who is going to step up?

Who will be the biggest X-factor?

Travis
: My biggest X-factor on Sunday is Texans DE Danielle Hunter. With Walker Little coming off a game where he nearly allowed a game-changing two turnovers on Sunday to Trey Hendrickson, I guarantee that the Texans have the redzone QB hit that led to an interception and the near-strip sack fumble of Lawrence playing on repeat this week. With Little nearly surrendering two game-altering plays to an Edge just a week ago and Danielle coming off of a two-sack game with a fumble forced, don’t be surprised if this is a heavy running back and tight end chipping week for Jacksonville.

Gus: Nico Collins. Like Thomas, he has also gotten off to a slow start this season, but we know what both of those guys are capable of. Depending on Kirk’s health, Collins is the only real playmaker in Houston’s offense. The Jaguars haven’t been able to slow down opposing WR1s much through two weeks, so whether Collins can carry the Texans could decide the game.

Henry: The Jaguars’ offensive line is my X-Factor. This unit has been tremendous and a huge breath of fresh air for Jacksonville. With two games over 100 yards rushing and only one sack, the Jags will need to keep that up against a hard-hitting and quarterback-hunting defensive line.

Final score prediction?

Travis
: Jaguars 27, Texans 17

Gus: Jaguars 20, Texans 13

Henry: Jags 17, Texans 24

What are your Week 3 predictions, Jaguars fans? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ns-staff-roundtable-and-game-picks-for-week-3
 
Jaguars Rookie Report: Travis Hunter’s costly penalty & more in Week 2

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Sunday was a frustrating outing for the Jacksonville Jaguars as they fell to the Bengals 31-27, but the outlook going forward is still positive, particularly in regards to the 2025 rookie class. Travis Hunter and Bhayshul Tuten were prominent pieces in the game plan and they each impacted the game significantly, but what about the rest of the rookies? Let’s break down each of them in this week’s rookie report.

Travis Hunter

Travis Hunter’s snaps took a huge jump in Week 2 as fans got their first real look at his two-way ability against the Bengals. He played 42 snaps on offense (59%) and 43 on defense (62%) which makes him just the second player since 2006 to play at least 20 snaps on both sides of the ball.

🔥 @Edelman11 and Travis Hunter are the only two players since 2006 to have 20+ snaps on both offense and defense

(via @PFF) pic.twitter.com/0zsKBw8ozS

— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX) September 15, 2025

Hunter came down with just three of his six targets for 33 yards as his deployment in the offense still seems like a work in progress. However, on the defensive side of the ball Hunter looked impressive in his first real action against tough competition. He had two tackles and a pass deflection, which should have been two if not for a questionable pass interference call that negated what would have been a game-winning defensive play from Hunter.

The Travis Hunter takes after two weeks of play have been dramatic to say the least. I, for one, am very encouraged by his play and think it’s only a matter of time before his impact is clear on both sides of the ball.

Bhayshul Tuten

After the Tank Bigsby trade last week, we knew that rookie running back Bhayshul Tuten would see an increase in usage and boy did he take advantage of that fact. His snap count on offense jumped from four in Week 1 to 18 on Sunday.

He had eight carries for 42 yards (5.3 ypc) and turned both of his targets in the screen game into highlight plays. The first one he took 24 yards while making several Bengals miss in the process, and the second was perhaps the highlight of the game as he caught the screen and made a filthy move on a defender before accelerating through another on his way to his first NFL touchdown.

It is truly Tuten szn pic.twitter.com/3gvq7J9IOs

— whirlybird (@HashTaguars) September 15, 2025

Tuten’s burst, contact balance and speed are already evident and if not for Travis Etienne’s terrific start this season he may be in line to get starters carries. Even so, his ability is going to be a valuable element of this offense all season long

Jack Kiser

Linebacker Jack Kiser continues to be solely a special teams contributor as he logged 17 snaps on that unit and didn’t see any action on defense. He didn’t register a tackle and was on a kickoff unit that allowed three different 30+ yard kick returns to Samaje Perine so a less-than-impactful day for the former Fighting Irish captain.

Rayuan Lane III

Like Kiser, Lane was used primarily on special teams as he tallied 22 total snaps between the kickoff and punt teams. He did register one tackle but it came when Samaje Perine was already passed the 30 yard line. The kick coverage unit as a whole needs to have a bounce back game against the Texans so look for more aggression from Lane in Week 3.

Jonah Monheim

The center out of USC was used exclusively on the field goal unit and he did a nice job of maintaining his responsibility as Cam Little went 4/4 on his field goals and 2/2 on extra points.

LeQuint Allen Jr.

Despite the Tank Bigsby trade, LeQuint Allen Jr. saw about the same usage as he had in Week 1 as he had 11 total offensive snaps against the Bengals. That resulted in two carries for 13 yards but he was primarily used as an extra blocker on passing downs. His willingness to get into the ribs of larger defenders is already paying dividends as Trevor Lawrence has taken just one sack through two games this season.

Let us know your thoughts on the rookies in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...-travis-hunters-costly-penalty-more-in-week-2
 
Jaguars vs Texans: How to Watch Week 3

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HOUSTON, TEXAS – SEPTEMBER 29: Travon Walker #44 of the Jacksonville Jaguars pressures C.J. Stroud #7 of the Houston Texans during the third quarter of the game at NRG Stadium on September 29, 2024 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Jack Gorman/Getty Images)

The Jacksonville Jaguars and Houston Texans are set to square off in Week 3 of the 2025 season.

The good guys currently lead the league with 6 forced turnovers. It’ll be interesting to watch if they can keep it going against the Texans (2 turnovers this season), especially considering that Jacksonville’s defensive line should present a mismatch against Houston’s offensive line.

“Guys are playing with vision on the ball. We got to continue to do that,” defensive coordinator Anthony Campanile said Thursday. “We got to attack the football, but if we don’t do that in practice and we don’t drill that as position coaches and myself, the position I’m in, it isn’t going to continue to happen … our guys, I think, have been seeing results because they’re doing the work every day, so I’m pleased with that at this point, but still work to do there too as well.”

Related reads:

How to Watch​


When: Sunday, September 21 at 1:00 p.m. ET

Where: EverBank Stadium

Live Stream: CBS and Jaguars TV affiliate networks (or NFL+)

Radio Broadcast: WJXL 1010AM/92.5 FM and Jaguars radio affiliate networks

Odds: Jaguars are 1.5-point favorites, per FanDuel Sportsbook

What are you looking forward to seeing today, Jaguars fans? Let us know in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...n/77273/jaguars-vs-texans-how-to-watch-week-3
 
H-Town Downed: Jaguars Stifle Texans 17-10

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On Sunday, the Jacksonville Jaguars found a way to improve to 2-1 on the season, despite playing an imperfect game at EverBank Stadium. The defense racked up two sacks, three turnovers, and five three-and-outs against the Texans. Jacksonville’s win results in a 2-0 record at home, 1-0 in AFC South play, and place Houston at 0-3 on the season, fighting for their playoff lives early. Here’s everything you need to know from Jacksonville’s Week 3 17-10 victory over the Houston Texans.

Live blog:

Catch up on all the big plays and best moments from tonight’s game in our live blog!

Pregame Notes:

The following Houston players did not play in this one: QB Graham Mertz, OT Blake Fisher, RB Dameon Pierce, RB British Brooks, TE Brenden Bates, WR Braxton Berrios, DE Darrell Taylor. WR Christian Kirk was active for the first time this season for Houston, facing his former team in Jacksonville.

Additionally, OL Wyatt Milum, RB Cody Schrader, DL Danny Striggow, DL B.J. Green II, DT Khalen Saunders Sr, and S Kahlef Hailassie were all inactive against Houston. LG Ezra Cleveland was active after being limited throughout the week with an ankle injury along with CB Montaric Brown (ankle) making his season debut.
1st Quarter

The Texans kicked off the affair on offense, with both teams trading quick three-and-outs after short third-down completions. After the 42-yard punt went out of bounds, Houston was set up with prime field position at their own 48-yard line. However, their offense again stalled with Ka’imi Fairburn missing a 52-yard field goal attempt, wide right. Jacksonville then put together their best drive of the day, methodically working their way down the field on a 9-play, 58-yard, 4:34 touchdown drive where the team was helped by a third-down pass interference penalty in the endzone on Houston to provide a new set of downs. RB Bhayshul Tuten capped the series on the following play for a one-yard touchdown – his first rushing touchdown on the season. (Jaguars 7, Texans 0)

Bhayshul Tuten starts the scoring in Jacksonville!

HOUvsJAX on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/wDP7ibBVZv

— NFL (@NFL) September 21, 2025

The Jaguars defense, smelling blood in the water forced another three-and-out after a Dennis Gardeck pass deflection, followed by a Devin Lloyd second down pressure, resulting in a Travon Walker clean-up sack.

Travon Walker and Devin Lloyd with the SACK.
Texans offense looking… not good right now. Jaguars are smothering them pic.twitter.com/M7icOTMnqX

— Fitz (@LaurieFitzptrck) September 21, 2025

2nd Quarter

The Jacksonville offense received the ball back at their own 31-yard line after an illegal block in the back penalty on the return. However, the offense again went cold after Lawrence missed a streaking Dyami Brown deep on second down, resulting in an eventual punt.

🤏 so close BTJ, just couldnt tuck it in while going to the ground pic.twitter.com/0uC1qC6UY7

— Fitz (@LaurieFitzptrck) September 21, 2025

Houston CB Derek Stingley notably left the game following this series, with a rib injury, never to return. Houston showed signs of life, offensively, with their best drive of the day, a 13-play, 71-yard, 6:51 drive. Despite the success in the air for Houston, Jacksonville held in the redzone, bending without breaking, to force a 27-yard field goal, instead of surrendering a touchdown. Notably, Jacksonville Eric Murray temporarily left the game on the drive, after being penalized for unnecessary roughness. He returned after the half. (Jaguars 7, Texans 3)

The Jaguars offense then went three-and-out on the following series. With Stingley still out for the Houston secondary, the Jacksonville offense called a timeout before the third-and-six play, yet Brian Thomas Jr remained on the sideline as Lawrence’s deep ball attempt for Parker Washington fell incomplete. The Jacksonville defense held CJ Stroud’s offense to another three-and-out on the following series. However, Jacksonville’s offense was unable to capitalize, with their own three-and-out after a third-down Trevor Lawrence sack by Will Anderson. This was Jacksonville’s third offensive three-and-out of the half. However, Jacksonville’s defense then forced their fourth three-and-out of the first half of the Houston offense. Jacksonville’s offense was unable to move the ball within field goal range, with a third down incompletion to TE Hunter Long.

