The Guardian (USA)

From No 1 to nowhere: was Trevor Lawrence to blame for the Jags’ playoff flop?

- Alex Kirshner

The Jacksonvil­le Jaguars had every opportunit­y to make the 2023 season a success. Instead they made it a disaster, culminatin­g with their 28-20 loss at the Tennessee Titans on Sunday afternoon. The Jaguars needed only to beat a 5-11 team to clinch the AFC South. But Trevor Lawrence threw two intercepti­ons and got stacked up shy of the goalline on a decisive fourth-and-goal keeper from the Titans’ one-yard line. A last-gasp effort by the Jaguars wasn’t enough to overcome a 15-point deficit entering the fourth quarter. And now the organizati­on embarks on an offseason of figuring out how a year with such promise went so awry. The Houston Texans, not the Jags, will represent the division in the playoffs.

The Jaguars have been lousy for most of the 21st century, and they reached fresh depths of ignominy when they posted the league’s worst record in both 2020 and 2021. (In the latter year, the franchise became a special kind of embarrassm­ent because of the slapstick leadership of an overmatche­d head coach, Urban Meyer.) But the team made a quantum leap in 2022. Lawrence, the franchise quarterbac­k they’d drafted with the first pick a season earlier, blossomed into one of the better quarterbac­ks in football. Edge rusher Josh Allen led a feisty defense. The Jaguars mounted a late-season charge to win the AFC South, and then pulled off a thrilling comeback win over the Los Angeles Chargers. They even scared the eventual Super Bowl winners, the Kansas City Chiefs, in the next round.

This season was the inverse, as the Jaguars started 8-3 and then faded to the tune of a 1-5 finish to go 9-8. The record was the same as a year ago. The feeling surroundin­g it couldn’t be more different.

Lawrence plays the game’s most important position and didn’t have the year he surely envisioned. The 2021 No 1 overall pick was far from terrible, but he wasn’t able to elevate an offense that lacked a real No 1 receiver and revealed depth problems when key target Christian Kirk missed the last month of the season with an injury. Lawrence had a close connection with tight end Evan Engram and pulled off some explosive plays with wideout Calvin Ridley, but the passing game never clicked into better than average production. The Jags were 15th in the NFL with 6.2 yards per throw entering the week and 18th in passer rating. Lawrence has a tremendous arm but did not get topend results from it, and his last – and most important – pass of the season was airmailed over Engram’s head on fourth down. It was the kind of moment where someone like Patrick Mahomes or excels.

Of particular concern: Lawrence halved his intercepti­on rate from 2.8% of his throws in his rookie year to 1.4% in 2022. But in 2023 the rate jumped to 2.5%, aided by those two picks on Sunday. It is unfathomab­le that the Jaguars won’t still make Lawrence their long-term signal-caller, and it’s worth rememberin­g that he played the stretch without one of his top wideouts and with a shoulder injury that appeared to dog him. But he, and his team, have to grow.

Sticking by Lawrence is an easy call, but the Jaguars have tougher decisions ahead of them. The biggest of those is Allen, who had 17.5 sacks this season to pace the defense. He is a free agent after making $10.9m in 2023. Someone will pay him handsomely, and it remains to be seen whether that will be Jacksonvil­le. Ridley, one of the team’s key receivers, is also set to hit the open market. And the Jaguars may also want to look closely at administra­tive changes, maybe including (to start) replacing Press Taylor as offensive coordinato­r. After a final two months like the Jaguars just had, even people higher up the org chart will receive scrutiny.

MVP of the week

Nico Collins, wide receiver, Houston Texans. There were a few beneficiar­ies of the Jaguars’ meltdown, none bigger than the Texans, who claimed the AFC South as a result. But Houston had to make their own luck, and Collins, the third-year receiver out of Michigan, delivered. On Saturday against the Indianapol­is Colts, Collins caught all nine targets from CJ Stroud and posted 195 yards and a touchdown on them in a 23-19 victory. A 75-yard score on Houston’s first play from scrimmage set the tone, and Collins made another key catch late in the second quarter on a third down, setting up Houston’s next touchdown.

Stat of the week

1935. That was the last time an NFL division saw each of its teams finish with a winning record. That season predated by 35 years the AFL-NFL merger that formed the modern league. But the AFC North matched the feat on Sunday, when the Cincinnati Bengals beat the Cleveland Browns 31-14 in a game with no playoff stakes for either team. (The Browns were guaranteed the AFC’s No 5 seed; the Bengals were out of the hunt.) The Baltimore Ravens have the conference’s best record at 13-4, and the Steelers closed with three wins to finish 10-7 and extend Mike Tomlin’s careerlong streak of 17 years in a row without a losing campaign. Every team in the AFC North, except the Bengals, will continue playing in the postseason.

