O-Zone: Win… win

JACKSONVILLE – Let’s get to it …

Rob from Westside:
Zone, I must be crazy because I’m not hurting from last weekend. Sure, it’s a disappointment, but the past decade has been nothing but disappointing. Mediocrity was the high-water mark and that ended before Jack Del Rio did. We won our first AFC South title this season, swept the AFC North, the Texans and the Colts. The players certainly should not rest on their laurels, but as a fan I am quite content. I will go with the theory the Steelers, Manning-led Colts, and Patriots have gone with: Win your division/compete for the playoffs every year and one of them will see you go all the way. If the team going forward can keep the games meaningful into December, I will be happy – as I am now. I’m good with this year and the team can keep on doing it every year.

John: This email makes a couple of good points, the first being that what the Jaguars accomplished this past season very obviously was significant psychologically and in terms of perception. I wrote and said last offseason that the Jaguars needed to get out of the “abyss” – i.e., the six consecutive double-digit loss seasons and the accompanying irrelevance. That seemed to be the first goal entering the Executive Vice President of Football Operations Tom Coughlin/Head Coach Doug Marrone era, and Marrone during his introductory press conference in January spoke of giving the fans a team they could be proud of. That felt like the first step for this franchise, and the Jaguars accomplished that and more this past season. The second point is pertinent going forward, and that’s the best way to achieve long-term relevance indeed is the one you cite – get to the postseason every season, be as healthy as possible and give yourself a chance every offseason. That’s easier said than done, but if you do it you have a healthy franchise that drafts and develops players – and that eventually establishes itself as a perennial contender.

Jaginator from (formerly of) Section 124:
If anyone still wants to cling to their sad NFL conspiracy theories, chew on this: Green Bay plays in the 68th-largest television market. Do you think they would ever sniff the playoffs if the league wanted to rig it so only the big-market teams succeeded? NFL fans may view Pittsburgh as a “big” city due to their winning reputation, but it’s only the 23rd-largest market. Peyton Manning got the Colts to two Super Bowls, winning one. But Indy is the 27th-largest market. Drew Brees has a Super Bowl ring – but New Orleans is only the 50th-largest market. So please, just stahp with all the tinfoil-hat nonsense.

John: All true.

John from Ramsey, NJ:
Unless I was watching the game through rose-colored glasses, I do not feel the hit on Gronk by Barry Church was incidental at best. He was leading with his shoulder and grazed Gronk’s helmet. I had to wonder at the time of impact who was hitting who. I believe the fine is totally unjustified. I wish Barry continued success. GO JAGUARS!

John: Agreed. The NFL perhaps – by necessity – has created a real issue in that it must prevent helmet-to-helmet contact while the rules preventing such contact have made it impossible to defend certain plays. Church on the play on which he knocked Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski out of the AFC Championship Game was trying to tackle Gronkowski high. His alternative would have been to hit him low and possibly injure his knees. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady threw a pass in such a way that Gronkowski had to reach high for it, thus leaving himself exposed. I suppose Church’s alternatives were to injure Gronkowski’s knees or allow the completion and a long gain. Neither seems like a good alternative to what occurred. The fine was ridiculous. Unfortunately for Church, me thinking that won’t change the fine.

The Real G.O.A.T.:
Federer just keeps on winning.

John: And he indeed just keeps on being the real G.O.A.T. #Fed20

Robert from Fernandina Beach, FL:
Critics never acknowledge that Blake Bortles is at least tied with the league lead in the past four years in the most boring statistic of all; availability. Think of all the quarterbacks who have missed lots of time in the past four years (Teddy Bridgewater, Derek Carr, Marcus Mariota, Carson Wentz, Deshaun Watson, Andrew Luck to name a few) while I don’t think I’ve ever seen Blake miss a play. That’s huge.

John: It’s true that observers typically give Bortles little credit for this, but it’s one of the many reasons teammates and Jaguars coaches respect Bortles so much. Marrone this past offseason talked often of Bortles’ toughness – and while much of that was about Bortles’ mental toughness dealing with criticism and adversity, it also was about the ability to take hits and play through pain and minor injuries. Not only does Bortles play through these things, he also rarely shows aftereffects of a hard hit or minor injury. To never have missed a start in four NFL seasons? Considering how many sacks and hits Bortles has taken, and how many he has avoided, that’s truly a strength. And indeed one that shouldn’t be overlooked.

Greg from Carlsbad, CA:
Hi, John: The Jags at the Pro Bowl are all pretty young. Even Malik Jackson just finished his sixth season. I’ve read what a couple said about being among a group elite at this level. What does your crystal ball say about this experience and their futures?

John: The fact that the five Jaguars players in the Pro Bowl this week are relatively young collectively is a positive that should bode well for the Jaguars’ future. None of the five – weak-side linebacker Telvin Smith, defensive end Yannick Ngakoue, cornerbacks A.J. Bouye and Jalen Ramsey and defensive tackle Malik Jackson – have shown signs of being players who rest on their laurels. There are no guarantees that all maintain a Pro Bowl level, but considering the presence of a slew of other near Pro Bowl young players on the roster – running back Leonard Fournette, linebacker Myles Jack, etc. – the future appears bright.

DUVAL DOOM from Section 217:
When does it stop hurting? I can’t imagine dealing with this all summer. Ugh.

John: Give it time, Doom. As far as the answer to your next question – how much time, Zone? – that I cannot answer.

Mike from St. Mary’s, GA:
John, we could have won all 18 games before this one and it still would have hurt just as much. I still don’t think we deserved the ending we got, but what a ride this year has been. Thanks, Jags. See you next year for more of the same.

John: Playoff losses are crushing, and they tend to hurt worse and linger longer the deeper they occur – and no, in a very real sense it doesn’t matter how many games a team wins before the final loss. The hurt is what makes the winning great, and the feeling when you win is why the losses hurt so much. Or something like that. I think.

Dwyane from Jacksonville:
If – big if, but if – the Jaguars had won the Conference Championship, would Telvin Smith and Yannick Ngakoue not have been named to the Pro Bowl? I am sure they would have rather been Super Bowlers than Pro Bowlers, but laurels are laurels.

John: No. If the Jaguars had made the Super Bowl, Smith and Ngakoue as alternates would not have been extended invitations when players on the AFC team opted out. They therefore wouldn’t have been designated as Pro Bowl players for the 2017 season whereas now they have received that designation. It is one of the quirks in the Pro Bowl system.

Keith from Jacksonville:
What are your thoughts on the XFL reboot? Do you think it could really capitalize from the NFL’s issues like bad officiating, stupid rules and other problems?

John: Not unless the quality of play is much, much better than it was in its first incarnation. I liked the XFL, and liked some of its concepts. I never thought it was a threat to the NFL, but I wondered if it might be a long-term thing for the spring. The problem was that the games quickly became difficult to watch – and over time, particularly because of the offensive line play, the games were pretty close to unwatchable.

Greg from Section 122 and Jacksonville:
Wow O-man, it finally hit me: We are Rocky. In the first movie he has this long shot title match against Creed; despite them both giving it their all, Creed wins the match due to judges scoring him more points – despite the fact Rocky fought a better fight. Now we come to the sequel where because Creed gives Rocky a rematch, during which he knocks Creed out in a triumphant return becoming the Champ. No more worries, we got this!!! Next year NFL no one is going to deny us our title. #TITLEORBUST

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

O-Zone: Unbelievable

JACKSONVILLE – The pain was real, and the pain remains.

If any theme dominated the inbox this week – other than anger, disappointment and frustration – that was it: Jaguars fans are hurting – and understandably so.

Hence, we present this special “Let-It-Out” edition of the O-Zone. I don’t say much in it, and there’s little in the way of breaking down the Jaguars’ loss to the New England Patriots last Sunday in the AFC Championship Game. There’s also not much on the draft or free agency – or even what the Jaguars will do at quarterback moving forward.

Mostly, it’s emails from this past week documenting how readers dealt with the pain and frustration of a heartbreaking loss that will hurt for a long while.

You know well the emotions. Anger. Bitterness. A feeling that maybe the Jaguars got robbed. Confusion over play-calling.

My wife used the word “devastating” – and that’s how it felt for many. The extreme emotion perhaps had much to do with the newness of the experience. Longtime Jaguars fans hadn’t experienced heartbreak with this team in a long while – and many casual fans and those new to the sport had no idea this sport could be so emotional.

Perhaps, though, what caused Sunday’s shock to linger was simpler than that. This team was simply so much fun – and goodness, wouldn’t it have been cool for that feeling to last a couple of more weeks?

Without a doubt that would have been cool. Sigh.

Let’s get to it …

Dylan from 215:
I have a feeling I might cry myself to sleep tonight. Done with the NFL for the season. Thank God for the EPL.

John: This was Sunday, and this was a very common sentiment …

Andrew from Mattoon, IL (Sunday):
No regrets … thank you Mr. Khan and all the Jags … a fairy tale season.

John: … as was this.

Brian from Greenwood, IN (Sunday):
This is going to hurt for a long time. It was an absolute dagger to the heart. I’m in mourning. I might call in sick tomorrow … nausea.

John: Yeah.

David from Ada, OK (Sunday):
We came pretty close to going to the Super Bowl. But Justin Timberlake? Really? Who listens to that guy? Thirteen-year old girls? J.P. Shadrick?

John: The fans focusing their ire on Shadrick gave me early hope that as a group they would pull through.

Steve from Queenstown, MD (Monday):
No, we didn’t get a Super Bowl. But you know what we did get? The energy from Duval grew so strong that I could feel it all the way here in Maryland. I likely speak for many that do not live in the Duval area. This season gave us good times. It gave us love. It gave us energy that we desperately needed. Going forth, it will just continue to grow. Thanks to Mr. Khan for everything he has done. Thanks to the entire front office. And especially thanks to the players. We love you all. #DTWD

John: #DTWD

Doug from Section 412 (Tuesday):
As bummed as I am this morning about the Jags’ loss, and as frustrated as I am about the officiating playing a role in that loss, I have to say a huge THANKS to this team and the coaching staff and the ownership for making being a Jaguars fan FUN again. It’s easy to forget, while wallowing in Monday Misery, how this season brought joy back to Jacksonville and how long it had been absent. I’ve been a season-ticket holder for 18 years, and I haven’t enjoyed a season this much since …

John: … maybe ever.