Halftime Stats:

  • Score: Jaguars 7, Texans 3
  • Time of possession: Jaguars 12:47, Texans 17:13
  • Sacks: 1 sack for each team
  • Turnovers forced: Zero turnovers for either team
  • Rushing yards: Jaguars 11-yards, Texans 50-yards
  • Yards per rush: Jaguars 1.8, Texans 4.5
  • Passing yards: Jaguars 77, Texans 57
  • Passing yards per attempt: Jaguars 3.3, Texans 2.7
  • Redzone: Jaguars 1-1, Texans 0-1
  • Penalties: Jaguars 6 for 45-yards, Texans 5 for 36-yards
  • Points off turnovers: Zero
halftime qb update. slugfest of a game pic.twitter.com/dRrwxMViOA

— Gus Logue (@gus_logue) September 21, 2025

3rd Quarter

Jacksonville’s offense showed some initial signs of life after the half, as they put together a 52-yard field goal drive. However, after the Cam Little made attempt, Houston was flagged for leverage, a 15-yard penalty. The offense was unable to pick up another first down, resulting in a 39-yard Cam Little field goal, three plays later. (Jaguars 10, Texans 3)

Houston was again held to their fifth three-and-out of the matchup, as Josh Hines-Allen and Arik Armstead met at the quarterback, sacking CJ Stroud on third down. Jacksonville then failed in their attempt to extend their lead with a 5-play, 25-yard drive, capped by a Cam Little 47-yard missed field goal attempt – his first miss of the 2025 season.

4th Quarter

With Houston driving into scoring range, the Jacksonville defense again held, with Jourdan Lewis intercepting a CJ Stroud second down attempt to Christian Kirk. This was Jacksonville’s seventh turnover of the season, and their league leading sixth interception.

Jaguars nab their 6th INT of the season!

HOUvsJAX on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/racqL0YMKf

— NFL (@NFL) September 21, 2025

Trevor Lawrence then gave the ball right back with an inexcusable interception into double coverage.

Trevor Lawrence throws a beautiful completion to Jalen Pitre pic.twitter.com/WdZVkmjZzT

— Official Ohio State DG (@DylanEveryday) September 21, 2025

The interception was immediately followed by a deep Nico Collins touchdown, with Tyson Campell in coverage. Campbell bit on the out-and-up by Collins leaving no one in coverage in the secondary. The Jacksonville offense was then unable to convert, going for it on fourth-and-two from midfield, with the pass being deflected at the line of scrimmage, incomplete. The Jacksonville defense again got the ball back with 3:58 left in the matchup via a Tyson Campbell forced fumble. After giving up the touchdown to Collins, Campbell forced the redzone fumble by Collins, recovered by Devin Lloyd. Lawrence then connected with Brian Thomas Jr on his best play of the day, a 46-yard catch and run, followed up by a 10-yard Travis Etienne touchdown rush (where it seems Houston surrendered the touchdown purposefully). (Jaguars 17, Texans 10)

Lawrence to BTJ into field goal range!

HOUvsJAX on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/H6SClJEhIM

— NFL (@NFL) September 21, 2025

Houston received the kickoff down seven, with 1:48 left, and two timeouts remaining. As Stroud led Houston into field goal range, Josh Hines-Allen deflected Stroud’s pass with 27-seconds remaining, resulting in an Atonio Johnson interception. Jacksonville’s defense wrapped up the day with two interceptions and a fumble recovery, all within the redzone.

Best highlight:

The Jacksonville defense closed the book on Sunday with a CJ Stroud pressure resulting in a game-sealing interception for our best highlight of the game.

Josh Hines-Allen and Antonio Johnson team up to seal the win for the #Jaguars.#Texans 10#Jaguars 17
pic.twitter.com/8mPMVdTLIv

— Daniel Griffis (@DanDGriffis) September 21, 2025

Biggest play(s) of the game:

According to rbsdm.com, the biggest play of the game by Expected Points Added (EPA) was CJ Stroud’s touchdown to Nico Collins (-4.3 EPA for Jacksonville).

Stroud to Nico! 50-yard TD to tie the game!

HOUvsJAX on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/si8dAx69cz

— NFL (@NFL) September 21, 2025

Per rbsdm.com, the biggest play of the game by Win Probability was Tyson Campbell’s forced fumble of Nico Collins, recovered by Devin Lloyd (+21% win probability for Jacksonville).

Nico Collins fumble. Tyson Campbell gets his hand in and Lloyd recovers pic.twitter.com/DrbRZSHdpE

— Fitz (@LaurieFitzptrck) September 21, 2025

Key stats (traditional):

  • QB Trevor Lawrence: 20/40 for 222-yards (5.6 YPA), with no TDs and 1 interception (56.5 passer rating)
  • RB Travis Etienne: 15 rushes for 56-yards (3.5 YPC), with 1 rushing TD
  • TE Brenton Strange: 6 catches for 61-yards on 7 targets (10.2 YPR)
  • WR Brian Thomas Jr: 2 catches for 55-yards on 6 targets (27.5)
  • DE Josh Hines-Allen: 2 tackles (1 solo), 3 QB hits, 0.5 sacks (forced final interception)
  • CB Jourdan Lewis: 4 tackles (3 solo), 1 TFL, 2 passes defensed, 1 interception
  • CB Tyson Campbell: 7 tackles (7 solo), 1 pass defensed, 1 fumble forced

View the full box score here

Game balls:

  • Special Teams: P Logan Cooke: 6 punts, 48.8 avg, 2 inside of the 20-yard line, and a long of 60-yards
  • Defense: CB Jourdan Lewis: 4 tackles (3 solo), 1 TFL, 2 passes defensed, 1 interception
  • Offense: TE Brenton Strange: 6 catches for 61-yards on 7 targets (10.2 YPR)

PFF notable player:

The team over at Pro Football Focus noted the following:

  • (Travis) Hunter only caught one of two targets for 21 yards. He played 95.5% of the 11 personnel snaps in Week 1, 79.2% in Week 2 and 71.2% in Week 3. Last week, he played more on defense due to an injury to Jarrian Jones, who wasn’t given an injury designation this week. Nonetheless, Hunter remained ahead of Jones on the depth chart. Hunter played 43 of the 63 snaps on defense. He’s consistently lined up at left cornerback on defense. This is the second straight week Hunter has played over 80 offensive snaps.
  • Both Travis Etienne Jr. and Bhayshul Tuten played fewer offensive snaps this week than last. LeQuint Allen Jr. took the two-minute drill snaps, unlike the last two weeks, and the Jaguars had fewer snaps with two wide receivers on the field at the same time. It’s relatively common for teams to sometimes use their third-down back during the two-minute drill while using their main running back at other times, so this probably doesn’t mean much going forward.

Notable absences:

The following Jacksonville players did not participate in Sunday’s matchup due to noted injuries throughout the week:

  • OL Wyatt Milum (knee)

Healthy Scratches:

  • RB Cody Schrader
  • DL Danny Striggow
  • DL B.J. Green II
  • DT Khalen Saunders Sr
  • S Kahlef Hailassie

The following players left Sunday’s game due to injury:

  • WR Dyami Brown (shoulder)

Full highlights:

  • You can watch the top plays of the Week 3 matchup on the NFL’s YouTube channel here.

Post-game lingering questions:

1. Stacked boxes = trouble?

Entering the game, just three of Travis Etienne’s 30-rushes came against stacked boxes, per Next Gen Stats. Houston changed that math significantly on Sunday, showing one safety looks often on early downs against Jacksonville and limiting the early down run game. Coach Coen spoke on Houston’s tendency to play five down linemen on early downs on Sunday, resulting in tougher sledding early on. Jacksonville ran the ball better in the second half, with 75 of the team’s 86-rushing yards coming after the break.

2. Seriously. What’s going on with Brian Thomas Jr?

Brian Thomas Jr was taken off of the field on multiple third-down plays, in lieu of Parker Washington and Tim Patrick. This occurred in a one-score game, as he struggled with multiple drops. Thomas exploded with a late 46-yard catch-and-run on a scoring drive to calm the stadium boos, but the question must be asked, what’s going on here?

CBS said.. queue the BTJ lowlight reel pic.twitter.com/ZqXqRBmVVo

— Fitz (@LaurieFitzptrck) September 21, 2025

3. Penalties and drops continue

Jacksonville ended the day with 9-penalties for 70-yards, with a few questionable illegal shift calls (again). One illegal shift (Brown), an illegal block (Miller), two offensive holdings (Little and Mekari), two false start (Strange and Mudnt), three unnecessary roughness (Murray – 2, and Gardeck), two defensive holdings (Campbell and Gardeck).

Very very close. The refs must of had a meeting about Jax illegal shifts bc calling that was.. idk it was very close. pic.twitter.com/oclPVsGGm5

— Fitz (@LaurieFitzptrck) September 21, 2025

Despite the multiple drops from Brian Thomas Jr, the late one from Parker Washington, and the 9-called penalties on the day (11-total), the team found a way to come out of Sunday with a victory while obviously playing not their cleanest game. There are worst things than being 1-0 in the AFC South, while playing your B or C game. What are your thoughts from tonight’s game, Jaguars fans? Who surprised you most or disappointed you with their play tonight? Let us know in the comments.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/game-day-threads/77319/h-town-downed-jaguars-stifle-texans-17-10
 
Jaguars, Texans Re-watch: 10 Observations from Week 3

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After dropping a heartbreaker in Cincinnati in week two, the Jacksonville Jaguars defense drew a teal line in the sand in week three, taking victory by the horns via three redzone turnovers from the Houston Texans. After providing the live takeaways and lingering questions from this week’s game, we take a closer review of the matchup after evaluating the televised gameplay. As a note, this review is based on the non-all-22 film, while being published before the PFF grades are released (in an effort to remain truly uninfluenced and unbiased on what we see). Additionally, this style of review knowingly places some limitations on evaluating secondary play without confirming the full coverage looks. With that said, let’s get into some takeaways from the Jaguars’ 17-10 victory over the now 0-3 Houston Texans.

*Any opinions noted are those of Travis and not of the entire BCC staff or leadership. Of course, anyone can disagree when evaluating film. Any noted EPA, Success Rate, or other data was retrieved from rbsdm.com. Additional data provided by NFL Pro and NextGenStats.