Video of the week

Does anything sum up Bill Belichick’s season better than the head coach shivering on the sideline as the New England Patriots lost to the almost as woeful New York Jets? And Sunday could well be the last time we see Belichick lead the Pats. Fox insider Jay Glazer, reported Sunday that Belichick will not return to the Patriots for the 2024 season. It was the most explicit report yet from a credible outlet to indicate Belichick’s time in New England is up. The game itself was a fitting end to an excruciati­ng campaign for the Pats: a 17-3 loss to the Jets, a fellow noncompeti­tor in the AFC East. In fitting fashion if it was Belichick’s last game, the defeat ended a 15-game New England win streak against the team that has gone longer without a playoff appearance (2010 was the last) than any other in the NFL. The Pats ended the season with a 4-13 record, the worst of Belichick’s campaign. At least he – or his potential successor – have the consolatio­n of a top-five draft pick.

Elsewhere around the league

-- The Buffalo Bills aren’t the juggernaut they have been in recent season but quit is noticeably absent from their game. On Sunday, they won their fifth game in a row to capture the No 2 seed in the AFC, something that looked pretty remote when they were flounderin­g midseason. Josh Allen said Sunday was a mirror of the season as a whole: they trailed the Miami Dolphins 14-7 at halftime and he had been intercepte­d twice before they fought back for a 21-14 victory. Allen also said this team is the best he has played for in terms of “togetherne­ss”. The Dolphins, meanwhile, seem to have difficulty killing off games despite their offensive weapons.

-- The Detroit Lions, having a dream season as NFC North champions for the first time since the division’s formation, sustained a potentiall­y major blow. Tight end Sam LaPorta, who earlier set the rookie catch record at his position with 86 grabs, left the Lions’ 30-20 win over the Minnesota Vikings after he hyperexten­ded his knee. That LaPorta was in the game at all was mildly curious, as the Lions were all but locked into the NFC’s No 3 playoff seed and his health for next weekend’s wildcard game ought to have been a priority. Alas, his status is now uncertain, and so is the Lions’ passing game for as long as their playoff run lasts. A flickerof good news came after the game from head coach Dan Campbell: “It’s not as bad as it looked, but it’s not good news,” he said, adding the team would learn more on Monday. “I know it looked awful.”

-- The Lions face the Los Angeles Rams in the playoffs. Few tipped the Rams to do much this season and even fewer (maybe no one) would have predicted their fifth-round pick Puka Nacua would help get them there by setting rookie records for receiving yards (1,486 yards) and catches (105). The customary asterisk needs to be added as this is a 17-game season but it’s still a brilliant surprise performanc­e to match – and perhaps surpass – Brock Purdy’s Mr Irrelevant heroics from last year. One other note from the game: Matthew Stafford now faces his old team, the Lions, in the wildcard round. Lions fans were mostly behind him when he won the Super Bowl with the Rams. They won’t be so accommodat­ing this time around.

-- Dallas Cowboys kicker Brandon

Aubrey started his career on an astonishin­g run: He knocked through 35 successful field goals in a row, the longest streak in league history for a kicker at the beginning of his career. That run of flawlessne­ss ended on Sunday when the Washington Commanders’ Joshua Pryor blocked an Aubrey attempt and set up a 66-yard touchdown runback by his Washington teammate, Jace Whittaker. NFL kickers have gradually become better and better in recent years, but Aubrey’s run of no misses was excessive even by the freakishly accurate standards of his kicking colleagues.

-- Jordan Love’s first full season as the Green Bay Packers didn’t turn out too badly then. He threw for 30 touchdowns – better than Brett Favre or Aaron Rodgers in their first full seasons (caveat: this was a 17-game campaign) – and he led the Packers to the playoffs after Sunday’s win over the Chicago Bears. Once again, it looks like Green Bay have handled a quarterbac­k succession with aplomb.

-- Yes, the Philadelph­ia Eagles rested plenty of starters and suffered injuries to AJ Brown and Jalen Hurts on Sunday but their 27-10 loss to a bad New York Giants team was … ouch. They’ve now lost five of their last six games as they prepare to face the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the wildcard round. Luckily for the Eagles, the Bucs didn’t look brilliant as they claimed the NFC South by scraping past the worst team in the league, the Carolina Panthers. But this Eagles team doesn’t look anything like the version that came so close to winning the Super Bowl a year ago.

NFL wildcard playoff games

NFC: Philadelph­ia Eagles (5) v No 4 Tampa Bay Buccaneers (4)

Green Bay Packers (7) v Dallas Cowboys (2)

Los Angeles Rams (6) v Detroit Lions (3)

AFC: Cleveland Browns (5) v Houston Texans (4)

Pittsburgh Steelers (7) v Buffalo Bills (2)

Miami Dolphins (6) v Kansas City Chiefs (3)

the good thing is we created the chances,” said Ten Hag, who went as strong as possible with his starting lineup despite missing eight players through injury and illness. “It is a massive competitio­n and everyone wants to win the FA Cup. We take it seriously.” United must, as it is their only chance to lift another arduous season with silverware.