Marty from Jacksonville (Tuesday):
I know losing to the Pats is painful, but I see something much more important. In October, the stadium was half empty. In December: sold out, standing room only. To me, having a team is so much more important than what happened Sunday. And having a team means you must sell out that stadium. That’s why this season was so monumentally important, and that’s why I am so happy in spite of that loss to the Pats. Those 10 or so years of losing are over, and the franchise survived it.

John: Winning is cool. People like it.

Otto from Ponte Vedra Beach, FL (Wednesday):
John, not a question but a statement from a very proud Jaguars fan. Last week I was visiting friends in Los Angeles. Of course I was hugely disappointed in the loss. Sunday night we had tix to the Kings hockey game. I wore my Jags hoodie. In walking to my seat I must have had 100 fist bumps/high fives from Angelinos yelling Go Jags and you guys got robbed (er, not the actual word). A lady even gave me her free drink coupon. Just sayin’ it’s nice to be appreciated away from home.

John: #DTWD

Terry from Miami (Wednesday):
When the NFL granted Jacksonville the expansion team, my boys (nine and 11), my wife and I had a family meeting. We had been Cowboys fans (since I was a kid). But that night we voted as a family to become Jags and we have ever since. This season was by far the most fun we have had. I live in Miami now, but we all went to the Buffalo game and it was awesome! We were only a few minutes from the Super Bowl! Hold your heads up! You were the better team! My grandchildren are now fans and will never know a time when the Jaguars did not exist! Three generations now, how awesome. We will be back! #DTWD! One for the whole team!

John: #DTWD

Jay from Greenville, SC (Wednesday):
John, a few months ago, the girl I was dating and I broke up. We stayed friends this whole time since, and about four weeks ago she started coming out with me every Sunday to watch the Jags play at our local sports bar. Even though she didn’t really like football, she understood some of it; and I still got the chance to explain a few things to her. The Jags over the few weeks have brought us closer together than before and today, we started dating again. It feels good, this season. We didn’t finish in the Super Bowl, but I still feel like they won this one for me. Cheers to next season. Hopefully we’ll be able to drive down for a game.

John: You can’t blame gravity for falling in love – Albert Einstein.

Derrick from Jacksonville (Wednesday):
This was a joyous season by the Jags. They came within 15 minutes of playing for the NFL Championship when very few thought they would even have winning season. I’ve been an avid season ticket holder for over 18 years and this was my favorite season. It is a time to reflect and appreciate this team and the effort they put on the field every game. GO Jags.

John: I think a lot of people will remember this as their favorite Jaguars season. Because of the unexpected nature of the season and the personalities of this team, this one will be tough to top.

Steven from Charlotte, NC (Wednesday):
O-Zone, I have gone through a wide range of emotions over the last couple of days and just now start to look back and appreciate what this season has meant to me. I honestly want to just say “thanks.” Thanks for the owner, coaches, players, and staff. Thanks for giving me a hope for the future. Thanks for providing new memories to mesh with old memories of a team, my team, that I grew up loving and watching every single Sunday. Thanks for giving me excitement to watch games that I haven’t felt in years. Thanks for making it OK to watch every game online after moving away to a new city, even though I’m DTWD. Thanks for giving me a home playoff game – correction: home playoff win – that will be seared in my memory forever more. Thanks for giving me reason to travel hours to be closer with family and root for our Jaguars together. Thanks for being a reason all my children now wear Ramsey No. 20 jerseys. Thanks for making me act like a child, silly and joyous, watching Marcedes Lewis catch a touchdown to extend a lead on the Patriots – and the video reaction that will now be part of family lore. Thanks for Telvin, and Calais, Poz, and 91. Thanks for providing me reason to hold my head high at work all around Panthers and Falcons fans. Thanks for the rookies and veterans, wins and losses. Just, thanks. #DTWD

John: #DTWD

Shane from Atlanta, GA (Wednesday):
At least people don’t look at me like my puppy just got ran over when I tell them I’m a Jaguars fan anymore …

John: No, now they look at you like that for the right reasons.

Matt from Bremen, IN (Thursday):
John, I have only missed watching the Super Bowl one time since I was a kid. I look forward to it every year. I even watched it while deployed to Iraq. But as of right now, I’m not watching it this year, because it’s just too painful. My wife is mad, because I told her she’d have to go to Super Bowl party without me. I don’t understand how she can want to party at a time like this. Living around the smug, arrogant Colts fans in Indy for a long time, I always rolled my eyes when they talked about how much they hated the Pats. I get it now.

John: This was Thursday morning. My told me the night before that we wouldn’t be watching the Super Bowl. It didn’t sound like a question and it didn’t sound up for debate. I sheepishly explained that I might “have it on” because, you know, my job and all. My voice tailed off as I said it and I’m hoping the episodes of House Hunters that night are the good ones.

Dave from Clayton, NC (Thursday):
I’m not over it …

John: You weren’t alone …

Tim from Jaxx (Thursday):
I still can’t believe it’s over.

John: … and you weren’t alone, either.

Michael from Middleburg, FL (Thursday):
O-Man, I’m trying to put this L behind me, but I find myself still stinging from it. I’m on the third phase of grief … bargaining. I only the refs weren’t terrible … if only Blake Bortles snapped the ball in time … if only Dede Westbrook doesn’t fall down … if only we stop them on third-and-18 … if only T-Gip was 100 percent … It’s going to be a long offseason.

Jags Fan 818 from Jacksonville (Friday):
The “GOAT” and company had to have help from the refs to win. We lost, but at the same time the Jags won! We don’t have to cheat or play dirty to get the W!!! So proud of the Jags and how far they came! Can’t wait for next season to begin! DUUUUVALLLLL!

 
 
 
 
 

 

O-Zone: Ah, kids…

ORLANDO, Fla. – Let’s get to it …

Chad from Orange Park, FL:
I’ve come to trust your opinion as you are unbiased and seem to look at things through a different lens. A couple of years ago you said you saw this team making and advancing in the playoffs when everything seemed bleak. You also were level-headed on Blake Bortles’ development as you foresaw many of the problems he had last season (2016) even though his 2015 was great statistically. Can you give a very level-headed silver lining for this team moving forward? I know the majority of the team is coming back and we will have lots of experience, but I can’t get out of my head that nothing is guaranteed. The chemistry may not be there next year and the AFC looks to be much-improved next year. Can you give some sort realistic answer just for the sake of closure?

John: I know the future no better than anyone else, though I do try to look at the NFL from a less extreme day-to-day, hour-to-hour lens than many do. As for your question, I expect the Jaguars will be very good – even improved – defensively next season, providing they remain relatively healthy. Young players such as linebacker Myles Jack, cornerback Jalen Ramsey and defensive end Yannick Ngakoue are going to form much of the core, and I believe Jack is poised for super-stardom. And while this defense by necessity will change some personnel in the coming years, it has potential to be good for several seasons. I absolutely think the offense will improve next season. I expect wide receiver Allen Robinson to return, and I expect players such as center Brandon Linder, running back Leonard Fournette and left tackle Cam Robinson to continue to develop. That’s a decent start for the offense. An intriguing storyline this offseason will be whether the Jaguars can add the sort of boost in talent offensively they did on defense the last two offseasons. I expect some pretty major additions at wide receiver, tight end and at least two offensive-line positions. I expect the Jaguars to look long and hard at quarterback, and I expect options outside the organization such as Alex Smith and Kirk Cousins to be explored. Whatever the details of what the Jaguars do offensively, I do not expect them to remotely “stand pat” – and I expect this to be a more reliable running team with more legitimate options in the passing game. That last part doesn’t have to mean a new quarterback, but it will mean a focus on being able to make plays more consistently downfield. So, realistically: I think the Jaguars will enter the season with a good chance to return to the postseason. How healthy they are when they get there, and how the postseason will go? Well, Chad: I’m good, but I ain’t that good.

Keith from Jacksonville:
As we’re talking about offseason possibilities with the wide receivers, how is AR15’s rehab going? Will he be back for camp?

John: I expect Robinson to be re-signed and I expect he will be brought along slowly during the offseason. That’s the norm with torn anterior cruciate ligaments. I expect Robinson will be ready by the regular season and that he will be productive.

Mark from Jacksonville:
What are your thoughts on Poz being back for 2018? I know that he is a free agent and plays in only about a third of the snaps, but I think he is still a valuable piece of the defense. Do you think the Jags will try to re-sign him, let him walk or is it possible that he retires? I know it is all speculation at this time, but interested in your thoughts.

John: My thought is that middle linebacker Paul Posluszny still wants to play and very much wants to play for the Jaguars. I absolutely could see him back on a cap-friendly, short-team deal. At the same time, there are a lot of teams running this defense that could use a middle linebacker of his ability. This will be one to watch.

Rob from Jacksonville:
Is it fair to say this is a “Super Bowl-or-bust” team now, moving forward?

John: For players and coaches, this already was Super Bowl or bust. That was their mindset all season. And there’s little doubt that now will be the fans’ feeling: You only get to come out of nowhere once in the court of perception. That once happened for this team last season.

Thad from Albuquerque, NM:
If we take a step back next year, we are back to a rebuild. No way around it. We will for sure have a new quarterback going into 2020 if we fail next year. We will be losing critical playmakers due to their contracts coming up and the AFC South will be locked down by the three teams that have a star quarterback in place already. Next year is our last chance with this team to be in the Super Bowl. It’s all or nothing. And I’m betting on nothing because we are never allowed to be happy or get nice things as Jags fans.

John: Please. Stop. Talking.

Tyler from Jacksonville:
What would you say to fans that have become disenfranchised with the NFL as a result of the absolute travesty that took place Sunday? Why even watch if the league will so unfairly officiate such a big game purposely? Keep in mind: nothing you can tell these fans will change their perspective that the refs absolutely helped Tom Brady as they have done over the past decade. What would you say to people like me who now see the NFL as barely more than the WWE? And before you jump up on the sports-are-above-influence-of crooked-refs high horse I will just remind you of that NBA ref convicted of fixing games.

John: It sounds as if you’re pretty dug in – and if you say they’re “nothing I call tell these fans” to change perspective, then perhaps there’s “nothing I can tell these fans” to change perspective. Look, the Jaguars got a few calls against them Sunday that I thought were very bad. Was it done on purpose? As part of a great conspiracy? As part of a league directive? No, I don’t believe that. Do officials get familiar with teams that they are used to see winning, thereby creating situations that some well-known players get the benefit of the doubt more than lesser-known players? I’d be hard-pressed to argue against that possibility.

