WEBVTT - Jaguars Happy Hour: Tuesday, September 21

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<v Speaker 1>It is Tuesday, September one. This is Jaguars Happy Hours. Hey,

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<v Speaker 1>now a guy who's tasting batches and still wearing that

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<v Speaker 1>same old hack j Peace, welcome in. It is Jaguars

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<v Speaker 1>Happy Hour on a Tuesday afternoon, recapping the Jaguars lost

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<v Speaker 1>to the Denver Broncos for one final time. Then we're

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<v Speaker 1>gonna put the thing to bed and move on to

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<v Speaker 1>week three. That's how it works in the NFL. It's

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<v Speaker 1>on to the next twenty four hour rule until the

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<v Speaker 1>day and well, you know, after this, so maybe thirty six.

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<v Speaker 1>I was told there would be no math this week

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<v Speaker 1>catch the last week today rule. Here's what's coming up

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<v Speaker 1>on the show today and a busy program that was

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<v Speaker 1>Jaguars analyst Jeff Lagaman. We'll take our final look at

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<v Speaker 1>the loss to the Broncos. The era on the Cardinals

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<v Speaker 1>are red hot offensively coming in. They escaped by the

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<v Speaker 1>skin of their teeth this past Sunday on a missed

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<v Speaker 1>field goal by the Vikings. But there two and oh

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<v Speaker 1>and right there in the that really really good NFC

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<v Speaker 1>West Division, and they've got a great quarterback and receivers.

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<v Speaker 1>They get a lot of things. We'll go through them

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<v Speaker 1>Urban Meyer. Coming up on The Urban Meyer Show and

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<v Speaker 1>the Jaguars Radio Network at five o'clock, we'll look forward

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<v Speaker 1>to hearing from the Jaguars head coach J P. Shadrick,

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<v Speaker 1>Jeff Lockman, and here we go another losing result logs.

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<v Speaker 1>There were pieces of this game though, and very few,

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<v Speaker 1>but some pieces of this game felt better. The the

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<v Speaker 1>operation from the sideline of the field, the getting the

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<v Speaker 1>play in the right number of players in the huddle,

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<v Speaker 1>those important pre snap things like first week it it

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<v Speaker 1>was rough. Yeah, I mean really rough, and really not

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<v Speaker 1>any excuse for that type of organization in a in

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<v Speaker 1>a game. And uh, I mean occasionally you might have

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<v Speaker 1>an issue, but well, it was good to see that

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<v Speaker 1>they did not have any of those issues and so

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<v Speaker 1>offensively and defensively, it's not like you were starting behind

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<v Speaker 1>the chains because of your own personal mistakes. At least

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<v Speaker 1>you were able to compete on even ground. The problem

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<v Speaker 1>is is that turnovers and giveaways continue to be an

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<v Speaker 1>issue for a football team that's playing a young quarterback.

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<v Speaker 1>And I think what they do going forward jp to

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<v Speaker 1>remedy that, I think it's gonna be very interesting because

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<v Speaker 1>I think they've got to they've got to take a

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<v Speaker 1>good long look at some of the things that they're

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<v Speaker 1>doing as far as having balance, so that these going

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<v Speaker 1>to give them the greatest chance at success is having

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<v Speaker 1>ballots for two reasons. Two. Okay, Number one, you got

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<v Speaker 1>a damn good running back and James Robinson, Okay, really

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<v Speaker 1>good football player. He was your best football player last

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<v Speaker 1>year and he's arguably your best football player right now.

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<v Speaker 1>That's not what one. Number two, The more of the

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<v Speaker 1>James Robinson is total the rock. The less pressure falls

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<v Speaker 1>on a young quarterback that is clearly in the learning

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<v Speaker 1>phase of a young career. So what's wrong with that? Okay?

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<v Speaker 1>And it'll be interesting and we're gonna ask Urban, Okay,

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<v Speaker 1>how do you achieve more balance? Because I mean, that's

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<v Speaker 1>I think it is a very important question. How do

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<v Speaker 1>you do that as a team because going back to

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<v Speaker 1>the early part of when he was hired, he talked

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<v Speaker 1>about having a good rushing attack and and having balancing.

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<v Speaker 1>Right now, the score you can't use an excuse in

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<v Speaker 1>this past game because the score was relatively closed, but

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<v Speaker 1>you still didn't have a lot of balance. I gotta

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<v Speaker 1>get that balance on offense. We'll get to the defense

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<v Speaker 1>coming up as well. And we heard from a head coach,

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<v Speaker 1>Urban Meyer. Of course, after the game, he always speaks

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<v Speaker 1>to us on Jaguar's postgame radio, the first word with

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<v Speaker 1>the head coach and then with the media right after that,

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<v Speaker 1>following whatever the result is. He also catches up with

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<v Speaker 1>the media on Monday and he said, this team, this

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<v Speaker 1>team is still fighting. There's a lot of fighting this

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<v Speaker 1>team there. This team is gonna. There's fifteen games left

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<v Speaker 1>and my goal, our goal is to have the strongest

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<v Speaker 1>locker room that you can possibly have. I feel like

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<v Speaker 1>it's extremely strong right now. Players are pissed, players want

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<v Speaker 1>to win, players are sticking it together, and that's gonna.

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<v Speaker 1>That's the best part of our team. The best part

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<v Speaker 1>of our organization right now is what's in that locker room.

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<v Speaker 1>That's Urban after the game on Sunday and speaking with

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<v Speaker 1>the media. Yeah, So the locker room, it's all about

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<v Speaker 1>the players. Getting those guys to still believe and and

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<v Speaker 1>improve as the weeks go along. Here. They may not

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<v Speaker 1>become a playoff team next week, but if you improve

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<v Speaker 1>some of the things that you're trying to build upon,

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<v Speaker 1>then you can you can have something in a few weeks. Well,

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<v Speaker 1>one thing is for certain I understand where he's what

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<v Speaker 1>he's trying to accomplish there, because if you're trying to

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<v Speaker 1>fight back from losing, and if the locker room is

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<v Speaker 1>not together and it's fractured, you have no chance of

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<v Speaker 1>getting better. And so what he's trying to do is

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<v Speaker 1>to maintain a belief that, hey, look, we're continuing to work,

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<v Speaker 1>we're continuing to get better, and give them the belief

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<v Speaker 1>that we will be better so that they can continue

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<v Speaker 1>to improve. And that's not easier to do once you

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<v Speaker 1>get in the regular season of the National Football League.

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<v Speaker 1>Typically the best way to do that is in the

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<v Speaker 1>off season by getting better better players. But it's hard.

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<v Speaker 1>I mean, you're you have so many different limitations once

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<v Speaker 1>you get in the regular season from a time standpoint

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<v Speaker 1>to where most of the time is spent prepping for

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<v Speaker 1>the game and installing a game plan and not so

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<v Speaker 1>much working on basic technique and fundamentals. And so that's

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<v Speaker 1>why it's very difficult for teams to make significant change

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<v Speaker 1>during the season. Now, experience is a definitely a huge

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<v Speaker 1>part of improvement, and that will help, especially with a

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<v Speaker 1>young quarterback, no doubt. JP. Let's hear from the quarterback

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<v Speaker 1>who threw a couple of picks in that game last week,

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<v Speaker 1>had an early touchdown on a beautiful opening drive. They

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<v Speaker 1>converted three third downs on that drive, had another with

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<v Speaker 1>penalty to to moving forward they got in the end zone,

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<v Speaker 1>but later in the game those turnovers, Trevor Lawrence says,

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<v Speaker 1>it's a work in progress. Who turnovers got to get

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<v Speaker 1>better at that. Uh, certain made a great catch on

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<v Speaker 1>the go ball, so that's one of those. It's like,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, he made a great play. It happens, But

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<v Speaker 1>the other one was a bad decision by me. But

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<v Speaker 1>just continually putting these drives together to stay in the game,

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<v Speaker 1>because you can see we're that close today and just

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<v Speaker 1>kind of got out of the game towards the end

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<v Speaker 1>and they ran with it. But I think we're close.

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<v Speaker 1>And obviously it's not what anybody wants to see, and

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<v Speaker 1>it's frustrating and disappointing, but um, we're gonna stay together

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<v Speaker 1>and I really feel like we're we're close. You know,

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<v Speaker 1>we've got good enough players to win these games, so

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<v Speaker 1>we should. I keep going to work. Trevor to come

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<v Speaker 1>and give us a pep talk here in the show

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<v Speaker 1>before we go on the air. Every week, he got

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<v Speaker 1>great attitude. He does. Yeah, he's got a great attitude.

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<v Speaker 1>And you go back and you look at the interceptions

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<v Speaker 1>and you never want to see him. But young quarterbacks

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<v Speaker 1>are going to have interceptions. I mean, Peyton Manning had

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<v Speaker 1>I think it was like twenty seven or eight interceptions

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<v Speaker 1>this rookie year, and which he only won three games.

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<v Speaker 1>I mean, that's just that happens as part of the

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<v Speaker 1>learning process. But I think one of the things that

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<v Speaker 1>he will be taught is that, Okay, let's go back

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<v Speaker 1>and let's look at the interceptions. How do we correct it.

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<v Speaker 1>How do we make sure that we don't do this again.

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<v Speaker 1>The first interception was right after a James Robinson strong run.

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<v Speaker 1>I believe it was a seven yard run. So you're

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<v Speaker 1>essentially you've got a second and three situations. Second and

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<v Speaker 1>three is kind of like a free down, so you

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<v Speaker 1>don't put anything in the air that's gonna be risky

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<v Speaker 1>on a second and three. If if you got a

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<v Speaker 1>check down, take the checkdown. If you have to eat

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<v Speaker 1>the football or throw it away, then then do so.

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<v Speaker 1>And on that particular play, he was late on the

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<v Speaker 1>decision making getting the ball to Ferrell his tight end

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<v Speaker 1>and allowed Creem Jackson the time to get over the

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<v Speaker 1>top and to make the interception. And he's a veteran player,

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<v Speaker 1>and he wouldn't have gotten there if the decision was

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<v Speaker 1>made quickly to throw the ball, or if the decision

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<v Speaker 1>was made to throw it to a check down to

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<v Speaker 1>James Robinson. The second interception, you've got a first and fifteen.

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<v Speaker 1>You had a penalty to set you back to the

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<v Speaker 1>first and fifteen, and it's but it's first down, you know,

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<v Speaker 1>so do you want to press the ball at first

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<v Speaker 1>and fifteen? No? I mean, sometimes you've got an underneath

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<v Speaker 1>route which he had on that particular play that could

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<v Speaker 1>have been a moderate completion. If it's really open, then maybe,

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<v Speaker 1>oh absolutely, if it's really open, But it really wasn't

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<v Speaker 1>open the dice, you know, maybe not. And I think

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<v Speaker 1>I get the impression JP that sometimes Trevor Lawrence is

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<v Speaker 1>trying to score fourteen points with one throw. You understand

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<v Speaker 1>what I mean by yeah, just trying to do a

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<v Speaker 1>little trying to do a little too much. And then

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<v Speaker 1>that's typical of young quarterbacks. That's part of the learning

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<v Speaker 1>process that has to happen with young quarterbacks that they

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<v Speaker 1>need to understand that the only way that they can

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<v Speaker 1>score a lot of points is to hit the open

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<v Speaker 1>guys and let some of those guys do something with

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<v Speaker 1>the ball. But I appreciate I mean, look, he I

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<v Speaker 1>appreciate eyes down the field and he's looking down the field,

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<v Speaker 1>and then he missed some things down the field too.

