Super Bowl predictions 2026: Seahawks or Patriots; which team wins?

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA- FEBRUARY 4: A general view of the Seattle Seahawks helmet and New England Patriots helmet displayed in inside of the Levi's Stadium prior to Super Bowl LX on February 4, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Don Juan Moore/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We are less than 36 hours away from the biggest game of the season!

Super Bowl LX features a rematch of Super Bowl XLIX (2015) between the Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots. Neither team was expected to be here, which makes the matchup that much more thrilling for all NFL fans. Kickoff is at 6:30 p.m. Eastern on NBC.

According to FanDuel Sportsbook, the Seahawks are favored by 4.5 points, and the total is set at 45.5 points.

According to Jacksonville Jaguars fans, the Seahawks will indeed win the Super Bowl.

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I’ve been going back and forth all week. I generally prefer Seattle’s coaches (Mike Macdonald, Klint Kubiak, etc.) over New England’s staff (Mike Vrabel, Josh McDaniels, etc.), but on this stage, the latter’s postseason experience provides a major edge. And while Seahawks QB Sam Darnold is more experienced than Patriots QB Drake Maye, I might actually trust Maye more in big-time moments. However! At the end of the day, Seattle’s roster is so much better than New England’s that I do expect the Seahawks to win. The Patriots *can* win this game but they’ll need just about every bounce of the ball to go their way.

What would a Patriots win mean for the Jaguars? How about the Seahawks?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...redictions-2026-seahawks-patriots-pick-winner
 
Jacksonville Jaguars betting odds to win next year’s Super Bowl

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JACKSONVILLE, FL - OCTOBER 15: Trevor Lawrence #16 of the Jacksonville Jaguars celebrates during an NFL game against the Indianapolis Colts at EverBank Field on October 15, 2023 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Perry Knotts/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Jacksonville Jaguars are tied for the 12th-lowest odds to win Super Bowl LXI next year.

Here’s a quick look at where each NFL team sits, per FanDuel Sportsbook.

  • Seattle Seahawks (+750)
  • Los Angeles Rams (+800)
  • Baltimore Ravens (+1200)
  • Buffalo Bills (+1200)
  • Green Bay Packers (+1300)
  • Los Angeles Chargers (+1500)
  • Philadelphia Eagles (+1500)
  • Detroit Lions (+1600)
  • Kansas City Chiefs (+1600)
  • New England Patriots (+1700)
  • San Francisco 49ers (+1800)
  • Denver Broncos (+2000)
  • Jacksonville Jaguars (+2000)
  • Houston Texans (+2000)
  • Chicago Bears (+2700)
  • Cincinatti Bengals (+3000)
  • Dallas Cowboys (+3000)
  • Indianapolis Colts (+4000)
  • Washington Commanders (+4500)
  • Atlanta Falcons (+5000)
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers (+5000)
  • Minnesota Vikings (+5500)
  • New York Giants (+7500)
  • Pittsburgh Steelers (+10000)
  • Cleveland Browns (+12500)
  • Las Vegas Raiders +12500)
  • Tennessee Titans (+15000)
  • Carolina Panthers (+15000)
  • New Orleans Saints (+17500)
  • Arizona Cardinals (+22500)
  • Miami Dolphins (+22500)
  • New York Jets (+25000)

I think the best value on the board might be the Vikings, just because their odds would rise considerably if they land a veteran quarterback in the offseason. One might say that Minnesota is a quarterback away.

As for Jacksonville, this year’s Super Bowl showed that a dominant four-man pass rush is the best path to winning a ring. What will James Gladstone and the front office do to upgrade the defensive line over the next few months?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...sonville-jaguars-betting-odds-super-bowl-2027
 
That Meyers trade really did transform the offense. You could see it in how defenses had to adjust - they couldn't just bracket Thomas anymore, and it opened up everything underneath for Strange and the backs. Coen calling it a turning point makes sense when you look at the second half numbers.

The awards snubs sting a bit but honestly, it's hard to argue too much. Stafford's season was historic, and McCaffrey coming back to put up those numbers deserved recognition. The Vrabel pick over Coen is the one that bothers me most - Jacksonville's schedule was significantly harder and they dealt with more impactful injuries. But New England going to the Super Bowl probably sealed that vote.

Speaking of which, I'm taking Seattle on Sunday. Their defensive front is going to give Maye problems, and while Vrabel's postseason experience matters, the talent gap is real. Darnold just needs to manage the game and let the defense work.

Those +2000 odds for next year feel about right. The cap situation is concerning though - being $11.4 million over with key guys hitting free agency is going to require some tough decisions. Curious to see what they do at defensive line. A dominant pass rush is clearly the recipe after watching this playoff run.

Anyone else think the Etienne situation is going to be interesting? PFF listing him as a top upcoming free agent has me wondering what the market looks like for him.
 
Important dates for the Jaguars’ 2026 offseason

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JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA - JUNE 11: General manager James Gladstone talks with offensive coordinator Grant Udinski of the Jacksonville Jaguars during a Jacksonville Jaguars mandatory minicamp at Miller Electric Center on June 11, 2025 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Logan Bowles/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Super Bowl LX is in the books, and we are officially on to the 2026-27 NFL season.

Every team’s first task of the offseason is to decide whether or not to re-sign any impending free agents (and the Jacksonville Jaguars face difficult decisions on that front). From there, we’ll transition into pro free agency, then the college draft, then college free agency. Get ready for significant change over the next couple of months.

Here are the most important dates throughout the 2026 offseason for the Jacksonville Jaguars.

  • February 17: Teams may begin designating franchise/transition players
  • February 23-March 2: NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis
  • March 3: Teams must designate franchise/transition players before 4 p.m. ET
  • March 9-11: Free-agency negotiation period begins on the 9th at noon ET
  • March 11: New league year begins at 4 p.m. ET (free agent deals and trades become official)
  • March 29-April 1: Annual League Meeting in Phoenix
  • April 6: Teams with a new head coach may begin offseason workout programs
  • April 20: Teams with a returning head coach may begin offseason workout programs
  • April 23: Last day for teams to bring 30 draft-eligible players to their facility for visits
  • April 23-25: 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh
  • May 1: Deadline to exercise fifth-year option for 2022 first-round draft picks
  • May 1-4 or May 8-11: Rookie minicamp
  • July 15: Deadline to sign a designated franchise player to a multiyear contract extension
  • Late July: Training camp begins (exact dates TBD)

What are you looking forward to most this offseason? Let us know in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...le-jaguars-2026-nfl-offseason-important-dates
 
Daily Prowl: Press Taylor is an offensive coordinator again

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Chicago Bears passing game coordinator Press Taylor watches training camp practice on July 23, 2025, at Halas Hall in Lake Forest, Illinois. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Good afternoon!

Here is today’s roundup of the latest news, rumors, and analysis on your Jacksonville Jaguars.

Local links


Study up before your next trip to the watercooler.

Bears Elevate Pass Game Coordinator Press Taylor to Offensive Coordinator (Windy City Gridiron)

After a relatively short interview process, the Bears went the safe and familiar route with Taylor, who joined the Bears last year under Johnson. The 38-year-old coach held several high-profile positions with Doug Pederson, serving as quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator for Pederson in Philadelphia before the hire of Nick Sirianni and then following the veteran coach to Jacksonville, where he served as Pederson’s offensive coordinator from 2022-2024. Unfortunately for Taylor, Trevor Lawrence failed to become an elite player during his tenure, leading to his eventual ouster.

Important dates for the Jaguars’ 2026 offseason (Big Cat Country)

Every team’s first task of the offseason is to decide whether or not to re-sign any impending free agents (and the Jacksonville Jaguars face difficult decisions on that front). From there, we’ll transition into pro free agency, then the college draft, then college free agency. Get ready for significant change over the next couple of months.

Jaguars betting odds to win next year’s Super Bowl (Big Cat Country)

This year’s Super Bowl showed that a dominant four-man pass rush is the best path to winning a ring. What will James Gladstone and the front office do to upgrade the defensive line over the next few months?

Too soon? Bears, 49ers among early bets to win next year’s Super Bowl (ESPN)

Loza: Jacksonville went from 4-13 in 2024 to 13-4 and AFC South champions in 2025, with the regime changes creating a reversal of fortune on both sides of the ball. … The Jaguars enter 2026 as the most balanced squad in their division, allowing them to build on momentum well into the next year’s postseason.

5 Early Names For Jaguars to Watch at No. 56 (Jaguars on SI)

If the Jaguars want to use an early draft pick to address their edge rush, then it is would be hard to find a player with a more fitting temperament than Michigan’s Derrick Moore. And explosive and violent pass-rusher, Moore would give the Jaguars the change-up pass-rusher their roster needs while he still bulks up to become a full-time player in the future.

3-Round 2026 NFL Mock Draft (A to Z Sports)

The secondary is the weakness right now for the Jaguars. [D’Angelo] Ponds is a unique player who could play on the outside or in the slot, potentially. What he lacks in size, he makes up for with speed and tenacity.