Abe from Catonsville, MD:
I know that “fans-are-gonna-fan” is the obvious answer, but the attempts to read a conspiracy into refereeing for high-profile teams like New England is silly. If that was actually happening and a league was conspiring to get a popular team from a bigger market into the finals, that would be hard to keep secret. And the moment it broke, that would be the end of that sport. No smart business would ever risk it. Accuse the NFL of a lot of things, but it certainly is smart.

John: This is probably a better answer to the last question than my effort.

Fred from New York:
In Game 6 of the 2013 NBA Finals, the San Antonio Spurs blew a big fourth-quarter lead to the Heat and missed a shot at the end of regulation that would have won the title before falling to Miami in overtime and again in Game 7. That team responded by winning the championship in 2014. I hope Jaguars Head Coach Doug Marrone has a little of Spurs coach Greg Popovich’s magic in him and can similarly motivate the Jags to use this loss to make them stronger next season.

John: I think Marrone will take a very similar day-by-day, workman-like approach to the 2018 offseason and season that he took this past season. It’s an approach that served this team well. I wondered in the first few days after the loss to New England whether there might be a hangover effect from that game. Listening to players at the Pro Bowl this week, I am less concerned about that. This is a young, confident team that sees this past season as the start of something, and I don’t think one loss will cause that to change. And yeah – I think what happened Sunday and how close this team came to its goal this past season might get mentioned somewhere
along the line next season.

Ryan from Jacksonville:
How many straight days has it been? I lost count.

John: I have put in three miles 1,125 consecutive days, dating to the day after the Jaguars’ 2014 regular-season finale in Houston. My son tells me it’s 1,057 days. The discrepancy is because I worked out on an elliptical twice while in Lincoln, Nebraska, for Randy Gregory’s Pro Day in March 2015 when the hotel treadmills were broken. I told my son ellipticals count and he told me they didn’t. I said they do and he told me he hated me for ruining his life. Things escalate in our house sometimes.
 
 
 
 

 

Ask Vic: Jags at start; pass rusher for Packers & O-Zone: Sing it proud

Ask Vic:

Bubba from Pocatello, ID
Vic, is Mike Vrabel ready to be a head coach? Three years on the sidelines (only one as a DC) and he’s good to go? Really?

He’s an impressive man, but I would agree the Titans accepted a major risk in firing a veteran coach who had raised the team from the depths of the league to within one win of the AFC title game. Let’s not forget, the Titans beat the Jaguars twice. Now, they’ve hired a defensive-minded coach for a team whose issues are on offense, which is Mike Mularkey’s specialty. How is it going to impact Marcus Mariota’s development? This coaching change is loaded with downside risk.

Robert from Orlando, FL
Are the Jags back next year, or is this a 2007-like mirage?

These Jaguars aren’t a snowman; they won’t melt during the offseason. It’s a young, talented roster on a team loaded with salary cap room. Quarterback is the issue. The Jags can remain a playoff contender without addressing quarterback, but I don’t think they can go to the championship level without an upgrade. Hey, they were afraid to pass the ball with 55 seconds left in the first half. I saw it earlier in the season, too, when they were afraid to throw the ball off their own goal line in overtime against the Jets. They tried to play around the most important club in their bag all season, and that tells me all I need to know about Doug Marrone’s opinion of his quarterback. You can’t play that way in today’s game and expect to win. Playing scared won’t work.

Ryan from Las Vegas, NV
Vic, I haven’t asked a question since you’ve been back but you bet I’ve been reading. It’s so great to have you around again. Look into your crystal ball. The Jaguars had a period with four playoff years in a row and two AFC championship games. Then they went 18 years in between championship games. Which scenario is more likely to repeat itself?

Tom Coughlin won’t make the same mistake. He won’t let the team become a cap casualty again. The Jaguars are at the start of a long run of playoff contention.

Pat from Seneca, SC
“Boston will go back to being the bad football town it always was.” That was provocative; please expand. Is there anything the Patriots could do to change how football is viewed in Boston? Is Boston unique when it comes to how football is viewed?

Boston is a Red Sox town. After that come the Bruins and then the Celtics. It was always that way until Tom Brady came along. When he’s gone, it’ll go back to how it was. It’s in Boston’s DNA.

Tyler from Dunnellon, FL
In 2007, despite a great year, you said you were concerned (the Jaguars) team was actually in the middle of its window closing, not opening. Is the window now opening or closing?

It’s opening, but how wide it opens is the issue. David Garrard was not “The Man,” and the Jaguars didn’t have the time to find “The Man” before they got old. I think this Jaguars team will have the opportunity to address the quarterback position in this offseason. Drew Brees and Kirk Cousins are scheduled for free agency — so is Jimmy Garoppolo but the 49ers would likely put the exclusive franchise tag on him.

Stephen from Jacksonville, FL
What is your opinion of the Jaguars’ offensive line? The number one-ranked run offense disappeared too often this season to be deserving of its title. The inability to run the ball in the second half of the AFC championship game played a significant role in the Jaguars’ loss. Do you think they need to make upgrades to the line for next season?

When you’re a one-trick pony, your opponent can focus on taking away your only trick. The Jaguars need a real passing game, not just one built on drags, delays, swings, screens and checkdowns. That’s scheme stuff and it worked early but not late. Plays win early, players win late. The Jaguars need to upgrade their passing game talent.

Logan from Lino Lakes, MN
Vic, will you be hanging around Mobile this week? Looking forward to hearing who Tony likes for the Packers.

I asked Tony Pauline for the name of somebody he likes for the Packers. This is what he gave me: “Keep an eye on Marcus Davenport, UT-San Antonio. Working at DE here but devastating 3-4 OLB in college.”

Brian from Yakima, WA
With the recent reports of Bell being repeatedly tardy to team functions, even basically not showing up for the final walk-through, is this a player that should get paid? Obviously, the talent is there, but if the reports are accurate, I’m shocked at the display of commitment to a team with a real shot at the Super Bowl at the time.

The franchise tag breeds enmity. The Steelers knew that and were likely prepared to accept a negative reaction by Le’Veon Bell. Hey, it’s nothing personal, just business, right? The Steelers are not a feel-good team. They don’t mind a little angst. They don’t mind allowing their players and their coaches to stew in their own juices. Bell’s behavior has weakened his position. I think Mike Tomlin’s failure to coach the defense out of its late-season skid will have taken a little of the bounce out of his step, too. All of that is good for the Steelers. Peace and tranquility are not virtues for a football team. Winning isn’t a byproduct of job security. Confrontation and angst work best. As Tom Coughlin once told me, “I don’t want a lot of people walking around here with smiles on their faces.”

Chase from Rapid City, SD
Vic, do you believe college football players should stay for all four years at their university before going on to declare for the NFL draft?

I don’t believe anyone should be held hostage and denied advancement, but I don’t like the farce that is the commitment the top players make but never intend to honor. These are our esteemed institutions of higher learning. They are where young people with genuine academic intentions go to become the leaders of our nation’s future. I’d prefer to see players who aren’t sincere about their commitment move directly from high school to the NFL. Maybe Cookie Gilchrist was ahead of his time. I think it’s time for the NFL to fund its own system for developing talent.

Andrew from Mount Dora, FL
Vic, you mentioned the Packers need one or two great players to fix the defense next year. Do you think there are any players available where the Packers pick this year that could fit the need?

Where the Packers are picking, they should be able to find exactly what they need.

Andrew from Minneapolis, MN
If Brady wins with or without Gronk, Deion Branch, Wes Welker, etc., who from the Patriots’ Super Bowl rosters should go into the Hall of Fame? Is everybody riding Brady’s coattails?

Ty Law is the only true Patriots player in the Brady era I see as a Hall of Famer, and it’s going to be a fight for Law to get in. Some might say Richard Seymour; I wouldn’t. By and large, it’s been Brady and a cast of misfit toys.

Dan from Sebastopol, CA
What are your keys to victory for both New England and Philadelphia?

Chatty says you beat the Patriots with man-to-man coverage, but the Jaguars have the best man corners in the league and they got trashed. For the Eagles to win, I think the quarterback must go down and the quarterback must go down hard. This Super Bowl will be decided by the Eagles’ pass rush or the Patriots’ ability to block it.

J.G. from Silver Spring, MD
Peer into the “Ask Vic” crystal ball. Who starts at QB in Week 1 for the Jaguars?

I’ll say Kirk Cousins. I think Drew Brees is too intelligent not to get a deal done with the Saints. He’s the hero of New Orleans. He must never play for another team, and I think he gets that.

Chad from Troy, MI
What is your favorite trick play you’ve ever seen executed?

It’s one I invented for my all-star baseball team. I called it the pop up play. When the pitcher saw the runner at first break for second, he threw a pitch out to the catcher, who then threw a pop up in the infield. The second baseman began yelling “I got it, I got it,” which caused the runner to stop and retreat to first base, where the ball was waiting for him.

Lori from Brookfield, WI
Vic, Leonard Fournette’s spin moves are remarkable. Which players have impressed you with their signature moves?

I’m not a spin move kind of guy. I like one cut and go. I liked Earl Campbell’s charging bull move. Fournette reminds me of Campbell. I think he should charge more and spin less. In my mind, if you’re not running the ball with power, you’re not running the ball. Power forces defenses to commit extra defenders to the line of scrimmage, and when that happens, the running game has won.

Richard from Jacksonville, FL
Vic, what’s your opinion on whistles being blown too early on turnovers? There have been several instances this year of a fumble return being blown dead inappropriately. I understand the safety aspect, but the plays seem so important to games that the refs should let the play go unless 100 percent sure the play is over.

Richard, you’re whining. I think you need to remember the score was 20-10 and the Jaguars had the No. 1 pass defense and its “Sacksonville” pass rush to protect that lead, but they didn’t get it done at crunch time. In my opinion, that unit spent too much energy celebrating itself. It should remember the numbers 772-7; that’s the numbers of yards and touchdowns passing it allowed in the final two games.

Dan from Grand Rapids, MI
Recently, I read an article arguing why Vince Lombardi is still a greater coach than Bill Belichick. The basic crux of the argument was Lombardi won four titles in nine years and didn’t have Tom Brady. Even though Belichick has the greatest QB of all time, he still has to be considered the greatest coach of all time, right? What he has done in the salary cap era is nothing short of remarkable. If you had to pick one, who is your greatest coach of all time?

It would be Lombardi because I think his persona has had a greater and more lasting impact on the game than that of any other coach in the game’s history. Lombardi defines the essence of the game, which is human confrontation. I’m not sure what Belichick defines. I don’t think he wants to define anything other than winning and, frankly, quarterbacks define winning. Nearly all of the great coaches won their titles with one quarterback.