Glossary:

  • EPA = expected points added (statistical metric used in football analytics to measure how well a team performs relative to expectation on an individual play, based on factors like field position, down and distance, and time remaining to quantify how many points a team is expected to score on a drive)
  • SR = success rate (percent of plays with positive EPA)
  • 1st% = percent of plays that earned first downs
  • CPOE = completion percentage over expected
  • ADoT = average depth of target
    • ADoT and CMP% may not match official statistics due to excluding spikes & throwaways

Offense:

1. Quarterback Play Evaluation

  • -0.12 EPA per play falls within the 26th percentile of all QBs between 2010 and 2020 with minimum 5 plays per game
  • A total EPA of -5.4 falls in the 23rd percentile on 45 plays
  • 8.4 average depth of target (ADOT) is in the 52nd percentile
  • 52.6 Completion percentage (CMP%)
  • -17% completion percentage over expected (CPOE) is in the 4th percentile
  • 38% Success Rate
  • 27% First Down Percentage
  • 56.5 Passer Rating
Capture_0699bc.png

In week three, Lawrence had the NFL’s eighth-fastest time to throw (TTT) of 2.57 seconds, just slower than CJ Stroud’s fifth-fastest 2.53 seconds on Sunday. Trevor’s 56.5 passer rating is 27th of the 30 quarterbacks to play prior to Monday Night Football, ahead of only Joe Flacco, Michael Penix Jr, and Russell Wilson.

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Lawrence completed just 2 of 11 passes over 10 air yards for 62 yards and an interception in Week 3, per NFL Pro.

His lone downfield highlight was the key 46-yard catch and run to Brian Thomas Jr. in the fourth quarter that set up the game-winning touchdown. Lawrence was more efficient on shorter throws, completing 18 of 27 passes under 10 air yards for 160 yards, while going 0-for-4 on attempts of 20+ air yards.

Lawrence’s day started off strong with a deep out to Brenton Strange in the first quarter and a timely and accurate curl route to Brian Thomas Jr. Lawrence was decisive and quick in the short game, moving the offense down the field towards their initial touchdown. After that series, and the Brian Thomas Jr sideline drop, Lawrence followed the play, bouncing back with a dagger to Dyami Brown on an out route. However, the struggles in the deep areas of the field began to pop up at this point with Lawrence missing an open Dyami Brown on a post route, just underthrowing a Parker Washington back shoulder sideline throw, and overthrowing Washington on another deep attempt that likely would have scored. With the potential explosives left on the field and the third-down fourth quarter interception that was forced into double coverage, while up 7 points, on their side of the 50-yard line was a pretty problematic decision that can’t be made.

Lawrence wasn’t helped much in this one from his primary targets, but he also struggled often with off-target throws. More will be expected of the Jacksonville QB1 as the season progresses, as it’s hard to win in the NFL without the ability to throw a pass 10 yards.

The offensive line reasonably kept Lawrence upright early on Sunday with the primary opportunity area being LT Walker Little, who has surrendered 12 QB pressures over the past two weeks, per Pro Football Focus. Per my review of the film, Little gave up five hurries in total. Jacksonville’s offense gave up 11 total pressures (per NFL Pro):

  • LT Walker Little: 5
  • RG Patrick Mekari: 2 (including Will Anderson sack)
  • LG Ezra Cleveland: 1 (Foley Fatukasi sack)
  • RT Anton Harrison: 1
  • 1 via a screen against a blitz
  • 1 via a naked bootleg with a blitzing LB
  • Robert Hainsey: 0
the extra lick that robert hainsey gets on azeez >> pic.twitter.com/uhXwaGRe0M

— keanu (@keanukarg) September 22, 2025

2. Run Game Evaluation

  • RB Bhayshul Tuten: -0.15 EPA per play on 6 plays (-0.72 receiving EPA per play on 1 target)
  • RB Travis Etienne: -0.20 EPA per play on 18 plays (-0.63 receiving EPA per play on 2 targets)
  • RB LeQuint Allen: -0.51 receiving EPA per play on 1 target (0 rushing attempts)
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Entering the game, just three of Travis Etienne’s 30 rushes came against stacked boxes, per Next Gen Stats. However, Houston changed that math significantly on Sunday, showing one safety looks often on early downs against Jacksonville and limiting the early down run game. 25% (4) of Etienne’s 16 rushing attempts came against 8 or more defenders in the box. Etienne ended the day with just one explosive rush of 10 or more yards, tied with Lawrence. That rush was the play where Houston allowed him to score, in an attempt to get the ball back with under two minutes to play. Without the gifted final rush, Etienne’s average reflects 3.07 yards per rush. Houston stacked the box with 8 or more defenders against Jacksonville on 29.2% of snaps (6th highest for the week).

Coach Coen, in his post-game availability, spoke on Houston’s tendency to play five down linemen on early downs on Sunday. With Houston playing five down linemen and adding another defender into the box(a total of 8), Jacksonville struggled to open lanes early on, and it didn’t seem to be one individual player struggling. On many rushes, the extra defender was the player making the tackle on the running back, who was unable to make the safety or linebacker miss in the hole. On other snaps, the line either missed picking up a defender in their combination blocks or the defender simply beat the guy blocking him. While this was primarily an issue for the interior offensive line early on, with each IOL blowing a block on the first two series, Walker Little also missed on an early block, resulting in a one-yard gain in a difficult reach block scenario.

Jacksonville’s success on the ground began when the offense line ramped up when the team stopped putting themselves in negative down and distances via early penalties in the second half. Travis Etienne and Bhayshul Tuten also began to break more tackles in the backfield, turning one-yard gains into four to five yards while running a few more mid-zone looks. Speaking of Tuten, the ball of momentum simply never stops behind the line of scrimmage. I counted four rushes (out of six) where he gained yards on plays that should have been a loss or a rush for no gain.

puller pulls to nobody and Bhayshul Tuten creates his own 1st down pic.twitter.com/6zUAkaUAdJ

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) September 21, 2025

3. Receiving Evaluation

  • WR Tim Patrick: 0.88 EPA per play on 1 target
  • WR Dyami Brown: 0.69 EPA per play on 4 targets
  • WR Travis Hunter: 0.66 EPA per play on 2 targets
  • WR Brian Thomas Jr: 0.05 EPA per play on 7 targets
  • WR Parker Washington: -0.73 EPA per play on 11 targets
  • TE Johnny Mundt: 0.36 EPA per play on 1 target
  • TE Brenton Strange: 0.30 EPA per play on 7 targets
  • TE Hunter Long: -0.18 EPA per play, on 3 targets
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Parker Washington, with his dominant play versus Cincinnati, seemed to earn more opportunities, per the coaching staff. However, his team-leading 11 targets on 31 routes against Houston led to just four receptions and a -24.7% catch rate over expected, per NFLPro (82nd of 88 qualified receivers in week 3). Washington started off strong early with a tight window catch while taking a hit from the Texans safety in the second quarter. However, many of his earlier incompletions were uncatchable with three passes overthrown or underthrown, one intercepted in double coverage, and one tipped at the line of scrimmage. Washington did, however, have two fourth quarter drops, one a clean drop, and another a throw slightly behind him on a late throw from Lawrence.

Meanwhile, teammate Brian Thomas Jr was 86th of 88 receivers at -30.6% catch rate over expected on 34 routes, with two catches on 6 targets. Thomas opened the game with a 9-yard curl then dropped an early sideline attempt over Derek Stingley. His third target was stripped away by Jalen Pitre and his fourth target a clean third down drop – his second of the game. With the staff removing Thomas from the game on multiple third-down attempts later in the game, it was nice to see Thomas bounce back with the 46-yard catch and run to set up the game-winning score.

#Jaguars: credited with 5 drops vs HOU (PFF)

2- Parker Washington
1- Travis Etienne
1- Hunter Long
1- Brian Thomas Jr

Two of Thomas Jr’s assumed drops were ruled as contested catches. He was 0/2 on those.

— Daniel Griffis (@DanDGriffis) September 22, 2025

We are now three games in and my core statement for this Jacksonville Jaguars office is this: Brenton Strange is simply always open. He had a 71% success rate on Sunday, with 43% (3) of his seven targets converting for first downs, and a 9.1% completion rate over expected for week three (13th of qualified NFL tight ends) on his 29 routes. Even on routes where he wasn’t targeted, Strange was often running wide open (i.e., the first Travis Hunter incompletion that was neatly intercepted by Bullock, the Will Anderson sack, etc). When Lawrence goes to Strange, good things seem to happen. While spending much of the day chipping the dominant duo of edges for Houston, Strange still had a productive day. In another offense, Strange could potentially be a top receiving option, like Sam LaPorta in Detroit. However, with so many mouths to feed in Jacksonville, that may be more of a week-to-week conversation for Strange.

Brenton Strange is a real-deal weapon in the passing game. Add what he does as a blocker and there is a good argument to make that he is one of the offense's most important players pic.twitter.com/4Kj0rrog5N

— John Shipley (@_John_Shipley) September 22, 2025

Travis Hunter played more defensive snaps (41) than offensive snaps (35) for the first time in his career in Week 3 against the Texans. On offense, Hunter had just two targets with the first one nearly being intercepted, as there was little separation on the route forcing a contested catch scenario. However, on Hunter’s second target, he showed off his yards after catch ability to pick up the first down on the 21-yard gain.

Defense:

4. Pass Rush Evaluation

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If you know nothing about EPA, success rate, or first down rate – know this, purple is bad, and green is good here. The darker the purple, the worse the performance for the Houston offense on Sunday, indicative of dominant play by the Jacksonville defense. Jacksonville was 3rd in the NFL with 10 points given up, 9th at 271 total yards surrendered, 7th at 4.7 yards per play, and 11th with 14 QB pressures for the week.

Per NFL Pro:

  • DE Josh-Hines Allen: 5 QB pressures, 16.7% pressure rate on 30 pass rushes, and 0.5 sacks
  • DE Travon Walker: 4 QB pressures, 14.8% pressure rate on 27 pass rushes, and 1.0 sacks
  • LB Devin Lloyd: 3 QB pressures, 37.5% pressure rate on 8 pass rushes
  • DT Arik Armstead: 1 QB pressure, 3.6% pressure rate on 28 pass rushes, and 0.5 sacks
  • DB Jourdan Lewis: 1 QB pressure, 100% pressure rate on 1 pass rush
  • LB Foye Oluokun: 1 QB pressure, 20% pressure rate on 5 pass rushes
  • S Andrew Wingard: 1 QB pressure, 33.3% pressure rate on 3 pass rushes

Defensive end Josh Hines-Allen led Jacksonville, forcing an early holding penalty on Houston OT Aieontae Ersery (negated by an Eric Murray unnecessary roughness penalty). He also ended his day with five QB pressures (11th of qualified defenders, prior to Monday Night Football), a shared sack with Arik Armstead, and a caused interception from a tipped ball. DE Travon Walker was 20th in the NFL with 4 QB pressures also, per NFL Pro. Both Allen and Hines-Allen were listed with six pressures per PFF, notably.