Editor’s pick


Drumroll, please!

How the Seahawks’ “Dark Side” Defense Turned Super Bowl LX Into a Blowout (The Ringer)

Seattle took down Rams MVP quarterback Matthew Stafford and Maye (the runner-up) in consecutive games this postseason. Even Mahomes’s dynastic run was made possible by an elite defense suffocating MVP quarterbacks like Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson along the way. Quarterbacks may win games, but defense is winning championships in this era. And after Seattle’s performance on Sunday, maybe more teams around the league should embrace the dark side.

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Next Gen Stats attributed 14 QB Pressures Allowed to Will Campbell in Super Bowl LX – the most pressures allowed by any player in a game this season (including playoffs)@NextGenStats

— Jack Andrade (@RealJackAndrade) February 9, 2026

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below — and be sure to check our social media and The Feed for more Jaguars conversation!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...rowl-press-taylor-offensive-coordinator-again
 
OH MAN where do I even start with all this??

First off - CALLED IT on the Seahawks. That defense was absolutely NASTY in the Super Bowl. 14 pressures allowed by Will Campbell alone?? That's not a stat, that's a cry for help lmao. Seattle's front four was living in the backfield all game. Maye never had a chance.

Now let's talk about what actually matters - the BILLS at +1200 for next year's Super Bowl!! That's tied with Baltimore and honestly that feels like DISRESPECT to me. Josh Allen dragged us deep into the playoffs AGAIN and we're sitting at the same odds as the Ravens? Come on now. But whatever, let the doubters doubt. JA17 is gonna feast next year.

As for the Jags - +2000 ain't bad honestly. That turnaround from 4-13 to 13-4 was legit impressive. Trevor Lawrence finally looking like the guy everyone thought he'd be when he got drafted. The Meyers trade was huge for that offense.

But here's my concern for Jacksonville - that cap situation is ROUGH. $11.4 million over with Etienne and other key guys hitting free agency? That's gonna require some painful decisions. You can't just let a running back like ETN walk, but you also can't overpay in this league.

And yeah, Coen getting snubbed for Coach of the Year is CRIMINAL. Vrabel's a good coach but come on - the schedule difficulty and injuries Jacksonville dealt with should've been the tiebreaker.

Anyone else think the Jags should be targeting edge rushers hard in the draft? That Derrick Moore kid from Michigan sounds like exactly what they need.
 
Daily Prowl: Should the Jaguars sign Kenneth Walker III in free agency?

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Seattle Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker III (9) in the 4th quarter against the New England Patriots during Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. on Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (Photo by Santiago Mejia/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

Good afternoon!

Here is today’s roundup of the latest news, rumors, and analysis on your Jacksonville Jaguars.

Local links


Study up before your next trip to the watercooler.

Ranking where Seahawks star Kenneth Walker III could land (CBS Sports)

The Jaguars have an impending free agent running back coming off a breakout as well in Travis Etienne Jr. Should he not return to Jacksonville, Walker could emerge as a suitable replacement. The Jaguars jumped to 13-4 this season, their first under Liam Coen, who loves using multiple backs. He did so in Jacksonville in 2025 and previously in Tampa Bay.

2026 NFL Free Agency: The Top 100 Players Available and Potential Fits (Fox Sports)

Otton, 26, has played a ton for the Bucs, with at least 92% of offensive snaps in each of the last three years. He’s averaged 52 catches and 500 yards in Tampa, but he’s also totaled only 11 touchdowns, getting his lone score of 2025 in the season finale. The Bucs have precious little else at the position, so if they let him walk rather than pay $8 million a year or more, they’d have to invest in a proper replacement, either in free agency with limited options or in the draft. Jacksonville? A Liam Coen reunion might make sense.

Jaguars’ 2025 positional review: Cornerback (Action Sports Jax)

When Lewis went down, Jones moved back inside and was lights out from then on. Among the Top-36 slot corners, Jones ranked second in NFL Rating (55.9) and first in yards allowed per snap (0.73). Statistically, no one was better in the nickel than Jarrian Jones. For reference, Lewis ranked sixth and seventh, respectively.

2025 Season in Review: Statistically Speaking (Jaguars.com)

Eighty-five point six: Takeaways were one statistic that defined an improved Jaguars defense in 2025. Another was the run defense, which led the NFL by allowing 85.6 yards per game in a season in which teams allowed an average of 116.9 yards per game. The Jaguars did not allow an opposing player to rush for more than 75 yards in a game in 2025.

Jaguars 7 Round NFL Mock Draft (A to Z Sports)

Jake Golday’s versatile skill set could help address the Jaguars’ pursuit of defensive efficiency. Golday has contributed in multiple roles on a Bearcats team that has exceeded expectations this year. Golday has demonstrated skill as a blitzer, tackler, and coverage player. His length and size provide NFL defensive coordinators with options for his role, as he has been effective both on the edge and off the ball. His testing results relative to his size will likely influence his draft position.

Editor’s pick


Drumroll, please!

2026 NFL Draft rankings: Who are the top 100 prospects in this year’s class? (The Athletic)

Reese was the No. 1 prospect on my midseason top 50, and nothing has changed at the top. An impressive height/weight/speed athlete, Reese (one of the youngest prospects in the draft class) was asked by Ohio State to play a blend of multiple positions, which showcased his vast tools for NFL scouts.

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Sam Darnold and Kenneth Walker in the tea cups at Disney belongs in the louvre

I’m cracking up right now 💀 pic.twitter.com/mbznXVBy6Z

— Mikey O’ver (@MikeyOver1) February 10, 2026

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below — and be sure to check our social media and The Feed for more Jaguars conversation!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...aily-prowl-should-jaguars-sign-kenneth-walker
 
Jaguars 2026 Offseason Home Page: Free Agents, Draft Picks, Key Dates, & More

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JACKSONVILLE, FL - JANUARY 04: James Gladstone, general manager of the Jacksonville Jaguars, Liam Coen of the Jacksonville Jaguars, and Tony Boselli, executive vice president of football operations for the Jacksonville Jaguars, look on before the game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Tennessee Titans on January 4, 2026 at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fl. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

It’s a new year with new possibilities.

The Jacksonville Jaguars will look to build off its promising 13-win season in Year 1 of a new regime led by head coach Liam Coen, general manager Tony Boselli, and executive VP of football operations/Hall of Fame offensive tackle Tony Boselli.

“The desired result obviously wasn’t there, but there’s a lot of pride in the process,” Gladstone said to recap the team’s 2025-26 season. “As I think about what myself, Liam, Tony were able to do with a vision, being able to execute that, raising the floor of the football team, knowing that when you think back to 2024 there was plenty of talent to keep, close games, but we needed to raise the floor and inject intangibles into the football team so that we could close games. To be able to see that come to fruition is something that we can certainly take some pride in.”

“Knowing that our whole message and really what was so great is Liam’s message was absorbed by our players. It was believed by our players, but it was going 1-0. To be able to say, hey, looking right here we need to pour in simply into our process, not worry so much about the results and find fulfillment there knowing that regardless of if we win a Super Bowl or if we don’t, that ball is rolling back down to the bottom of the hill and we got to start all the way over.”

Be sure to bookmark this page to stay as up to date as possible during the Jaguars’ 2026 offseason.

2025 In Review​

2026 News​

2026 Analysis​

2026 Free Agency​

2026 NFL Draft​

2026 Schedule​


See you in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...sonville-jaguars-2026-nfl-offseason-home-page
 
Daily Prowl: Placing franchise tag on Devin Lloyd makes zero sense

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SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 03: Devin Lloyd #0 of the Jacksonville Jaguars looks on before the 2026 NFL Pro Bowl game between the AFC and the NFC at the Moscone Center South on February 03, 2026 in San Francisco, California. The NFC won 66-52. (Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good afternoon!

Here is today’s roundup of the latest news, rumors, and analysis on your Jacksonville Jaguars.

Local links


Study up before your next trip to the watercooler.

Restructure or Reload? The Jaguars’ Biggest Salary Cap Decisions of 2026 (Big Cat Country)

In lieu of restructuring left guard Ezra Cleveland, the team could opt to extend the veteran offensive lineman who enters the final year of his three-year, 2024 extension. Cleveland carries an OverTheCap market valuation of approximately $11.6 million per year, which is almost identical to his current 2026 cap hit of $11.4 million. At that annual average, Cleveland would rank as the 11th-highest paid left guard in the NFL. This route would open up $6.0 million in cap space, a higher amount than the $5.6 million from restructuring.

2026 Way-Too-Early NFL Power Rankings: Jaguars Too Low? (Big Cat Country)

We rounded up way-too-early 2026 NFL power rankings to get a sense of how much respect the Jaguars have earned over the past several months.

Jaguars’ 2025 positional review: Safety (Action Sports Jax)

To provide some further insight into just how good Antonio Johnson was this season, he finished as Pro Football Focus’ highest graded safety and was sixth among all NFL defenders in EPA lost in coverage, according to NextGenStats.