ORLANDO, FL – Let’s get to it …

Geralt from Celina, OH:

What is your best prediction for Blake Bortles? Do we let him walk? Do we pay him his $19.1 million option? Do we extend him – and if so, what kind of potential deal would he get?

John: My thought as of now – four days after the season – is I believe Bortles probably will be the Jaguars’ quarterback next season, but I don’t think it’s a given. The Jaguars will explore options at all positions, and quarterback certainly will be the major decision. And I do think there’s a possibility the Jaguars explore veteran options via trade or unrestricted free agency. How realistic are options such as Alex Smith and/or Kirk Cousins? Time will tell. What would the Kansas City Chiefs want in exchange for Smith? Would the Jaguars be able to woo Cousins – provided he doesn’t re-sign with the Washington Redskins – in a quarterback-thirsty free-agent market? It’s clearly uncertain and there clearly is a possibility Bortles won’t return; if that wasn’t the case, he already would be signed to a long-term deal. I’ve said for a while I believe Bortles will be the quarterback next season and play on his $19.1 million contract. If he plays well next season and shows continued development, then the sides could work out a long-term deal – and if he doesn’t, the team could move on. If the team was still uncertain about his future in that scenario, they could then franchise him for the 2019 season. There are issues and unanswerable questions galore on this topic. I suspect the answers will get a lot more answerable in the next month or so.

Greg from Carlsbad, CA:

So … 29th. Whom are Jags picking?

John: Wide receiver or offensive lineman … that’s my early thought.

Tony from Land of Confusion:

Not really a question as much as an observation – this was our ’84 Bears season. Coming from nowhere to reach the conference championship game on the back of a strong defense and a powerful running game. Next year is our 1985.

John: That’s certainly the hope. The Bears in 1984 not only won the NFC Central, they began emerging as an NFC power with a young defense. They beat the two-time defending NFC Champion Washington Redskins on the road in the divisional round – a relatively similar accomplishment to the Jaguars beating the Pittsburgh Steelers on the road in the divisional round earlier this month. The Bears then lost the NFC Championship Game, 23-0, to a powerful 49ers team then in the early stages of a dynastic run. That championship-game loss motivated the Bears throughout 1985 to one of the great seasons in NFL history. We’ll see if the Jaguars follow suit.

Robert from Jacksonville:

Will the Jaguars submit their questionable calls to the NFL office for review? If so, what is the typical response? The league office has stated they missed a call – or maybe that’s the NBA?

John: Teams routinely submit calls to the league office for clarification. The NFL indeed often admits mistakes. The response? Typically something akin to, “Sorry.” If that seems as if it doesn’t particularly ease the pain when critical, season-ending calls are missed … you’re right. It doesn’t.

Wayne from Jacksonville:

I just read on my phone that Roger Goodell confirmed that the NFL does sometimes “help” with the outcome of a game so that they can create a bigger revenue – just like the WWW – so does that confirm that the refs worked against us and for the Patriots and quarterback Tom Brady last Sunday? There were just too many Patriots penalties that were not called. Do you believe that this will go unanswered by the NFL or will the owners get together and demand honest officiating?

John: I think there’s something wrong with your phone. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell certainly never admitted anything close to that publicly. To do so would call into question the integrity of the entire league.

Bruce from Jacksonville:

So now Mike Florio has the ability to look into a player’s mind and heart and discern intent? I see a very different intent and a very different take on whether the hit on Gronk was intended to harm; sure it was illegal according to the rule, but the rule ignores that in many cases when you hit someone above the chest their head is going to go forward and probably hit the helmet of the other player. … Laws of physics: action equals reaction.

John: I don’t pay all that much attention to Florio, though I’m sure he spends hours perusing the hidden meaning behind everything I say or write – sort of like trying to figure out if Paul is really dead. But anyone who saw Jaguars safety Barry Church’s hit on Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski last Sunday as a hit with intent to injure was watching a different game than I saw.

Micky from Section 308:

What’s the difference between an “All Pro” and a “Pro Bowler” – and I don’t mean the kind that gets paid for bowling.

John: A Pro Bowl selection is a player selected to the Pro Bowl, which could mean he is selected in the original process in December and also could mean he is named to the game if a player originally selected to the game is unable to play. An All-Pro player typically designates a player named first- or second-team Associated Press All-Pro. Both are prestigious honors, but All-Pro – by virtue of their being far few players named – is considered the more prestigious.

Hippy Ryan from Fleming Island, FL:

I think we agree that guard could be our late first-round pick. I think a charging rhino that opens holes for our “run-first” offense could be the big difference, along with maybe a receiving tight end. Or are we at more of Best-Available-Player level now?

John: We sort of agree in the sense that I believe a guard is possible at the end of the first round, but I consider that a small possibility. I would guess tight end, wide receiver or right tackle would be the selection there with interior lineman more of a possibility late.

Gamble from Philadelphia, PA:

Just curious why you didn’t list cornerback as one of the Jags’ needs with Aaron Colvin leaving. Obviously, the Top 2 are world class but we do play a ton of nickel. Do you think a player currently on the roster will step up? Thanks O-Zone.

John: That was an oversight. Nickel corner clearly will be a need if Colvin leaves.

Jordan from Jacksonville:

If it’s me, I either sign Drew Brees to biggest three-year contract of all time or I aggressively trade up to get whatever quarterback I think is the best.

John: I won’t be surprised if the Jaguars seriously explore quarterback this offseason, but I doubt the Jaguars do either of these things. I’ll be shocked if Brees isn’t playing for the New Orleans Saints next season because both sides want that to happen – and I’ll be shocked if the Jaguars trade up for a rookie quarterback because I can’t see them being able to get high enough to get a player they would want to start immediately – if such a player actually exists in this year’s draft.

Glen from Orange Park, FL:

Is there much of a chance free agents like Paul Posluszny, Aaron Colvin, Marqise Lee, and/or Allen Robinson would sign a team-friendly contract to remain part of this ascending team? Do you think there is a very good chance the team pays Blake Bortles the fifth year and sign him long term next year if he continues improving?

John: I would be stunned if Colvin, Lee or Robinson sign cap-friendly deals. They’re young, ascending players who have every right to make as much money as they possibly can as they enter the primes of their careers. I do believe Posluszny could sign such a deal. He wants to finish his career in Jacksonville, and my sense is he wants to play at least another season or two.

Nate from St. Petersburg, FL:

Firstly, I’m a Bortles backer. I’ve got to admit though that I’m extremely intrigued about the possibility of Kirk Cousins in teal. I can’t help but be nervous about the idea of booting a guy who clearly has the support of his team, from a team like this. Tight knit, loud, expressive and loyal. How do you think the other 52 would look at the team bringing in another starter after this run?

John: How good is the new guy? How tough is the new guy? This is not a snide answer. Rather, it is to make the point that the Jaguars’ locker room absolutely supported Bortles this past season and I believe most players would love to have him back. They respect him and like playing with him. At the same time, if the Jaguars brought in a player who truly could help the team win more than Bortles and displayed similar toughness, leadership, etc., they would play for that player, too. Players want to win. They adapt. And if it happens, the Jaguars’ players would adjust to a different quarterback.

Biff from Jacksonville:

O-Zone carried me through. Thanks, John.

John: No worries.
 
 
 

 

O-Zone: Head up

JACKSONVILLE – Let’s get to it …

Eder from Mexico City, Mexico:
I’m really happy with the season, and had a mixed sensation after Sunday’s loss to the Patriots. I believe this team will be back to the AFC Championship Game soon. This team is full of young guys. I think they lose focus with all referee calls, which is a normal issue with young guys. No matter if the call was good or bad from referees, they need to be on the game and just focus on the next play. I hope next year, they are going to be more concentrated. What you think about this?

John: I think there is something to this, and I think players also know this. I believe the veteran leaders will concentrate on this area, and I believe that focus – along with the accompanying maturity of being collectively a year older – will make this less of an issue next season. This team rode on emotion a lot this past season, and that emotion served the team well for the most part. There were flare-ups that cost them in key situations – against, say, San Francisco – but the team handled itself well on that front in the postseason. I think you’ll see that trend continue; the more undisciplined a team is, the harder it is for that team to win. These players above all else want to win; as players mature, that desire should lead to be more discipline.

Jake from Cary, NC:
Jacksonville’s population is less than one million people. The Greater Boston population is almost five million. The NFL is a business, and the goal of any business is to maximize profit / keep investors happy. Few (no?) businesses would make a decision that sacrifices four million customers. Most investors (e.g., advertisers) wouldn’t stand for it. Look at the numbers: four million additional people with a vested interest in the game; one penalty for 10 yards. The business minds in the NFL are too smart to have allowed the Jags to win that game. We never stood a chance.

John: Nah. Sorry.

Brian from Gainesville, FL:
Is it fair to recognize that next year will almost certainly be a step backwards? We will lose a few key defensive players. We still won’t have a dominant offensive line. We still won’t have a superstar receiving corps. Plus, the rules make it hard for teams to repeat success: Lower draft pick, salary cap, tougher schedule, and a healthy Texans team and healthy Andrew Luck look to make for more dark days. What do you think O?

John: The Jaguars’ task indeed will be difficult next season, but it’s too strong to say next season “almost certainly” will be a step backward. While I don’t expect cornerback Aaron Colvin to be re-signed, I expect the defense to be very good, even improved, in its second season with most core players essentially playing together. I expect offensive line to be addressed in the offseason, as well as receiver and tight end. I can’t guarantee the Jaguars will make the AFC Championship Game again next season, but I do think exceeding 10 victories and winning the AFC South title again is very possible. At that point, you hope you’re healthy and you hope you get favorable matchups.

Bill from Folkston, GA:
Hey, John: Could you explain the compensatory drafts? Also, I was wondering what you think is the largest need for the Jags to address in the offseason, whether free agency or the draft. Personally I think the need is either tight end or wide receiver – something to help open up more options on offense.

John: Compensatory draft selections are awarded to “compensate” for free-agency losses in the previous offseason. In general terms, a team losing more high-profile, expensive unrestricted free agents than it signs will be awarded compensatory selections commiserate to how much it was hurt in free agency. I wouldn’t expect the Jaguars to receive compensatory selections this offseason, for instance, because they gained players such as defensive end Calais Campbell, safety Barry Church and cornerback A.J. Bouye in free agency while losing strong safety Johnathan Cyprien. As far as needs in the offseason: guard, perhaps right tackle, wide receiver, tight end.

