The Province

Jaguars hand Bortles starting job

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JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — The Jacksonvil­le Jaguars are sticking with Blake Bortles — because of his legs.

Coach Doug Marrone has selected Bortles as his starting quarterbac­k for the season opener, a surprising turnabout that said more about the team’s offensive line than its signal callers.

Marrone’s decision came a little more than a week after he opened up the job and pleaded with Bortles and veteran Chad Henne to “go out there and take it.”

Marrone said he “had enough informatio­n” to stay with Bortles. The third overall pick in the 2014 draft will make his 46th consecutiv­e start when the Jaguars open Sept. 10 at Houston.

Going back to Bortles was a clear indictment of the team’s shaky offensive line, which has been underwhelm­ing in three pre-season games. The Jaguars are planning to start rookie Cam Robinson at left tackle and are undecided at left guard. The right side is far from rock solid, either.

“Blake has the ability to extend plays for us, which I think is going to be helpful in what we have to get done,” Marrone said.

Henne started Thursday’s pre-season game against the Panthers and had some decent moments, but the 10th-year pro also got sacked three times in the first half.

Bortles delivered his best outing of the pre-season, finishing with a touchdown and an intercepti­on while keeping several plays alive with his legs.

“You only have a certain amount of time and then it’s time to go,” Bortles said. “I think it’s built into every single play, ‘This is how much time you have,’ and then you have to take off and either get into a scramble drill-type thing or take off and run.”

Bortles looked like a franchise quarterbac­k in his second season, throwing for 4,428 yards and 35 touchdowns and smashing several team records. Although he racked up a chunk of his statistics late in lopsided games, there was belief Bortles would only get better.

Instead, he regressed in 2016. He arrived at this year’s training camp hoping to turn his career around, but raised eyebrows with a string of intercepti­ons in practice and missed throws in pre-season.

Bortles surely will be on a short leash to start the season, meaning Henne could get another shot.

“Definitely for him, it’s still proving that he’s a franchise quarterbac­k,” Henne said. “He has to play well and he has to lead this team. The only way to do that is to win games.”

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