2026 NFL predictions: Super Bowl LXI picks, MVP candidates (ESPN)

[Big Prediction:] Moody: Running back Travis Etienne Jr . will sign with the Chiefs during free agency. Etienne would be intriguing as a proven, versatile back who has surpassed 1,000 rushing yards in three of his four healthy seasons, including 1,107 yards and seven touchdowns in 2025. His ability to contribute as both a runner and receiver (5,136 career all-purpose yards with 32 touchdowns) would boost a Chiefs backfield that averaged less 4.0 yards per carry last season and failed to produce a running back with at least 200 receiving yards.

2026 NFL Free Agency Big Board: Ranking Top 50 Players (Bleacher Report)

Travis Etienne Jr. might not be universally viewed as the top running back in free agency, but when he’s at his best, there aren’t many more capable dual-threat backs out there. An explosive runner and receiver, the 27-year-old has reached 1,399 scrimmage yards in three of his four seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

2026 NFL franchise tag primer: What we’re hearing on top candidates and early tag decisions (CBS Sports)

Lloyd faces a linebacker tag number near $28 million, which groups off-ball linebackers with outside players. Fred Warner doesn’t make that kind of money, and the Jaguars already have Ventrell Miller on a rookie deal.

One offseason acquisition that could take these five NFL teams to the next level (PFF)

Cincinnati could be wise to aggressively pursue Jacksonville’s Devin Lloyd, who is fresh off a career-best season at 27 years old. Lloyd’s 88.4 PFF overall grade ranked third among qualified linebackers this season. He was also one of just three linebackers to rank in the top 12 in PFF run-defense grade and PFF coverage grade. Assuming he can maintain something close to that level of production, Lloyd would be a great fit as the new leader of the Bengals’ defense.

Ranking all 63 starting quarterbacks from the 2025 NFL season (NFL.com)

Trevor Lawrence played the best football of his career in 2025, finally flirting with the generational tag he’s carried since his days at Clemson. Lawrence was a laser-accurate passer, used his legs more than he ever has as a pro and proved to be the unrelenting engine behind a Jaguars team that evolved into an offensive machine in the second half of the season. With Liam Coen leading the way, Lawrence and the Jaguars have a bright future ahead of them.

Editor’s pick


Drumroll, please!

NFL insiders rank head coach hires (The Athletic)

There are very real concerns about the power structure with ownership in Tennessee. The recent stretch of turnover at coach and GM has only amplified the skepticism.

“I thought they were going offense because of the QB,” an executive said. “(Saleh) is confident and organized. He’s going to put together a decent staff. But is the personnel side set up in a way for the head coach and pieces to have success? And will they have time to do it?”

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55 burgers, 55 fries, 55 tacos, 55 pies, 55 cokes, 55 wings, 55 shakes, 55 pancakes, 55 pastas, 55 peppers, 155 taters, 55 TDs pic.twitter.com/edBw6mBbm4

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) February 11, 2026

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below — and be sure to check our social media and The Feed for more Jaguars conversation!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ly-prowl-franchise-tag-devin-lloyd-zero-sense
 
Where would Liam Coen rank in this year’s crop of head coach hires?

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JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA - JANUARY 11: Head coach Liam Coen of the Jacksonville Jaguars looks on prior to the AFC Wild Card Playoff game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Buffalo Bills at EverBank Stadium on January 11, 2026 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

And just like that, the season is over.

A Super Bowl more memorable for reaction to the halftime show rather than the product on the field drew the curtain on the 2025 NFL campaign. Whilst the Seattle Seahawks players were still picking confetti out of their hair, their offensive coordinator was busy assuming the final head coach position, the last of ten openings in the league this year.

After an impressive first twelve months in charge of the Jacksonville Jaguars, Liam Coen is firmly entrenched in Duval County and scheming ways to have his franchise take the next step in 2026. But where would he rank amongst the hires if he were on the market this season? Let’s take a look:

First-time head coaches​

"Hell yeah, I'm going [to Las Vegas.]"

Seahawks OC Klint Kubiak confirms with @StaceyDales that he will be the next coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. pic.twitter.com/DEtOPhXbMM

— NFL Network (@nflnetwork) February 9, 2026

This is the category Coen would have fallen into this time last year; a group of unknowns full of potential and ambition as they take the lead role of an NFL franchise for the first time. Of the ten hires this offseason, six of them are first-time head coaches: Joe Brady (Buffalo Bills), Mike LaFleur (Arizona Cardinals), Jeff Hafley (Miami Dolphins), Todd Monken (Cleveland Browns), Jesse Minter (Baltimore Ravens) and Klint Kubiak (Las Vegas Raiders).

Like Coen, Brady, LaFleur and Kubiak have an extensive track record on the offensive side of the ball. In fact, all four coaches’ resumes are remarkably similar, with each one being OC’s at two different franchises before being hired as a head coach. If this were twelve months ago, you could put this quartet of playcallers in any order you chose.

But Coen has 13 NFL wins under his belt from just one season in charge, and is a proven commodity. Success in one season does not guarantee it in the next, but it’s a season that none of the new offensive head coaches have achieved and at the very least sits the Jaguars HC above his new peers.

Monken, at 60, feels different from the three above, with an outrageous level of experience. He was head coach at Southern Miss for three years in the early 2010’s, but appears to be an uninspiring hire by a franchise familiar with him from his time as OC in 2019. It may be unfair, but if he was hired by the Jags last season, Shah Khan would have been public enemy number one in Duval County.

The only one from this group you can make a case for would be Jeff Hafley, who spent four years as a head coach in college football with Boston College. Hafley was widely regarded as a success in Chestnut Hill, dragging the Eagles to ACC respectability. He left with a creditable 22-26 record, apparently wanting to focus on coaching rather than recruiting – and his impressive two year stint a DC with the Green Bay Packers has only added to his growing reputation. I’d naturally still err towards the head coach with NFL experience, but it’s a close one.

Fired and hired​

Giants, HC John Harbaugh agree to five-year deal. (via @rapsheet, @TomPelissero, @MikeGarafolo) pic.twitter.com/dSzbtI5lSt

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026

Two teams’ coaching searches ended in appointing names who were in the top job elsewhere last season. John Harbaugh spent eighteen seasons with the Baltimore Ravens, racking up 180 wins in the process. Of those 18 campaigns, the Ravens went to the playoffs 12 times and won Super Bowl XLVII in 2012 after a memorable win over his brother Jim Harbaugh, then head coach of the San Francisco 49ers.

It would be remarkably insincere for even the most ardent Jaguars fan to claim that Coen’s one season in charge in Jacksonville could hold a candle to the CV that Harbaugh built in Baltimore. The New York Giants won the lottery when it came to the head coach carousel, and whether or not he has anywhere near the same level of success in the Big Apple as he did in Charm City, nobody can argue with the appointment.

The other new head coach in this category is a more nuanced argument. Can anyone really be fairly judged amongst their fellow HC’s if they’re working for the Cleveland Browns? Kevin Stefanski had an up-and-down tenure in North Ohio; do you praise him for two eleven-win seasons – the first to reach that number since Bill Belichick in 1994? Or do you hold him to account for 26 losses over the last two years?

A lot of that is determined by who you consider responsible for talent acquisition. The quarterback drama alone in Cleveland should be enough to get someone fired. The Atlanta Falcons evidently feel Andrew Berry was at fault, and Stefanski gets a second chance; ultimately, delivering the first playoff win to Browns fans in 26 years might JUST edge one season of success in Jacksonville.

The retreads​

"Pittsburgh is my world."

Pittsburgh native Mike McCarthy gets emotional as he is introduced as the @steelers next HC 🥹 pic.twitter.com/R3nv6rXfCk

— NFL (@NFL) January 27, 2026

The final two hires selected coaches who have previous experience in the hot seat, but spent 2025 either as a coordinator or on sabbatical. Robert Saleh seems to have gotten over the traumatic experience of coaching the New York Jets and is ready for another crack of the whip with the Tennessee Titans; an excellent defensive coordinator in two stints under Kyle Shanahan in San Francisco, there is no evidence from his time in Gotham to suggest the Jaguars need to worry about their AFC South rivals. Saleh will be looking to prove doubters wrong, but Coen’s stock as a head coach is far higher.

The final candidate on this list, like Harbaugh, has eighteen years as a head coach under his belt and a Super Bowl ring on his finger. But unlike Harbaugh, Mike McCarthy did not arrive at his new home amidst rapturous applause from the natives. Despite three 12-win seasons in a row with the Dallas Cowboys, McCarthy has the reputation of a coach who has failed to keep up with the times.

It’s fair to question the lack of success in both Dallas and Green Bay, considering the talent. McCarthy has been to the playoffs twelve times behind the arms of Brett Favre, Aaron Rodgers and Dak Prescott, but never got back to the big game. Perhaps the new Pittsburgh Steelers head coach is being held to a higher level of account than Harbaugh, considering the near-identical career records. Regardless, you won’t find one single person in Jacksonville who would swap their leader for him.