Linebacker Devin Lloyd rushed the quarterback eight times against Houston, collecting 3 QB pressures and a 37.5 pressure rate (17th). In the passing game he gave up two receptions on three targets for a total of four yards (70.1 passing rating allowed), while also recovering the Tyson Campbell-forced Nico Collins fumble.

I’m starting a new series where a highlight a free agent for 2026 each week. My first selection for the yr is Devin Lloyd. Lloyd is a free agent after this season because the Jags declined his 5th yr option. We saw 5 FA LBs sign for double digit APYs last yr, and Lloyd is up next pic.twitter.com/SObA6qWujo

— Daniel Salib (@salibdaniel1) September 22, 2025

5. Run Game Evaluation

The Jacksonville front seven allowed Houston an average of 4.6 yards per carry, including 22-scrambling yards from CJ Stroud. The Houston running backs alone averaged 4.3 yards per carry on Sunday, with a long of eight yards. On the tape, it didn’t seem to be a truly dominant game on the ground for the Jaguars interior defensive line in the run game. Houston often had much success on first down rushes throughout the matchup, until penalties set them up in longer down and distances. However, I didn’t see one player consistently beat up front for the Jacksonville interior. On one play, Dawuane Smoot gets moved out of his gap, on another it’s Arik Armstead missing a diving tackle attempt in the backfield, on another it’s Austin Johnson getting moved out of his gap while doubled. And despite being one of the team’s primary run stuffers, I thought Davon Hamilton had a really good game, splitting doubles and not getting moved off the point of attack, though mostly absent from the stat sheet.

Jacksonville ended Sunday with zero run stuffs (0%) on Houston’s 19 rush attempts. However, they only stacked the box on 5.3% of snaps (26th/30 for the week prior to MNF).

6. Coverage Evaluation

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Houston WR Nico Collins paced the Texans with 104 yards receiving, buoyed by his 50-yard touchdown catch over CB Tyson Campbell. However, outside of this play and a 17-yard catch and run versus Travis Hunter, Collins’ day was mostly made up of chain-moving stop routes, crossers, and screens, bringing in 7 consecutive catches between the middle of the second quarter and his late fourth quarter fumble. Despite Tyson Campbell giving up the tying touchdown catch to Collins, I thought he had a solid day otherwise. He bounced back to force a fumble on a Collins stop route after rallying from his coverage responsibility, secured a deep pass breakup in coverage on Collins, and was reasonably sticky on the day.

Cornerback Jourdan Lewis had his prototypical dominant performance, giving up just one reception for four yards on six targets, with three passes defended, no touchdowns surrendered, an interception, and a QB pressure on his one pass rush (a zero-passing rating). He nearly brought in a late one-handed interception in coverage on Christian Kirk as well.

Jaguars nab their 6th INT of the season!

HOUvsJAX on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/racqL0YMKf

— NFL (@NFL) September 21, 2025

Travis Hunter was targeted five times in coverage, giving up 5 catches for 54 yards per NFL Pro (111.7 passer rating), however, a review of the film shows a third-and-five check down to Dalton Schultz while in zone coverage. Hunter came up to make the tackle. Nico Collins caught a 6-yard stop on the next pass attempt. Collins then catches a 17-yard slant, with Hunter in press alignment with a single high safety look, and on his final pass attempt in his vicinity, he allowed a 13-yard catch and run to Christian Kirk, missing the tackle, which allowed an additional 8 yards of YAC. This isn’t to say that Hunter struggled in coverage on Sunday, but zero passes defensed on five targets, with a missed tackle, are what they are. The arrow is pointing up for the rookie, and to be clear, he did have great coverage on multiple routes throughout the game that didn’t show up on the stats sheet, like his coverage on Stroud’s second quarter, third down incompletion to Dalton Schultz, where Hunter perfectly covered Collins in the redzone.

here are over a dozen of Travis Hunter's coverage snaps in Week 3

played 43 of a possible 63 defensive snaps

obviously plenty of zone coverage for the Jaguars. Just look for '12' pre-snap pic.twitter.com/BRi6UhQQa7

— Josh Norris (@JoshNorris) September 22, 2025
Travis Hunter with lockdown coverage on Christian Kirk pic.twitter.com/HgBnEk68lM

— Billy M (@BillyM_91) September 22, 2025

Safety Andrew Wingard surrendered two catches on four targets for 19 yards (a 63.5 passing rating) to add to his six tackles (four solo). Five of his tackles came when rallying up from deeper coverage. A reasonably solid day for the safety group as a whole, with Antonio Johnson also stepping in for a temporarily hobbled Eric Murray late. Notably, Johnson played well, while on the field for 17 of Stroud’s 38 passing attempts. He wasn’t directly targeted in the passing game, secured a game-sealing interception, racked up four tackles (1 solo), with three of them from Houston receivers after the catch.

Special Teams:

7. Kicking

Cam Little went 1 for 2 with a long of 39 yards and went 2/2 on his extra points. Punter Logan Cooke ended the day with 6 punts, a 48.8 average, two kicks inside of the 20-yard line, with a long of 60 yards.

8. Return Game

Parker Washington had two punt returns for an 8.5 average and a long of 13 yards. Meanwhile, LeQuint Allen Jr averaged 24.0 yards per kick return with a long of 26 yards. Throughout the first three weeks of the season, Heath Farwell’s unit has struggled to date in the return game, as they are currently 28th in the NFL for average kick returns (22.6 yards) and 25th on average punt return (8.6 yards) in the first three weeks. However, the punt coverage unit is third in the NFL with a 45.7 net average, and the kickoff coverage team is 14th at 25.0 yards per return.

Miscellaneous:

9. Penalties/Miscues

Jacksonville ended the day with 9 accepted penalties (11 overall) for 70 yards, with one questionable illegal shift call.

  • 2 offensive holding penalties (Walker Little, Patrick Mekari)
  • 2 false start penalties (Brenton Strange, Johnny Mundt)
  • Illegal shift (Dyami Brown)
  • Illegal block in the back (Ventrell Miller)
  • 3 unnecessary roughness penalties – one (2 Eric Murray, 1 Dennis Gardeck)
  • 2 defensive holding penalties (Tyson Campbell, Dennis Gardeck)

The two false start and the illegal shift penalties (i.e., the offensive pre-snap penalties) are the only ones that I truly place importance on, as these are theoretically some of the more controllable penalties. As we discussed in the post-game article, the illegal shift penalty seemed to be extremely nitpicky by the refs at best, and a bad call at worst. The unnecessary roughness penalties were going to happen against Houston, with the built-in history between the teams, Eric Murray facing his former team, and a lot of extra talking on the field.

10. Coaching/Scheme

The Jacksonville defense, after a rough few series against Cincinnati, played lights out on Sunday, bending without breaking and often getting the ball back from the Texans when it mattered most. In what was always known to likely be a close game, the defense was opportunistic and timely with their three redzone takeaways. They came away with two sacks inside of Houston’s 30-yard line and kept CJ Stroud uncomfortable for much of the game, while bending without breaking. The team’s 9 takeaways lead the NFL, matching their entire season total from 2024, just three games into 2025. This marks them most takeaways by a Jaguars’ defense through three games since 2005, when the team finished with a 12-4 record, per NFL Pro.

Offensively, there’s much to still be figured out between the Brian Thomas Jr situation, how much Travis Hunter may be used offensively as the year goes on (and the deep passing game struggles continue), and how they will counter more teams continuing to stack the box moving forward. Jacksonville retained the win, but those questions will all require quick answers with San Fransico coming up. This was the same team that, in 2023, made the “Trevor Lawrence only throws to his first read” narrative a thing by sitting on all routes under 10 yards, stacking the box, and forcing the team to beat them early in the passing game. I expect them to follow suit in week 4 and also expect Coen and Udinski to have better answers for the 49ers than Doug Pederson’s offense did. Time will tell!

That’s it from me for week 3! What were your takeaways from the game, Duval? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jagua...s-texans-re-watch-10-observations-from-week-3
 
Jaguars vs 49ers: Week 4 opening odds

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JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA – NOVEMBER 12: Nick Bosa #97 of the San Francisco 49ers pressures Trevor Lawrence #16 of the Jacksonville Jaguars during the third quarter of the game at EverBank Stadium on November 12, 2023 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

The Jacksonville Jaguars (2-1) will face the San Francisco 49ers (3-0) at 4:05 p.m. EST on Sunday, Sept. 28, at Levi’s Stadium.

According to FanDuel Sportsbook, the Jaguars are 3.5-point underdogs and the total is set at 46.5 points.

Jacksonville displayed “Huge ability to stay the course” in its Week 3 win over Houston, coach Liam Coen said afterward. “You’re winning the game for the majority of it. They tied it up, but even though obviously not playing our best football offensively, defense kept us in it … Very proud of this group. They played their tails off and kept competing.”

Going forward, the Jaguars may be without starting wideout Dyami Brown, who left Sunday’s game early due to an upper-body injury. But the Niners are among the most banged-up teams in the league right now: Mac Jones re-aggravated a knee injury when filling in for Brock Purdy, who sat out the past two games with toe and shoulder ailments; Nick Bosa (knee) left Sunday’s game early; Jauan Jennings (ankle/shoulder) missed the contest; and Brandon Aiyuk (ACL) and George Kittle (hamstring) remain on injured reserve.

The Niners are undefeated this season, but they are not at full strength. It’s a good opportunity for the Jaguars to steal a game during the toughest stretch of their schedule.

What are your thoughts on the Jaguars’ Week 4 matchup? Let us know in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...-odds-san-francisco49ers-week-4-betting-lines
 
Jaguars rise in NFL power rankings entering Week 4

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It wasn’t always pretty, but the Jaguars escaped with a win in Week 3. Liam Coen has led Jacksonville to a 2-1 start for just the fourth time since 2007. Things are looking up!