Dane from Jacksonville:
One fer O-Zone. In the midst of a very bittersweet time to be a Jags fan, I really appreciate the humor you bring to my day in the O-Zone. This Jags organization is very special to me and many, many people in Jacksonville and across the world. The O-Zone plays no small part of it and I appreciate your efforts.

John: I can think of nothing more self-serving in this difficult time for Jaguars fans than to print an email praising one self. To do so would indicate insecurity on such a level that it would be comical and expose that person as pathetic, weak and sad.

Mike from Charleston, SC:
I think the fumble rule needs to be changed to allow advancing of a fumble to its conclusion and then change the ruling after the review. Your thoughts?

John: The spirit of your email is correct. Something must be done to address plays incorrectly called dead. But it’s not really about “changing” a rule. NFL rules state that once a play is called dead, it can’t be overturned – and that makes sense. The problem is that officials routinely blow plays dead when they are very much still alive. I don’t know that there’s an answer beyond training them not to do this, but I do believe there must be more if an emphasis on this. The inadvertent whistles often involve touchdowns and game-turning plays, and one such play darned sure hurt the Jaguars Sunday.

Paul from North Dakota:
Almighty O, what do you see in your crystal ball for the Jags’ future at wide receiver? With both Allen Robinson and Marqise Lee due to become unrestricted free agents, do the Jags sign them back? Do the Jaguars release Allen Hurns with his contract not guaranteed anymore to make room for one of these two players? Is this young new core enough to allow our veterans to test free agency waters and potentially find a new place to call home? Oh, please Almighty O: shed some light on this unforeseeable future of ours.

John: As your email indicated, anything along these lines right now is speculation. These are offseason questions, and the Jaguars’ process of formulating their offseason approach has just begun. The thought here is the Jaguars will re-sign Robinson and trust that he returns to his pre-injury form. I don’t believe Lee will be re-signed and I anticipate the Jaguars parting ways with Hurns. I foresee Robinson, Dede Westbrook and Keelan Cole being three of the Jaguars’ top wide receivers next season with either a Day 1-2 draft selection or free agent being the fourth. We’ll see if I’m right.

Jerell from Columbia SC:
Jags blew their best shot to make a Super Bowl. It will take another 10 years to get back. Sigh …

John: Sure. Or maybe it will take 20 years. Or maybe it will take one. We’ll see.

Dana from Sacksonville:
Myles Jack seems to have really improved over the second half of the season. How good can he be next season and beyond that? What improvements did you see from him and what makes him potentially special?

John: Jack improved as the season went on, appearing far more comfortable as the season continued. This made sense because he was in his second NFL season, his first calling the defense. As he got more comfortable mentally, he played freer and made more and more big plays. I think what we saw late in the season from Jack – particularly in the last two postseason games – were the early steps toward stardom and elite status. My guess is Jack will be one of the leading lights on this team next season.

Chris from Mandarin, FL:
Despite winning more games this season, the two-toned helmets are not cool. We do not like them.

John: Hmmmm…

Steve from Duval:
O-Zone, is it a good thing or bad thing that our offensive coordinator and defensive coordinator aren’t being considered for jobs outside of the Jags’ organization?

John: It’s an expected thing. Todd Wash (defense) and Nathaniel Hackett (offense) have been coordinators with the Jaguars for two seasons and one, respectively. This was their first season working for a team that made the postseason. If the Jaguars are successful next season, I imagine you will see their profile rise. But for the Jaguars, it’s a good thing that they’re staying. The staff should have continuity in message and scheme. It’s not the end of the world if a team doesn’t have those things, but it’s better if it does.

Keith from Woonsocket, RI:
If you think Jags fans down there have it bad, try being a Jags fan in the New England area. I seriously don’t think there is a more arrogant bunch of fans than Pats fans. You would think that they beat us by 40 the way they talk. I almost had to leave work early on Monday because it was too much for me to deal with. Jags fans: keep your head up. At least you have the support of other Jags fans down there.

John: Stay strong.

 

 

 
 
 

 

Ask Vic: It’s not Gronk, it’s Brady & O-Zone: Good, cruddy feeling

JACKSONVILLE – We usually look ahead on Wednesday. We’ll allow a little look back today. There’s time for that. That’s not a fun fact, just a fact.

Let’s get to it …

Jeff from Jacksonville:
Philip Rivers, J.J. Watt, Jason Witten, Eric Berry, Matthew Stafford, Aaron Donald, Joe Thomas. Just some of the borderline Hall of Fame players who have been in this league for a long time who never have played in a conference championship game. I’d say the Jags did pretty good and got a ton of playoff experience this season.

John: True, true, true. What the Jaguars did during the 2017 season is hard. Really hard. They got closer to the Super Bowl than at any other time in franchise history in this sense: never before had they led the AFC Championship Game in the fourth quarter. They trailed the entire game when they lost to the New England Patriots in 1996 and never led in the fourth quarter when they lost to the Tennessee Titans in 1999. The fact that they reached higher than any previous Jaguars team this past season doesn’t mean you shouldn’t feel disappointed, heartbroken and even angry that they fell a few minutes short of the Super Bowl. It darned sure doesn’t mean what happened Sunday didn’t hurt. It does mean that the Jaguars had a hell of a season that won’t soon be forgotten and one that should stand out as special for a long time – and a season that a lot of other teams and players wished they could have experienced.

Marshal from Palm Coast, FL:
O-Man, how beneficial do you think it would have been on that last drive to have someone the caliber of Allen Robinson out there for BB5 who can just go up and get it when we needed it most?

John: Very.

Julio from So Cal:
I will give you three reasons why the Jags lost the AFC Championship Game. Kneel with 55 seconds remaining in the first half, delay of game on third down, not blitzing on third-and-18. We talk about holding players accountable, how about coaches?

John: I would have liked to have seen perhaps a draw or a screen at the end of the first half Sunday, possibly to Corey Grant – just to see if his speed could have created something. I think you can make the argument that the Jaguars got a touch too conservative there – and yes, the delay of game shortly before that that negated a first down to tight end Marcedes Lewis was a killer …. the second half may have played out far differently had the Jaguars gotten a field goal there. I didn’t have a problem with the Jaguars not blitzing on third-and-18 in the fourth quarter; this team has been a pressure-with-four, cover-with-seven defense much of the year. If blitzing was the automatic solution to all defensive problems, all teams would blitz every play and no team would ever lose. As far as holding coaches accountable, the Jaguars lost in the AFC Championship Game; the hurt everyone feels is real. I think coaches did too good a job this season to expect firings, so I suppose I’m asking what should happen to hold the coaches accountable? Flogging? Public shaming? Beaten about the face and neck? I’ll check to see if these are options.

Alan from Aurora, IL:
Is the Pro Bowl roster finalized now? How many Jags will be participating?

John: Five Jaguars players are expected to participate in the Pro Bowl in Orlando this week: Cornerback Jalen Ramsey, cornerback A.J. Bouye, defensive tackle Malik Jackson, linebacker Telvin Smith and defensive end Yannick Ngakoue. Defensive end Calais Campbell opted out of the game Monday. Ramsey, Bouye and Jackson were originally voted into the game, with Smith and Ngakoue being named on Monday.

Jeremy from Rhode Island:
John, this one stings and will sting for a while not because the Jags lost a great battle to a great team but because the manner in which the officiating aided the Patriots win. When you take away the fairness of a sport, you don’t have a sport. You have a con.

John: A few calls went against the Jaguars Sunday. I thought the interference against Bouye at the end of the first half was an incorrect call, and there’s little question linebacker Myles Jack’s fumble recovery should have resulted in a touchdown. I also think it slightly defies logic that the Patriots committed no penalties offensively or defensively. I won’t call what happened Sunday a con, because it’s not my belief that there was a categorical conspiracy to help one team or the other, but those calls were unfortunate.

Ryan from the Pit of Misery:
John, how is it that in consequential games, the Patriots always get the benefit of the doubt on 50/50 calls? How is it possible that this is the only game all year that Jags’ defensive line doesn’t force at least one offensive holding call? How does a secondary that only drew five pass-interference calls all season were flagged for two in Foxboro? Patriots wide receiver Danny Amendola not flagged for blatantly head-butting Jaguars safety Tashaun Gipson right in front of a ref? How is Jack whistled down with nobody touching him? I’m sorry, but I just need to vent O-man. What recourse is there for the rest of the NFL World that feels year after year that the Patriots are in cahoots with the NFL and their referees? I know who I’ll be rooting for in the Super Bowl – Philly Philly.

John: All of those are fair things to feel, and I will tell you the non-call on Amendola head-butting Gipson was a major topic in the Jaguars’ locker room after the game. I can’t disagree with the pass interference on Jaguars cornerback Jalen Ramsey. The call against Bouye … well …

Mike from Jacksonville:
The Jaguars’ defense this season must hold the all-time record for defensive touchdowns egregiously nullified due to the quick whistle. Even more shameful is that there is a chance it directly altered who is playing in the Super Bowl this year.

John: The call that negated Jack’s potential hurt. It changed momentum. One thing that should be remembered, though: The Jaguars got possession at their 33 after the play and did not get a first down. They had the ball and a chance to do something with it – and went three-and-out. As angry as people want to get with the Patriots winning all of the time and getting breaks, it should also be noted that they are good enough to take advantage of the breaks once they get them. That’s a far more significant a part of their success as any good fortune. There was no rule that the Patriots had to score a touchdown after interference call on Bouye. There was no rule that the Jaguars couldn’t get a first down after the Jack fumble recovery. There was no rule that the Jaguars couldn’t have made a few plays at the end of the game when the Patriots had momentum. A lot of teams get breaks and don’t turn them into victories. The Patriots are good enough to take advantage of them more often than not.

Pedal from Farnborough, Hampshire, UK:
Oh Mighty ‘O,’ I spent Monday in a stunned daze. Even my wife was sympathetic as I stared into space and, “We were SO close;” she usually hears white noise when I mention the Jags. For the last seven days, I had hope and belief we could go all the way. This year was going to be OUR year. I was in the Jaguars UK Pub watching the game with friends I had made since the Jags started playing in the International Series. For years, I thought I was the only Jags fan in the UK. We cheered every first down and celebrated every score like lunatics. Our hearts were broken with 2:48 left. As I stood there fighting back the tears, a few fans were saying, “What a great year it was for the Jags.” We won the division. We hosted and won a playoff Game. We beat the Steelers – again. I’m not there yet, mighty ‘O.’ It might take a week or two before I look back and smile. You fall seven times, you stand up eight. DTWD!