Rankings:​

  1. Jim Harbaugh, New York Giants
  2. Kevin Stefanski, Atlanta Falcons
  3. Liam Coen, Jacksonville Jaguars
  4. Jeff Hafley, Miami Dolphins
  5. Joe Brady, Buffalo Bills
  6. Jesse Minter, Baltimore Ravens
  7. Mike LaFleur, Arizona Cardinals
  8. Klint Kubiak, Las Vegas Raiders
  9. Robert Saleh, Tennessee Titans
  10. Mike McCarthy, Pittsburgh Steelers
  11. Todd Monken, Cleveland Browns

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ould-liam-coen-rank-2026-nfl-head-coach-hires
 
Daily Prowl: Trevor Lawrence dominated the middle of the field in 2025

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NASHVILLE TENNESSEE - JANUARY 07: Trevor Lawrence #16 of the Jacksonville Jaguars throws a pass during the game against the Tennessee Titans in Nashville, Tennessee at Nissan Stadium on January 7, 2024 in Houston, Texas. The Titans defeated the Jaguars 28-20. (Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good afternoon!

Here is today’s roundup of the latest news, rumors, and analysis on your Jacksonville Jaguars.

Local links


Study up before your next trip to the watercooler.

Where would Liam Coen rank in this year’s crop of head coach hires? (Big Cat Country)

Like Coen, Brady, LaFleur and Kubiak have an extensive track record on the offensive side of the ball. In fact, all four coaches’ resumes are remarkably similar, with each one being OC’s at two different franchises before being hired as a head coach. If this were twelve months ago, you could put this quartet of playcallers in any order you chose.

How Jaguars’ Defense Mirrored Seahawks’ This Past Season (Jaguars on SI)

Jacksonville was tied for second in yards per attempt while coming in at ninth in sub-package rate at 74 percent. They featured elite run-stoppers in their “front six,” such as Josh Hines-Allen, Travon Walker, and Foyesade Oluokun. The Jaguars have to upgrade their secondary and either re-sign Devin Lloyd or replace him, but they’re encouragingly close to matching the Seahawks’ formula.

2025 Season in Review: Breaking Out (Jaguars.com)

It’s perhaps not fair to call Travis Etienne Jr. a “breakout player” in 2025. But while the fifth-year veteran back had had two previous 1,000-yard rushing seasons – in 2022 and 2023 – the ’25 season was perhaps his best as a professional. Etienne, the No 25 overall selection in the 2021 NFL Draft, rushed for 1,107 yards with 292 yards receiving. His 13 touchdowns led the Jaguars and were a career-high.

The biggest offseason needs for all 32 NFL teams (The Athletic)

The Jaguars need to boost their secondary with more starting-caliber players who can excel in defensive coordinator Anthony Campanile’s zone-based system. They ran into coverage issues down the stretch, and midseason acquisition Greg Newsome struggled in the playoff loss to the Bills. Travis Hunter’s return will help, for sure, but the Jaguars need to add a few pieces to the competition.

The Trades, Signings and Draft Picks That Decided the 2025 NFL Season (Sports Illustrated)

The Jaguars made one of the most impactful moves of the year by bringing in Jakobi Meyers midseason. Early in the year, the Jaguars receiving core was plagued by drops. Once Jacksonville brought in Meyers, the Jaguars transformed into one of the NFL’s most explosive offenses heading into the postseason. The acquisition proved so successful that the Jaguars extended Meyers before the end of the regular season.

2026 NFL futures odds: Intriguing sleepers to consider (CBS Sports)

AFC South, Jaguars (+180): In their first year under coach Liam Coen, the Jags were among the biggest surprises amid their 13-4 finish and playoff appearance. We understand that the elite defensive profile of the Texans, who finished the regular season with nice consecutive wins, is why they are the slight chalk. But as their playoff struggles illustrated, they could be facing a dilemma at quarterback while Trevor Lawrence and friends are likely to take another step forward.

Editor’s pick


Drumroll, please!

‘New one for you’: Inside Steve Tisch’s transactional friendship with Jeffrey Epstein (The Athletic)

Since the Department of Justice released more than 3 million emails last month, powerful individuals have had their dealings with Epstein scrutinized. But the Tisch-Epstein dynamic — revealed in dozens of unguarded emails exchanged between them in 2013 — stands out for how singularly focused it was on Epstein’s ability to connect Tisch with young women. There was scant talk about philanthropy or business opportunities present in many other Epstein relationships. Rather, Epstein, a convicted sex offender who was charged with sex trafficking before his death in 2019, merely plucked women from his orbit and delivered them to Tisch.

Must-see media


Auto-retweet.

Best "catchable" throw rates in the intermediate area of the field

[throws traveling 10-19 air yards, min. 55 attempts]:

1. Trevor Lawrence – 81.4%
2. Brock Purdy – 79.1%
3. Marcus Mariota – 78.6%
4. Lamar Jackson – 78.5%
5. Joe Burrow – 78.0% pic.twitter.com/XshfO8ghJi

— Fantasy Points Data (@FantasyPtsData) February 12, 2026

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below — and be sure to check our social media and The Feed for more Jaguars conversation!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ly-prowl-trevor-lawrence-middle-of-field-2025
 
Tweets of the week: ‘Best is yet to come’

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SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 05: (L-R) Marissa Mowry and Trevor Lawrence attend the 15th Annual NFL Honors at Palace Of Fine Arts on February 05, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

Happy Friday, Big Cat Country! Let’s look at some of this week’s Jacksonville Jaguars highlights, hype, and more from X/Twitter.

Jaguars legend Jimmy Smith celebrated a birthday:

Happy Birthday to our guy @JimmySmithJags, a legend in teal 🫡
#DUUUVAL pic.twitter.com/5zMHpOya7U

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) February 9, 2026

Trevor Lawrence commented on the Jaguars’ fan base:

"It does give that small town feel of like everyone's just bought-in on football."@trevorlawrence on the #DUUUVAL fan base. pic.twitter.com/rqFcZTZA8e

— Jim Rome (@jimrome) February 5, 2026

QB1 on facing adversity and returning to the playoffs:

"It's the hand you're dealt, and you've gotta play it… you gotta go straight through it."@trevorlawrence battling through adversity in his career to return to the playoffs this season. pic.twitter.com/8RkCkh3bwI

— Jim Rome (@jimrome) February 5, 2026

He also spoke on the Jaguars’ wide receiver room:

Trevor Lawrence gives a full breakdown of his wide receiver room.
– Jakobi Meyers' great spatial awareness
– Parker Washington's natural talent
– Why he wants to still see Travis Hunter on offense
– How Brian Thomas Jr. handled a challenging season pic.twitter.com/mGgcwCCBVb

— Matt Harmon (@MattHarmon_BYB) February 6, 2026

Coach Coen talked about how he’s proud to coach this team:

"So proud to be able to coach this team." 🥹#NFLHonors on NBC/NFLN pic.twitter.com/fXC4ztkNqL

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) February 6, 2026

Arik Armstead, Trevor Lawrence, Logan Cooke, and Liam Coen at NFL Honors:

The boys 🙌⁰⁰#NFLHonors pic.twitter.com/nVjRNDjWFE

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) February 6, 2026

Cam Little spoke to Jordan Schultz about his record-breaking field goal:

#Jaguars K Cam Little tells me the behind the scenes of his absurd NFL record 68-yard FG from this season 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/Mq4LlAlKhj

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) February 6, 2026

The Jaguars will be featured on Vice’s season finale of “Don’t Call it a Comeback”:

That sound you hear is me running through a brick wall

Two weeks from today, the season finale of @VICETV’s “Don’t Call it a Comeback” series will feature… your Jacksonville #Jaguars

(and plenty of other #FriendsOfThePod) pic.twitter.com/BTRQ0xgFX5

— Mia O'Brien (@MiaOBrienTV) February 10, 2026

Franchise history was made with the 55 touchdowns scored:

55 burgers, 55 fries, 55 tacos, 55 pies, 55 cokes, 55 wings, 55 shakes, 55 pancakes, 55 pastas, 55 peppers, 155 taters, 55 TDs pic.twitter.com/edBw6mBbm4

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) February 11, 2026

Lawrence stated the “best is yet to come”:

best is yet to come. pic.twitter.com/6OV1rWQ02n

— Trevor Lawrence (@trevorlawrence) February 7, 2026

I feel like I say this every week, but I’m ready for the 2026 season:

It felt amazing, Coach 🥹#DUUUVAL pic.twitter.com/hdQH4JebWY

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) February 9, 2026

Cannot wait:

We can't wait to be Back at The 'Bank in '26 🔒
#DUUUVAL pic.twitter.com/Kmu3dKvYCz

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) February 6, 2026

Speaking this into existence:

Taking the Super Bowl LXI logo for a spin. pic.twitter.com/UNaRGNMe7C

— NFL Fashion Advice (@fashion_nfl) February 10, 2026

Some familiar faces at TPC Sawgrass:

Jaguars on the prowl at TPC Sawgrass. #DUUUVAL pic.twitter.com/1652IamGmD

— THE PLAYERS (@THEPLAYERS) February 12, 2026

Josh Hines-Allen shared his thoughts on Bad Bunny’s halftime show:

Zero comprehension, 100% respect. Powerful message. LOVE!