As Week 4 approaches, we rounded up the latest NFL power rankings to get a sense of how the Jaguars are viewed nationally.

The Athletic: 16 (last week: 19)​


From Josh Kendall and Chad Graff:

This is Trevor Lawrence’s fifth NFL season, and we keep waiting for a breakout that once felt inevitable. But the switch to Liam Coen as head coach hasn’t come with the positive shift in Lawrence many expected. It’s still early, but this season, Lawrence has completed just 58.8 percent of his passes (30th in the NFL) for 5.9 yards per attempt (25th) and has thrown as many touchdowns (four) as interceptions.

Yahoo Sports: 16 (22)​


From Frank Schwab:

It wasn’t the most impressive performance, but the Jaguars pulled out a win against an offensively inept Texans team. Trevor Lawrence doesn’t look much better, Travis Hunter’s usage is strange, Brian Thomas Jr. is a shell of his rookie self, and despite all that the Jaguars are doing OK at 2-1.

CBS Sports: 17 (19)​


From Pete Prisco:

The defense saved the day against the Texans, but the offense still isn’t clicking. They have way too many penalties and drops.

USA Today: 17 (19)​


From Nate Davis:

DE Josh Hines-Allen needs two sacks to become this franchise’s all-time leader. Tony Brackens, with 55, is currently the standard bearer … and a reminder that the Jags’ best days occurred a quarter-century ago.

NFL.com: 17 (23)​


From Eric Edholm:

The Panthers, Bengals and Texans might not represent the most fearsome trio of opponents, but the Jaguars’ defense held up well against all three, for the most part, which is a big reason for the team’s 2-1 start. They’ll rue letting that Cincinnati game get away, but Sunday was a turn in the right direction . A young team has to make big plays in crunch time to learn how to win, and the Jaguars did just that with three fourth-quarter turnovers against Houston — their third straight three-TO game to open the season. Liam Coen’s offense still has plenty of room for growth, and Brian Thomas Jr. ’s struggles have been borderline alarming. He had three drops by my count and seemed mostly miserable for the game’s first 58 minutes, but Thomas came up with a massive catch late to help the Jaguars pull out the thriller and earn a big divisional win.

ESPN: 18 (23)​


From Mike DiRocco:

We’re nitpicking here because the defense has been the backbone of Jacksonville’s two wins. The Jaguars rank fifth in points allowed per game (17, tied with the Texans and Cardinals) and rushing yards allowed per game (82.7). But they’re not converting a significant amount of pressure into sacks. They rank ninth with 44 QB pressures but have only six sacks, and their pressure rate (33.6%) ranks 18th. Defensive end Travon Walker leads the team with two sacks, while defensive tackle Arik Armstead is second with 1.5.

Pro Football Talk: 18 (24)​


From Mike Florio:

They tried to give Sunday’s game to Houston; they’re lucky the Texans apparently didn’t want to take it.

Bleacher Report: 19 (23)​


From Gary Davenport:

The good news is that after besting the Texans in a game that fans should have been paid to watch, the Jacksonville Jaguars are 2-1 to open the season. The bad news for the Jaguars is just about everything else.

To be fair, the Jaguars were improved defensively in Week 3 relative to last week’s meltdown in Cincinnati—the Jags gave up just one touchdown forced three turnovers and held the Texans to just 271 yards of offense. But the offense that new head coach Liam Coen was supposed to unlock was mostly MIA again. Trevor Lawrence completed just 50 percent of his passes and threw another pick. Wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. was mostly a non-factor for the third time in as many games. And Jacksonville managed just 86 yards on the ground.

Could these Jaguars beat an injury-ravaged 49ers team in Santa Clara next week? Maybe. Are they any kind of real factor in the AFC? Not looking like this.

Sports Illustrated: 20 (24)​


From Conor Orr:

While I recognize that I cannot praise the Eagles for willfully ignoring A.J. Brown for half the year and dog the Jaguars for Brian Thomas’s struggles early in the season, it feels like Trevor Lawrence doesn’t trust his top wideouts and is passing them up in critical situations. It happened multiple times against the Texans, which got patched over thanks to a critical win.

The Ringer: 22 (24)​


From Diante Lee:

The Jaguars are 2-1—they really should be 3-0—and it feels like this coaching staff has been dragging them to wins every step of the way. Jacksonville’s run game has sneakily been one of the best in the league, a calling card of head coach Liam Coen last year in Tampa Bay. Things haven’t clicked yet in the passing game, but that’s because the offensive design has far outpaced the unit’s execution. With the schedule getting tougher from here, it’ll be on quarterback Trevor Lawrence to take the reins and determine whether this team can hold its winning form.

Where would you rank the team, Jaguars fans? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...rs-rise-in-nfl-power-rankings-entering-week-4
 
Jaguars Reacts Survey: Who’s winning the AFC South this season?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Jaguars fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Jaguars fans — are you confident the team is headed in the right direction?

And who do you expect to win the division this season?

Here were the betting odds for the AFC South entering the year:

  • Houston Texans: +110
  • Jacksonville Jaguars: +290
  • Indianapolis Colts: +340
  • Tennessee Titans: +700

And here’s how the division stands right now:

  • Tennessee Titans: 0-3
  • Indianapolis Colts: 3-0
  • Jacksonville Jaguars: 1-2
  • Houston Texans: 0-3

“To not play your best, specifically on one side of the ball, and still come away with a win, that is important,” coach Liam Coen said after Jacksonville’s Week 3 win over Houston. “To go and win a division game like that, a physical, tough finish comes down to the wire. That is really big for us to be able to move forward and have belief that we can go and win tight games … very pleased with their ability to stay connected and to finish a tough game the right way.”

“We don’t like each other,” Trevor Lawrence said. “We don’t like any of our division opponents, so it’s not necessarily uncommon in that respect, but, yeah, I just — we’re not going to get bullied … that’s their mindset and it’s not going to happen to this team. So it was fun to be able to punch back and stand up in those moments where it’s like, all right, you want to throw that punch? Like, we’re here.”

Despite a disappointing loss in Week 2, the Jaguars are doing about as well as we could have hoped. The Texans and Titans being winless through three games is even better news.

Surprisingly, the biggest threat to win the AFC South seems to be Daniel “Indiana” Jones and the Colts. They’ve jumped out to a 3-0 start behind an offense that ranks second in points scored and total yards. Indianapolis crushed Miami and Tennessee by a combined 46 points, and they eked out a 1-point win over a very good Denver team. Are they legit?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...survey-whos-winning-the-afc-south-this-season
 
Jaguars, 49ers Wednesday Injury Report

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The 2-1 Jacksonville Jaguars head to San Francisco on Sunday, as the team looks toward their first road victory of 2025. Jacksonville will face the 3-0 San Francisco 49ers at 4:05 (EST) at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara. On Wednesday, both teams released their initial injury reports for the week, with reasonably good news for Jacksonville.

Jacksonville Jaguars:


Jacksonville starting starting receiver Dyami Brown opened the week as a DNP after leaving Sunday’s matchup with a shoulder injury. When asked if Brown’s injury would be a longer-term or shorter-term injury, Head Coach Liam Coen responded “can’t tell you right now.”

Additionally, running back Bhayshul Tuten was a limited participant, wearing a red non-contact jersey on Wednesday as he continues to work back to full participation with a shoulder issue. Tuten was also limited in each of last week’s practices before suiting up against Houston, rushing 6 times for 21-yards and a touchdown (3.5 YPC).

Rookie offensive lineman Wyatt Milum was a limited participant as he recovers from his training camp knee injury that resulted in him missing the first three weeks of 2025. Patrick Mekari (elbow) and Ezra Cleveland (ankle) were both limited.

Wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr (wrist) was listed as a full participant on Wednesday.

San Francisco 49ers:​


For San Francisco, the injury list is pretty extensive for week four, with multiple star players either questionable or already ruled out for Sunday. Defensive end Nick Bosa will reportedly be out for the season with a torn ACL. Initial reports reflected that he will undergo surgery for his week 3 sustained injury. He has not officially been placed on IR or ruled out of the game, as of publishing.

Tight end George Kittle is also currently on the Injured Reserve with a hamstring injury. Receiver Brandon Aiyuk continues to work his way back from last season’s ACL and MCL injuries, missing the first three games, as he is on the PUP List.

49ers quarterback Brock Purdy has missed two games due to a turf toe issue he has been working back from. He was limited on Wednesday.

Additionally, backup QB Mac Jones has also been dealing with a PCL (knee) injury since training camp, which put him on the injury report entering week 3. He reaggravated his knee during their week 3 win and was limited on Wednesday as well. Coach Coen noted that Jacksonville would prepare for the possibility of facing either quarterback this week.

San Francisco’s leading receiver, Ricky Pearsall (281-yards receiving), didn’t practice on Wednesday, but let the media know that he just had some knee soreness. Pearsall stated that he expects to practice this week and be good to go on Sunday. Wide receiver Jauan Jennings was also a DNP on Wednesday due to ankle and shoulder injuries after missing the week 3 game.

Rookie WR Jordan Watkins was a DNP and is expected to miss multiple weeks with a calf injury, per 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan last week:

“You never know with calves, but guess around three to four,”

Defensive tackle CJ West will reportedly undergo thumb surgery for an injury suffered during the team’s week 3 victory over the Arizona Cardinals. Defensive lineman Yetur Gross-Matos missed Wednesday with a knee injury. He was also a DNP last Wednesday for this same injury before playing in Sunday’s matchup.

Cornerback Renardo Green (neck), cornerback Deommodore Lenoir (illness), and offensive lineman Connor Colby (groin) were also limited for San Francisco on Wednesday.

As an aside, 49ers WR Demarcus Robinson, who was suspended for the first three games for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy, is now eligible to play in Sunday’s matchup, to potentially give the San Francisco receiver corps a boost.

Suspensions are over for #49ers WR Demarcus Robinson and #Vikings WR Jordan Addison, who both served three games and are now back with their teams.

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) September 22, 2025

Overall, Wednesday’s injury report was a reasonably positive start to the week for a Jacksonville offense still awaiting clarity on Dyami Brown’s status. With Parker Washington looking primed for a larger role, in Dyami’s absence, earning 11-targets on Sunday, Jacksonville may have a few options available during any potential absence.