John: You don’t have to smile yet. People aren’t smiling here. Players aren’t smiling. Coaches aren’t smiling. Sexton is smiling, but it’s because his stylist told him it was OK to wear a kerchief on camera, so that’s not all that pertinent to this discussion. Point being, you get over emotions and heartache at your own pace. Grieve if you must, but remember: this is sort of a good, cruddy feeling – and this cruddy feeling is so much better than the cruddy feelings of the past five or six seasons. There’s legitimate hope that the good feelings will continue to outweigh the cruddy ones around these parts for a while.

 

 

VIC:

Nathan from New York, NY
The Eagles defense gets better when Carson Wentz gets injured, while the Packers defense gets worse (twice) when Aaron Rodgers gets injured. How do you explain that?

The Eagles defense has true headliners, led by Fletcher Cox, who I believe is right behind Aaron Donald among defensive tackles. That’s not a scheme defense. The Eagles have the personnel to line up and whip you.

Steve from New Britain, CT
Did you agree with the review of the Lewis fumble? I didn’t because at the instant his knee touched the ground, the ball was still pinned to his thigh and not loose or out of his control.

I’m OK with the call because the ball had moved, but I’m not OK with the wimpy “call stands” ruling by Al Riveron; I’m assuming it was his ruling. The replay provided a perfect view of the ball, Lewis’ grasp of it, his knee and the ground. Come on, Al, it’s got to be either reversed or confirmed, not stands.

Dan from Madison, WI
How did Minnesota’s defense get beat so bad?

It ate the pizza. I thought the Jaguars defense did, too.

Brandon from Jacksonville Beach, FL
Vic, please explain how Bouye interfered with Cooks running out of bounds of his own volition.

There was too much contact by Bouye. There is no more bump and run. Maybe the call should’ve been illegal contact. Either way, the Jaguars secondary allowed 310 yards passing (gross) and collapsed at crunch time. No. 1 pass defense? It gave up 779 yards and seven touchdowns to the Steelers and Patriots combined. I think the Jaguars defense needs to stop talking and start playing.

Dan from Sebastopol, CA
Vic, which team impressed you the most Sunday?

Does Tom Brady count as a team? Where are the “it’s Gronk, not Brady” people today? Brady wins with Gronk and without Gronk. Gronk is a Brady creation, just as Deion Branch was and Charlie Weiss was and maybe even Bill Belichick is. Brady is the greatest football player of all time. Take air out of the ball or put air in the ball; it doesn’t matter. Stitches in his passing hand? No problem.

Ryan from Mukwonago, WI
Vic, just watched Coach Belichick’s Friday press conference. He is pretty disrespectful to the media. I don’t know how those guys even show up and ask questions, knowing what the responses are likely to be. Did Coach McCarthy, Coughlin or Noll ever behave like this?

I’m not a Bill Belichick fan for that reason. I was fortunate to grow up covering pro football when its coaches accepted their responsibility for promoting the game. Baseball was the national pastime back then, and football was the college game. Coach Noll tolerated me because he knew it was good for the game, and I am eternally grateful to him. Back then, coaches conducted something known as the “five o’clock” club, at which coaches and media enjoyed a late-day beer at training camp. Information was passed. A coach would say, “Keep an eye on the kid from Kansas; he’s making a move.” We developed relationships that lasted throughout our careers. Those days are gone. Now, coaches do everything they can to avoid the media. It’s that way because pro football is so popular it doesn’t need the every-day media anymore, only its TV partners. Coach Noll wasn’t a tell-all kind of guy, but he’d throw out a nugget and then give you that look that let you know you just got something good. I remember covering a 1987 replacement players game in Atlanta. Mike Webster had crossed picket lines to play in the game, which shocked me. Away from other reporters, I asked Coach Noll why Mike would cross picket lines. Coach Noll explained Mike was retiring at the end of the season. He trusted I would use that information responsibly. As it turned out, Mike played on, which was an indication of his financial difficulties. Tom Coughlin always worked at being good with the media. I liked that about him. I think Mike McCarthy could be the best in the business at working with the media. He would’ve been a perfect fit in the “five o’clock club” era. I think it’s unfortunate he feels a need to keep a distance from the media and maintain an edge in his press conferences. I guess it’s a sign of the times. I like the old days better.

John from Logansport, IN
What are we doing for “Ask Vic Day” this year?

If I hosted an “Ask Vic Day” in the area under my house known as the party pavilion, ambulances would have to be parked on site to transport all the Wisconsin types who would succumb to the heat and bugs. The mosquitoes would thank me for such a delicious meal.

Dolly from Madison, WI
There are two good storytellers out there: Vic and Lt. Joe Kenda.

My first newspaper job was in a town just a few miles from where Kenda lived. It was a gritty coal-mining town, a most unlikely place to produce a TV star. I guess you find TV stars where you find TV stars.

Michael from Fernandina Beach, FL
It hurts, Vic.

Joy feels like heaven. When you hurt, you know you’re alive.

Mark from Ventura, CA
Does the large number of underclassmen declaring for the 2018 draft create a drought of premier choices for the 2019 draft?

It’s like bitcoin. Somebody’s going to pay for this madness.

Alex from Brooklyn, NY
I haven’t seen anybody else mention the salary cap advantage the Jaguars have. Can you tell me exactly what happened?

As a result of the uncapped year in 2010 and stripping the team for sale, the Jaguars got so far under the salary cap minimum it was impossible for them to quickly become cap compliant once the league had a new CBA in 2011. The league structured a long-term plan for the Jaguars to regain cap compliance; it involves two four-year bands (2013-16 and 2017-20). Effectively, the Jaguars have had and will continue to have more cap room and maneuverability in using it than the teams in the league that didn’t salary dump in 2010. The proponents of cap spending tell you about Malik Jackson and A.J. Bouye, but they don’t tell you about Toby Gerhart and Davon House. Most teams couldn’t have signed Jackson and Bouye if they had signed Gerhart and House; there are other busts, too. What surprised me when this plan was announced is the Jaguars suffered no loss-of-draft-picks penalty for non-compliance.

Daniel from Los Angeles, CA
I respect your opinion very much on all things, but you’re dead wrong about Blake Bortles. He is the Jaguars’ future starting QB.

Will they continue playing scared, as they did when they took a knee with 55 seconds to play in the first half? That doesn’t work in today’s game.

Brad from Parker, CO
What personnel group would Coach Vic employ in the “Ketchman 0-0-11” defense? Is it all defensive backs or do you throw in a couple of wide receivers and linebackers for hands, size, etc.?

I employ my best defenders and tacklers. Hey, there were 10 seconds left to play and the Vikings were out of times out. Why were the Saints rushing Keenum? You don’t want to rush him. You want him to take his time, right? I can’t help but think of George Perles, who was fond of saying, “That’s why MIT doesn’t have a football team.” These days, MIT has a football team. What does that say about MIT?

Pete from Minneapolis, MN
Nick Foles is lighting it up. What do you make of his plight?

He has the size and skill set to be “The Man.” So what’s holding him back? If I needed a quarterback, I’d take a long, hard look at Foles. Is there any chance he’s a late bloomer?

Steve from Pueblo, CO
Vic, wanted to say thank you for your “memories make us rich” line. I was terminated at my job last week. I just got back from taking my lovely nieces to the park. I have struggled with feelings of worthlessness and being a complete failure. Then I thought about that line and realized I will not be defined by a job, an extremely stressful one at that. I have my health, my faith and my family to get through this. But what makes me most happy is I have some time to make memories with my family. Thanks for sharing with us your memories.

Be thankful you have bootstraps. Pity the poor people who don’t.

Sam from Jacksonville, FL
Do Patriots fans realize how good they’ve had it? I can’t wait for the day Tom Brady retires so New England fans can finally feel the hurt I’ve felt for the last 10 years.

No, they think it’s Belichick or Kraft or the will that is the great spirit of New England. One day, age will claim Brady’s career, and Boston will go back to being the bad football town it always was.

Eric from Appleton, WI
Was Mark Brunell ever “The Man” in Jacksonville? If so, when was he no longer “The Man?”

He had the talent, the stats and the contract befitting “The Man.” In 1996, he was a star. He’s the best scrambler I’ve ever covered. He was better than Steve Young. Then came a knee injury in the following year’s preseason. Mark was never the same again. He continued to develop his skills as a pocket passer, but the big-play scramble he used to upset the Broncos in the 1996 playoffs was by and large gone. Mark was “The Man” until the Jaguars drafted Byron Leftwich in 2003. I think Mark’s career at the top was greatly shortened by the knee injury.

Frank from Prosper, TX
Does CBS pay Romo by the word? I am forced to watch with the sound off.

No network could afford to pay “Chatty” by the word. By the way, what was with the Todd Wash obsession yesterday? “He has great schemes,” Chatty kept saying. Hey, Chatty, those great schemes gave up 552 yards and six touchdowns last week, and played ole with the game on the line yesterday.

Reese from Wappingers Falls, NY
Why are some successful college coaches such flops when they move to the pros, such as Dan Devine, Lou Holtz, Steve Spurrier and Nick Saban, while others like Jimmy Johnson, Tom Coughlin, Don Coryell and Pete Carroll have such successful pro coaching careers?

Bud Wilkinson, Tommy Prothro, John Robinson, Bob Petrino, Butch Davis and Chip Kelly were also flops. Why so many flops? Because there have to be losers. The inverse draft order system demands it. You can’t recruit your players. You have to get in line and pick your players. That’s the difference.

Brian from Yakima, WA
Is Tomlin guilty of allowing his team to look forward to a Patriots rematch?

In my opinion, Tomlin is guilty of not having done enough to cope with the loss of Ryan Shazier. Move Watt inside and play Harrison at his regular spot. Play a four-man front with Alualu at defensive tackle in a gap-control look. Bring Sean Davis down in a Polamalu-type role. Do something! Tomlin did nothing.

Lee from Marshfield, WI
How many players do you think it will take to really turn around the Packers defense?

One great player can do it; two will do it for sure. Dom Capers got the one great player he needed when the Packers drafted Clay Matthews, but Capers never got another one.

 

 
 

 

 
 
 

 

O-Zone: Heartache

JACKSONVILLE – Let’s get to it …

Mark from Jacksonville:
Oops, just remembered … it’s always coaching in the NFL.

