Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Next up, guys, on the buyers sell the nice question is,
after blowing a winnable game to the brawlers Sincinnat Bengels,
are the Jaguars still the same old Jaguars? Guys? The
Jaguars had this game in their hands up with three
the ball of the Bengos twelve yard line less than
six minutes to play. All they needed was a touchdown
to put this game away. Instead, they completely melted down
(00:24):
a run, lost four yards, a drop, and then on
fourth down Brian Thomas flat out dropped what should have
been a first down. Cincinnati Bengals took advantage, went down
the field and won it. This is the kind of
loss that has people rolling their eyes and saying, same
old Jaguars. The drops were brutal. Brown had two. Thomas
not only dropped the fourth down play, but also looked
(00:46):
half hearted on a route earlier that turned into a
Loren's interception. Trevor Lawres himself had a couple of costume mistakes,
a bad red zone read or a bad red zone
pick in the second quarter and another year turnover that
got overturned on review. And then there was Travis Hunter,
the rookie defensive bat had a tough day, flagged for
(01:08):
illegal contact and then hit with the twenty five yard
pass interference that I still as Cincinnati Bagels winning drive. Offensively,
he hasn't been much better, with just fifty five receiving
guards over the first two games of the NFL season. Now,
let's be fair, it's not all doom and gloom. The
Jaguars are running the football better than having years, and
their defense has already had five interceptions after getting only
(01:29):
six all the last season. The effort is there and
their structure looks better utterly and colm. So this isn't
a broke roster. This issue is execution when it matters
most to Jacks vide Wires keeps shooting hisself in the foot.
But guys, here's the debate, buy or sell that the
Jaguars are still the same old Jaguars. If you're on
(01:50):
the buy, say, blowing leads, red zone failures, drops, piloties.
It's all the same story we've seen for many, many
years with the let Jacksville Jaguars. Laws looked frustrated, the
young receivers, army aren't reliable, and this losses isn't It
is more evidence nothing has really changed. But if you're
on the south side, I see that as well. It's
only week two. They are only one or two plays
(02:12):
away from being two to zero. The run game is
still rolling, the defense is forcing turnovers, and with time
they're drops and misques should clean up. This might look
like the same old Jaguars, but the foundation is stronger. However, guys,
I'm buying this for now until Jacksonville proves otherwise. They're
the still the same old Jaguars. Yes they're positives, Yes
(02:32):
they're close, but you cannot blow a game to a
backup quarterback who threw three interceptions. Championships championships teams close
those out. The Jaguars don't, and that's why people won't
take them seriously until they change the script. But what
do you guys think? Are the Jaguars improving under Leon
Coleman or are they the same old Jaguars with the
games on the line. Comment down below.