What are your thoughts on the week’s first injury report, Duval? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...s/77549/jaguars-49ers-wednesday-injury-report
 
Jaguars vs 49ers Matchup History: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

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The Jacksonville Jaguars are currently in second place in the AFC South! On the road this week, the team will hope to achieve a 3-1 record, facing off against the San Francisco 49ers. The two teams have played each other seven times, and the 49ers lead the series 5-2.

Series results

DateVisitorHome
11/12/2023San Francisco 49ers – 34Jacksonville Jaguars – 3
11/21/2021San Francisco 49ers – 30Jacksonville Jaguars – 10
12/24/2017Jacksonville Jaguars – 33San Francisco 49ers – 44
10/27/2013San Francisco 49ers – 42Jacksonville Jaguars – 10
11/29/2009Jacksonville Jaguars – 3San Francisco 49ers – 20
12/18/2005San Francisco 49ers – 9Jacksonville Jaguars – 10
09/12/1999San Francisco 49ers – 3Jacksonville Jaguars – 41

The good

Week 1 at Alltel Stadium on September 12, 1999
Final score:
49ers – 3, Jaguars – 41
Attendance:
68,678

Jason Craft, Damon Jones, James Stewart, and Aaron Beasley scored touchdowns. Mark Brunell completed 22 out of 30 attempted passes for 265 yards. Fred Taylor led the team with 74 rushing yards, and Jimmy Smith led with 139 receiving yards. Mike Hollis made the four attempted field goals. Aaron Beasley had two interceptions. Tony Brackens, Kevin Hardy, and Gary Walker each recorded one sack.

The bad

Week 8 at Wembley Stadium on October 27, 2013
Final score: 49ers – 42, Jaguars – 10
Attendance: 83,559

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Mike Brown scored the only touchdown. Chad Henne completed 29 out of 45 attempted passes for 228 yards. Maurice Jones-Drew led the team with 75 rushing yards, and Cecil Shorts led the team with 74 receiving yards. Josh Scobee made the attempted field goal. Paul Posluszny recorded ten combined tackles.

The ugly

Week 10 at EverBank Stadium on November 12, 2023
Final score: 49ers 34
– Jaguars 3
Attendance: 69,271

CHASE YOUNG AND NICK BOSA FORCE A TREVOR LAWRENCE FUMBLE pic.twitter.com/KPQj8ErINi

— Arye Pulli (@AryePulliNFL) November 12, 2023

Another week, another game chosen for “the ugly” due to injuries. Jamal Agnew injured his shoulder returning a kick during the first quarter, and Tyson Campbell left with a hamstring injury during the third quarter. Plus, this game was just a mess, I’m sure, despite trying to block it out mentally, we all remember. Trevor Lawrence completed 17 out of 29 attempted passes for 185 yards. Travis Etienne led the team with 35 rushing yards, and Christian Kirk led with 104 receiving yards. Brandon McManus made the attempted field goal. Foyesade Oluokun sacked Brock Purdy twice, and Devin Lloyd led the team with ten combined tackles.

Players who have played for JAX and SF

PlayerPosJAXSF
Adams, TyrellLB20212021
Allen, BrandonQB20162023-2024
Armstead, ArikDT2024-20252015-2023
Bartch, BenOG2020-20232023-2025
Beadles, ZaneOG2014-20152016-2017
Beathard, C.J.QB2021-20242017-2020
Bell, BlakeTE20182015-2016
Cloherty, ColinTE2011-20122010
Conley, ChrisWR2019-20202023-2024
Cooper, DekeDB2003-20052006
Cyprien, JohnathanDB2013-20162020
Day, SheldonDT2016-20172017-2019
Dobbs, JoshuaQB20192024
Douzable, LegerDE2010-20112017
Edwards, MarcRB2003-20041997-1998
Ellison, AtiyyahDT2008-20092007
Farrell, LukeTE2021-20242025
Gabbert, BlaineQB2011-20132014-2016
Gipson, TashaunDB2016-20182022-2024
Hall, DanaDB1996-19971992-1994
Hance, BlakeOT2022-20242022
Harris, DuJuanRB20112015-2016
Hasty, JaMycalRB2022-20232020-2021
Hill, JasonWR2010-20112007-2010
Holba, ColinLS20172018-2020
Hyde, CarlosRB2018-20212014-2017
James, WilliamDB20082010
Jefferson, JordanDT20242025
Jones, MacQB20242025
Key, ArdenLB20222021
Lynch, AaronLB20202014-2017
Mabin, GregDB20202017-2018
Marsh, CassiusLB20202017-2018
Martin, JamieQB1998-20002008
McBath, DarcelDB20112012
McCaffrey, MaxWR20172017-2018
McDaniel, TonyDT2006-20082017
McLaughlin, ChaseK20202019
McNichols, JeremyRB20192017-2023
Miller, BruceRB20202011-2015
Mullens, NickQB20252018-2020
Osgood, KassimWR2010-20112013-2014
Pashos, TonyOT2007-20082009
Posey, JeffLB20011998-2000
Prioleau, PiersonDB20081999-2000
Richie, DavidDT20001998-1999
Saubert, EricTE20202024
Skuta, DanLB2015-20162013-2014
Slaughter, T.J.LB2000-20032006
Smiley, JustinOG20102004-2007
Smith, MalcolmLB20192018
Spence, AkeemDT20192022
Spurlock, MichealWR20122009
Stokes, J.J.WR20031995-2002
Stupar, NathanLB20132013
Thomas, BrandonOG20182015
Thomas, EdwardLB2000-20022000
Watson, DekodaLB20142017-2018
Wesley, JoeLB20011999
Williams, JamesLB19951997-1998
Wilson, JarrodDB2016-20202021
Winborn, JamieLB20052001-2005
Wright, MatthewK20212024
Young, SamOT2013-20152019
Zelenka, JoeLS2001-20081999

Please share your favorite moments from the Jaguars vs 49ers series with us in the comments or on social media. Not following us on social media? You can find us on Twitter, Bluesky, Facebook, Instagram, and Threads.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...matchup-history-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly
 
Travis Hunter makes impact on Jaguars defense in 3rd NFL game

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We are now three games into the Travis Hunter Experiment, trademark pending.

Anyone who has been along for this ride has seen the ups and downs just three games into the highly unusual job of getting the former Heisman winner to play both sides of the football professionally. Sunday’s 17-10 win was yet another step into seeing it play out the way we all want, at least defensively.

Hunter played 43 defensive snaps to his 37 offensive snaps over the weekend, the second consecutive game where he has played more as a corner than as a receiver.

Starting with just the stats defensively, Hunter played fine. He was second among the defensive backs in tackles with a career-high six. But corners are paid to not accumulate stats, which Hunter did a decent job of against good receivers.

Below, you will see Hunter matched up one-on-one with former Jags receiver Christian Kirk. As Texans’ quarterback C.J. Stroud rolls out of the pocket and is looking Kirk’s way, Hunter is blanketing him against the sideline and helps force a Stroud scramble.

Travis Hunter with lockdown coverage on Christian Kirk pic.twitter.com/HgBnEk68lM

— Billy M (@BillyM_91) September 22, 2025

In this second clip, you see Hunter read a play in the backfield and come up to make a tackle on a running back. Long gone are the days where his size was a potential dealbreaker and he was getting his head pushed into the dirt in the preseason!

Look at Travis Hunter getting active in the run game! pic.twitter.com/yTFWcWMjmz

— JP Acosta (@acosta32_jp) September 22, 2025

This last clip is maybe his best work, where he stays in the pocket of Nico Collins for Collins’ entire route. Collins has a couple inches and about 30 pounds on Hunter, but Hunter is able to keep Collins basically out of the play and helps force a field goal try. In a game decided by a touchdown, plays like this that don’t show up on the box score matter a lot.

Top of the screen. Good coverage by Travis on that 3rd down stop. https://t.co/rRL0fI6keH pic.twitter.com/hPUR3AcB0Z

— DELFONIK (@djDELFONIK) September 21, 2025

Overall, there is a lot to be impressed with from Hunter in his third game. Corners aren’t supposed to earn big stats, unless it is something like pass breakups or picks. In coverage, while playing a lot of zone, Hunter allowed four catches for 48 yards.

So far, as a rotational player, Hunter hasn’t been asked to do much so his lack of production may seem like a lack of skill. Watching his clips from Sunday would show something entirely different.

There is a question to be asked about whether the Jags are recouping value from Hunter based on his draft slot and what they gave up to get him. But the dude has played in just three games.

here are over a dozen of Travis Hunter's coverage snaps in Week 3

played 43 of a possible 63 defensive snaps

obviously plenty of zone coverage for the Jaguars. Just look for '12' pre-snap pic.twitter.com/BRi6UhQQa7

— Josh Norris (@JoshNorris) September 22, 2025

Offensively, Hunter has left a lot to be desired.

In his first game, he caught six balls on eight targets. Both his catches and targets have gone down in the two ensuing games, including catching just one pass on Sunday.

To Hunter’s credit, his one catch for 21 yards was impressive but it just isn’t a lot of impact, especially coupled with the fact the rest of the pass catchers are struggling.

Travis Hunter shakes 'em twice for the 21-yard gain!

HOUvsJAX on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/p7xttrtaZw

— NFL (@NFL) September 21, 2025

Hunter’s catch was his career-high for yardage, but it was on a short dump off pass. On one hand, you can credit Hunter for going and getting 18 yards. On the other hand, you can probably be a bit upset that he is being used only in screens or short passes.

Much like Hunter the corner, Hunter the receiver is still a work in progress professionally. He has done a poor job getting set presnap and has had his own issues with drops.

Wide receiver Dyami Brown’s status for Sunday’s game at the San Francisco 49ers is up in the air currently. Both Brian Thomas Jr. and Parker Washington have struggled in recent weeks. Hunter could potentially help fill Brown’s void or spark some life into this offense. Or maybe not.

The 49ers this year have allowed scores of 13 points, 21 points and 15 points, all in wins. It will take everyone on the Jags to go across the country and defeat a foe they never have in five straight tries.

And it will almost certainly take all of Hunter to win, all two sides of him.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ter-makes-impact-on-defense-in-third-nfl-game
 
Reacts Survey Results: Jaguars fans weigh in on the AFC South

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Dec 29, 2024; Jacksonville, Florida, USA; Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. (7) greets a young fan after the game against the Tennessee Titans at EverBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images

This week, we asked Jacksonville Jaguars fans who they expect to win the division this season.

Two-thirds of voters chose the hometown team, with the other third buying into the Colts’ hype.

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Here are the current odds for each team to win the AFC South, per FanDuel Sportsbook.