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<v Speaker 1>D J char could post rout down the middle. That

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<v Speaker 1>DJ had probably two or three steps on the defensive

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<v Speaker 1>back and he misses him. I think he had Farrell

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<v Speaker 1>at one point open and didn't throw to him either. Well,

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<v Speaker 1>he had he had him open. It went to insert.

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<v Speaker 1>Sir Tan had the interception and we called him certain

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<v Speaker 1>and he he's learning still on that too. But one

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<v Speaker 1>of the things that I would have, I think in

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<v Speaker 1>that situation, because who's his intended target on the certain interception?

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<v Speaker 1>Do you remember? I do not. I think it was

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<v Speaker 1>Tyron Tyron Johns. If I've got a decision, this is

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<v Speaker 1>just me. If I've got a decision, that okay, I've

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<v Speaker 1>got one on one because that's type of situation, right,

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<v Speaker 1>And the coverage was tight. Coverage was pretty tight. Sir

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<v Speaker 1>Tan was on them, so it's not like there was

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<v Speaker 1>there was two or three steps and Trevor sees that

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<v Speaker 1>separation and it kind of hip hip he yeah, he

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<v Speaker 1>kind of hipped hip and he decides to make that throw.

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<v Speaker 1>If I've got the great Jimmy Smith, okay, one of

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<v Speaker 1>the Jaguars all time great wide receivers, I'll make that throw. Okay.

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<v Speaker 1>If I've got Tyron Johnson. I mean no offense to

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<v Speaker 1>Tyron Johnson, but the guy wasn't even on a football

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<v Speaker 1>team when when training camp started. And I think this

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<v Speaker 1>is part of the the learning process because you know,

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<v Speaker 1>maybe on the other side, if you've got DJ Chart

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<v Speaker 1>and it's a single high safety, Okay, let me think

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<v Speaker 1>Tyron Johnson, d J Chart, Tyron Johnson, d J Chart,

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<v Speaker 1>there is a little more history, I guess with Chart

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<v Speaker 1>than there is with Johnson. Well, you know, more of

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<v Speaker 1>his ability. You have you have to learn that there

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<v Speaker 1>are some that you can trust and that there are

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<v Speaker 1>some that you can't or that you're not ready to yet. Okay.

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<v Speaker 1>And so that's situation because both of the vertical routes

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<v Speaker 1>were essentially hip hip covered thrown underneath. That's first and fifteen.

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<v Speaker 1>You know you got a six yard game. Look second

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<v Speaker 1>to nine is okay? Okay, nothing wrong with that. Sometimes

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<v Speaker 1>you can't be greedy, and I think in some cases,

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<v Speaker 1>I think he's getting a little bit greedy. But that again,

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<v Speaker 1>that's part of the learning process for a young quarterback,

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<v Speaker 1>and a lot of people maybe have the expectation that, well,

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<v Speaker 1>he's the first to overall pick of the traffic. He's

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<v Speaker 1>not going to go through it. No, that he's still

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<v Speaker 1>got to go through it. It's just that's part of

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<v Speaker 1>the growth, the growth curve. It's got to happen. Let's

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<v Speaker 1>discuss a little defense now. The Jags, because of some

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<v Speaker 1>of the offensive issues, were on the field defensively for

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<v Speaker 1>nearly thirty nine minutes in the game. Shot Griffin after

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<v Speaker 1>the game on the play calling on the defensive side

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<v Speaker 1>and how they tried to hang in there. Coach telling

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<v Speaker 1>you an amazing job making sure that costs perfect. Feel

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<v Speaker 1>like his play card was amazing his game, and I

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<v Speaker 1>may shure I tell told man right after the game,

0:11:59.400 --> 0:12:01.839
<v Speaker 1>you know that was every situation was great and that

0:12:01.880 --> 0:12:03.800
<v Speaker 1>has to build off of. It has continue to build

0:12:03.800 --> 0:12:06.320
<v Speaker 1>off continue to get this defense together. You know, uh,

0:12:06.800 --> 0:12:09.960
<v Speaker 1>he's starting to turn over. Continue helped offense out. You

0:12:09.960 --> 0:12:12.640
<v Speaker 1>gotta get the ball. Josh Allen talked about that earlier

0:12:12.679 --> 0:12:14.800
<v Speaker 1>in the season, like I just gotta figure out a

0:12:14.840 --> 0:12:17.640
<v Speaker 1>way to get the football. Alan had a Sack nearly

0:12:17.640 --> 0:12:20.200
<v Speaker 1>swatted the ball away from Teddy Bridgewater, slinging them around

0:12:20.240 --> 0:12:22.320
<v Speaker 1>a couple of times that that didn't didn't come out,

0:12:22.480 --> 0:12:24.680
<v Speaker 1>and then Shack Griffin again had the ball in his

0:12:24.760 --> 0:12:26.480
<v Speaker 1>hands a couple of different times. It would have been

0:12:26.480 --> 0:12:28.839
<v Speaker 1>an acrobatic interception. It would have been a circus catch.

0:12:29.000 --> 0:12:31.319
<v Speaker 1>But I mean the ball, you know, it's close. It's

0:12:31.320 --> 0:12:33.400
<v Speaker 1>as close as they got I guess on Sunday, and

0:12:33.400 --> 0:12:35.840
<v Speaker 1>they still haven't reeled one in yet. And that's that's

0:12:35.880 --> 0:12:39.439
<v Speaker 1>an issue. You know, if you look at the success

0:12:39.600 --> 0:12:43.400
<v Speaker 1>or lack of success of this franchise, especially now in

0:12:43.400 --> 0:12:47.200
<v Speaker 1>a seventeen game losing streak, you look at plus minus

0:12:47.200 --> 0:12:52.679
<v Speaker 1>differential and you can't win unless you start to change

0:12:53.320 --> 0:12:58.079
<v Speaker 1>that stat I mean literally your chances of winning. And

0:12:58.080 --> 0:13:00.360
<v Speaker 1>and we've talked about this before, and I don't know

0:13:00.400 --> 0:13:03.920
<v Speaker 1>the exact numbers, but it's not great if you well,

0:13:03.960 --> 0:13:07.880
<v Speaker 1>no talking about the numbers of turnover differentials. You know,

0:13:07.920 --> 0:13:13.120
<v Speaker 1>if you're even okay fifty fifty, if you get one takeaway,

0:13:13.200 --> 0:13:17.360
<v Speaker 1>your percentage probably jumps, you know, six somewhere in that range.

0:13:17.400 --> 0:13:20.959
<v Speaker 1>If you get two takeaways, you or your plus two,

0:13:21.640 --> 0:13:26.280
<v Speaker 1>then you're probability of win is probably in the seventy range.

0:13:26.600 --> 0:13:30.080
<v Speaker 1>If you go to plus three, it's probably in the range.

0:13:30.080 --> 0:13:33.160
<v Speaker 1>I mean, it's that that's how it works. I mean,

0:13:33.200 --> 0:13:36.079
<v Speaker 1>the better you are in turnover differential, and that's the

0:13:36.120 --> 0:13:38.320
<v Speaker 1>single most determining factor in all of football. If you

0:13:38.320 --> 0:13:41.000
<v Speaker 1>look at that stat that will tell you better than

0:13:41.040 --> 0:13:44.280
<v Speaker 1>any other stat whether you're winning or losing is to

0:13:44.280 --> 0:13:48.080
<v Speaker 1>turnover differential. And since you're not getting any takeaways as

0:13:48.120 --> 0:13:51.320
<v Speaker 1>a defense, and you have a young quarterback that's learning

0:13:51.400 --> 0:13:54.040
<v Speaker 1>and figuring things out, and he's been turning the ball over,

0:13:54.760 --> 0:13:57.600
<v Speaker 1>that's why you're not winning right now. And in order

0:13:57.679 --> 0:14:02.080
<v Speaker 1>to change winning and losing, you need to change that number.

0:14:03.120 --> 0:14:05.600
<v Speaker 1>Let's come back in a moment. Plenty of show ahead

0:14:05.600 --> 0:14:08.400
<v Speaker 1>here on Jaguars Happy Hour. We'll get a little deeper

0:14:08.440 --> 0:14:12.280
<v Speaker 1>into the Jaguars offensive issues from last week and go

0:14:12.400 --> 0:14:14.680
<v Speaker 1>through some of the wide receivers so far and see

0:14:14.720 --> 0:14:17.440
<v Speaker 1>if they can get some balance with a running game. Also,

0:14:18.240 --> 0:14:19.920
<v Speaker 1>and uh coming up a little later, we'll look at

0:14:19.920 --> 0:14:21.920
<v Speaker 1>the a f C South as well and see what

0:14:21.960 --> 0:14:23.720
<v Speaker 1>the rest of the teams in the division did in

0:14:23.800 --> 0:14:27.440
<v Speaker 1>Week number two. Season tickets, single game tickets and group

0:14:27.480 --> 0:14:30.040
<v Speaker 1>tickets are still available. Be a part of the new

0:14:30.080 --> 0:14:33.960
<v Speaker 1>era of Jaguars football and own it. Visit Jaguars dot

0:14:34.000 --> 0:14:37.160
<v Speaker 1>com slash tickets. We're called nine oh four six three three,

0:14:37.240 --> 0:14:40.600
<v Speaker 1>two thousand. We're often running It's Jaguars Happy Hour on

0:14:40.640 --> 0:14:45.960
<v Speaker 1>the Jaguars Digital Network, Jacksonville Sports Talk for Jacksonville sports

0:14:46.000 --> 0:14:50.239
<v Speaker 1>fans ten ten X hour home of the Checksonville Jaguars.

0:14:54.960 --> 0:14:58.160
<v Speaker 1>Welcome back Jaguars Happy Hour on a Tuesday afternoon j P.

0:14:58.280 --> 0:15:00.520
<v Speaker 1>Shadrick with Jeff Flagerman. Glad you're a long with us

0:15:00.520 --> 0:15:03.040
<v Speaker 1>The Urban Meyer Show coming up at five o'clock. We'll

0:15:03.040 --> 0:15:05.840
<v Speaker 1>hear from the Jaguars head coach and get his final

0:15:05.920 --> 0:15:08.440
<v Speaker 1>thoughts on the loss of the Broncos, what they're working

0:15:08.480 --> 0:15:12.520
<v Speaker 1>on this week, and get ready for Arizona coming to

0:15:12.520 --> 0:15:15.800
<v Speaker 1>town in week number three. Coming to Daily's Place tonight

0:15:15.920 --> 0:15:20.920
<v Speaker 1>it is the Legend Carlos Santana and his band Tomorrow

0:15:20.920 --> 0:15:25.400
<v Speaker 1>three eleven Counting Crows Thursday, Coheed and Cambria Friday. Tickets

0:15:25.400 --> 0:15:28.680
<v Speaker 1>at Daily's Place dot com. Busy Week this week October

0:15:28.720 --> 0:15:32.760
<v Speaker 1>Schedules nuts as well. I'm gonna guess maybe we'll ask

0:15:33.000 --> 0:15:36.240
<v Speaker 1>Urban this. I bet Urban's a Santana fan. Oh you

0:15:36.400 --> 0:15:38.440
<v Speaker 1>think so. I mean Santana is one of the greatest

0:15:38.440 --> 0:15:42.280
<v Speaker 1>of all time. He played Woodstock, That's yeah. I mean

0:15:42.320 --> 0:15:45.680
<v Speaker 1>the guy he's got to be what mid seventies, right,

0:15:45.760 --> 0:15:52.560
<v Speaker 1>It's a great question. He's been Internet is for exactly. Um.