— Joshua Hines-Allen (@JoshHinesAllen) February 9, 2026

Admittedly, I’m not sure what the context is for this, but hell yeah:

Thank God For Jacksonville Fl!!!!! 🙏🏾❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

— Plies (@plies) February 8, 2026

Happy Galentines and Valentine’s Day to those who celebrate. I hope you have a wonderful and safe weekend! Not following Big Cat Country on social media? You can find us on Twitter, Bluesky, Facebook, Instagram, and Threads.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacksonville-jaguars-news/82320/tweets-of-the-week-best-is-yet-to-come
 
Daily Prowl: The Titans assembled the baldest coaching staff of all time

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New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll, left, and New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh hug before a preseason game at MetLife Stadium on Sunday, August 28, 2022. Nfl Giants Vs Jets Preseason Game Giants At Jets

Good afternoon!

Here is today’s roundup of the latest news, rumors, and analysis on your Jacksonville Jaguars.

Local links


Study up before your next trip to the watercooler.

Why the Jaguars’ 2026 season won’t be like 2018 (Big Cat Country)

The Sacksonville defense was obviously due for regression in turnover margin (they ended up falling from fifth-best in 2017 to third-worst in 2018), but they also worsened in sack margin (from second-best to fifth-worst). Tough look given the nickname. In fact, according to Sharp Football Analysis, their -18 differential in forced sacks from 2017 to 2018 was the largest year-to-year difference for any NFL team in 30 years.

Tweets of the week: ‘Best is yet to come’ (Big Cat Country)

Happy Friday, Big Cat Country! Let’s look at some of this week’s Jacksonville Jaguars highlights, hype, and more from X/Twitter.

Jaguars NFL free agency: Should they re-sign Montaric Brown? (Florida Times-Union)

With Hunter slated to take on a larger role defensively next season, the Jaguars may not find the urgency needed to fill the second corner spot right away. If the team signs Brown to an extension, it essentially would lock him in as one of the starting corners without much competition fairly allowed.

Jaguars’ Defense set for massive roster turnover in 2026 (Action Sports Jax)

This year, the Jaguars will face some tough decisions as only 60% of defensive snaps are set to return, the fourth lowest mark in the NFL. There’s some pretty big names that come along with that, namely Devin Lloyd and Montaric Brown.

3 Things That Must Happen This Offseason for Jaguars to Return to Playoffs (Jaguars on SI)

Brown and Newsome are both set to be free agents next month if the Jaguars don’t sign them to long-term deals. If the Jaguars lose both, that is nearly 1,200 snaps the Jaguars have to replace in the secondary. Hunter playing more defensive snaps will solve some of that, but he will play offense as well, so the Jaguars will need to add multiple pieces to fill out the room.

2026 NFL offseason: Free agency, draft questions for all 32 teams (ESPN)

The Jaguars must make getting the quarterback on the ground a priority; they ranked third in QB pressures (222) but 27th in sacks (32) in 2025. This year’s class of edge rushers is regarded to be pretty deep, which is good since Jacksonville doesn’t have a first-round pick because of the Travis Hunter trade last year. Could the Jags get involved in the pursuit of the Raiders’ Maxx Crosby?

Best trade fits for Maxx Crosby: Potential landing spots for Pro Bowl pass rusher (NFL.com)

The Jaguars made big strides in 2025, winning the division after having just four victories in 2024, but their pass rush needs a boost if they want to continue that upward trajectory next season. Jacksonville just ranked 21st in pass defense and 27th in sacks, with Josh Hines-Allen leading the way with eight QB takedowns. Crosby would provide a much-needed boost to the defensive line and another dynamic pass rusher opposite Hines-Allen. With Crosby, the Jags could be true Super Bowl contenders.

Overlooked Veterans Every Team Must Prioritize in 2026 NFL Free Agency (Bleacher Report)

Like all the veteran players on this list, Wingard isn’t a star. But he’s a physical safety who can hold his own against the pass who just held down the back end of the defense capably for a 13-win Jaguars team.

Every NFL team’s biggest roster decision entering 2026 (PFF)

Lloyd’s fit as the centerpiece in Anthony Campanile’s defense is obvious, and he helped the unit sit sixth in EPA per play. But with the Jaguars having negative cap space and without any major deals to restructure, it may be an uphill battle to keep Lloyd — who should have a massive market at only 27 years old.

Editor’s pick


Drumroll, please!

Tennessee Titans finalize 2026 coaching staff (Music City Miracles)

The Tennessee Titans announced their 2026 coaching staff under Robert Saleh this afternoon. The new staff features just three holdovers from Brian Callahan’s 2025 staff: special teams coordinator John Fassel, tight ends coach Luke Stocker, and defensive backs coach Tony Oden. It also includes Saleh’s cousin, Ahmed Saleh, as a defensive assistant and Mike Borgonzi’s brother, Dave Borgonzi, as the linebackers coach.

Must-see media


Auto-retweet.

They’re calling it the baldest coaching staff in NFL history, folks.

Ryan Day (@ryanday.bsky.social) 2026-02-13T16:25:00.288Z

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below — and be sure to check our social media and The Feed for more Jaguars conversation!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...embled-the-baldest-coaching-staff-of-all-time
 
Why the Jaguars’ 2026 season won’t be like 2018

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JACKSONVILLE, FL - SEPTEMBER 16: Blake Bortles #5 of the Jacksonville Jaguars throws a pass in the second half of their game against the New England Patriots at TIAA Bank Field on September 16, 2018 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Jacksonville Jaguars are the winners of the AFC South. They have a young quarterback and an opportunistic defense. After years of idling in the gutter, they soared to unfamiliar heights, resetting the biased image the nation holds of our beloved, gritty, horrifically beautiful Jags.

Hold up…

We’ve seen this story before — and the ending wasn’t pretty.

Jacksonville clinched the division, thus clenching the hearts of their fans, in 2017 and 2022 before flopping in “Same Old Jaguars” fashion the subsequent seasons.

Why will things be any different this time around?

Well, for starters, the starting quarterback for the 2026 Jaguars (27-year-old Trevor Lawrence) is better than the primary passers for the 2023 and 2017 teams (24-year-old Lawrence and 25-year-old Blake Bortles, respectively). Lawrence was named an MVP finalist after his tear in the second half of the 2025 season. He’s come a long way from his 2023 season, which he finished on injured reserve. And I’m not going to waste everyone’s time by explaining why he’s better than Bortles.

The 2026 Jaguars should feel much more confident not just in their quarterback but also in their head coach, offensive playcaller, and defensive playcaller compared to 2018 and 2023.

Those two teams failed in part because they were content with the coaching staff. To be fair, it’s asking a lot to make significant changes after making the playoffs. What’s more damning is that those two teams were content with the roster.

The Jaguars extended Bortles’ contract in 2018. Their two big moves that offseason were drafting DT Taven Bryan with the 29th overall pick and signing RG Andrew Norwell to a top-of-the-market deal. The Allen Bros (WRs Robinson and Hurns) left in free agency along with nickel CB Aaron Colvin, who was replaced by D.J. Hayden. The front office didn’t make any significant changes to maximize the sudden turnaround.

Same goes in 2023. Trent Baalke spent three of his first four draft picks (TE Brenton Strange, RB Tank Bigsby, LB Ventrell Miller) on non-premium positions that already had an above-average starter in place. The big moves that offseason were placing the franchise tag on Evan Engram and replacing RT Jawaan Taylor with first-round pick Anton Harrison. There are certainly cap-related reasons to consider as well, but for a second time, the front office sat on its hands and assumed Jacksonville’s growth would be linear, or at least stay flat.

Instead, the 2018 and 2023 Jaguars were bitten by the injury bug and regressed in several key categories.

The Sacksonville defense was obviously due for regression in turnover margin (they ended up falling from fifth-best in 2017 to third-worst in 2018), but they also worsened in sack margin (from second-best to fifth-worst). Tough look given the nickname. In fact, according to Sharp Football Analysis, their -18 differential in forced sacks from 2017 to 2018 was the largest year-to-year difference for any NFL team in 30 years.

Sacks were already an issue for the 2025 Jaguars, and we all just watched the Seahawks’ pass rush dominate Super Bowl LX. One would think that general manager James Gladstone and the current regime will bolster the defensive line aggressively this offseason. That may be the path to ensuring 2026 doesn’t end up like 2018 or 2023.

I recorded a podcast with BCC alum John Shipley on this very subject if you’re interested in more rationale.

Are you still nervous about history repeating itself, Jaguars fans?

Tell us why or why not in the comments!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ars-2026-2018-season-similarities-differences
 
Restructure or Reload? The Jaguars’ Biggest Salary Cap Decisions of 2026

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With the NFL officially announcing a significant increase to the 2026 salary cap to approximately $303.5 million, teams across the league are recalibrating their offseason strategies, and the Jacksonville Jaguars are no exception. As it stands, Jacksonville is projected to be roughly $9 million to $11 million over the cap ahead of the new league year, which begins on March 11. While that figure may initially raise eyebrows, it’s far from a crisis, as in today’s NFL, being over the cap in February is often more of a starting point than a setback.

