Orlando Sentinel

After bye, hello to last place

- By Mark Long

JAGUARS

Jaguars tumble to AFC South basement with 2 lopsided losses

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JACKSONVIL­LE — Another defensive debacle and another lopsided loss have the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars on the verge of another second-rate season.

The Jaguars (4-6) couldn’t run the ball or stop the run for the second straight game Sunday, resulting in a 33-13 blowout at AFC South foe Indianapol­is and dropping them to last in the division.

Jacksonvil­le looked mostly unprepared following a bye week. Quarterbac­k Nick Foles’ return did little, if anything, to spark a struggling offense. And the defense was downright dismal again, giving up more than 200 yards rushing for the third time in the past six games.

It’s the second time in the franchise’s 25 years that the Jags have allowed three teams to run wild like that in the same season — and there are still six games to go.

The Colts ran for 264 yards, reminiscen­t of Carolina’s performanc­e in early October. The Panthers hammered the Jags for 285 yards on the ground.

Coach Doug Marrone thought his defense had resolved some of its issues after that meltdown, but they returned in London

two weeks ago. Houston ran for 219 yards in a 26-3 victory over Jacksonvil­le at Wembley Stadium.

Indy did even more damage on the ground Sunday, with Marlon Mack (109 yards) and Jonathan Williams (116) each topping the century mark.

“We’ve got to wear it. We played ugly,” defensive captain Calais Campbell said. “It’s tough because we didn’t play good enough.”

Jacksonvil­le fell to 1-3 in the AFC South, including 0-3 against division-leading Houston and Indianapol­is. The Jaguars play at Tennessee (5-5) on Sunday, a chance to get out of the AFC South cellar and move closer to .500.

The Titans have won five in a row against the Jags in Nashville. Another loss would leave Jacksonvil­le another step closer to missing the playoffs for the 11th time in the past 12 seasons.

What’s working: Nothing, really. Foles finished with 296 yards passing and two touchdowns to DJ Chark, but a good chunk of his numbers came in garbage time. Leonard Fournette ran eight times for 23 yards two weeks after gaining 40 yards on 11 carries.

Marrone suggested that playing without tight end Seth DeValve — a fourthyear pro claimed off waivers in September — hamstrung the ground game.

“I’m not going to sit here and make excuses,” Marrone said before offering one. “We had an injury and that took out some of the things we wanted to do runwise. But at the end of the day we just felt good and comfortabl­e throwing the football, and it didn’t work.”

What needs help: Everything, honestly. Getting outscored 59-16 in back-to-back division games — with one touchdown coming in the final minute against the Colts — says all anyone needs to know about the state of the team.

Stock up: Chark continues to impress. He caught eight passes for 104 yards and two touchdowns, giving him 51 receptions for 796 yards and eight scores in his second season. He’s been on the receiving end of each of Foles’ three TD passes in 2019.

Rookie defensive end Josh Allen notched his eighth sack, tying the franchise’s rookie record set by Yannick Ngakoue in 2016. Allen has been the biggest bright spot on a mediocre defense.

Stock down: Both coordinato­rs. Offensive coordinato­r John DeFilippo isn’t getting Fournette involved enough, especially early in games, and defensive coordinato­r Todd Wash hasn’t done enough to get more from what’s supposed to be one of the AFC’s better defenses.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/AP ?? The Colts’ Jonathan Williams (33) runs past the Jaguars’ Yannick Ngakoue (91) during the Jags’ loss to the Colts Sunday in Indianapol­is.
MICHAEL CONROY/AP The Colts’ Jonathan Williams (33) runs past the Jaguars’ Yannick Ngakoue (91) during the Jags’ loss to the Colts Sunday in Indianapol­is.

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