0:15:53.680 --> 0:15:55.760
<v Speaker 1>I've seen him once and he's fantastic. That was in

0:15:55.800 --> 0:16:00.320
<v Speaker 1>a festival setting, and this apparently is just having his

0:16:00.400 --> 0:16:02.200
<v Speaker 1>bands so they might go for a while tonight. He's

0:16:02.200 --> 0:16:05.960
<v Speaker 1>seventy four years old. Wow, still getting after it. That's

0:16:05.960 --> 0:16:09.760
<v Speaker 1>pretty cool alright. And you never know who might come

0:16:09.800 --> 0:16:12.680
<v Speaker 1>on stage with him tonight. So check it out Daily's

0:16:12.720 --> 0:16:14.760
<v Speaker 1>Place dot com for tickets. Let's get back to the

0:16:14.840 --> 0:16:19.800
<v Speaker 1>Jaguars Ring. I'm not going to be on stage tonight. Um,

0:16:19.880 --> 0:16:23.360
<v Speaker 1>I'll be at the show most likely. Jaguars offense eight

0:16:23.520 --> 0:16:26.920
<v Speaker 1>three yards on the opening drive, smooth as can be,

0:16:28.160 --> 0:16:31.040
<v Speaker 1>but then things got rocky in a hurry. The next

0:16:31.120 --> 0:16:34.680
<v Speaker 1>three drives combined for seven yards. That's correct. They had

0:16:34.720 --> 0:16:37.200
<v Speaker 1>a forty yard drive at one point, but missed a

0:16:37.240 --> 0:16:40.200
<v Speaker 1>field goal right before half. They had a hundred six

0:16:40.280 --> 0:16:42.920
<v Speaker 1>yards the rest of the day after drive number one,

0:16:44.440 --> 0:16:47.600
<v Speaker 1>what in the world happened? Well, yeah, you had a

0:16:47.600 --> 0:16:50.760
<v Speaker 1>lot of different things happened. I think that you had

0:16:50.760 --> 0:16:55.160
<v Speaker 1>a quarterback that wasn't quite as crisp as the first drive.

0:16:55.720 --> 0:16:59.240
<v Speaker 1>From that point on, I thought he was trying to

0:16:59.280 --> 0:17:01.840
<v Speaker 1>be a little bit too aggressive down the field instead

0:17:01.840 --> 0:17:05.359
<v Speaker 1>of sometimes taking what the defense will give you, which

0:17:05.400 --> 0:17:10.199
<v Speaker 1>sometimes is underneath. Sometimes he missed things that were opened

0:17:10.200 --> 0:17:13.439
<v Speaker 1>down the field. He missed Dj Chark which might have

0:17:13.480 --> 0:17:15.760
<v Speaker 1>been a touchdown pass going down to the deep middle,

0:17:16.280 --> 0:17:18.359
<v Speaker 1>and DJ probably had two or three steps on the

0:17:18.359 --> 0:17:24.199
<v Speaker 1>defensive back, and so then you had a protection issues

0:17:24.240 --> 0:17:26.840
<v Speaker 1>a couple of time that stall drives. But for the

0:17:26.840 --> 0:17:29.800
<v Speaker 1>most part, I think the offensive line against a very good,

0:17:29.880 --> 0:17:33.480
<v Speaker 1>dever Broncos defensive front, did very well. I thought, I

0:17:33.480 --> 0:17:36.840
<v Speaker 1>thought it was good enough to win. And then defensively,

0:17:37.400 --> 0:17:39.880
<v Speaker 1>you weren't able to take the ball away. So when

0:17:40.200 --> 0:17:43.879
<v Speaker 1>you're not very efficient at the quarterback position throughout the

0:17:43.880 --> 0:17:46.880
<v Speaker 1>course of the game, and then you turn the ball

0:17:46.920 --> 0:17:51.399
<v Speaker 1>over and then you don't get takeaways as a defense,

0:17:52.080 --> 0:17:58.159
<v Speaker 1>and you allow some big explosive plays by Courtland Sutton

0:17:59.520 --> 0:18:02.640
<v Speaker 1>and an easy touchdown by the tight end no fan

0:18:03.600 --> 0:18:07.359
<v Speaker 1>and you allow Teddy Bridgewater to create more time in

0:18:07.440 --> 0:18:12.480
<v Speaker 1>the pocket to get the completions and the efficiency. It's

0:18:12.520 --> 0:18:15.600
<v Speaker 1>hard to win that way. I thought. I thought that

0:18:15.800 --> 0:18:19.199
<v Speaker 1>the Jaguars defense for the most part did okay against

0:18:19.200 --> 0:18:22.720
<v Speaker 1>the run, and that's what I would say going back

0:18:22.760 --> 0:18:27.159
<v Speaker 1>to the previous week in Houston. They did okay. Okay, Yeah,

0:18:27.280 --> 0:18:29.960
<v Speaker 1>but the issue is is that for this defense because

0:18:30.000 --> 0:18:32.720
<v Speaker 1>they're not generating a great pass rush, because if they were,

0:18:32.760 --> 0:18:36.600
<v Speaker 1>they would have a takeaway by now, that doing okay

0:18:36.800 --> 0:18:39.320
<v Speaker 1>is not good enough. You have to be really good

0:18:39.760 --> 0:18:41.760
<v Speaker 1>against the run. I think if your defense to give

0:18:41.800 --> 0:18:45.280
<v Speaker 1>yourself the best chance that you need to have to

0:18:45.320 --> 0:18:47.640
<v Speaker 1>be able to get after the passer j P. I mean,

0:18:47.640 --> 0:18:51.840
<v Speaker 1>it can't be did okay this defense. If they want

0:18:51.840 --> 0:18:53.760
<v Speaker 1>to be where they want to be in a in

0:18:53.840 --> 0:18:58.800
<v Speaker 1>a stop the pass standpoint, you have to be outstanding

0:18:58.840 --> 0:19:01.000
<v Speaker 1>against the run. And right now I don't think they've

0:19:01.000 --> 0:19:03.600
<v Speaker 1>been outstanding yet. I mean, you look at what the

0:19:03.640 --> 0:19:07.240
<v Speaker 1>young running back from the dever Broncos Javant to Williams did.

0:19:08.160 --> 0:19:10.439
<v Speaker 1>I mean, he was, he's really good. There was that

0:19:10.560 --> 0:19:13.400
<v Speaker 1>one run where he broke like three tackles. He's kind

0:19:13.400 --> 0:19:16.159
<v Speaker 1>of keeping his balance and then and then the more

0:19:16.160 --> 0:19:18.480
<v Speaker 1>of the game on, the better he looked. I mean,

0:19:18.520 --> 0:19:20.400
<v Speaker 1>and so those guys, that's how it works for those

0:19:20.400 --> 0:19:22.760
<v Speaker 1>I want to have that happened the opposite way. As

0:19:22.760 --> 0:19:24.960
<v Speaker 1>the game is wearing on, your defense is getting better

0:19:25.000 --> 0:19:27.399
<v Speaker 1>and you're shutting them out and making it making it

0:19:27.440 --> 0:19:31.280
<v Speaker 1>hard for Teddy Bridgewater with third and seven plus, and

0:19:31.320 --> 0:19:35.159
<v Speaker 1>I don't think they accomplished that going to the secondary

0:19:35.200 --> 0:19:36.800
<v Speaker 1>now when the ball is in the air. You know,

0:19:36.840 --> 0:19:39.240
<v Speaker 1>there was that one long play at the start of

0:19:39.240 --> 0:19:41.840
<v Speaker 1>the third quarter, but c J. Henderson was out of

0:19:41.880 --> 0:19:43.720
<v Speaker 1>the game at that point with the hip issue. Chris

0:19:43.760 --> 0:19:46.639
<v Speaker 1>clay Brooks was in on that play and suddenly just

0:19:46.720 --> 0:19:48.600
<v Speaker 1>kind of ran right past him. It felt like, well

0:19:48.640 --> 0:19:51.159
<v Speaker 1>c J. Henderson was on the field on on the

0:19:51.200 --> 0:19:55.639
<v Speaker 1>one um crossing route where he that gives up the touchdowns.

0:19:57.760 --> 0:20:00.840
<v Speaker 1>I mean, so there's and it was a a poor

0:20:00.920 --> 0:20:03.600
<v Speaker 1>job of trying to get across the field to cover it.

0:20:03.760 --> 0:20:05.919
<v Speaker 1>I mean, look, there's traffic all the time. When you

0:20:05.920 --> 0:20:08.720
<v Speaker 1>got man coverage, find a way to fight through it.

0:20:09.520 --> 0:20:12.159
<v Speaker 1>And and it was almost like he was hesitant to

0:20:12.240 --> 0:20:16.240
<v Speaker 1>kind of fight through that traffic. And you can't be hesitant.

0:20:17.600 --> 0:20:19.560
<v Speaker 1>You know, if you get knocked on your fannie trying

0:20:19.600 --> 0:20:21.480
<v Speaker 1>to get there, get knocked on your fannie, but don't

0:20:21.520 --> 0:20:24.040
<v Speaker 1>just kind of say whoa, whoa, whoa. You know, I

0:20:24.080 --> 0:20:27.280
<v Speaker 1>can't get through that. No, see if you can. About

0:20:27.320 --> 0:20:29.680
<v Speaker 1>the rest of the secondary this past week, I thought,

0:20:29.720 --> 0:20:32.920
<v Speaker 1>I think Ray Shawn Jenkins has been a nice addition.

0:20:33.040 --> 0:20:35.520
<v Speaker 1>So he's done a good job. You know. Week one,

0:20:35.560 --> 0:20:37.879
<v Speaker 1>he missed an opportunity there trying to break up some

0:20:37.920 --> 0:20:41.440
<v Speaker 1>deep balls, and uh, I thought he was okay. This week,

0:20:41.480 --> 0:20:45.280
<v Speaker 1>I thought that Andrew Wingered played a solid game. Everybody's

0:20:45.320 --> 0:20:47.760
<v Speaker 1>been on Wingered or not everybody A lot of fans

0:20:47.840 --> 0:20:50.680
<v Speaker 1>have been on Wingered. We didn't play well the first game,

0:20:51.080 --> 0:20:54.080
<v Speaker 1>but yeah, I thought he played pretty well. He had sack,

0:20:54.960 --> 0:20:58.240
<v Speaker 1>he was active, he didn't miss any tackles where he

0:20:58.280 --> 0:21:02.119
<v Speaker 1>did the previous week. So yeah, I thought he was

0:21:02.160 --> 0:21:04.880
<v Speaker 1>I thought he was okay. I thought he was okay.