Cap space for every #NFL team. pic.twitter.com/rKanRu7Fun

— Tyler Webb (@tylermwebb) February 4, 2026

As shown above, Jacksonville is currently one of 12 teams over the cap, including the Chicago Bears, Buffalo Bills, Detroit Lions, Houston Texans, Green Bay Packers, and others (per Spotrac). The team has multiple avenues available to create financial flexibility, with simple restructures, extensions with void years and/or option bonuses, and strategic veteran extensions all being possibilities to quickly shift the team’s books from the red to having breathing room.

Restructures

By restructuring defensive tackle Arik Armstead, the team has the ability to open up $9.7 million in cap space. While trading or cutting Armstead has often been a subject of dispute within the fanbase, such a move would leave a void within the interior pass rush while saving the team $14.4 million against the cap as a June 1st cut or trade. The front office could also opt to restructure right guard Patrick Mekari. The team could open up $7.5 million in cap space in 2026 by converting some of his base salary into a signing bonus, spreading the cap hit out to future seasons. In terms of restructures alone, the team has the flexibility to open up $34 million in cap space.

  • DT Arik Armstead ($9.7M)
  • OL Walker Little ($7.7M)
  • LB Foye Oluokun ($6.1M)
  • LG Ezra Cleveland ($5.6M)
  • DT Davon Hamilton ($5.0M)
  • DE Josh Hines-Allen ($4.9M)
  • RG Patrick Mekari ($4.8M)

As a note, the numbers presented above represent maximum restructure potential, primarily involving void years. As defined by OverTheCap:

A simple restructure converts payments into prorated signing bonuses within the confines of the remainder of the contract. Teams typically have the ability to unilaterally execute simple restructures without any action necessary from the player.A maximum restructure increases the amount of cap space via conversion into prorated signing bonuses by either extending the contract or by adding void years to a contract, years that do not extend the contract but are only used as placeholders for the proration. Maximum restructures are typically considered a renegotiation of the contract that requires the player’s consent to execute.

In other words, these moves kick the can down the road. These restructures alone would bring Jacksonville into the black on salary cap space, with $23 to $25 million in total cap availability. Notably, the team also has the ability to gain $7.2 million in cap space by trading offensive lineman Walker Little, instead of a restructure. The team gains $11.9 million in a post-June 1st trade scenario, adding another $4 million of possible cap space. The team, additionally, has 10 or more other contracts able to be restructured for smaller amounts than those noted above.

Extension Candidates

Following any of the above restructures, Jacksonville also has several core players who are candidates for early extensions, which allows the organization to smooth cap hits over future seasons before market prices climb even higher. We take a look at a few Jacksonville roster options for the coming month.

Defensive tackle Travon Walker is currently slated to play on a fully guaranteed $15.2 million fifth-year option in 2026. However, if the Jaguars choose to sign him to a long-term extension before then, they could create significant short-term cap relief, freeing up as much as $11.1 million of that 2026 figure alone. According to Spotrac, Walker’s projected market value sits around five years, $120 million (approximately $23.9 million per year), based on age and production comparisons to players like George Karlaftis and Brian Burns. At that average annual value, Walker would rank 14th among NFL edge defenders in yearly salary. Jacksonville would be committing top-15 money to two defensive ends at the same time, with Hines-Allen currently ninth in annual pay and Walker projected 14th.

Tight end Brenton Strange is also set to enter a contract year in 2026 after posting a career-best 46 receptions for 540 yards in 2025. Spotrac projects Strange’s market value at roughly four years, $48 million, with an average of $12 million per season. He currently carries just a $2 million cap hit in the final year of his rookie deal, so an extension would represent a noticeable increase. That said, depending on how the contract is structured, his 2026 cap number may only see a modest bump, potentially even seeing no 2026 change in the current season. Strange, along with receiver Parker Washington, is eligible for an extension at the start of the new league year.

Speaking of Washington, Parker is set to enter the final year of his rookie deal in 2026, carrying a $3.6 million cap hit. With a contract year ahead, his market value, according to Spotrac, is projected to command roughly four years, $56 million on an extension, averaging $14 million annually. If Jacksonville chooses to get ahead of the market and extend him, the impact on the 2026 cap would largely depend on the structure. By utilizing signing bonus proration or even void years, the Jaguars could keep his first-year cap number relatively low. At worst, his 2026 figure would see only a slight increase from the current $3.6 million. At $14 million per year, Washington would rank around 28th among NFL wide receivers in average annual salary, solid WR2 money in today’s market, without venturing into the elite-tier price range.

Safety Antonio Johnson is heading into year four after finishing the 2025 season as one of PFF’s top-rated safeties, boosted significantly by his five-interception campaign. With momentum on his side, he now enters the final season of his rookie contract, carrying a base salary of $1.145 million and a cap hit of just $1.22 million. According to OverTheCap, Johnson’s current market valuation sits around $9.9 million per year. When compared to safety contracts across the league, that figure would slot him approximately 22nd among NFL safeties in average annual value, just ahead of former Jaguars safety Andre Cisco.

In lieu of restructuring left guard Ezra Cleveland, the team could opt to extend the veteran offensive lineman who enters the final year of his three-year, 2024 extension. Cleveland carries an OverTheCap market valuation of approximately $11.6 million per year, which is almost identical to his current 2026 cap hit of $11.4 million. At that annual average, Cleveland would rank as the 11th-highest paid left guard in the NFL. This route would open up $6.0 million in cap space, a higher amount than the $5.6 million from restructuring.

Similarly, instead of restructuring to open up $5 million in cap space, the team could opt to either extend, trade, or outright cut defensive tackle DaVon Hamilton. Should the team heavily invest in the interior defensive line in the 2026 draft, a post-June 1st trade or release saves the team $8.4 million in cap space. In terms of an extension, Hamilton carries a projected market value of roughly $11.5 million per year, while his current 2026 cap hit sits at $12.4 million. This projected market rate ranks 32nd among NFL interior defensive linemen and would allow Jacksonville to open $5.3 million in cap space through an extension.

With tough decisions looming for cornerback Montaric Brown, linebacker Devon Lloyd, and running back Travis Etienne, the Jaguars face a critical choice: create cap space to retain their homegrown stars or redirect those funds toward pursuing an impact free agent in the trenches. As it currently stands, Jacksonville has multiple pathways to create between $30 and $60 million in cap space this offseason. The flexibility is there. The question is how aggressive they’re willing to be to unlock it. Almost every lever they can pull comes with some degree of long-term risk to the roster or future financial flexibility.

So what’s the right balance, Duval? Which direction would you take?

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...-jaguars-biggest-salary-cap-decisions-of-2026
 
2026 Way-Too-Early NFL Power Rankings: Jaguars Too Low?

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JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA - OCTOBER 06: Travis Hunter #12 of the Jacksonville Jaguars runs out of the tunnel prior to an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs at EverBank Stadium on October 6, 2025 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Perry Knotts/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Seattle Seahawks defeated the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX to close the 2025-26 NFL season. The new league year begins on March 11 (see more important offseason dates here).

We rounded up way-too-early 2026 NFL power rankings to get a sense of how much respect the Jaguars have earned over the past several months.

CBS Sports: 4​


From Pete Prisco:

This young team is building toward something, and Liam Coen is the right guy for the job. They do have to find ways to improve their pass rush.

Bleacher Report: 6​


From Brent Sobleski:

The Jaguars were playing as well as any team entering the postseason only to come up short in the Wild Card round against the Buffalo Bills. Despite the disappointing finish, Jacksonville is finally trending in the right direction after winning the AFC South outright and plenty of the excitement centers on quarterback Trevor Lawrence.

Fox Sports: 7​


From Ralph Vacchiano:

They’ve been a sleeping and underachieving giant for years, and Liam Coen’s rookie year is only the beginning. Even if they don’t get 13 wins again, they’re not going to fade away anytime soon.

USA Today: 7​


From Nate Davis:

They’ve got some personnel issues to figure out, LB Devin Lloyd, RB Travis Etienne and most of the starting secondary headed for free agency. They also need to figure out the optimal role for WR/CB Travis Hunter after an injury-curtailed but disappointing rookie season. Still, hard not to be bullish on this squad following the quantum leap it made in Year 1 under rookie coach Liam Coen and revitalized QB Trevor Lawrence.

Yahoo Sports: 8​


From Frank Schwab:

There’s almost nowhere for the Jaguars to go but down after a 13-win season. But Jacksonville shouldn’t fall too far if the strides we saw Trevor Lawrence make in Liam Coen’s offense are a sign of things to come. Getting Travis Hunter back after he missed most of the second half of the season due to injury will help too. The Jaguars don’t have their first-round pick due to that Hunter trade and aren’t in great cap shape, but the talent on hand is good enough to compete for another division title.

