Daily Press

‘It’s a profession­al setting’

New Jaguars coach Pederson treating players with respect

- By Mark Long

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — Doug Pederson has no interest in being coy. His straightfo­rward approach with the Jaguars has been a welcome respite for players who endured an 11-month fiasco under Urban Meyer.

Among Meyer’s many missteps: having rookie quarterbac­k and No. 1 draft pick Trevor Lawrence split first-team reps with Gardner Minshew; allowing Tim Tebow to try to resurrect his playing career as a tight end; and believing motivation­al gimmicks would inspire profession­al athletes, many of them millionair­es.

Long before Jaguars owner Shad Khan fired Meyer in mid-December, the three-time collegiate national championsh­ip-winning coach had lost the locker room.

Pederson is going out of his way to get it back. And in the first week of training camp alone, it’s become clear that Pederson isn’t playing games with his guys.

He thrust three rookies — pass rusher and top pick Travon Walker, fellow firstround linebacker Devin Lloyd and thirdround center Luke Fortner — into the starting lineup ahead of more tenured players. He benched at least one backup for repeated miscues in team drills. And he waived kicker Andrew Mevis last week after the undrafted rookie shanked a few field goals, including attempts so errant that one hit former Cowboys coach Dave Campo in the shoulder and two others scattered bystanders nowhere near the uprights.

“It feels good to be a part of a profession­al locker room, not only in the locker room but also when you talk to the coaches,” pass rusher and team captain Josh Allen said. “It’s a profession­al setting. ... He’s not getting on us; he’s letting us know what’s real and he’s talking to us like grown men. With that, nothing but respect. We want to grow.”

Pederson, who led the Eagles to their first NFL championsh­ip since 1960 following the 2017 season, made it a point to allow his new team to “heal” after all that went down in Jacksonvil­le in 2021.

He instituted an open-door policy, filled his staff with former NFL players and stayed far away from the college-like ways that eventually annoyed so many players under Meyer. No more music blaring throughout practice. No more emcee directing drills and reminding guys to hydrate. No more charting “winners and losers” for every drill, and catchphras­es such as “own it” and “plus-two mentality” are long gone.

Unlike Meyer, Pederson doesn’t require players to jog onto practice fields, doesn’t gather them for lengthy chats before or during workouts, and doesn’t bring in guest speakers.

Pederson treats his young team like a veteran-laden group.

For the first time in his coaching career, Pederson is essentiall­y giving players two days off after preseason games, with the second one including a weightlift­ing session and a walkthroug­h.

He said recent studies on soft-tissues injuries led him to make the schedule tweaks.

“I even looked at the regular season and how we practice during the regular season,” he added. “There’s typically two days after a game before we’re back on the practice field, so I wanted to use that model just a little bit in training camp.”

Pederson’s most interestin­g approach is how he’s handling rookies. Meyer waited until late August to name Lawrence the team’s starting quarterbac­k. Three days later, the Jaguars traded Minshew to the Eagles. Other recent early round selections by the Jags — including cornerback Tyson Campbell, left tackle Cam Robinson, running back Leonard Fournette and quarterbac­k Blake Bortles — had to “earn” starting jobs in camp and into the regular season.

“You draft these guys for a reason, and the reason is they need to play,” Pederson said. “We need the depth. We need the talent. We need maybe possibly to fill a hole. There’s no better time than right now to let them go through a practice and make mistakes, have successes and be able to coach all that right now than say Week 1 or 2 of the regular season, when it’s their first time.”

Pederson’s path has been refreshing for a franchise that has four wins in the past two seasons combined.

“It’s cool seeing the way he approaches things,” Lawrence said. “He’s definitely a player’s coach, in the sense of he takes care of us, but there’s an expectatio­n. He knows what it takes to win and what it takes to win championsh­ips. There’s that expectatio­n that you need from your head coach. There’s a standard you have to uphold.”

 ?? JOHN RAOUX/AP ?? Jaguars coach Doug Pederson watches as players warm up during practice on Sunday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
JOHN RAOUX/AP Jaguars coach Doug Pederson watches as players warm up during practice on Sunday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

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