0:21:05.440 --> 0:21:09.360
<v Speaker 1>Everybody's kind of everybody, I keep saying everybody. Some folks

0:21:09.640 --> 0:21:12.520
<v Speaker 1>feel that Andre Cisco could see a little more time

0:21:12.560 --> 0:21:16.320
<v Speaker 1>as the year progressive. Here, Um, okay, what maybe you

0:21:16.320 --> 0:21:20.640
<v Speaker 1>can take off the field. Yeah, what if Winger continues

0:21:20.680 --> 0:21:25.719
<v Speaker 1>to get better? Then great. But here's the thing. Andrew

0:21:25.760 --> 0:21:29.920
<v Speaker 1>Winger didn't have fourteen or fifteen interceptions in twenty three

0:21:29.920 --> 0:21:33.360
<v Speaker 1>career games in college, whatever that number was. In fact,

0:21:33.440 --> 0:21:37.160
<v Speaker 1>let me look at it. Thirteen interceptions in twenty four

0:21:37.240 --> 0:21:43.480
<v Speaker 1>games at Syracuse. I mean, man, yeah, no doubt can

0:21:43.520 --> 0:21:46.720
<v Speaker 1>wing or do that. We haven't seen it yet. Well,

0:21:46.760 --> 0:21:48.760
<v Speaker 1>I mean I'm not. I'm not trying to, you know,

0:21:48.880 --> 0:21:51.840
<v Speaker 1>be joking here. I'm just saying, is that. Look, when

0:21:51.880 --> 0:21:54.280
<v Speaker 1>you have a guy that has the ability to take

0:21:54.280 --> 0:21:57.840
<v Speaker 1>the ball away like that, and you're a defensive right

0:21:57.880 --> 0:22:03.479
<v Speaker 1>now that has goose egg zero takeaways, you might want

0:22:03.480 --> 0:22:05.719
<v Speaker 1>to get the guys on the field that can change

0:22:05.720 --> 0:22:11.640
<v Speaker 1>that number. Right. So there's a guy and and here's

0:22:11.680 --> 0:22:17.119
<v Speaker 1>the one thing I do understand. Cisco is still on

0:22:17.359 --> 0:22:19.520
<v Speaker 1>his way back from an a c L injury that

0:22:19.520 --> 0:22:24.000
<v Speaker 1>he suffered at Syracuse. So is there a schedule and

0:22:24.359 --> 0:22:29.199
<v Speaker 1>a a plan that they have in place to allow

0:22:29.359 --> 0:22:31.399
<v Speaker 1>him to get back to be in full speed. I'm

0:22:31.440 --> 0:22:36.280
<v Speaker 1>sure there is. I mean most trainers doctors always have

0:22:36.359 --> 0:22:41.359
<v Speaker 1>a plan. But or is it that or is it Okay?

0:22:42.920 --> 0:22:45.000
<v Speaker 1>We need to have him earn it and he hasn't

0:22:45.080 --> 0:22:47.400
<v Speaker 1>shown us yet that he's earning the more reps when

0:22:47.400 --> 0:22:49.639
<v Speaker 1>he starts playing, and he starts earning more reps, and

0:22:49.640 --> 0:22:51.199
<v Speaker 1>we'll give him more reps. I mean maybe it's some

0:22:51.240 --> 0:22:53.560
<v Speaker 1>of that too. I don't know, but I know this.

0:22:54.240 --> 0:22:57.480
<v Speaker 1>He's got ball skills. And I watched his college film.

0:22:57.880 --> 0:23:01.520
<v Speaker 1>I watched this preseason performances. This guy can play some

0:23:01.560 --> 0:23:05.640
<v Speaker 1>football and when he gets if he's anywhere around the ball,

0:23:06.600 --> 0:23:10.919
<v Speaker 1>it's his That would sound pretty nice for this defense

0:23:11.000 --> 0:23:13.080
<v Speaker 1>right about. Now. That's what you need, you know. And

0:23:13.119 --> 0:23:15.480
<v Speaker 1>another thing is to shock Chack Griffin had his hands

0:23:15.480 --> 0:23:17.320
<v Speaker 1>on the ball. He had week one, he had an

0:23:17.320 --> 0:23:19.640
<v Speaker 1>early one, and then he had another one this week

0:23:19.680 --> 0:23:21.600
<v Speaker 1>that was would have been an acrobatic catch, but it

0:23:21.600 --> 0:23:23.280
<v Speaker 1>would have been it would have been a crazy catch.

0:23:23.400 --> 0:23:27.120
<v Speaker 1>But look, I mean sometimes that's you know, you gotta

0:23:27.160 --> 0:23:29.760
<v Speaker 1>make them. I mean, make a crazy catch because there's

0:23:29.760 --> 0:23:35.359
<v Speaker 1>gonna be some easy ones that you drop works, you know,

0:23:35.520 --> 0:23:39.840
<v Speaker 1>so you gotta start making some some more splash plays

0:23:40.320 --> 0:23:44.040
<v Speaker 1>as a defense, whether that's you know, pressure in the quarterback,

0:23:44.640 --> 0:23:47.160
<v Speaker 1>sacking the quarterback in a good job. Look, you got

0:23:47.160 --> 0:23:50.600
<v Speaker 1>three sacks this pass game. And I like the production

0:23:50.640 --> 0:23:52.600
<v Speaker 1>of gods is I think if there's a question do

0:23:52.640 --> 0:23:56.439
<v Speaker 1>you have Tavin Bryan or Adam gots Is active on

0:23:56.560 --> 0:23:59.920
<v Speaker 1>game day? I'm I'm choosing Adam Gotsis from now on. Yeah,

0:24:00.119 --> 0:24:03.040
<v Speaker 1>the previous week they chose to have him inactive and

0:24:03.119 --> 0:24:07.320
<v Speaker 1>Tavin Bryan was active. Adam Gotsis I think gives you

0:24:07.400 --> 0:24:12.239
<v Speaker 1>more productivity. I think that's very obvious. And so if

0:24:12.240 --> 0:24:14.119
<v Speaker 1>you're trying to put the best football team out there,

0:24:14.320 --> 0:24:16.399
<v Speaker 1>you put him, put him out there. Well, there was

0:24:16.440 --> 0:24:18.640
<v Speaker 1>the one fourth down play that comes to my mind

0:24:18.920 --> 0:24:21.840
<v Speaker 1>speaking of Tavin Brian where he ended up on his

0:24:21.880 --> 0:24:26.080
<v Speaker 1>back side. Yeah, he got knocked those fourth and one

0:24:26.240 --> 0:24:28.159
<v Speaker 1>one and a half went a fourth and shorty and

0:24:28.160 --> 0:24:32.000
<v Speaker 1>it was a quarterback sneaking and Bobby Massey ended up

0:24:32.040 --> 0:24:34.960
<v Speaker 1>taking him back and essentially putting him on his back

0:24:35.000 --> 0:24:38.160
<v Speaker 1>at five yards deep. You know. And that's only one

0:24:38.160 --> 0:24:40.560
<v Speaker 1>playoff of the game. And look, everybody's had and will

0:24:40.600 --> 0:24:42.960
<v Speaker 1>have their beer and kicked in the National Football League.

0:24:42.960 --> 0:24:49.080
<v Speaker 1>That happened. But the plays that I'm referring to and

0:24:49.080 --> 0:24:51.760
<v Speaker 1>and that that Gods has just has more awareness. He

0:24:51.800 --> 0:24:53.880
<v Speaker 1>has more awareness for where the ball is and where

0:24:53.920 --> 0:24:57.440
<v Speaker 1>he needs to go. So he has a better nose

0:24:57.520 --> 0:25:00.720
<v Speaker 1>for the football and when you have a better from football,

0:25:00.720 --> 0:25:03.080
<v Speaker 1>it's about making plays and then play them. We got

0:25:03.080 --> 0:25:05.600
<v Speaker 1>a sack last week to plenty ahead, will come back

0:25:05.640 --> 0:25:08.840
<v Speaker 1>in a moment and look aheadlogs. The Arizona Cardinals are

0:25:08.880 --> 0:25:11.760
<v Speaker 1>coming to town in Week three. One of the hottest

0:25:11.800 --> 0:25:16.080
<v Speaker 1>offenses in football and it and then they have arguably

0:25:16.240 --> 0:25:20.560
<v Speaker 1>one of the most entertaining all offenses in the National

0:25:20.560 --> 0:25:23.680
<v Speaker 1>Football League. Let's hope not this week. I hope not.

0:25:24.760 --> 0:25:26.840
<v Speaker 1>We'll bring it all down when we come back. Check

0:25:26.880 --> 0:25:29.720
<v Speaker 1>out the Official Jaguars Podcast network and free subscription and

0:25:29.800 --> 0:25:33.439
<v Speaker 1>appley Tunes, Spotify or wherever you download your pods. Give

0:25:33.520 --> 0:25:36.440
<v Speaker 1>us that five star rating. As always, it's Jaguars Happy

0:25:36.480 --> 0:25:45.160
<v Speaker 1>Hour on the Jaguars Digital Networks. And I think I'm

0:25:45.200 --> 0:25:47.160
<v Speaker 1>processing it as good as you can. Obviously, you want,

0:25:47.320 --> 0:25:49.480
<v Speaker 1>you want to win, and like I said, you work

0:25:49.520 --> 0:25:51.840
<v Speaker 1>all week to win and when you're going it's disappointing.

0:25:51.880 --> 0:25:54.520
<v Speaker 1>But I feel like I'm in it. I'm in a

0:25:54.520 --> 0:25:57.760
<v Speaker 1>good spot. I'm the same, I'm the same person, same mindset,

0:25:58.160 --> 0:26:01.120
<v Speaker 1>nothing's changed. So making sure I keep my confidence every

0:26:01.160 --> 0:26:04.399
<v Speaker 1>week is big and I think I have that, So um,

0:26:04.400 --> 0:26:07.639
<v Speaker 1>we're gonna get better. We're close. You know, it's obviously

0:26:08.359 --> 0:26:10.280
<v Speaker 1>last week and this week doesn't look great when you

0:26:10.280 --> 0:26:12.360
<v Speaker 1>look at the numbers, but I really do like we're

0:26:12.400 --> 0:26:14.320
<v Speaker 1>close and we just gotta make some more plays and

0:26:14.359 --> 0:26:18.439
<v Speaker 1>stay together. There's the quarterback, Trevor Lawrence after the game

0:26:18.840 --> 0:26:21.399
<v Speaker 1>Sunday and welcome back at Jaguars Happy Hour on a

0:26:21.440 --> 0:26:24.879
<v Speaker 1>Tuesday afternoon, j P. Shadrick with Jeff Loguman, Joe Fornado

0:26:24.960 --> 0:26:26.919
<v Speaker 1>on the audio, Brett Reever on the video side on

0:26:27.000 --> 0:26:29.560
<v Speaker 1>Jaguars dot Com, The Urban Meyer Show coming up at

0:26:29.600 --> 0:26:33.359
<v Speaker 1>five o'clock. We'll hear from the Jaguars head coach, as

0:26:33.400 --> 0:26:36.400
<v Speaker 1>we always do on Tuesday's get his final thoughts on

0:26:36.440 --> 0:26:40.120
<v Speaker 1>the previous week's game, and then an early look at

0:26:40.160 --> 0:26:43.359
<v Speaker 1>week number three. And our early look at week number

0:26:43.400 --> 0:26:46.320
<v Speaker 1>three begins now, and you don't need to look much

0:26:46.320 --> 0:26:49.800
<v Speaker 1>further than Kyler Murray, the quarterback for the Arizona Cardinals.