ESPN: 9​


From Mike DiRocco:

The Jaguars did a good job of getting close to the quarterback in 2025 (222 pressures, ranked third), but not so much in getting the quarterback on the ground (32 sacks, ranked 27th). Fixing that will likely come either via trade or free agency because they don’t have a first-round pick after trading up for wide receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter in 2025. Their interior pass rush especially needs a boost (7.5 sacks, including 5.5 by defensive tackle Arik Armstead).

NFL.com: 9​


From Eric Edholm:

Liam Coen has built up a pretty good stack of chips at the table with an unexpectedly good first season with the Jaguars, but you know how those things go. Now the expectations have been reset, and the Jaguars will mostly be treated as contenders as we wonder when the proverbial next step comes. The defense looks to be in good shape overall, far exceeding expectations yet buoyed with a solid base of talent. There’s even a case to be made for the passing game being a big plus, with Trevor Lawrence — albeit a bit inconsistently — delivering some big performances. But the run game kept waning in effectiveness down the stretch, so that could be an area of focus this offseason.

The Athletic: 9​


From Josh Kendall and Chad Graff:

Jacksonville won its last eight regular-season games before being bounced from the playoffs in a three-point loss to Buffalo. Including the postseason, this team had the fourth-best point margin in the league this season (plus-135).

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

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...s/82225/2026-way-too-early-nfl-power-rankings
 
Travis Hunter is Still a ‘Math Changer,’ Just Not the Way You Think

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Fans in Duval and a new wave of national Jaguars followers have been buzzing for the past few days ever since Cameron Wolfe of NFL Network reported that Travis Hunter is expected to play primarily cornerback in 2026, with part-time duties at wide receiver.

If this new report sounds familiar to some, it probably should. It’s essentially what general manager James Gladstone told the fanbase back on January 14th at his end-of-season media availability.

“Very fair to say his rehab process is going as expected. He’s hitting it hard and obviously the joy that he brings to just the everyday operation is still something that permeates throughout the space that he enters. Beyond that, on the role that he will play, we still expect him to play on both sides of the ball. Obviously, you can take a peek at expiring contracts on our roster and which side of the ball has more. Obviously at this point walking into the offseason, corner is a position that we have a few guys who are on expiring contracts. So by default you can expect for there to be a higher emphasis on his placement.”

With everyone high and low itching to make their long-awaited grand declarations on the Jaguars’ plan for Hunter, this feels like an appropriate time to clear a few things up.

What This Report Means, And What It Doesn’t​


Here’s what we actually know. As a rookie, Hunter played 323 offensive snaps and 162 defensive snaps across seven games. That’s roughly 46 snaps per game on offense and 23 on defense. Early on, the plan leaned towards offense as the primary position. Before the bye week, Head Coach Liam Coen publicly talked about self-scouting, asking, “What do we do best?” and pouring into those strengths. At the time (pre-Jakobi Meyers), the offense needed direction. They needed juice. Reports reflected that the team would lean on Hunter to fill that role coming out of the break.

Then the Meyers trade happened. The offense stabilized. The receiving core and the surrounding team adjusted, falling in line at a time that Hunter was sidelined with a season-ending injury. That’s the key: they’ve shown us they’re willing to self-scout, and they adjust. Plans evolve based on roster needs, not draft-day promises. When Hunter was drafted, the front office acknowledged his usage would be fluid early as he learned to play both roles in the league. That fluidity has simply carried into Year Two.

And honestly, that’s the whole advantage of having Travis Hunter. He’s what they’ve called a “math changer.” You deploy him where the need is most urgent, week to week, matchup to matchup, season to season. Meanwhile, none of this locks them into anything permanent. This was a misconception that Gladstone attempted to clear up in June:

“I do think there’s a little bit of a misconception in that it’s wide receiver first, corner second, as much as it is the learning methodology of wide receiver through this phase and then continuing to trickle in more defense, that is his primary background,” Gladstone said.

The “wide receiver first” mentality was about his onboarding, not his usage primacy. What I interpret this recent report to indicate is that Hunter’s defensive snap rate is expected to increase, possibly to full-time starter levels, because that’s where the current team need is. What it does not say is that his offensive role is disappearing, nor that this move is permanent. Those are two different things.


The Snap Context Everyone Is Ignoring​


Before his injury in 2025, Hunter was playing between 53% and 87% of offensive snaps in the first seven games. His defensive usage fluctuated wildly, anywhere from 9% to 68%, depending on injuries in the secondary. Remember: Montaric Brown’s usage was ramping up early and didn’t surpass a 45% snap rate until after the Greg Newsome, Tyson Campbell, Week Five trade. When the corner room was thin, Hunter played more defense. When it wasn’t, he didn’t. That’s not confusion. That’s roster management.

Now look at the receiver room. Early in the season, Brian Thomas Jr. typically led the group in snaps. Hunter was usually second. Dyami Brown and Parker Washington rotated for the WR3 role week-by-week, with Tim Patrick handling about 20% of snaps at WR5. Fast forward to how the season ended: with Hunter out, Parker Washington and Jakobi Meyers were often out-snapping BTJ. Dyami had multiple healthy scratches, and Tim Patrick is a pending free agent. Suddenly, WR4 and WR5 snaps are widely available, and at the same time, the team has a massive hole at outside CB1.

There are roughly 40–50% of 2025 WR snaps from WR4/WR5 roles available. Hunter can absorb a chunk of that while playing much heavier on defense. From a roster construction standpoint, that’s not controversial. It’s practical. And that’s without even factoring in potential draft additions.


Nothing About This Is Permanent​


If Parker, Meyers, or BTJ were to miss time in 2026, Hunter’s offensive usage would likely spike. If a major roster move happens at receiver, the plan changes again. That’s the point. Jacksonville is coming off a 13-win season. They finished near the top of the league in post-bye week passing offense with Hunter sidelined. Meanwhile, cornerback help is needed, and Hunter is one of the best young CB talents from his draft class. They have options. That’s a good thing.


Glue Guys: A Team Staple​


This situation reminds me of last offseason’s Brenton Strange conversations. Many predicted then that he might not put up the gaudy, fantasy-friendly numbers, but he’d be essential to how the machine works. That turned out to be true. Strange was one of the team’s most efficient players and a dominant run blocker, even if the box score didn’t scream it. Hunter might follow a similar path, at least for now, where his combined offensive and defensive statistical output doesn’t come close to matching his on-field impact on wins and losses. And that’s probably just fine for Jacksonville leadership.

If he plays 30–45% of offensive snaps while logging full-time reps at corner, his fantasy output may dip. But his presence alongside Strange, BTJ, Parker, and Meyers stresses defenses. Coverage shifts. Matchups tilt. The offense benefits even if the stat sheet doesn’t explode. If the team wins, none of that matters. If they struggle early and his offensive usage feels light? Fans will panic. That’s football. But following a 9-win 2025 improvement, they’ve probably earned a full offseason with room to work unquestioned.


The Injury & Conditioning Layer​


One more factor that should be considered is Hunter’s conditioning. Hunter is expected to be ready for Week 1. But after multiple injuries between training camp and his late-season issue, it’s fair to wonder if he’ll immediately be in peak, two-way-ironman shape. Managing his early workload on offense, where timing and conditioning matter most, might simply be smart development in return from November LCL surgery. That doesn’t mean his ceiling is capped. It may just mean pacing may be wise at this juncture.


The Bottom Line​


All we truly know is what we already knew in January: Travis Hunter will open the season primarily at cornerback while playing some receiver. That’s it.

Everything else, like the assumption that his offensive role is permanently shrinking, is purely NFL dead zone projection. More than anything, this just feels like offseason noise amplified by fantasy football debates, and a national media cycle that doesn’t consistently track Jacksonville’s week-to-week realities. The plan isn’t rigid. It never was. It’s fluid, just like it’s always been. Welcome to the new era of Jacksonville Jaguars football.

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...ill-a-math-changer-just-not-the-way-you-think
 
Daily Prowl: Jaguars re-sign RB DeeJay Dallas, DT Matt Dickerson

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INDIANAPOLIS, IN - DECEMBER 28: DeeJay Dallas #20 of the Jacksonville Jaguars exits the field after an NFL football game against the Indianapolis Colts at Lucas Oil Stadium on December 28, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good afternoon!

Here is today’s roundup of the latest news, rumors, and analysis on your Jacksonville Jaguars.

Local links


Study up before your next trip to the watercooler.

Travis Hunter is Still a ‘Math Changer,’ Just Not the Way You Think (Big Cat Country)

If Parker, Meyers, or BTJ were to miss time in 2026, Hunter’s offensive usage would likely spike. If a major roster move happens at receiver, the plan changes again. That’s the point. Jacksonville is coming off a 13-win season. They finished near the top of the league in post-bye week passing offense with Hunter sidelined. Meanwhile, cornerback help is needed, and Hunter is one of the best young CB talents from his draft class. They have options. That’s a good thing.