  • Indianapolis Colts (3-0): -140
  • Jacksonville Jaguars (2-1): +175
  • Houston Texans (0-3): +750
  • Tennessee Titans (0-3): +4500

As for the confidence survey, 88% of fans are confident in the direction of the team — up from 77% last week.

Jacksonville_1_092425.png

We should learn a lot about the Jaguars over the next month. They’ll face the 49ers, Chiefs, Seahawks, and Rams before their Week 8 bye.

As for Sunday’s game, defensive coordinator Anthony Campanile says the Niners offense presents “a lot” of problems. “They do a great job in the run game, play action pass. Having played them in the past, I think they’re as good as anybody when it comes to that, and they do a really good job in the dropback game, constant movement before the snap and just the motions, making sure everybody’s on the same page, communication and getting lined up. So yeah, they present a lot of issues.”

Meanwhile, offensive coordinator Grant Udinski says the Niners defense presents problems “on all three levels. The pass rush, you see those guys getting off the ball, then the linebackers, [Fred] Warner obviously makes plays all over the field … at the third level, they challenge guys in the back end, track the ball, ball skills. So, there’s a reason the defense has put up the numbers they put up and perform the way they performed, really because of the way they execute and the guys they have and the way they play.”

The Colts will fly to Los Angeles this week to face the Rams. Depending on how these two West Coast games shake out, the Jaguars could be tied for first in the AFC South after four games.

Top comments from Wednesday’s post (wasn’t expecting that much Trevor pessimism!):

MCG679
Could be…The worm does turn sometimes.

Let’s just hope this doesn’t turn into an almost decade run like the Manning yrs.

Their defense is playing good. They have a decent running game, the QB and the rest of the offense is playing well. So there’s little room for errors on our part for right now it seems.
JaxCommenterGuy
This is shaping up to be a season where the winner of the AFC South is (again) decided by the back half. We have a relatively easy end to the season.

We get to have 4 of our last 6 games as Divisional games. I’m excited to see what meaningful football in December is like.
Jaguardian
Not including this early season, doesn’t Trevor Lawrence and Daniel Jones have similar numbers?
CCH12882
There is an argument to be made that Houston and Indy have better defenses. But even that is debatable with Jags leading the league in turnovers through three games. But it’s a Passing league now and Trevor Lawrence, as much as it pains me to say it, isn’t playing better than Daniel Jones, is half the QB CJ Stroud is and is only better than struggling Rookie Cam over there in Tennessee until he figures things out. And that imposter posing as BTjr isn’t helping things either. But it’s the abhorrent misusage of Travis Hunter that I feel is throwing this entire offense and Team as a whole, into perpetual dysfunction.
Jaguardian
Probably the Dolts will win the division, unless they have a major collapse. I’ll be content with getting a wild card spot because we’re not ready collectively to compete against a first place schedule next season. Let Indiana Jones and crew deal with that…for now.
JaxCommenterGuy
“Are we headed in the right direction”
We are probably headed in a better direction than we were previously. Not sure if it’s “the right direction”, but an improvement.

But it’s like you’re driving on the highway and instead of heading to Philly, now you’re headed to New Jersey.

“Who is going to win the division”
Us, probably. Not necessarily because we are one of the best 8 teams in the NFL, but because the other 3 teams in the AFC South seem to be having an even worse psychotic breakdown than we are experiencing.
WillGMCC
Jags are 2-1
MCG679
Probably the Colts unless our WRs and QB can get their stuff together.

Best case scenario is we luck into winning the division, the browns get our foolishly given away 1st and other round picks.

The next yr we get a first place schedule and get taken to the woodshed.

Which will allow us to get the replacement for 16. Letting the newly drafted QB sit a yr, practice and learn what not to do in real time on the sideline.

Then we can cut the albatross away from our necks without a financial hit I believe. Or at the least significantly less.

If we get lucky and someone is desperate enough maybe even get an xtra 3rd or 4th round pick out of the deal.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/nfl-r...esults-jaguars-fans-weigh-in-on-the-afc-south
 
Jaguars vs 49ers: Staff roundtable and game picks for Week 4

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JACKSONVILLE, FL – DECEMBER 01: Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. (7) runs with the ball /across/during the game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Houston Texans on December 1, 2024 at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fl. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Welcome to Big Cat Country’s staff roundtable!

Today, we’re previewing Week 4’s matchup between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the San Francisco 49ers at Levi’s Stadium.

What has surprised you most about the Jaguars so far this season?

Dillon Appleman: The obvious answer here is the struggles of Brian Thomas Jr., but I’m honestly more surprised at how the defense has performed under a first-year DC in Anthony Campanille. The unit was horrendous last year, so improvement was a low bar heading into the season, but this defense has legitimately been terrific through three games. Can’t say enough good things about coach Camp.

Travis Holmes: On the positive side of things, I’ve been most impressed by the play of this offensive line. The team may be coming off its worst rushing performance of 2025, yet they found a way to establish the run in the second half after struggling early against Houston’s five-man front. On the not-so-good side of things, I’ve been shocked at the play of the special teams return units so far. The Jaguars rank 28th in yards per kick return (22.6) and 25th in yards per punt return (8.6); those averages are each 3 full yards lower than last year.

Gus Logue: The defensive coordinator has surprised me for a second straight season — in a good way, this time. Anthony Campanile’s unit already has more takeaways through three games (9) than Ryan Nielsen’s had all last year (8). When the turnovers eventually diminish, it won’t unveil a fraudulent defense. This group is legit, and Camp is cooking up stunt games, blitz packages, disguised coverages, simulated pressures, you name it. The 2025 defense could be the team’s best since Sacksonville.

What’s a matchup you’re looking forward to watching?

Dillon:
Josh Hines-Allen vs. Trent Williams is about to be a heavyweight fight. JHA is off to an incredible start to the season, and Williams is still a top-five tackle in the NFL today. Allen is just 1.5 sacks away from being the all-time leader in Jags history — I’m sure he would love to accomplish that feat against a player like Williams.

Travis: Ricky Pearsall versus Tyson Campbell. The Jaguars have faced a trio of really good receivers over the first three games, who all had good to outright elite days despite subpar quarterback play. While the expectation is always that certain receivers will win their share of the battles, that expectation should also be shared for cornerbacks, and Campbell bounced back against Nico Collins in week 3. Christian McCaffrey will no doubt get his explosives on the ground and through the air. But this game will likely come down to whether Jacksonville can limit or erase San Francisco’s secondary threats. That starts with Campbell against Pearsall, the 49ers’ leading receiver with 281 yards in three games.

Gus: Trevor Lawrence against San Francisco’s pass rush. With Nick Bosa (knee) out of the picture, defensive coordinator Robert Saleh figures to send extra bodies more often. Lawrence should have several chances to make the Niners pay when they don’t have a numbers advantage in coverage. Among 30 passers with 5+ downfield attempts this season, Lawrence joins Michael Penix Jr. as the only ones without a completion, so hopefully the deep ball will emerge for Jacksonville on Sunday.

Who will be the biggest X-factor?

Dillon:
Christian McCaffrey. With the Niners down a handful of offensive weapons (George Kittle, Brandon Aiyuk, potentially Jauan Jennings), they’re going to lean heavily on their star back on Sunday. If he has a big day, it’s going to be tough for the Jags to pull out a win in San Francisco.

Travis: Rookie defensive end Mykel Williams versus Jacksonville’s offensive line. While we know All-Pro edge Nick Bosa won’t be suiting up on Sunday after his week 3 injury, many might have missed just how the 49ers used Williams in Bosa’s absence. He played 35 downs as an edge and eight as a defensive tackle or nose tackle, via PFF. Williams ended the day with six quarterback pressures, leading all 2025 rookies, and two third-down run stops against Arizona. Right tackle Anton Harrison and right guard Patrick Mekari will primarily be tasked with keeping the rookie away from Trevor Lawrence.

Gus: I’ll go with Devin Lloyd. He ranks third among linebackers in PFF grade this season (90.2) but Kyle Shanahan is notorious for posing problems against that position. It’d go a long way towards a Jaguars W if Lloyd can continue making plays in the middle of the field. I’m also interested to see 49ers WR Demarcus Robinson now that he’s served his three-game suspension; he could have a sizable role on Sunday.

Final score prediction?

Dillon:
Jaguars 30, Niners 20

Travis: Jaguars 17, Niners 16

Gus: Jaguars 27, Niners 28

What are your Week 4 predictions, Jaguars fans? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...rs-staff-roundtable-and-game-picks-for-week-4
 
Jacksonville Jaguars Winners and Losers from Week 3: Defense Dominates In Much Needed Win

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Sometimes it’s all about how you respond. The Jacksonville Jaguars responded Sunday afternoon.

After an embarrassing road loss last week, the Jags flipped the script this week with their 17-10 win over the hated Houston Texans. It was far from pretty or clean but it was a win nonetheless, showing this team might be built for adversity after all.

For the third straight week the Jacksonville defense produced three turnovers, already eclipsing the team’s season total from the year before. Brian Thomas Jr. responded in a big way late in the game. And Trevor Lawrence called his own number to extend what ended up being the game-winning drive with a scramble.

Things were at rock bottom after Cincinnati. After beating your bitter rival at home for the first time in years? The mountaintop, if only for a couple days.

WINNERS
Defensive Backs


What a day the Jags DBs had on Sunday.

The Jacksonville defensive backfield had a stellar performance led by the likes of Tyson Campbell and Hall of Fame free agent signing Jourdan Lewis. The defense overall had a tremendous day by only allowing one touchdown to what can be a fairly potent offense, but the corners and safeties deserve a ton of credit for that win. Limiting Texans not named Nico Collins to just 100 yards receiving combined is a heck of a way to show out.

Lewis: The big play of the day for Lewis was his interception in the fourth quarter. It didn’t result in points for Jacksonville but it felt like a bit of a momentum shift. It was also C.J. Stroud’s first pick against the Jags in his three-year career.

Campbell: The almost $80 million man led the team in tackling and had key pass breakups down the stretch. But no play Sunday was bigger than Campbell forcing a Nico Collins fumble that resulted in the game-winning drive by the Jags. What a way to respond for Campbell after last week.

Nico Collins fumble. Tyson Campbell gets his hand in and Lloyd recovers pic.twitter.com/DrbRZSHdpE

— Fitz (@LaurieFitzptrck) September 21, 2025

Andrew Wingard: Say what you will, but Dewey Wingard is playing some good football this year. Always good for a soundbite, the veteran safety was third on the team in tackles with six.