0:26:50.200 --> 0:26:52.560
<v Speaker 1>He is among the league leaders in a few passing

0:26:52.600 --> 0:26:56.520
<v Speaker 1>categories early this season. It's a dynamic playmaker, gets out

0:26:56.560 --> 0:26:59.840
<v Speaker 1>of the pocket. He's a former baseball player who's a

0:27:00.119 --> 0:27:03.960
<v Speaker 1>round pick as an outfielder for the Oakland A's. He's

0:27:04.000 --> 0:27:07.080
<v Speaker 1>just got a different style about him when he runs

0:27:07.080 --> 0:27:09.520
<v Speaker 1>around and then can throw the ball down the field

0:27:09.560 --> 0:27:13.480
<v Speaker 1>at different arm angles and twisting and turning and fading away,

0:27:13.520 --> 0:27:16.520
<v Speaker 1>and it always seems to be, you know, like fifty

0:27:16.600 --> 0:27:20.000
<v Speaker 1>yards down the field and not the money somehow sometimes

0:27:20.119 --> 0:27:22.080
<v Speaker 1>how does that work? Well? Not all the time. I

0:27:22.080 --> 0:27:26.840
<v Speaker 1>mean he will throw some interceptions. Now, So this week,

0:27:27.040 --> 0:27:30.440
<v Speaker 1>if there was any week to break the lack of

0:27:30.520 --> 0:27:33.119
<v Speaker 1>takeaways is a defense, this is the week because he

0:27:33.160 --> 0:27:35.840
<v Speaker 1>will throw you one and you've got to make sure

0:27:35.840 --> 0:27:37.920
<v Speaker 1>that you catch it, and he might throw you too

0:27:38.720 --> 0:27:42.800
<v Speaker 1>if he does three or four. Come on, it could be,

0:27:43.160 --> 0:27:45.840
<v Speaker 1>could be. It just depends on how well your offense performance,

0:27:45.960 --> 0:27:48.680
<v Speaker 1>what the score differential is, and where it's, what side

0:27:48.680 --> 0:27:50.359
<v Speaker 1>of the fence that is lined on, because if you

0:27:50.400 --> 0:27:52.440
<v Speaker 1>put there is a little cardinals in a situation where

0:27:52.480 --> 0:27:54.880
<v Speaker 1>they've got to play a little bit of catchup, then

0:27:54.920 --> 0:27:56.880
<v Speaker 1>that would be better for your defense. But the one

0:27:56.880 --> 0:28:00.280
<v Speaker 1>thing about Kyl Murray is it's like it's like a

0:28:00.400 --> 0:28:04.040
<v Speaker 1>video game. He's all over the map, but he's running

0:28:04.040 --> 0:28:06.359
<v Speaker 1>around and and then all of a sudden he'll stop

0:28:06.400 --> 0:28:09.639
<v Speaker 1>and throw it down the field. He scores with his legs.

0:28:09.720 --> 0:28:13.000
<v Speaker 1>He's a kind of for nine touchdowns as a quarterback

0:28:13.080 --> 0:28:15.399
<v Speaker 1>so far, which probably is one of the best in

0:28:15.400 --> 0:28:21.040
<v Speaker 1>the league, if not the best. And I seriously when

0:28:21.080 --> 0:28:23.720
<v Speaker 1>I when I say this, you might want to put

0:28:23.720 --> 0:28:25.440
<v Speaker 1>as much speed as you have on the field when

0:28:25.480 --> 0:28:29.480
<v Speaker 1>he's out there, because he will extend plays, and the

0:28:29.520 --> 0:28:34.200
<v Speaker 1>more speed you have, the less likely possibly that you

0:28:34.480 --> 0:28:36.280
<v Speaker 1>are going to give him more talk. Do you have

0:28:36.600 --> 0:28:39.640
<v Speaker 1>a spy for lack of a better turn? Do you

0:28:39.680 --> 0:28:43.200
<v Speaker 1>have somebody just follows him around on you can I've

0:28:43.240 --> 0:28:45.800
<v Speaker 1>seen that done before. I mean, if you have somebody

0:28:45.840 --> 0:28:51.600
<v Speaker 1>that is exceptional at extending the play, and I've seen

0:28:51.640 --> 0:28:54.440
<v Speaker 1>it done before to where a team might rush three

0:28:55.480 --> 0:28:59.440
<v Speaker 1>instead of four, and then the fourth guy is not

0:28:59.560 --> 0:29:02.200
<v Speaker 1>uncover ridge, but he basically just stays right there at

0:29:02.200 --> 0:29:05.120
<v Speaker 1>the line of scrimmage. And it could be your fastest

0:29:06.000 --> 0:29:10.280
<v Speaker 1>defensive end rush or whatever. It could be your fastest

0:29:10.320 --> 0:29:14.560
<v Speaker 1>linebacker for example, if you put Telvin Smith out there

0:29:14.640 --> 0:29:17.320
<v Speaker 1>or Miles Jack I mean thinking about fast linebackers in

0:29:17.400 --> 0:29:20.640
<v Speaker 1>Jaguars history, those were probably two of the fastest. Like

0:29:20.720 --> 0:29:24.640
<v Speaker 1>those type of guys, you would say, okay, you stay here,

0:29:25.240 --> 0:29:27.920
<v Speaker 1>and then once he decides to go left, right or

0:29:28.000 --> 0:29:33.520
<v Speaker 1>up the middle, you're on them. And uh, when I

0:29:33.520 --> 0:29:35.800
<v Speaker 1>was in New York one time, I remember we had

0:29:36.520 --> 0:29:39.560
<v Speaker 1>we had a defensive back in that role. It didn't

0:29:39.600 --> 0:29:43.080
<v Speaker 1>work very well, but we tried it. That was one

0:29:43.080 --> 0:29:48.400
<v Speaker 1>of one of Pete Carroll's early trial and error type

0:29:48.440 --> 0:29:52.640
<v Speaker 1>of defenses that he had. The error. Yeah, it definitely

0:29:52.640 --> 0:29:55.840
<v Speaker 1>didn't work. Huh. So of course when you have a

0:29:55.920 --> 0:29:58.120
<v Speaker 1>quarterback like that, it helps when you have some weapons

0:29:58.160 --> 0:30:01.240
<v Speaker 1>down the field, and they have some. Certainly in Arizona,

0:30:01.320 --> 0:30:05.480
<v Speaker 1>DeAndre Hopkins is there, former Texans wide receiver and we

0:30:05.480 --> 0:30:07.480
<v Speaker 1>we know, oh well, what kind of player he is.

0:30:07.520 --> 0:30:11.440
<v Speaker 1>Though in his career against the Jaguars, he's played in

0:30:11.480 --> 0:30:15.280
<v Speaker 1>fourteen games, only six touchdowns. But you know that was

0:30:16.280 --> 0:30:19.360
<v Speaker 1>over you know, the time with the Houston Texans to

0:30:19.480 --> 0:30:22.880
<v Speaker 1>one yard games in that time. But if you let

0:30:22.920 --> 0:30:25.520
<v Speaker 1>off him at all, even if you cover him with

0:30:25.880 --> 0:30:28.640
<v Speaker 1>a guy or double covering, we've seen him makes some

0:30:28.760 --> 0:30:32.520
<v Speaker 1>incredible catches, certainly in his time in Arizona so far.

0:30:32.760 --> 0:30:36.840
<v Speaker 1>He is Uh, he's got great hands, great hands, does

0:30:36.880 --> 0:30:41.440
<v Speaker 1>a great job with contested catches. He's not a burner anymore.

0:30:41.480 --> 0:30:45.000
<v Speaker 1>I think he's a he's essentially a a possession receiver.

0:30:45.280 --> 0:30:48.920
<v Speaker 1>And he probably won't agree to that. And he makes

0:30:48.960 --> 0:30:52.680
<v Speaker 1>bigger plays than most possession receivers as far as the

0:30:52.760 --> 0:30:56.000
<v Speaker 1>multitude of him. But the speed is not a factor

0:30:56.080 --> 0:30:58.320
<v Speaker 1>with him anymore. He's not gonna run by anybody. I

0:30:58.360 --> 0:31:00.920
<v Speaker 1>feel like this is probably gonna be his bulletin board

0:31:00.920 --> 0:31:05.520
<v Speaker 1>and his locker this week. Jeff, he cares what I say.

0:31:06.440 --> 0:31:08.920
<v Speaker 1>You think he cares what I know. He doesn't care

0:31:08.960 --> 0:31:11.400
<v Speaker 1>what I say, But I mean that's what he's become.

0:31:11.480 --> 0:31:13.560
<v Speaker 1>I mean, look at his career stats. I mean as

0:31:13.680 --> 0:31:16.840
<v Speaker 1>as receiver's age, that's kind of what happened sometimes. Yeah,

0:31:17.320 --> 0:31:23.680
<v Speaker 1>it hasn't happened with a j. Green And he's on

0:31:23.720 --> 0:31:27.280
<v Speaker 1>the team too, Julio Jones. What is he in like

0:31:27.400 --> 0:31:30.880
<v Speaker 1>your twenty Yeah, I guess you're right there, he goes.

0:31:31.040 --> 0:31:34.000
<v Speaker 1>I mean that some guys still got it and that's

0:31:34.040 --> 0:31:36.360
<v Speaker 1>just not DeAndre Hopkins game. But I can tell you this,

0:31:37.040 --> 0:31:39.800
<v Speaker 1>for a quarterback that runs around a lot and creates

0:31:39.800 --> 0:31:44.280
<v Speaker 1>six what we call scramble rules plays or broken plays,

0:31:44.800 --> 0:31:47.320
<v Speaker 1>you might not have a better receiver than DeAndre Hopkins

0:31:47.320 --> 0:31:51.800
<v Speaker 1>on the on the planet. Because he's creative, he invents things,

0:31:52.440 --> 0:31:55.320
<v Speaker 1>and when the quarterback throws it up to him. The

0:31:55.400 --> 0:31:58.360
<v Speaker 1>quarterback trust that he's going to catch the ball, and

0:31:58.400 --> 0:32:00.360
<v Speaker 1>at the very least he's not gonna let the opponent

0:32:00.400 --> 0:32:06.680
<v Speaker 1>catched the ball. Octoberen ross A Stadium, West Lafayette, Indiana,

0:32:06.760 --> 0:32:11.080
<v Speaker 1>under the lights, per Due upset number three Ohio State twenty.

0:32:11.160 --> 0:32:15.560
<v Speaker 1>It was Urban Meyers thirty second and final college loss.

0:32:16.240 --> 0:32:19.680
<v Speaker 1>In that game, Rondale Moore had twelve receptions, a hundred

0:32:19.720 --> 0:32:22.280
<v Speaker 1>seventy yards and two touchdowns for the boiler Makers and

0:32:22.320 --> 0:32:24.880
<v Speaker 1>an upset win, the only loss of the season for

0:32:24.920 --> 0:32:26.760
<v Speaker 1>the buck Eyes. They went on to win the Rose Bowl,

0:32:26.760 --> 0:32:29.760
<v Speaker 1>but not the National Championship. Rondale Moore now with Arizona

0:32:30.040 --> 0:32:35.120
<v Speaker 1>leading the Cardinals in targets, catches, and yards, which which

0:32:35.120 --> 0:32:38.440
<v Speaker 1>is amazing. He played Perdue. How State lost the Purdue,

0:32:38.560 --> 0:32:40.240
<v Speaker 1>Yes they did. They stormed the field that night at

0:32:40.320 --> 0:32:42.680
<v Speaker 1>ross A. How do you do that? Well, that's that's

0:32:42.680 --> 0:32:45.760
<v Speaker 1>what has when guys like this put it together, those

0:32:45.840 --> 0:32:50.320
<v Speaker 1>kind of performances State has likely it was an upset.