Ineos executives Dave Brailsford and Jean-Claude Blanc took a front row seat in the directors’ box, alongside former United CEO David Gill, as they continue their review into the inner workings of Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s latest investment. It was an uncomforta­ble opening for the visitors as Wigan almost scored from their first attack. Martial Godo led a counter-attack and picked out the unmarked Thelo Aasgaard with a low cross to the back post. It needed a fine save from André Onana to prevent the Liverpool-born, Norway under-21 internatio­nal converting with a first time shot. Wigan were not to know it, but their best opportunit­y had been and gone.

Maloney admitted: “It might have changed the dynamic of the game at that time but United had a lot of chances. It was a big chance but I can’t criticise the effort of the team. It was difficult at times but I hope our players take a lot from it.”

Wigan were confident and positive in possession with Fulham loanee Godo prominent, but United’s superior technique and movement gradually told. The visitors should have been out of sight by the interval but a combinatio­n of poor finishing, good goalkeepin­g and misfortune limited Ten Hag’s side to a slender one-goal advantage.

United took the lead through an excellent finish from Dalot. Marcus Rashford teed up the left-back after his initial shot had been blocked by defender Liam Morrison. There was a packed penalty area between Dalot and goal but he curled a precise shot beyond the Wigan goalkeeper Sam Tickle into the bottom corner.

Rashford was involved in most of United’s best moments yet, by the same token, was also wasteful considerin­g the amount of possession he received. He brought the first save from Tickle with a low shot that the keeper reacted to sharply and almost doubled the visitors’ lead when Tickle fumbled the striker’s shot against a post. To Wigan’s relief, the keeper was just able to retrieve the ball before it crossed the line.

Tickle denied Rasmus Højlund with his legs and was reprieved again when parrying a swerving Rashford shot straight into the path of the Denmark forward. The ball hit Højlund and trickled wide of Tickle’s goal. Alejandro Garnacho struck the crossbar from distance and Scott McTominay missed yet another clear opening when launching himself at a Fernandes cross only to head wide from close range.

United continued to dominate possession after the break but were almost punished for the basic error of falling asleep at a Wigan throw-in. Aasgaard strolled away from Jonny Evans to the byline and centred for Godo, perfectly placed on the penalty spot and also left unmarked by the United defence. The winger miscued his volley badly off target.

The impressive Kobbie Mainoo forced Tickle into a low save and made a vital intercepti­on to halt Godo’s surge into the United area when Wigan staged a rare break. The irritation of the away fans at Rashford’s casual approach was notable while the tie somehow remained in the balance.

The England internatio­nal produced a telling response, however, with a key contributi­on to United’s second goal. Rashford burst past Sean Clare to the byline where, having previously ran the ball out of play or shot into a Wigan defender, he pulled an intelligen­t ball back for Fernandes. Liam Shaw stretched out a leg in an attempt to intercept Rashford’s pass and that was all the invitation the United captain required to go to ground after a slight touch of toes.

The referee, Anthony Taylor, took his time before pointing to the spot, to the disgust of the majority of the DW Stadium, and Fernandes ignored the jeers to send Tickle the wrong way with a cool penalty into the bottom corner.

whom FC Bayern would not have become the club it is today.”

A brilliant player and manager, Beckenbaue­r’s legacy has somewhat been tarnished by the aforementi­oned allegation­s of corruption – the trial against him ended without a verdict in April 2020. In 2014, he was also hit with a 90-day suspension by Fifa for failing to help an inquiry into alleged corruption in the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids. He was part of the Fifa executive committee that made the awards.

Beckenbaue­r’s death comes a little under three months after the passing of Sir Bobby Charlton. The pair were, completely coincident­ally, given the responsibi­lity by their respective managers of man-marking the other in the 1966 World Cup final. It led to both delivering muted displays at Wembley but, overall, there was no doubting their outstandin­g contributi­ons to their countries and to football as a whole.

“Franz Beckenbaue­r was able to float on the lawn, as a footballer and later also as a coach he was sublime, he stood above things,” said Germany’s current head coach, Julian Nagelsmann. “An aura surrounded him until the end, which even the health problems and strokes of fate that he had to cope with could not shake it.

“I am grateful and proud that I was able to get to know him and will remember him fondly.”

 ?? ?? Trevor Lawrence and the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars started the season 8-3 before they suffered a series of losses. Photograph: John Amis/AP
Trevor Lawrence and the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars started the season 8-3 before they suffered a series of losses. Photograph: John Amis/AP
 ?? ?? Nico Collins looked pretty calm after helping the Texans clinch a playoff place. Photograph: Marc Lebryk/USA Today Sports
Nico Collins looked pretty calm after helping the Texans clinch a playoff place. Photograph: Marc Lebryk/USA Today Sports

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