JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The sun seemed to shine brighter in Jacksonville on Monday. The air felt crisper. The St. Johns River looked cleaner. Even the Jaguars’ aging stadium appeared to glisten for the first time in decades.
Jacksonville’s losing streak, now tied for the longest in team history at 13, was cause for celebration — and arguably the best thing to happen to the city since the NFL granted it an expansion franchise in November 1993.
Thanks to the New York Jets’ shocking victory over the Rams in Los Angeles, the skidding Jaguars (1-13) now have a stranglehold on the No. 1 pick in the 2021 draft — and Clemson star quarterback Trevor Lawrence.
“THE New York freaking Jets delivered an early Christmas present to Jacksonville today,” Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry posted on Twitter before vowing to light a victory cigar. “Seriously, this Jets win could be a defining moment for our ball club. See you next week then see you at the draft. This is the win of the day.”
The stunning development 2,400 miles west gave Jacksonville the hope the floundering franchise has been missing for years. It also created what’s sure to be an agonizing wait to make sure the Jaguars don’t screw it up. Not just two weeks, either. More like four months.
Jacksonville needs to lose two more games, beginning with Sunday’s home finale against Chicago; hire a general manager whose primary goal is finding a long-term fix to the team’s long-time QB problem; and assemble a coaching staff that can groom a guy widely viewed as the best college prospect since Andrew Luck.
No problem, right?
There’s little doubt Jacksonville could mess it up. After all, this is the franchise that drafted quarterbacks Byron Leftwich, Blaine Gabbert and Blake Bortles, took Leonard Fournette over Patrick Mahomes and Deshaun Watson, and doubled down on Gardner Minshew.
None of those failed moves seemed to matter Sunday evening as the Jets made play after play down the stretch to hold off the Rams. Running back Frank Gore, safety Marcus Maye and punter Braden Mann should never have to buy a drink in Jacksonville.
Same for Jaguars coach Doug Marrone if his swan song is helping the team land Lawrence by intentionally losing to the Bears (7-7) and at Indianapolis (10-4) a week later.
“I wouldn’t be able to do that,” Marrone said Monday. “I couldn’t do it. I just wouldn’t. I’ve never done it at anything in my life. I had trouble letting my kids win when they were little.”
Marrone gracefully handled several questions about having Jaguars fans openly rooting against the team down the stretch.
“When you’ve lost as many games as we’ve lost in a row now, and we’ve only won one with two games left, there’s going to be lots of stuff that’s going to be said and it’s not going to be lots of positive,” he said. “I think you got to understand that’s the business we’re in. … It’s fair game.”