0:32:50.760 --> 0:32:52.960
<v Speaker 1>Dwayne Haskins in that game, by the way, side, note

0:32:53.280 --> 0:32:56.320
<v Speaker 1>through the ball seventy three times for the buck Eyes

0:32:56.360 --> 0:33:00.360
<v Speaker 1>that night. What seventy three and they only scored twenty points.

0:33:01.160 --> 0:33:03.400
<v Speaker 1>How many times did they run it? I don't know,

0:33:03.520 --> 0:33:06.520
<v Speaker 1>but it was, Yeah, it was. It was a heck

0:33:06.520 --> 0:33:11.520
<v Speaker 1>of a night. Let's put it that way. Reason why passes, Yes,

0:33:13.560 --> 0:33:16.760
<v Speaker 1>I mean it's a lot. How's his arm not fall off? Well,

0:33:16.800 --> 0:33:18.840
<v Speaker 1>I mean, I don't know. In the NFL, if you

0:33:18.880 --> 0:33:24.760
<v Speaker 1>get seventy plays, you're lucky, right, I mean exactly. I'd

0:33:24.800 --> 0:33:27.320
<v Speaker 1>say the average number of plays in the National Football

0:33:27.400 --> 0:33:34.360
<v Speaker 1>League is probably right around right around seventy, maybe sixty seventy,

0:33:34.440 --> 0:33:37.120
<v Speaker 1>someone right in that range, right, Yeah, because the clocks

0:33:37.160 --> 0:33:38.840
<v Speaker 1>moving all the time, and you're you know, up and

0:33:38.880 --> 0:33:41.920
<v Speaker 1>at it, the play clocks a little shorter. Yeah, yeah,

0:33:41.960 --> 0:33:45.400
<v Speaker 1>that's but anyway, that's that's crazy. But more as a

0:33:45.400 --> 0:33:48.200
<v Speaker 1>guy who stepped in this year's a rookie second round pick,

0:33:48.600 --> 0:33:51.720
<v Speaker 1>and it's really been a nice addition for the Arizona offense.

0:33:51.720 --> 0:33:54.400
<v Speaker 1>And he's like five ft seven by the way, he

0:33:54.480 --> 0:33:58.680
<v Speaker 1>can go play. He is what seven five? He is?

0:33:59.440 --> 0:34:01.600
<v Speaker 1>I anybody, I haven't. I haven't watched a ton of

0:34:01.680 --> 0:34:05.560
<v Speaker 1>him yet. You need to, but I will. And here's

0:34:05.600 --> 0:34:07.480
<v Speaker 1>the one thing I will say about the Cardinals. They

0:34:07.520 --> 0:34:10.600
<v Speaker 1>got a lot of single digit guys. You know, every team,

0:34:10.680 --> 0:34:12.560
<v Speaker 1>you know, kind of jumped on that bandwagon. They want

0:34:12.560 --> 0:34:15.800
<v Speaker 1>to do a bunch of single digits. And nobody seems

0:34:15.840 --> 0:34:18.600
<v Speaker 1>to like the number two except for a quarterback in

0:34:18.640 --> 0:34:23.400
<v Speaker 1>New York. Why is that? I don't know. But Chase

0:34:23.520 --> 0:34:27.359
<v Speaker 1>Edmonds has number two. You got Kyler Murray at one,

0:34:27.440 --> 0:34:31.400
<v Speaker 1>Chase Edmonds was wearing two. Nobody likes three. I guess

0:34:31.520 --> 0:34:36.120
<v Speaker 1>Rondel Moore is four. Nobody likes five. If you were

0:34:36.120 --> 0:34:38.840
<v Speaker 1>going to pick a single digit to wear JP and

0:34:38.920 --> 0:34:42.520
<v Speaker 1>you played, and you were playing ball, regardless of position,

0:34:43.320 --> 0:34:48.080
<v Speaker 1>what number would you want to wear? That's a good one.

0:34:48.080 --> 0:34:50.880
<v Speaker 1>I don't know. Eight, it's kind of I don't know.

0:34:51.000 --> 0:34:54.600
<v Speaker 1>I have no idea, any particular reason why. Joe, what

0:34:54.719 --> 0:34:57.839
<v Speaker 1>number would you wear? Joe would wear number five, you'd

0:34:57.840 --> 0:35:01.839
<v Speaker 1>be number one. I'm not big fan of the number one.

0:35:02.160 --> 0:35:04.520
<v Speaker 1>That's kind of a look at me number. I'm just saying,

0:35:04.560 --> 0:35:06.960
<v Speaker 1>I don't know. I'm not saying anything like about Kyler Murray,

0:35:07.000 --> 0:35:09.640
<v Speaker 1>but I was gonna say that's on his bulletin board

0:35:09.640 --> 0:35:13.400
<v Speaker 1>now the way to go. I know. One thing is

0:35:13.440 --> 0:35:18.200
<v Speaker 1>that John Ward where's number six? Yeah, he's he kind

0:35:18.200 --> 0:35:21.720
<v Speaker 1>of shook the tree last night. He kind of shook

0:35:21.760 --> 0:35:24.719
<v Speaker 1>the tree on social media last night. What did he do?

0:35:25.640 --> 0:35:28.960
<v Speaker 1>Apparently he said something regarding the Ravens they were on

0:35:29.120 --> 0:35:33.799
<v Speaker 1>and he apologized to Jaguars fans today. Okay, let's put

0:35:33.880 --> 0:35:36.880
<v Speaker 1>that way. Okay, hopefully it's water under the bridge. But anyway,

0:35:37.040 --> 0:35:39.640
<v Speaker 1>I hope brought his name Uppe. Okay, so now I'm

0:35:39.680 --> 0:35:42.000
<v Speaker 1>gonna like want to go to Twitter and find out

0:35:42.040 --> 0:35:46.960
<v Speaker 1>what he said. But anyway, if you're six ft five,

0:35:48.320 --> 0:35:49.839
<v Speaker 1>is that what do you have? Six five six six

0:35:49.880 --> 0:35:55.160
<v Speaker 1>something like that and two hundred and ninety pounds, a

0:35:55.239 --> 0:35:59.719
<v Speaker 1>single digit number just doesn't work, you know what I mean.

0:36:00.000 --> 0:36:02.399
<v Speaker 1>It's allowed, though now see they change it. It's like

0:36:03.000 --> 0:36:08.400
<v Speaker 1>it's like wearing stripes, okay, and you're really wide and

0:36:08.520 --> 0:36:12.920
<v Speaker 1>you wear horizontal stripes. Makes you look wider. Okay, So

0:36:12.960 --> 0:36:16.120
<v Speaker 1>if you're a big man, stick with the double digits.

0:36:16.160 --> 0:36:18.520
<v Speaker 1>It makes you look better in a jersey. When you

0:36:18.560 --> 0:36:21.319
<v Speaker 1>wear a single digit number kind of makes you look

0:36:21.320 --> 0:36:23.000
<v Speaker 1>a little portly. And I'm not saying you it's a

0:36:23.000 --> 0:36:25.719
<v Speaker 1>little portly. I'm just saying is that it makes you

0:36:25.760 --> 0:36:28.759
<v Speaker 1>look not quite as felt. I think you just did

0:36:28.840 --> 0:36:32.319
<v Speaker 1>the late Lewis Knicks the third at Notre Dame wore

0:36:32.360 --> 0:36:34.440
<v Speaker 1>the number one, the big nose tackle. Yeah, it did

0:36:34.560 --> 0:36:37.279
<v Speaker 1>look good on him. That's uh, that's one of those.

0:36:37.360 --> 0:36:40.120
<v Speaker 1>Let's come back in a moment. We've got plenty ahead. Well,

0:36:40.120 --> 0:36:43.440
<v Speaker 1>we'll touch on the Cardinals defense. Couple of veteran names

0:36:43.960 --> 0:36:47.120
<v Speaker 1>pass rushing for the Cardinals. We'll go through the injury

0:36:47.120 --> 0:36:50.840
<v Speaker 1>report presented by Baptist Health, little AFC talk and a

0:36:50.920 --> 0:36:56.000
<v Speaker 1>discussion about a long time Jaguars employee and original who

0:36:56.080 --> 0:36:59.000
<v Speaker 1>is retiring hanging it up at the end of the year.

0:36:59.040 --> 0:37:00.600
<v Speaker 1>That's all coming up. And if you're looking for the

0:37:00.640 --> 0:37:02.520
<v Speaker 1>m v P of the truck game, then look no

0:37:02.640 --> 0:37:06.120
<v Speaker 1>further than Ford F one fifty. Loaded with impressive capability

0:37:06.440 --> 0:37:10.759
<v Speaker 1>and designed to dominate, workplay and everything in between. This

0:37:10.840 --> 0:37:14.160
<v Speaker 1>truck makes tough look easy, no wonder. It's the official

0:37:14.160 --> 0:37:17.719
<v Speaker 1>truck of the NFL and proud partner of your Jacksonville Jaguars.

0:37:17.760 --> 0:37:21.200
<v Speaker 1>And this is Jaguars Happy Hour on the Jaguars Digital Network.

0:37:23.920 --> 0:37:26.880
<v Speaker 1>Jaguars Game Day broadcasts are presented by vices Star Credit

0:37:26.960 --> 0:37:30.120
<v Speaker 1>Union and welcome back. It's Jaguars Happy Hour. J P.

0:37:30.239 --> 0:37:33.880
<v Speaker 1>Shadrick with Jeff Logan. Thank you for joining us this afternoon.

0:37:33.920 --> 0:37:36.880
<v Speaker 1>And veterans choose v A for the benefits you've hearned.

0:37:37.440 --> 0:37:41.160
<v Speaker 1>Visit choose dot v A dot gov. Let's take a

0:37:41.160 --> 0:37:44.480
<v Speaker 1>look at the injury report presented by Baptist Health, Changing

0:37:44.560 --> 0:37:46.879
<v Speaker 1>Healthcare for Good. A few names on it, and rban

0:37:46.920 --> 0:37:51.200
<v Speaker 1>Meyer updated some of the status sees Status is that

0:37:51.520 --> 0:37:55.279
<v Speaker 1>STATI status status is gave us the status of a

0:37:55.360 --> 0:37:59.560
<v Speaker 1>few players. On Monday. A. J. Ken, the right guard

0:38:00.000 --> 0:38:03.279
<v Speaker 1>with the hamstring. Urban said he'll probably play this week. C. J.