2 Dominos to Fall from Jaguars’ Travis Hunter Decision (Jaguars on SI)

Between BTJ’s struggles this season and the Jaguars’ deep wide receiver room, there was a rising belief that Jacksonville could trade the former LSU star this offseason in exchange for draft capital or to fill a more pressing need. Now that it’s been stated that Hunter Jr. will only play wide receiver in certain situations, though, it wouldn’t make much sense for the Jaguars to move off of Thomas Jr., unless they get another pass-catcher back in the deal, of course.

2026 NFL offseason: Trade proposals that fit for both teams (ESPN)

Thomas would immediately step in as Josh Allen’s No. 1 receiver. For a team that’s $10 million over the projected cap before making adjustments this offseason, Thomas’ contract is a bargain for the next few years. He’ll make $2.1 million in 2026 and $2.8 million in 2027 before a potential fifth-year option in 2028, affording the Bills multiple seasons of cost control. Even if Thomas only settles in somewhere between his 2024 and 2025 form, he would offer significant surplus value.

One potential 2026 salary-cap cut for every NFL team: Tyreek Hill, Kirk Cousins and more (The Athletic)

The Jaguars are $11 million over the salary cap, and they’ll need to get creative this offseason to become cap compliant. The most they could save by releasing a single player would be $4 million for Cleveland, their left guard. They have only two more players who would account for $3 million in cap savings and four additional players who could net $2 million. If the Jaguars need more cap space to make an aggressive addition, they’d likely have to restructure deals for higher-paid players such as Trevor Lawrence, Josh Hines-Allen or Arik Armstead.

Editor’s pick


Drumroll, please!

Roster Moves: Jaguars Re-Sign RB DeeJay Dallas and DL Matt Dickerson (Jaguars.com)

Dallas appeared in three games with the Jaguars last season after signing with the team in December. With Jacksonville, Dallas returned six kicks for 180 yards and added two carries for 21 yards. … Dickerson played in the Jaguars’ last eight games of 2025, including starts in the final four regular season contests, after beginning the season on the team’s practice squad. He totaled 10 tackles (one for loss), two quarterback hits and one pass defensed and was a part of the NFL’s top run defense, allowing just 85.6 rushing yards per game. Dickerson also recorded a pair of tackles in Jacksonville’s Wild Card game.

Must-see media


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Travis Hunter got a tattoo of his wife’s face on his chest pic.twitter.com/OEzXeorHET

— Hater Report (@HaterReport) February 15, 2026

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below — and be sure to check our social media and The Feed for more Jaguars conversation!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...-jaguars-re-sign-deejay-dallas-matt-dickerson
 
Daily Prowl: Mike Evans will play again in 2026…

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TAMPA, FL - DECEMBER 29: Tampa Bay Buccaneers Wide Receiver and Offensive Coordinator Liam Coen react to a play on the field during the game between the Carolina Panthers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on December 29, 2024 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Good afternoon!

Here is today’s roundup of the latest news, rumors, and analysis on your Jacksonville Jaguars.

Local links


Study up before your next trip to the watercooler.

Jaguars Mock Draft Roundup 02/17: The Draft Starts In The Second Round (Big Cat Country)

With the newness of this year’s draft setup for Jacksonville, we will take a look at what draft pundits think the Jags should be towards the end of the second round. Cleveland owns the rights to the Jags first rounder this year as part of the Travis Hunter trade, so Liam Coen and James Gladstone will have to sit tight for a while before beginning their second draft as a tandem.

How did the rise of Parker Washington save the Jaguars on third down? (Action Sports Jax)

After the bye, Washington seemingly attained football enlightenment. Despite ranking 59th in third-down snaps, Washington ranked 3rd in yards (243), 1st in yards per reception (27.0), 1st in yards after catch (109), 3rd in YAC per reception (12.1), and 1st in explosive plays (7) among receivers.

3 Teams Who Make Sense for a Walker Little Trade (Jaguars on SI)

Like the Lions and Browns, the Jaguars have some experience dealing with the Las Vegas Raiders’ front office. They made early contact with them about Jakobi Meyers during training camp and then pulled the trigger at the trade deadline to give both sides what they wanted. Unlike the Lions and Browns, the Raiders have a quality left tackle in Kolton Miller, but they need more.

Dream Offseason Trade Scenario for Every NFL Team (Bleacher Report)

The Green Bay Packers could look to trade Wyatt if they don’t intend to offer him an extension before his contract expires in 2027. With that being a possibility, former Packers linebacker coach and defensive run-game coordinator Anthony Campanile may push for a reunion via trade. In 2025, the Jaguars allowed the fewest rushing yards, but they finished 27th in sacks. Wyatt can make an impact on passing downs as a disruptive interior defender who gets after the quarterback.

2026 NFL free agency: Best team fits for the top 50 players (ESPN)

Under Jaguars defensive coordinator Anthony Campanile, Lloyd had a career-best five interceptions, taking one back for a score. That type of on-the-ball production at linebacker will garner interest in free agency, but I have Lloyd sticking with a Jacksonville unit that ranked top 10 in both scoring and run defense.

Highest-graded QBs from the 2025 NFL season: Matthew Stafford takes the top spot (PFF)

The 2025 season was pivotal for Lawrence to prove he could live up to the billing of his draft status. While it took some time for Lawrence to become acclimated to Liam Coen’s offense, once he found his footing, he was dangerous. From Week 13 through the end of the postseason, Lawrence generated a 92.6 overall PFF grade, the highest by any quarterback over that span.

Why Travis Hunter’s full-time switch to cornerback aligns with PFF grades (PFF)

Jacksonville gave Hunter opportunities on both sides of the ball straight away, with some definite bias toward playing wide receiver, but the early results tilted towards a full-time position on defense. Hunter played 323 offensive snaps in his rookie season, earning a 62.2 PFF offensive grade. On defense, he logged 162 snaps and posted a 73.2 PFF defensive grade.

Editor’s pick


Drumroll, please!

Buccaneers WR Mike Evans will return for 2026, explore free agency (NFL.com)

The news of Evans’ intent to continue playing confirms what his teammate, quarterback Baker Mayfield , said in late January: Evans still has ” more in the tank. ” Whether the Buccaneers have enough money in the bank to convince Evans to finish his career in the only place he’s ever known in his NFL career, however, remains to be seen.

Must-see media


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Let us know your thoughts in the comments below — and be sure to check our social media and The Feed for more Jaguars conversation!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacksonville-jaguars-news/82432/daily-prowl-mike-evans-will-play-2026
 
Jaguars Reacts Survey: Where does 2025 rank among all-time Jaguars teams?

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JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA - DECEMBER 14: Head coach Liam Coen celebrates with Trevor Lawrence #16 of the Jacksonville Jaguars during an NFL 2025 game against the New York Jets at Everbank Stadium on December 14, 2025 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Logan Bowles/Getty Images) | Getty Images

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 — what’s the greatest team in franchise history?

The 1996 season was the first true “you’ve arrived” moment for the Jaguars. In just their second year of existence, the team stunned the league by finishing 9-7 and earning a Wild Card berth. Behind quarterback Mark Brunell and a fearless young roster, Jacksonville pulled off playoff upsets over the Buffalo Bills and top-seeded Denver Broncos before falling in the AFC Championship Game to the New England Patriots.

In 1999, the Jaguars delivered the most statistically dominant regular season in franchise history. Led again by Brunell and head coach Tom Coughlin, Jacksonville stormed to a 14-2 record, with both losses coming to the division rival Tennessee Titans. The offense was explosive, the defense opportunistic, and Hall of Fame tackle (and current VP of Football Ops) Tony Boselli anchored a powerhouse roster. After dispatching the Miami Dolphins 62-7 in the Divisional Round, the dream season ended in the AFC Championship against Tennessee — the only team that could solve Jacksonville that year.

The 2017 campaign revived the magic for a new generation of fans. Built around a ferocious defense nicknamed “Sacksonville,” featuring stars like Jalen Ramsey, Calais Campbell, and Yannick Ngakoue, the Jaguars finished 10-6 and returned to the playoffs. They eked past the Buffalo Bills at home in the Wild Card Round and stunned the Pittsburgh Steelers in a high-scoring Divisional Round before falling heartbreakingly short in the AFC Championship against the New England Patriots.

The 2025 season marked a truly pivotal step in the franchise’s evolution. With quarterback Trevor Lawrence established as the face of the franchise, head coach Liam Coen hired to maximize his potential, and wide receiver Jakobi Meyers added before the trade deadline, the offense erupted during the second half of the season. Meanwhile, new all-time franchise sack leader Josh Hines-Allen and All-Pro linebacker Devin Lloyd anchored a defense that finished first in rushing yards allowed and second in forced turnovers. While it ended in a gutwrenching home loss to the Bills in the Wild Card Round, 2025 showed that the Jaguars’ championship window is very much open.

Before this most recent season, I suspect most folks would’ve said the 1999 team was the best in franchise history, with younger fans giving more love to the 2017 squad. Does the 2025 crew top either (or both) of them?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Source: https://www.bigcatcountry.com/jacks...reacts-survey-greatest-team-franchise-history
 
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