John: The idea that coaching was a major issue for the Jaguars Sunday was a theme in the inbox after their 24-20 loss to the New England Patriots in the AFC Championship Game – and I sense it will be a theme for the next few days. We may as well get the answer out of the way: if you believe that the coaching staff is to blame for the Jaguars not being in the Super Bowl, then I suppose you will believe what you will. This staff managed to get the Jaguars a 10-point lead with less than 10 minutes remaining in the AFC Championship Game – the same Jaguars team that was considered awful in August and the same one that many believed was so deficient offensively and at the quarterback position that it couldn’t possibly win a playoff game, or beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, or win a division, etc. The Jaguars’ carved out a 14-3 lead in the first half using little-used running back Corey Grant and keeping the Patriots’ defense off-balance. In the second half, the Patriots were able to do what they had set out to do entering the game – get the Jaguars’ running game stopped, and prevent quarterback Blake Bortles from beating them with his legs. I agree that the Jaguars perhaps could have thrown on first down in the fourth quarter on a couple of drives. I absolutely would have liked to have seen that, but to overly criticize a coaching staff that got the Jaguars here with an offensive line that wasn’t dominant much of the season and a receiving corps without its No. 1 receiver all season? The Jaguars were within a few minutes of the Super Bowl on a team that has some serious decisions to make offensively in the offseason. If people aren’t pleased with the coaching this season, they may never be pleased.

Sean from Jacksonville:
So … What’s the deal with Chris Ivory being a healthy scratch recently? Is it a sign of things to come?

John: Ivory was a healthy scratch in the postseason because the Jaguars believed Leonard Fournette, T.J. Yeldon and Corey Grant were better options to have active on game day. And yes – considering his cap hit, I’d say it’s likely Ivory won’t likely return next season.

Wilfredo from Corpus Christi, TX:
You can’t beat the Patriots playing them for three quarters. We got conservative in the fourth quarter and paid for it. We should have won that game. We played an amazing game for three quarters. Blake Bortles played the game of his life. Then we let the foot off the gas. With all that said, I’m proud with the way this team has fought all season. The way our coaching staff has turned things around. The arrow is pointing up. Go Jags.

John: It’s hard to argue against the thought that the Jaguars went too conservative in the fourth quarter. At the same time, this hasn’t been a throw-on-every-down offense during the season and it was probably a reach to expect them to start doing it with a 10-point lead in the fourth quarter in Foxboro. I imagine the Jaguars’ coaches will regret not being a bit more aggressive in that situation. I imagine they will regret more not getting more push in the run game in the second half, and not getting more interior pressure on Brady. Those felt like bigger issues to me than play-calling. Not getting a stop on third-and-18 and getting a fumble recovery for a possible touchdown blown dead weren’t exactly small factors, either. #DTWD

Bryant from White Plains, NY:
Zone. I feel the need to say Duval Til We Die.

John: You weren’t alone Sunday night. Many readers were feeling the same. It was a great season, one that will be remembered and one that re-ignited the bond between team, city and fans. #DTWD? Damned right.

Marc from Oceanway:
The refs gave the game to New England at the end of the first half.

John: I thought the interference call in A.J. Bouye was incorrect, but I thought the more egregious miss was calling the Myles Jack fumble recovery dead in the fourth quarter. Officials have to stop whistling plays dead. It changes everything too often, and it darned sure changed the game Sunday.

Joshua from Harrisburg, PA:
Fiddlesticks.

John: Well said.

TB from Boynton Beach, FL:
Am I the only one that saw that Myles Jack wasn’t down? The refs blew one there. I know one play doesn’t win or lose a game, but Jack scores there, that’s pretty tough to overcome, even for TB12.

John: You’re not the only one who saw it. It looked incorrect from my view, too – and you’re correct that it would have been tough to overcome.

Dakota from Fleming Island, FL:
No question. I just wanted to say this was a great season. We came up a little bit short of a Super Bowl appearance and it hurts. It really does hurt but we had an amazing season and that can’t be forgotten. This was no fluke. The Patriots just had one of their most difficult AFC Championships in many years. We should be proud of our team. This was an amazing season and I know I will always be #DTWD. Go Jags always

John: #DTWD

Andrew from Charleston, SC:
I know you’ll say that officiating evens out in the end, but you’ve got to admit that it played a big part of this game. The two DPI calls, the inadvertent whistle, the lack of offensive holding calls on the Patriots … these calls and no calls were severely damaging to the Jaguars. The Patriots won, but the Jaguars deserved the victory.

John: The Jaguars had 98 yards in penalties and the Patriots had 10. I think a lot of the calls against the Jaguars were deserved, and I need to look at the interference call against Bouye in the first half to get a better read on it. Jack called the discrepancy in the penalty yardage “interesting,” and there were times in the second half it was very interesting. I guess my assessment is a team must be very well-coached to not have a penalty called against its offense or defense in a tightly contested postseason game. The Patriots are very well-coached, so perhaps that explains a lot.

Craig from Sacksonville:
Oh, well. Still a great season. Thanks guys. Let’s get ‘em next year!

John: #DWTD

Christian from La Habana, CA:
Did Nathaniel Hackett get two paperweights for this game? He sure loves to call runs up the middle against a loaded box.

John: I don’t get the paperweight reference, though I don’t doubt it’s outrageously witty, clever or both. And sure: blame the coordinator. It’s always coaching in the NFL.

Adam from Bryan, TX:
What happened to Yannick Ngakoue? He was completely invisible the whole game? Why didn’t the coaching staff put Dante Fowler Jr. in more often after seeing the success he was having? I think he could have made more of an impact on the game.

John: Speed edge rushers often have a difficult time affecting Patriots quarterback Tom Brady because he’s so good at moving up in the pocket. Fowler had some early success chasing him down, but you don’t minimize the snaps of an edge rusher such as Ngakoue. You still need pressure from the edge even if it doesn’t result in a sack. More hurtful for the Jaguars was the lack of interior pass rush. It got to Brady some, including an eight-yard sack that set up a third-and-18 that Brady converted with a critical 21-yard pass to wide receiver Danny Amendola, but anyone on the Jaguars’ interior would tell you there wasn’t enough movement in Brady’s face. And there certainly wasn’t enough in key situations.

Matt from Lafayette, IN:
I thought it was interesting that we didn’t see Blake rushing at all, especially considering that that offensive line did not look as good as it had the past few weeks.

John: The Patriots for the most part took away the quarterback keeper on the read option by keeping defensive ends on the edge rather than crashing down to stop the Jaguars’ running backs. I thought there might have been one or two plays on which Bortles could have run, but for the most part the Patriots schemed that well.

J from Orange Park, FL:
I only watch the Jaguars on game day. So, in years past I only watched the Super Bowl for the commercials. I don’t think I can watch it this year knowing how close the Jaguars got to actually being in the game.

John: I doubt you’ll be alone on that front. Losses like Sunday’s linger for a long time. They’re sickening. They hurt. They make winning sweeter, but that doesn’t help in the short term.

Jeremy from Jacksonville:
My heart hurts. I’m not mad though I’m almost in tears writing this I am so proud of this team and I know they left it all out there. Good season, guys. DTWD

John: #DTWD
 

 

 
 
 

 

O-Zone: For now and always

JACKSONVILLE – Let’s get to it …

Chris from Orlando, FL:
John, if Blake wins the AFC Championship and get the Jags to the Super Bowl and wins the Super Bowl and wins both games with no picks or turnovers, do the Jags sign him to a franchise offer this year or does he have to play out next year?

John: So, you’re saying that all Blake Bortles needs to do to be signed to a long-term contract is win the Super Bowl and play four perfect postseason games with no turnovers? Is that all? Would you like him to fly through the air like Superman and deliver a baby, too? What’s a shame and categorically unfair to Bortles is that you’re expressing a sentiment that many people seem to believe – that he must play perfectly for Jaguars to retain him as their quarterback next season. Bortles hasn’t played perfectly this season, and he didn’t play perfectly against the Steelers last week. But overall, he has played well this season – and he has played very well in a lot of games. That includes the Divisional Playoff victory over Pittsburgh, but that was far from the only game in which that has been the case. I believe Bortles will be the Jaguars’ quarterback next season because of many things. One major reason is Jaguars coaches and players believe strongly in the guy. They like the guy. They respect the guy. That matters, and considering what this team has accomplished this season, I think it’s going to be really hard to go a different direction at the position this offseason. I doubt that will mean signing him to a long-term deal yet, but there’s time for that next season or after next season – or even after that.

Jeff from Orange Park, FL:
Taking the Jaguars to win Sunday seems to imply that Bortles will have a good game, since it seems unlikely the team could pull off the upset without getting a good game from him. What gives you the confidence that we get good Blake Sunday?

John: Bortles has played well far more often than not this season. The incidents of “Bad Blake” as often as not have been because of dropped passes or inconsistency around him. He has played pretty well pretty consistently over the last two months of the season, with the notable exceptions being the regular-season finale and the first half of the Buffalo playoff game. Weather was a factor in both of those games. I don’t expect weather to be much of a factor Sunday, so I think Bortles will at least play OK.

Joshua from Savannah, GA:
Steve Young, whom I respect very much, had the nerve to refer to the Jaguars’ defense as “pretty good, maybe even above average.” Really? A defense that remains near or at the top of every statistical category is “maybe above average?” I care little what the national opinion is, and indeed a large number of opinions regarding this team nationally have been laughable at best this past week. This one, though, might be at the top of the list. #DTWD

John: Sometimes, national media gets it wrong. Sometimes local guys get it wrong. Sometimes, even the great O-Zone gets it it wrong. (Yes, kids …’tis true). In this case, Steve Young got it wrong.

Jonathan from Charleston, SC:
O-Man, seems like the media and talking heads have not grasped the fact that these aren’t the same Jags of seasons past. I don’t believe any of them really have seen much about the Jags until this past weekend against the Steelers. If we win Sunday, maybe they’ll actually do some research before opening their mouths in regards to the Jags. Heck, one radio talking head (Bruce Murray) thought Jacksonville was in South Florida.

John: And sometimes Bruce Murray gets it wrong … whoa, whoa, whoa … wait … The Bruce Murray?

Nathan from St. Augustine, FL:
I imagine after seeing the Steelers throw three long touchdown bombs against the Jags, Tom Brady will be throwing deep to Brandin Cooks more than once Sunday. What can the Jags do different to make sure they are not successful this week? Is it on the safeties to give help deep?