0:38:03.400 --> 0:38:07.080
<v Speaker 1>Henderson with a hip wait and see Trey Herndon with

0:38:07.080 --> 0:38:09.120
<v Speaker 1>a knee issue. Well, he could be back in the

0:38:09.160 --> 0:38:11.279
<v Speaker 1>practice field this week. That'd be good news and a

0:38:11.320 --> 0:38:14.560
<v Speaker 1>boon for the second year if he's available. James O'Shaughnessy

0:38:14.640 --> 0:38:17.239
<v Speaker 1>with a high ankle sprain. It's gonna be a few

0:38:17.280 --> 0:38:20.160
<v Speaker 1>weeks at least for him. And Labisca Chenult Jr. With

0:38:20.239 --> 0:38:23.000
<v Speaker 1>the shoulder issue last week in the game, but Urban

0:38:23.080 --> 0:38:26.319
<v Speaker 1>said he should be a fine for practice and we'll

0:38:26.320 --> 0:38:28.360
<v Speaker 1>see how the days go. But at least that's a

0:38:28.360 --> 0:38:30.719
<v Speaker 1>good start for Labisca. Moving ahead, there's your Baptist Health

0:38:30.760 --> 0:38:35.560
<v Speaker 1>injury report. Baptist Health Changing Healthcare for Good. I wish

0:38:35.680 --> 0:38:40.160
<v Speaker 1>that Lavisca had not had those two drops in the game. Yeah,

0:38:40.360 --> 0:38:44.359
<v Speaker 1>they were big, they seemed, and they kind of stole

0:38:44.400 --> 0:38:46.440
<v Speaker 1>a couple of drives. Well, when you're when you're losing,

0:38:47.000 --> 0:38:51.640
<v Speaker 1>the mistakes obviously are magnified. And because that's what you

0:38:51.719 --> 0:38:53.920
<v Speaker 1>have to do, you have to work on correcting the

0:38:53.920 --> 0:38:56.760
<v Speaker 1>things that you are not doing well. And drops and

0:38:56.880 --> 0:38:59.600
<v Speaker 1>both the first and the second game have been an issue.

0:38:59.640 --> 0:39:02.319
<v Speaker 1>It has a been a hundred of them, but it's

0:39:02.320 --> 0:39:04.840
<v Speaker 1>been enough to where it's affected the rhythm and the

0:39:04.880 --> 0:39:06.840
<v Speaker 1>way that the offense is playing and you've got to

0:39:06.840 --> 0:39:09.719
<v Speaker 1>try to find a way to correct that. And with

0:39:09.880 --> 0:39:12.680
<v Speaker 1>the type of player that Levisk is and a lot

0:39:12.680 --> 0:39:15.080
<v Speaker 1>of people say, wow, he really didn't have two drops,

0:39:15.080 --> 0:39:17.040
<v Speaker 1>that one would have been a tough catch to make. Well,

0:39:17.440 --> 0:39:20.239
<v Speaker 1>he's a tough guy. That's the type of catch and

0:39:20.239 --> 0:39:22.600
<v Speaker 1>the type of player that I think Lavisco Janalt has

0:39:22.640 --> 0:39:25.440
<v Speaker 1>to be for this football team so that he is

0:39:25.480 --> 0:39:29.320
<v Speaker 1>not afraid or or unwilling to go across the middle

0:39:29.360 --> 0:39:32.279
<v Speaker 1>and and knows that at times when he catches the ball,

0:39:32.320 --> 0:39:35.000
<v Speaker 1>he's gonna get hit and he still has to make

0:39:35.040 --> 0:39:37.879
<v Speaker 1>the catch. That's the type of player that he has

0:39:37.920 --> 0:39:40.399
<v Speaker 1>to be. For this football team. Let's take a look

0:39:40.440 --> 0:39:42.600
<v Speaker 1>around the a f C South and touch on all

0:39:42.680 --> 0:39:46.000
<v Speaker 1>the team's activity and week number two, and let's start

0:39:46.000 --> 0:39:48.319
<v Speaker 1>off with the Houston Texas. They had a lead on

0:39:48.360 --> 0:39:52.680
<v Speaker 1>the Browns. Tyrod Taylor been suffered a hamstring injury. Baker

0:39:52.719 --> 0:39:55.279
<v Speaker 1>Mayfield was banged up in the game but stayed in

0:39:55.480 --> 0:39:58.640
<v Speaker 1>came back in the Browns rally to win one. It's

0:39:58.640 --> 0:40:01.240
<v Speaker 1>a short week and Dave Mills could get the start

0:40:01.280 --> 0:40:04.000
<v Speaker 1>Thursday night, which he was the Texans top draft pick

0:40:04.040 --> 0:40:06.640
<v Speaker 1>and I believe he was a third round pick. It's amazing, right,

0:40:07.400 --> 0:40:10.040
<v Speaker 1>which I ought to tell you that the Texans are

0:40:10.120 --> 0:40:13.880
<v Speaker 1>always away from building that team back into a winner,

0:40:14.200 --> 0:40:16.759
<v Speaker 1>but they play on Thursday night football too. So you're

0:40:16.760 --> 0:40:20.640
<v Speaker 1>gonna have a rookie that is thrust into the lineup

0:40:20.680 --> 0:40:24.360
<v Speaker 1>on a short week because of an injury to Tyrod Taylor,

0:40:24.480 --> 0:40:26.520
<v Speaker 1>which is gonna miss I think a couple of weeks

0:40:26.560 --> 0:40:29.840
<v Speaker 1>with the injury that he had. So and man Derrick

0:40:29.920 --> 0:40:34.040
<v Speaker 1>Henry of the Tennessee Titans, what are you kidding? What

0:40:34.120 --> 0:40:37.640
<v Speaker 1>a second half for Tennessee as they beat the Seahawks

0:40:37.640 --> 0:40:41.040
<v Speaker 1>thirty three thirty. He's speaking of you. We're talking about

0:40:41.080 --> 0:40:44.239
<v Speaker 1>backs to get warm as the game goes along. When

0:40:44.280 --> 0:40:46.440
<v Speaker 1>Derrick Henry starts to roll and then all of a

0:40:46.440 --> 0:40:49.080
<v Speaker 1>sudden he's turning up a little yardage, it just goes

0:40:49.160 --> 0:40:52.640
<v Speaker 1>and goes, and then forget about it. He has I

0:40:52.680 --> 0:40:56.200
<v Speaker 1>think this is a very unique trait and it didn't

0:40:56.200 --> 0:40:58.759
<v Speaker 1>happen the first week, but typically he has it. He

0:40:58.840 --> 0:41:01.239
<v Speaker 1>has his trade that he can start off slow in

0:41:01.239 --> 0:41:04.480
<v Speaker 1>a game and he finishes extremely strong and a lot

0:41:04.560 --> 0:41:07.360
<v Speaker 1>of people think he's and never thought that he was

0:41:07.400 --> 0:41:11.880
<v Speaker 1>a burner. Watch him on game day. He runs away

0:41:11.920 --> 0:41:15.319
<v Speaker 1>from people do and he's what do you think he

0:41:15.600 --> 0:41:20.600
<v Speaker 1>hightway six four? I bet he's to sixty to fifty.

0:41:21.320 --> 0:41:24.480
<v Speaker 1>What if I had to guess six four to fifty.

0:41:25.120 --> 0:41:28.399
<v Speaker 1>I will tell you what the official height and weight

0:41:28.440 --> 0:41:35.760
<v Speaker 1>they tell you it is. Yeah, accurate can be different. Actually,

0:41:35.760 --> 0:41:40.600
<v Speaker 1>they don't even listed on the Titans website. M six

0:41:40.920 --> 0:41:42.919
<v Speaker 1>two fifties about what they've called him in the past.

0:41:42.960 --> 0:41:46.680
<v Speaker 1>But he might be bigger than that. I mean he's

0:41:47.040 --> 0:41:49.640
<v Speaker 1>he's a big guy because he stands next to offensive

0:41:49.680 --> 0:41:51.680
<v Speaker 1>line and you're like, he's not that much. He looks

0:41:51.719 --> 0:41:54.400
<v Speaker 1>like a defensive end. I think it's the easy way

0:41:54.520 --> 0:41:56.960
<v Speaker 1>to describe it. He looks like a defensive end in

0:41:57.000 --> 0:41:59.920
<v Speaker 1>the National Football League that is uh or an out

0:42:00.000 --> 0:42:03.200
<v Speaker 1>side linebacker in the National Football He's playing a three

0:42:03.239 --> 0:42:06.400
<v Speaker 1>four defensive end playing a four three. He's big dude.

0:42:07.000 --> 0:42:11.160
<v Speaker 1>And then finally the Indianapolis Colts, Carson Wentz hurt both

0:42:11.239 --> 0:42:15.959
<v Speaker 1>ankles somehow in the game and the Rams beat the Colt. Yeah,

0:42:16.040 --> 0:42:19.800
<v Speaker 1>and that's that's that's gonna be an issue. And Carson

0:42:19.800 --> 0:42:22.000
<v Speaker 1>Wentz has had a hard time staying healthy and and

0:42:22.040 --> 0:42:24.719
<v Speaker 1>I hope you know that he has success, you know,

0:42:24.760 --> 0:42:27.640
<v Speaker 1>not against the Jaguars, but I hope that he is

0:42:28.480 --> 0:42:31.480
<v Speaker 1>has can find a way back to the player that

0:42:31.560 --> 0:42:35.840
<v Speaker 1>he once was, which we thought he was the next

0:42:35.880 --> 0:42:40.120
<v Speaker 1>great up and comer. Injuries have just ruined his career.

0:42:40.200 --> 0:42:43.760
<v Speaker 1>So and then you know, the wheels kind of fall off,

0:42:44.760 --> 0:42:50.560
<v Speaker 1>and next you know he's he's traded and the Eagles

0:42:50.560 --> 0:42:53.759
<v Speaker 1>game and extension and everybody was thinking, this guy is

0:42:53.800 --> 0:42:55.600
<v Speaker 1>gonna be an Eagle for life. He's gonna be a

0:42:55.600 --> 0:42:58.560
<v Speaker 1>great quarterback for the Eagles. He's gonna lead them to

0:42:58.680 --> 0:43:02.640
<v Speaker 1>the to the playoffs every year. And now he's just

0:43:02.680 --> 0:43:05.520
<v Speaker 1>trying to stay healthy and stay on the field. For

0:43:05.560 --> 0:43:08.440
<v Speaker 1>a different football team. So that's going to be an

0:43:08.480 --> 0:43:10.560
<v Speaker 1>interesting watch how that works out through the end of

0:43:10.600 --> 0:43:12.399
<v Speaker 1>the year. Who's the backup and Indy by the way,

0:43:18.640 --> 0:43:26.800
<v Speaker 1>Yeah no, not the it's a two years ago. Kobe

0:43:26.800 --> 0:43:30.080
<v Speaker 1>Procet's the backup for the Miami Dolphin. That's right. I mean,

0:43:31.280 --> 0:43:33.680
<v Speaker 1>the merry go around continue. Once you're you're kind of

0:43:33.680 --> 0:43:35.480
<v Speaker 1>in the club that at least for the next a

0:43:35.560 --> 0:43:37.680
<v Speaker 1>few years, you can kind of stick around. Now you

0:43:37.719 --> 0:43:39.600
<v Speaker 1>have to look around the a f C South. Let's

0:43:39.600 --> 0:43:42.080
<v Speaker 1>wrap the show today with some news that came out

0:43:42.640 --> 0:43:47.440
<v Speaker 1>late last week about an original Jaguars employee. Dan Edwards

0:43:47.520 --> 0:43:52.560
<v Speaker 1>joined the Jaguars organization in nine four in the communications department,

0:43:52.560 --> 0:43:55.920
<v Speaker 1>worked his way up became the senior VP of Communications

0:43:55.960 --> 0:44:01.680
<v Speaker 1>in for the team. He is retiring at the season

0:44:02.120 --> 0:44:04.919
<v Speaker 1>and has spent a long time is almost his entire

0:44:04.960 --> 0:44:08.040
<v Speaker 1>professional career in the National Football League started in the

0:44:08.080 --> 0:44:10.520
<v Speaker 1>league office in nineteen eighty three. He was an intern

0:44:10.600 --> 0:44:15.520
<v Speaker 1>in New York alongside another intern named Roger Goodell and

0:44:15.840 --> 0:44:18.120
<v Speaker 1>hell of course, now the commissioner of the good NFL.