Antonio Johnson: What a random player to get the game-sealing pick but congrats to Antonio Johnson for making a great diving effort on Stroud’s final pass. With Darnell Savage now gone, Johnson will have to step up even more. So far so good for the safety.

Travis Hunter: Another guy who responded in a fine way was Travis Hunter, who played 43 snaps on defense. Hunter had some sticky coverage on Collins in the end zone that resulted in an incompletion on what could have been a costly touchdown. He is far from polished, and the team is far from understanding what to do with him, but this was a step in the right direction.

Josh Hines-Allen

No one probably deserves this more than Hines-Allen, who has seen the worst of the worst in Jacksonville and has been around for all the shellacking the Texans do when they come to town.

It was Hines-Allen who got to Stroud and the football on the Texans’ final play though, just barely making contact with the ball but making enough for it to sail in the air and into the gut of Johnson. That is the type of play Hines-Allen has to make for this team to be successful in these moments and he did precisely what was needed.

The sack numbers are not there for Hines-Allen this year, as he has just the one half sack he got today, but he leads the NFL in pressures with 18. It is coming for Hines-Allen. Houston’s rookie tackle Aireontae Ersery was food for Hines-Allen most of the game which is a great sight considering there is still another game to be played against Ersery and company too.

Number 41 needs just two sacks to break the franchise record of 55 sacks. That could come as early as next week.

Every win in the league is earned. We left it all out there and got what we came for.

— Joshua Hines-Allen (@JoshHinesAllen) September 22, 2025

Free Food

No one from Al’s Pizza is paying me to include this bit. Maybe they should. I do wonder if the marketing person there got fired for this promotion they are running, though.

No one could have guessed the Jags would get 2+ takeaways in three straight games, but more half off pizza for everyone because of it. Every Monday night for three straight weeks I’ve gotten Al’s, so thank you Anthony Campanile. It’s fitting free pizza comes courtesy of an Italian guy.

If you are a Firehouse Subs Rewards member, you can get free food too because Cam Little made a 40+ yard field goal too. BOGO medium subs are part of the Fieldgoals for Firehouse promotion which Little triggered to start the third quarter.

Victory Monday is great. Victory Monday with free lunch and dinner is even better.

NIETHER

Brian Thomas Jr.


What an interesting day for the much-maligned former golden boy of Duval County.

Sunday was as rollercoaster-y as it could get for Thomas Jr., as the wide receiver was booed at home after a trio of drops but might have saved the game with his 47-yard catch late in the fourth.

He had just one catch prior to that audible by Trevor Lawrence at the line to get Thomas Jr. open, which just isn’t good for someone of his caliber. Something is wrong with him and it can’t be just his wrist injury.

Thankfully though, BTJ made a statement with his catch. It doesn’t exonerate him of his poor performance overall as he had just two catches on six targets. This year, he has as many drops as total catches with six.

No one has ever been in this newly created “neither” category. I hope BTJ doesn’t find himself here again.

Brian Thomas Jr reached a top speed of 22.13 MPH on this 46-yard catch. @NextGenStats

He’s the 3rd fastest ball-carrier this season.
pic.twitter.com/CsjX7kstl8

— Daniel Griffis (@DanDGriffis) September 21, 2025

LOSERS

Edgar Bennett


Speaking of drops, the Jags have the dropping football virus running rampant through this team. The cure needs to be found yesterday.

Bennett, the team’s wide receivers coach, has got to figure out what is going on with his unit and fix it soon. The offense cannot continue to be stunted by the apparent ineptitude of the pass catchers.

It has gotten so bad that there are whole segments midgame going over the dropping problem. Lawrence is getting sold down the river because of these drops. Think about how good this team would be if they caught half the passes they dropped over the past two weeks.

Parker Washington had 11 targets and caught just four balls. These numbers could make a grown man weep.

Winning does mask issues a lot of the time but this one is actually impossible not to notice. With Dyami Brown now hurt and his status moving forward up in the air, the team needs to hold onto the ball more than ever.

Drops montage for Brian Thomas from last week and this week.

😬 pic.twitter.com/GMwax3cM9S

— Henry McKenna (@henrycmckenna) September 21, 2025

Penalties

Another issue that has persisted through three weeks is penalties with this Jags team. By game’s end Sunday, the Jags had nine (!!!) accepted penalties for 70 yards.

Those 70 yards are just 16 yards shy of the team’s overall rushing performance and more yardage than any individual Jaguar pass catcher had. This year, the Jags have committed 26 penalties which is an absurd number. Most of the stuff is presnap too, with Hunter having no idea where to line up or guys not settling before the snap.

Head coach Liam Coen said postgame he was proud of how his team battled through the adversity of drops and penalties. But you don’t need to battle adversity at all if you just do the right thing from the start.

cool explanation here. Coen reinforces Trevor & how he battled despite the #Jaguars drops & penalties.

says the huge play to BTJ was a play change from Trevor pre-snap. @ActionSportsJax pic.twitter.com/C0nuIleANH

— Jason Hamby (@Jason_Hamby14) September 21, 2025

Let us know your thoughts on the game in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/gener...m-week-3-defense-dominates-in-much-needed-win
 
Jaguars vs 49ers: Week 4 Live Blog and Open Thread

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Good afternoon, Big Cat Country! Our Jacksonville Jaguars are on the road in San Francisco to hopefully beat the 49ers for the first time since 2005. Kickoff is at 4:05 pm EST, and you can click here to learn how to watch/listen to the game. You can also find game updates on our X/Twitter, Bluesky, and Facebook.

INACTIVES

The following players will be inactive for the Jaguars in today’s game:
5 WR Dyami Brown
32 RB Cody Schrader
64 OL Wyatt Milum
96 DT Khalen Saunders Sr.
92 DL Danny Striggow
56 LB Yasir Abdullah
20 S Kahlef Hailassie

— JaguarsPR (@JaguarsPR) September 28, 2025

THE WEATHER

Comfy kickoff conditions.@SJRWMD | #JAXvsSF pic.twitter.com/aVhCONdP5T

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) September 28, 2025

7:09: THE OFFENSE GETS THE FIRST DOWN! I could scream. Victory formation! Jags win 26-21.

7:06: THE DEFENSE GETS ANOTHER TAKEAWAY!

6:59: Lawrence gets the first down, followed by Etienne rushing for another first down. The offense fails to convert on third down. Little’s field goal misses.

6:53: Touchdown 49ers. The Jaguars’ lead is cut down to five.

6:42: TURNOVER ON DOWNS! The Jaguars’ offense takes over. Logan Cooke comes out to punt.

6:31: 49ers punt. PARKER WASHINGTON RETURNS THE BALL TO THE HOUSE!

PARKER WASHINGTON 87-YARD PUNT RETURN TD!

JAXvsSF on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXnxV pic.twitter.com/POblWVbYrl

— NFL (@NFL) September 28, 2025

6:25: Little’s kick is good. Jags are up by six.

6:21: INTERCEPTION DEVIN LLOYD!

The @jaguars defense get their third turnover of the game!

They have 3 takeaways in every game this season 😤

JAXvsSF on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXnxV pic.twitter.com/Qbx3crbwv3

— NFL (@NFL) September 28, 2025

6:16: Etienne gets the first down. BTJ goes down. Cooke comes out to punt.

6:07: Touchdown 49ers. The two-point conversion is good. Jennings is down for San Francisco.

5:55: The Jaguars go three and out to start the second half.

5:31: Defense makes the stop. The 49ers’ field goal is good. Tuten returns the ball 54 yards! Cam Little’s field goal is good.

5:12: The 49ers punt. The Jaguars’ offense goes three and out. Logan Cooke punts, and Lane draws a flag. Two-minute warning.

5:09: Harrison injury update:

OL Anton Harrison has an elbow injury and his return is questionable.

— JaguarsPR (@JaguarsPR) September 28, 2025

4:54: Travis Hunter with a nice 28-yard catch for a first down. Lawrence to Strange for another first down. Strange gets another first down inside the 40-yard line. BTJ gets across the line to gain for a first down. Hunter Long catches the ball to set up 1st and goal. TOUCHDOWN JAGS!

14 plays. 89 yards. Six more points for the @Jaguars.

JAXvsSF on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXnxV pic.twitter.com/dhqkBhSok2

— NFL (@NFL) September 28, 2025

4:51: Travon is questionable to return.

DE Travon Walker has a wrist injury and his return is questionable.

— JaguarsPR (@JaguarsPR) September 28, 2025

4:46:

. @swaggy_t1's 48-yard touchdown run put the Jaguars ahead, 7-3, in the second quarter. Etienne Jr. is one of three players this season (RB Derrick Henry and RB Jonathan Taylor) to have two runs of 45-plus yards. pic.twitter.com/QxVPXweaNk

— JaguarsPR (@JaguarsPR) September 28, 2025

4:44: DEVIN LLOYD WITH A TAKEAWAY!

PICK! The @Jaguars defense with their 11th takeaway of the season

JAXvsSF on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXnxV pic.twitter.com/DiLw6dv8mj

— NFL (@NFL) September 28, 2025

4:42:

. @DGardeck forced a fumble recovered by @deweywingard for the Jaguars' 10th takeaway of the season, tied with Pittsburgh for the most in the NFL. The Jaguars have had 10 takeaways through the first four games of a season just one other time in franchise history (2017).

— JaguarsPR (@JaguarsPR) September 28, 2025

4:40: TOUCHDOWN ETIENNE!!

TRAVIS ETIENNE 48-YARD HOUSE CALL

JAXvsSF on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXnxV pic.twitter.com/rw18T7TMD8

— NFL (@NFL) September 28, 2025

4:39: THE DEFENSE GETS THEIR TENTH TAKEAWAY FOR THE SEASON!


4:35: End of the first quarter.

One down.#JAXvsSF pic.twitter.com/i571zaAF7O

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) September 28, 2025

4:21: Allen Jr. makes a questionable catch instead of letting the ball bounce out of bounds. Jaguars start around their own ten-yard line. Lawrence to BTJ for a first down, followed by a first down run by Etienne. Etienne picks up another first down. Lawrence moves the chains on 4th&1. Cooke comes out to punt.

4:05: Jacksonville wins the toss and defers. Former Jaguars Luke Farrell brings the 49ers to first and goal. The defense holds the 49ers offense to three points.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/game-...ars-vs-49ers-week-4-live-blog-and-open-thread
 
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