John: This is an understandable concern, but it may not be a merited one. The Jaguars gave up some long touchdowns against Pittsburgh, but only one could really be categorized as a breakdown or mistake by the defense – the long pass down the middle of the field to wide receiver Martavis Bryant at the end of the first half. Three others – two by Antonio Brown and one by Le’Veon Bell – were great throws and catches by an All-Pro quarterback and skill players. Cornerback A.J. Bouye had great coverage on Brown’s two plays and linebacker Telvin Smith had great coverage on Bell’s touchdown. My point: the three long touchdowns were not because the safeties didn’t help or because the Jaguars erred. They were because the Steelers executed. How to prevent them? Cover as you did Sunday. Make the play when it’s there. It’s a game of inches. Be an inch or two better. That’s what often decides championship games.

Michael from Middleburg, FL:
I took your advice from Tuesday’s O-Zone and told me wife she can- … her response was to ask me to buy her a Jalen Ramsey jersey. I’m not quite sure what exactly that means, but I think it means #DTWD!

John: Good! Good for you. Keep telling her she can— I’m sure it will keep going swimmingly.

Tom from St. John’s, FL:
Big O, I hope this comment is as valid Monday morning as I think it is today. The magnificent jobs that people like Calais Campbell, Jalen Ramsey, Yannick Ngakoue, etc. have turned in are acknowledged. But in the euphoria of this team’s progress, have we overlooked the continuing contribution of a guy named Malik? Seems he has been a constant almost silent stabilizing part of this team.

John: I couldn’t agree more that Malik Jackson is a major reason the Jaguars are playing in the AFC Championship Game Sunday. But I don’t know that it’s right to say he’s overlooked; this is a player, after all, who has been named to the Pro Bowl. As far Jackson being silent, I don’t know … I mean, have you heard his interviews lately? The guy’s a lot of things, but he ain’t quiet.

Winston C. from St. Johns, FL:
“What they called the Divisional Round is over. I expect that the AFC Championship is about to begin. Upon this battle depends the survival of the season. Upon it depends our own football life, and the long continuity of our institutions and our Empire. The whole fury and might of the enemy must very soon be turned on us. Belichick knows that he will have to break us in Foxborough or lose the war. If we can stand up to him, all the NFL may be free and the life of the world may move forward into broad, sunlit uplands. But if we fail, then the whole world, including Jacksonville, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted game planning. Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear ourselves that, if Jacksonville and its Jaguars last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.'”

John: A fan with free time can be a beautiful thing.

Saif from Washington, DC:
The Jags have been so far under the cap that they applied for an exemption for not spending enough almost a decade ago. This explains why we have had a lot of money to spend in free agency. Do you think that this is sustainable? I feel like we spend quite a bit on free agency to patch up our holes, but may be getting used to always having the money to pay for it. Thoughts?

John: What happened a decade ago in free agency has little-to-no effect on what has happened in the last two or three offseasons. The Jaguars did go relatively quiet in free agency in the 2012 and 2013 offseasons, which helped them be under the cap enough to have big money and cap space to use in the past two offseasons. And yes … they have used that space phenomenally wisely to acquire high-priced and phenomenally productive players such as safeties Barry Church and Tashaun Gipson, defensive end Calais Campbell, cornerback A.J. Bouye and defensive tackle Malik Jackson. That’s a huge amount of spending and no … you can’t expect to be able to maintain that level of spending. But you know what? You shouldn’t have to maintain that level. You should be able to draft and develop and fill the occasional need with a free agent. That’s the ideal approach and the Jaguars should be able to take something close to that approach moving forward.

Patsy from AR:
Which state are the Jacksonville Jaguars from?

John: Duval, baby.

 

 
 

GodBless the USA - Proud to Be an Americanby Lee Greenwood

 

O-Zone: Keep talkin’, keep walkin’

JACKSONVILLE – Let’s get to it …

Tom from Jacksonville:
Tom Brady has been in the playoffs 15 times since 2001. New England has won five Super Bowls, and lost two. But they have also lost five conference championship games, two division playoff games and one wild-card game. That’s losses in eight of 15 years before the Super Bowl game. Not invincible.

John: This is an important lesson to remember, and I’m sure it will be mentioned to Jaguars players at some point this week – perhaps more than once. Yes, the Patriots have won more Super Bowls than any team in the last decade and a half, but perhaps their most impressive attribute as an organization is they get to the postseason and give themselves a chance year after year after year. Once the league reaches this stage of the postseason, teams are relatively even and a play or two here or there often decides the title. Witness the Patriots’ last few seasons: a couple of last-minute victories over Seattle and Atlanta in the Super Bowl, and a narrow loss to Denver in the AFC Championship Game. Had a play or two gone differently, the Patriots could be three-time defending Super Bowl champions; had a play or two gone differently the other way, they might not have won either of their last two titles. I say this not to denigrate what they have accomplished, but to make the point that they are not as invincible as they are a remarkably resilient, consistent team that takes advantage of its opportunities and plays with remarkable poise, confidence and efficiency. It’s a rare attribute that I think will be more appreciated when people look back on their dynasty, a dynasty that I doubt will be duplicated any time soon. The bottom line: they are extremely difficult to beat at this stage of the postseason, but beating them is far from impossible.

Strnbker from Dothan, AL:
The Jags have had more media coverage the past two weeks than the past 10 years combined. Gotta love it. I take it drafting in the Top 5 this year is a bit of stretch?

John: I’ll Google this.

Scott from Gilbert, AZ:
Zone, I’m liking the weather forecast for Sunday in Foxboro … We can do this!

John: The forecast for Sunday in Foxboro is partly cloudy with a high of 46 degrees, and I agree that’s a good forecast for the Jaguars. I didn’t like the Jaguars’ chances in Pittsburgh last week during the week because I envisioned a frigid field and it being so cold it would be hard to grip the ball to throw. I didn’t know how Jaguars quarterback Blake Bortles would handle that. When I saw Bortles moving easily and throwing well in the pregame warmups, I liked the Jaguars’ chances a lot more. The longer I see the forecast in Foxboro call for decent weather, the more I’ll keep liking the Jaguars’ chances Sunday.

Aaron from Aldie:
John, I just think we are in a good place. The pressure is on the Patriots because if they lost to the lowly Jaguars …

John: There’s some truth to that, but I don’t think pressure will bother the Patriots Sunday. They have been here a few times.

Marius from Karlsruhe, Germany:
I live in a fairly big city in Germany (300,000 people, yes this is considered big here) and on my way to the supermarket two random people walked by me raising their fist saying, “Go Jags” (I had my Jaguars baseball cap on). Well, since this is kind of new, I thought I had to report this to you.

John: That was me. Jaguars gehen.

Kyan from Le Mars:
I know it’s probably not likely, but how awesome would it be if Ramsey covered Gronk all game? Ramsey and Gronk going at it, verbally and physical, would be great television.

John: Jaguars cornerback Jalen Ramsey possibly covering Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski one-on-one was an intriguing idea early in the week, but I also doubt it happens. The Jaguars have been an elite defense all season rushing four linemen and covering with seven behind the four-man pass rush. I don’t imagine they’ll get very far away from that approach very often Sunday.

Marshall from St. Thomas, VI:
Mr., O, I bought a Leonard Fournette jersey to wear to the Wembley game in London and introduce my wife’s cousins to American football. My wife is a Brit. They loved the game as did I. I have been wearing the same jersey all year as I watched the games this year. Going into the playoffs, I have not washed the jersey. I am in a dilemma. Do I wear the unwashed jersey next week against the hated New England team and risk offending my fellow fans or risk washing it?

John: Cleanliness is overrated. DO NOT wash the jersey. Or your other game-day clothes. Or the stuff you sleep in the night before the game.

Micky from Section 408:
Last Sunday I didn’t have clean socks so I wore a pair of my girlfriend’s white gym socks. Since we won, do I need to wear the same clothes and watch at the same place with the same people and eat/drink the same things?

John: Yes.

Nate from St. Pete, FL:
I have the utmost confidence in our secondary locking down their receivers. I think the matchup of the day is Myles Jack and Telvin Smith against their tight ends, running backs and under routes. We all know New England uses the short passing game as an extension of the running game.

John: Yep.

HD from Jacksonville:
John, when was the last time you saw a team who could win in so many different ways? Defensive battle with the Bills (10 pts), shootout with the Steelers (45 pts), blow out (against Ravens, Colts, Texans)? This team is so enigmatic, probably more so on offense than defense, which has been rock solid all year.

John: Really good teams can win in a lot of different ways. The Jaguars are more balanced than many believe, and it has shown in the postseason.

Ric from Jacksonvile:
Last year…. well let’s just say Blake Bortles wasn’t good. He was publically criticized and he took the criticism and took responsibility for himself. He didn’t make excuses and didn’t complain. He just worked as hard as he could and took every avenue available for him to improve. This year, even though he is playing substantially better, Blake is still taking criticism. But this year, it seems like it isn’t just people evaluating his skill, it has become almost personal, nasty, and dirty. After last Sunday’s game, he stood in front of the media and was asked about this exact issue. This was his opportunity to say what he had every reason to say: “Hey, I’m in the AFC Championship Game and all those people who had something bad to say about me are not. And I would just like to tell all of them to go “jump in a lake.” Just not in those words. Instead, he stood there and just said he was happy they were going to the AFC Championship Game and all he can do is the best he can do for the team and the fans. The kid is nothing but class from the very beginning and I hope he stays in Jax as long as he wants. Here’s one for Blake!

John: This has been a big reason Jaguars players have supported Bortles to the degree they have this season. They have known for a while he is better than people believe, and they have known for a while he has taken a lot of personal criticism that could rightly have been directed at others. So, yeah … one fer Blake.

Nick from Annapolis, MD:
I was doing a little thinking … for a change … and I realized how right Tom Coughlin was when talking about drafting Leonard Fournette. This team needed to get into the end zone. Fournette absolutely helps this team get in in the end zone. In a strange way, if the Jaguars get one more win, in almost doesn’t matter if Fournette plays another game as a Jaguars. That pick was worth it. I don’t know that we get past Pittsburgh without him on the roster.

John: Fair point.

Fred from Naples, FL:
Will the Jaguars advancing as far as they have thus far, plus all the national attention, influence the voters at all in regards to the Boselli nomination to the Hall? Is he now over the top?

John: The Jaguars’ playoff run will have nothing to do with Boselli’s Hall of Fame chances. The voters vote on a player’s merit, not how their former team is doing.

Jeremy from Newport, RI:
I personally don’t have a problem with some of the talk from our players. However, do you think it’s too much? Are we putting our foot in our mouth or is this about par for the course?

John: This team talks during games. It talks after games. It occasionally talks before games. This is who these players are. There’s no sense worrying about whether it’s too much, too little or just right. It ain’t changing anytime soon.