0:44:18.600 --> 0:44:20.799
<v Speaker 1>He spent a year with the Miami Dolphins. The year

0:44:20.840 --> 0:44:23.160
<v Speaker 1>the Dolphins went to the Super Bowl, and then the

0:44:23.239 --> 0:44:25.520
<v Speaker 1>year after that ended up with the Pittsburgh Steelers in

0:44:26.480 --> 0:44:31.080
<v Speaker 1>five through the nineteen nine three season, and then ninety

0:44:31.120 --> 0:44:34.320
<v Speaker 1>four came down to Jacksonville when the stadium was being built.

0:44:34.400 --> 0:44:37.600
<v Speaker 1>That's before the franchise. Seven years with the franchise, it's

0:44:37.600 --> 0:44:40.440
<v Speaker 1>pretty incredible, and Dan's gonna hang it up at the

0:44:40.520 --> 0:44:43.680
<v Speaker 1>end of the season. And I know we all in

0:44:43.680 --> 0:44:47.200
<v Speaker 1>our department here in the broadcast world are incredibly close

0:44:47.239 --> 0:44:50.560
<v Speaker 1>to Dan and he's done so many things for us

0:44:51.120 --> 0:44:53.680
<v Speaker 1>personally and professionally over the years. We're gonna miss having

0:44:53.760 --> 0:44:56.560
<v Speaker 1>him around these hallways and being able to pick his

0:44:56.680 --> 0:44:59.960
<v Speaker 1>brain and um, because he's seen a lot of things.

0:45:00.000 --> 0:45:02.800
<v Speaker 1>Things in those twenties seven years here is certainly everything

0:45:02.840 --> 0:45:07.000
<v Speaker 1>that has happened, but just league knowledge and general just

0:45:07.440 --> 0:45:10.120
<v Speaker 1>good around, good, good, all around people are hard to find,

0:45:10.239 --> 0:45:12.279
<v Speaker 1>and you got all that combined in one guy. And

0:45:12.360 --> 0:45:15.600
<v Speaker 1>Dan Edwards. Well, I've always appreciated damn twenty seven years

0:45:15.640 --> 0:45:18.720
<v Speaker 1>with the franchise. I think it's like thirty eight years

0:45:18.880 --> 0:45:23.600
<v Speaker 1>in the National Football League and twenty two years he's

0:45:23.640 --> 0:45:26.960
<v Speaker 1>been my boss and uh, which is a very long

0:45:27.040 --> 0:45:30.760
<v Speaker 1>time and couldn't have atched for a better boss. And

0:45:31.280 --> 0:45:35.120
<v Speaker 1>I've always loved and appreciated his wisdom through the years,

0:45:35.440 --> 0:45:38.839
<v Speaker 1>and I will still count on and rely upon that

0:45:38.880 --> 0:45:42.000
<v Speaker 1>wisdom for many years to come because he's a friend.

0:45:42.800 --> 0:45:44.880
<v Speaker 1>And uh and I considered Dan a great friend. And

0:45:44.880 --> 0:45:48.920
<v Speaker 1>he's gonna be missed and an unbelievable family man. Um

0:45:49.440 --> 0:45:52.759
<v Speaker 1>late wife and the four kids and now grandkids are

0:45:52.760 --> 0:45:54.759
<v Speaker 1>coming along and he's gonna spend a lot of time

0:45:54.800 --> 0:45:58.320
<v Speaker 1>with him. And you know, he's got two sons that

0:45:58.360 --> 0:46:02.400
<v Speaker 1>are in the NFL and PR department right now, um,

0:46:02.440 --> 0:46:04.960
<v Speaker 1>and then a daughter that's at Florida and Communications at

0:46:04.960 --> 0:46:07.239
<v Speaker 1>the at the moment, So there's a there's a lot

0:46:07.280 --> 0:46:10.000
<v Speaker 1>of future Edwards to be around. They're not going anywhere

0:46:10.000 --> 0:46:13.200
<v Speaker 1>in the NFL. They always say this, This kind of

0:46:13.200 --> 0:46:15.440
<v Speaker 1>goes back many years that they always say is that

0:46:15.719 --> 0:46:18.799
<v Speaker 1>the greatest thing you ever accomplishes your kids. And I've

0:46:18.840 --> 0:46:21.319
<v Speaker 1>always said this that the kids are always a great

0:46:21.360 --> 0:46:24.920
<v Speaker 1>reflection on the men and the women that raised them.

0:46:25.040 --> 0:46:30.120
<v Speaker 1>And Dana, Patricia, his late wife, raised an incredible family.

0:46:30.600 --> 0:46:33.319
<v Speaker 1>And uh, yeah, and it's gonna be. It's gonna be.

0:46:33.360 --> 0:46:35.560
<v Speaker 1>We gotta find a way to keep Dan coming back.

0:46:35.640 --> 0:46:37.439
<v Speaker 1>You know a little bit where we can see them,

0:46:37.440 --> 0:46:39.239
<v Speaker 1>and I don't know, maybe we need to come up

0:46:39.280 --> 0:46:41.640
<v Speaker 1>with like a Saturday night beer nights. I'm gonna say

0:46:41.640 --> 0:46:43.680
<v Speaker 1>there might be a six pack in bath at some

0:46:43.719 --> 0:46:47.560
<v Speaker 1>point if we tell them, hey, Dan free bud light,

0:46:49.680 --> 0:46:52.480
<v Speaker 1>I think we might get them there. Maybe maybe so,

0:46:52.600 --> 0:46:54.560
<v Speaker 1>but we got we got a little time left with

0:46:54.640 --> 0:46:56.719
<v Speaker 1>the Dan Edwards in the office every day and that's

0:46:56.719 --> 0:47:00.279
<v Speaker 1>a great thing for us. We're January January when he

0:47:00.360 --> 0:47:03.479
<v Speaker 1>is officially retired, right. There might be a point where

0:47:03.480 --> 0:47:07.600
<v Speaker 1>he's not around, but he's still working revotely as as

0:47:07.640 --> 0:47:10.359
<v Speaker 1>they say. But well he'll be around, which is which

0:47:10.400 --> 0:47:12.440
<v Speaker 1>is probably gonna take advantage of a six leave that

0:47:12.480 --> 0:47:16.360
<v Speaker 1>he has built up seven years. He's probably got a

0:47:16.400 --> 0:47:20.160
<v Speaker 1>little bit. I think there's probably some in the in

0:47:20.200 --> 0:47:23.840
<v Speaker 1>the Hopper forum. So congratulations to Dan on a fantastic career.

0:47:23.960 --> 0:47:27.560
<v Speaker 1>We've got some time left with him. So the Jaguars

0:47:28.000 --> 0:47:30.920
<v Speaker 1>and the Denver Broncos game has done. The Jaguars at

0:47:30.960 --> 0:47:33.640
<v Speaker 1>the Arizona Cardinals. This week, we're about to hear from

0:47:33.719 --> 0:47:36.240
<v Speaker 1>Urban Meyer coming up. The Urban Meyers Show is next,

0:47:36.280 --> 0:47:40.160
<v Speaker 1>and I'm curious what Urban thinks of the effort and

0:47:40.200 --> 0:47:44.960
<v Speaker 1>overall performance last week. It kind of looked better overall.

0:47:45.160 --> 0:47:47.000
<v Speaker 1>We'll get his thoughts on that coming up well. And

0:47:47.040 --> 0:47:48.759
<v Speaker 1>I think the other thing too, is that how are

0:47:48.760 --> 0:47:51.840
<v Speaker 1>you going to handle Kyler Murray? And And I'm sure

0:47:51.960 --> 0:47:55.319
<v Speaker 1>that you know it's Tuesday and we're talking to him

0:47:55.320 --> 0:47:57.480
<v Speaker 1>on Tuesdays, and I know Tuesdays are the day in

0:47:57.520 --> 0:48:01.120
<v Speaker 1>which they're still trying to formulate game plan ends. Tuesday

0:48:01.200 --> 0:48:03.359
<v Speaker 1>is a big game planning day. So he's gonna have

0:48:03.400 --> 0:48:07.440
<v Speaker 1>all the answers for us. No, but you would share

0:48:07.880 --> 0:48:11.520
<v Speaker 1>anyway anyway. I don't think so. But that's gonna be

0:48:11.560 --> 0:48:13.880
<v Speaker 1>the big challenge this week is Kyler Murray and and

0:48:13.920 --> 0:48:16.759
<v Speaker 1>they've got some weapons on that defense. And then how

0:48:16.800 --> 0:48:18.839
<v Speaker 1>are you going to block this pass rusher this week?

0:48:18.960 --> 0:48:21.600
<v Speaker 1>Now he's he's a challenge. Now there's y's to him,

0:48:21.680 --> 0:48:25.040
<v Speaker 1>Chandler Jones and J. J. Watt. You know, he's getting more.

0:48:25.880 --> 0:48:28.760
<v Speaker 1>He's been banged up for few years. The new environment,

0:48:28.760 --> 0:48:31.520
<v Speaker 1>I'm not buying it, you know, Champ. Chandler Jones is

0:48:31.560 --> 0:48:36.960
<v Speaker 1>a great player, and it's still a great player age. J. J.

0:48:37.040 --> 0:48:38.879
<v Speaker 1>Watt is not is not a He's not a great

0:48:38.920 --> 0:48:43.560
<v Speaker 1>player anymore. He's a good player, but he's not the J. J.

0:48:43.680 --> 0:48:46.960
<v Speaker 1>Watt that we've watched from the the AP Defensive Player

0:48:46.960 --> 0:48:49.359
<v Speaker 1>of the Year anymore. But no, but he can still

0:48:49.440 --> 0:48:51.880
<v Speaker 1>if he's I can tell you this, the guy is

0:48:51.880 --> 0:48:56.960
<v Speaker 1>going to be walking into the Hall of Fame. Sure,

0:48:57.680 --> 0:49:00.120
<v Speaker 1>not trying to down him or anything, but father time

0:49:00.200 --> 0:49:02.319
<v Speaker 1>is caught up with him a little bit. You're just

0:49:02.440 --> 0:49:06.280
<v Speaker 1>you're throwing bulletin board material everywhere today for the Cardinals.

0:49:06.960 --> 0:49:09.560
<v Speaker 1>I'm just I'm just look JP. I mean, I'm not

0:49:09.640 --> 0:49:12.319
<v Speaker 1>here to blow smoke. You're telling it like it is.

0:49:12.600 --> 0:49:14.800
<v Speaker 1>I'm here to tell you what I see. Splitting the

0:49:14.920 --> 0:49:18.600
<v Speaker 1>front seat. That's what Logs does on this show. No

0:49:18.800 --> 0:49:23.120
<v Speaker 1>holds barn. Logs just lets it fly every now. We

0:49:23.239 --> 0:49:26.200
<v Speaker 1>like that. Well here from a head coach Urban Meyer.

0:49:26.280 --> 0:49:30.279
<v Speaker 1>Coming up next. This has been Jaguars Happy Hour on

0:49:30.320 --> 0:49:33.080
<v Speaker 1>a Tuesday on the Jaguars Digital Network.