JACKSONVILLE – Senior writer John Oehser, senior correspondent Brian Sexton and team reporter/producer Kainani Stevens offer quick thoughts on the Jaguars as they prepare to play the Tennessee Titans at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Tenn., in a 2025 Week 13 game Sunday
John Oehser, Jaguars Senior Writer…
1. Better and better. The Jaguars at 7-4 are very much in the playoff picture, with a very real chance to win the AFC South – that despite national pundits and observers talking more about the Texans and Colts in that vein. A reason their chances are realistic is this team continues to improve as December approaches. Not only is the offense continuing to play to its identity and becoming more consistent with 27 or more points in each of its last four games, the defensive line – after struggling at times in the first nine games – has turned in two of its strongest performances in back-to-back victories over the Los Angeles Chargers and Arizona Cardinals. Perhaps most importantly: Quarterback Trevor Lawrence is steadily improving within the offense. Yes, he threw 3 interceptions and lost a fumble Sunday against the Cardinals, but the plays he made to help the Jaguars win – touchdown passes to wide receivers Jakobi Meyers and Parker Washington – were among multiple plays that day that showed Lawrence making the throws and decisions winning quarterbacks must make. We're not going to see perfection from Lawrence. But if recent signs become more the norm, that will complement the improvements seen elsewhere around the roster enough to make this an interesting December and January.
2. On the fly. Perhaps the most-overlooked strength of the 2025 Jaguars has been the ability to develop through adversity, with significant roster changes making this a different team than even three months ago. Consider the wide receiver corps. The season began with Brian Thomas Jr., Dyami Brown and Travis Hunteras the top three receivers. That trio didn't play this past Sunday, with Washington and Meyers – now the top two options in the passing game – each making critical plays. The Jaguars defensively have adapted through injuries in the secondary, winning Sunday with Christian Braswell and Montaric Brown at cornerback and Antonio Johnson at safety. Some of the changes have been injury-induced and some have been performance-related. Whatever the factors, for the Jaguars to have adapted and improved during such transition is impressive and bodes well for the short- and long-term future.