San Diego Union-Tribune

JAGS HALT MEYER’S METHODS

Jacksonvil­le tries to get past controvers­y surroundin­g ex-coach

- BY MARK LONG

The Jacksonvil­le Jaguars moved quickly to rid themselves of some of Urban Meyer’s nontraditi­onal methods Thursday.

There was no longer a motivation­al team huddle on the practice field. There was no longer an emcee with a microphone barking out directions for drills. There was no longer any use for catch phrases like “plus-two mentality” and “own it.”

The Jaguars embraced the not-so-subtle changes that followed owner Shad Khan firing Meyer late Wednesday night after a 2-11 start that included countless embarrassm­ents on and off the field.

“It brings a little bit of clarity to the guys in the locker room,” rookie quarterbac­k Trevor

Lawrence said. “I wouldn’t say relief, but I would say just bring some clarity and some direction moving forward.

“We really want to go and finish the season strong, and to be honest, it’s been hard to last the last week with everything going on. There’s a lot of things being stirred up by the outside, too, that didn’t help. Made things a lot worse. It’s hard to be focused and have all your attention and efforts going towards winning the game when there’s so many things going on.”

Meyer’s final week included: an accusation Wednesday that he kicked former player Josh Lambo on the practice field in August; confirmati­on that he got into a heated argument with receiver Marvin Jones after criticizin­g wideouts for not winning enough one-on-one matchups a few weeks ago; and a report that Meyer called assistant coaches losers while questionin­g their résumés.

With his fate seemingly sealed, Meyer bolted the facility hours early Wednesday and left assistants to handle the game plan. He didn’t check out and never checked back in with any of them.

The Jaguars and Meyer’s representa­tives then spent hours working out details of the coach’s terminatio­n agreement, eventually leading to the late-night news drop.

Lawrence and many of his teammates woke up to learn Meyer had been fired.

“There’s been some drama. There’s been some distractio­ns,” Lawrence said. “You can’t ever go back, though. You just have to move forward.”

Offensive coordinato­r Darrell Bevell was made interim coach and handled a team meeting Thursday. He also instituted several tweaks aimed at maintainin­g a normal routine for players while putting his own spin on leading them through the final four games, beginning Sunday against Houston (2-11).

“All I can do is be me,” Bevell said. “Fortunatel­y, I’ve been around a lot of great coaches. The thing I learned from them is to take the things from them and put them into my personalit­y, my way, and then say, ‘OK, I just can’t pull that off.’

“So I’m only going to be me, and I’m going to try to be that same person each and every day.”

Although players and coaches refused to acknowledg­e Meyer’s firing was a muchneeded relief near the end of dysfunctio­nal season, they clearly saw it as a weight lifted as they try to end a five-game skid and find some momentum heading into an uncertain offseason.

“The biggest thing that we need right now is someone that’s consistent,” Lawrence said.

Khan had already started to consider what to do with Meyer at the end of the season when Lambo’s accusation dropped. Meyer denied doing anything more than taking a playful poke at Lambo, who could end up suing Meyer and the Jaguars for workplace harassment.

 ?? COREY PERRINE AP ?? Jacksonvil­le Jaguars interim head coach Darrell Bevell talks to cornerback Shaquill Griffin (26) on Thursday.
COREY PERRINE AP Jacksonvil­le Jaguars interim head coach Darrell Bevell talks to cornerback Shaquill Griffin (26) on Thursday.

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